2013 TIFF CAST Awards Announcement

For the second year running, I’ve compiled a special edition of the CAST Awards, just based on what people saw during the Toronto International Film Festival. Here are the CAST Top 10 based on the votes of 27 submitted ballots. Voters ranked up to 10 films on their ballot from top to bottom, with first choices receiving 10 points, second choices 9, etc. The Points column lists the total score for each film, Mentions indicates how many voters included it in their Top Ten, Average is the average point score, and Firsts shows how many voters chose it as their favourite TIFF film.

In the case of points ties, the film with the higher number of first-place votes is listed first, then by highest average score. Because our sample size is quite small, these “rankings” don’t actually mean much, but I thought it would give a good idea of what this particular group of festivalgoers enjoyed this year. I’m curious to see how many of these show up in our regular year-end CAST ballot and how they do.

FILM TITLE
POINTS
MENTIONS
AVERAGE
FIRSTS
1. 12 Years a Slave 65 9 7.22 3
2. The Strange Little Cat 63 7 9.0 3
3. Under the Skin 58 8 7.25 0
4. Gravity 49 6 8.17 2
5. Blue Ruin 49 9 5.44 1
6. Only Lovers Left Alive 45 7 6.43 0
7. Blue is the Warmest Colour 39 7 5.57 1
8. Manakamana 32 5 6.4 0
9. The Double 32 6 5.33 0
10. Oculus 31 4 7.75 1

Participants:

Here is a PDF with each person’s ballot and the full collated results, with a few more interesting stats included.

And for those still reading, here is my final TIFF CAST ballot. There are only 9 films because that’s all I was able to see this year:

My TIFF CAST Ballot

  1. Club Sandwich
  2. The Strange Little Cat
  3. The Square
  4. Under the Skin
  5. Young and Beautiful
  6. A Field in England
  7. Only Lovers Left Alive
  8. The Wonders
  9. Love is the Perfect Crime
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Under the Skin

Under the Skin
Editor’s Note: The poster image used here is not final or official (as evidenced by the incorrect release date on the bottom) but it’s better than the book cover I was going to use.

Under the Skin (Director: Jonathan Glazer): In Michel Faber’s 2000 novel Under the Skin, a mysterious woman drives around rural Scotland, picking up hitchhikers for mysterious reasons. Faber’s first-person prose leads us to believe her motive is purely one of sexual hunger, and when the very outré ulterior one is revealed (she’s an alien in human form, looking for flesh to harvest), we see how weirdly kindred the two processes are.

Jonathan Glazer’s long-gestating and boldly abstract adaptation of Faber’s novel stays faithful to only a few broad plot details – her mission also involves finding men, preferably loners, and luring back to her abode for initially unspecified reasons. But more crucially, it takes that quality of making the commonplace strange and amplifies it tenfold. Like the best genre narratives, Under the Skin works on an anti-naturalistic register, and uses uncanny, iconographic imagery to grapple with themes and emotional terrain that makes psychological realism seem ill-equipped for; chief among them being loneliness, displacement, and the mutability of desire.

The alien is here made nameless, and rather than the scarred, awkward thing of Faber’s novel, she’s played by Scarlett Johansson, fetchingly but also amusingly dressed in a fur coat and skintight jeans; an appropriately alien approximation of attractiveness. The film makes canny use of Johansson’s default setting for the most part – she’s a hypnotic blank – but there’s also a real sense of emerging, inchoate vulnerability under the facade, albeit one that never truly comes across as entirely human.

The film’s opening images are of dilating orbs, which have a Rorschach-blotch quality that portends the film to follow, and the emergence of light from darkness in this overture also intimates the alien’s journey from efficient predator to nascent humanity. The precise moment of that awakening isn’t made completely explicit. A scene in which she picks up and seduces a severely disfigured young man shows her to be oblivious and non-judgmental to his otherness (being alien has its virtues), though a glimpse of herself in a mirror, following his entrapment, seems to cast the burden of the body into sharp relief.

The influence of Stanley Kubrick is all over Under the Skin, but it goes beyond the superficial. Glazer’s previous film Birth (not to mention a number of his music videos) suggested a Kubrick heir-apparent, but occasionally in cringing fashion; particularly its shout-out to Barry Lyndon in a scene involving Danny Huston chasing and spanking Cameron Bright’s possessed child. Under the Skin gets Kubrick-like effects from less obvious means – the interplay of light reflected on faces, visors and windscreens as subjects glide through the Scottish motorways achieves the cosmic grandeur of 2001’s Stargate sequence, while Faber’s heavy-handed meat-processing allegory is condensed into an elegant montage that evokes both The Shining’s corridor-of-blood and Nikolas Geyrhalter’s Our Daily Bread.

But more significantly than just absorbing the influence, Glazer reveals himself, unlike his master, willing to open a window and let reality infringe upon his meticulous, visionary construction. The film’s most intriguing but problematic conceit involves Johansson, barely recognizable in a dark bob, followed by hidden cameras as she scours the streets for male prey in her van, her victims both unwitting participants in the film and integral to its diegesis. There’s a comic frisson to these interactions – she’s literally an alien placed in the real world – but Glazer rarely lets them play out as anything but a montage, and the strictly-functional deployment of documentary material feels a bit of a missed opportunity, particularly in the context of a film that looks askance at the functional.

Nonetheless, the tension between naturalism and surrealism (the seduction scenes, which seem to transpire in a realm beyond time and space, have the same suspension of the motion-capture episode from Holy Motors) gives the film a texture that’s alien indeed. Ironically, the film’s language becomes less experimental when Johansson’s extra-terrestrial begins to experiment herself, with mercy, empathy and human pleasure. If Glazer’s Sexy Beast and Birth were love stories built around acts of verbal persuasion, Under the Skin ultimately resonates as a wordless evocation of solitude, as well as an ode to nature – the mysticism of its ending feels appropriately tragic yet triumphant, and To the Wonder would be a perfect alternate title if Malick hadn’t already used it.

As pure cinema, Glazer’s film is nothing short of indelible – there are few images from it that haven’t left my head (in particular, two instances of superimposition are worthy of Murnau and Jean Epstein). That it’s also maddeningly opaque and imperfect somehow works in its favour, giving it the additional quality of being recognizably human.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGDnbcq0BkU
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Stray Dogs

Stray Dogs
Editor’s Note: With this post, we welcome new contributor Ian Barr, a recently-transplanted Australian. How about a welcoming comment, dear readers?

Stray Dogs (Director: Tsai Ming-Liang): ‘Kinetic’ isn’t the first word that most would ascribe to the films of Taiwanese filmmaker Tsai Ming-Liang, with their predominant aesthetic of static frames, long, long takes, and depictions of mechanically-performed routines and gestures, each distended past the threshold of naturalism and into a realm that’s closer to performance art. But such is the alchemy of this filmmaker that Stray Dogs, easily the most radically reduced distillation of his themes and formal approach to date, less narrative than temporal portrait, feels utterly charged with a sense of kinesis throughout.

The aforementioned alchemy, so elusive to pinpoint in earlier films, is also laid barer in Stray Dogs. Tsai’s tableaus, often captured in a single, static shot (with a few exceptions) tend to start in media res, the rhythm of the depicted process(es) well underway. The opening shot is an example; two children sleeping on a mattress on the floor of a decrepit, dimly-lit room, their mother sitting on its edge, slowly combing her hair. The metronomic snores of the children continue, but the rhythm of the hairbrush strokes tapers out, and the shot is held long enough that the tableau ceases to become representational, but rather an undulating magic-eye painting. Then a blinding cut to the base of a giant tree in daytime, in sharp contrast to the nocturnal urban interior. Much like the rest of the film, the juxtaposition between spaces of disparate ambience (roaring rainstorms, the hums and beeps of supermarkets, and often eerie, dead silence) is oddly bracing. For the faithful, the effect is kinetic indeed.

This is at once Tsai’s most straightforward film, but also his most mysterious – or rather, mysterious in its straightforwardness, especially coming after the self-reflexive house-of-mirrors that was 2009’s unfairly-dismissed Face. The sliver of story involves a broken, poverty-stricken family, in which the full scope of its brokenness gradually, glacially emerges. While Tsai’s human subjects in prior films were closer to spectral presences wandering through landscapes of urban decay, here his regular actor Lee Kang-Sheng is less ambiguously living in abject poverty, supporting himself and his children by holding advertising placards at a busy intersection.

The family’s estranged matriarch, meanwhile, haunts the surrounding environs as a more purely spectral entity. At one point, she explores an abandoned building at night with a flashlight, discovering a mural painted on a wall depicting an expanse of forest above a rocky lakeside. It appears roughly halfway into the film, and makes a reappearance in the film’s final scene, an agonised attempt at reconciliation between two ghosts, stretched seemingly as far as its actors can sustain their doleful, saturnine gazes (roughly 15 minutes). The mural is as enigmatic as that which decorated the swimming pool in Robert Altman’s 3 Women, and at first seems to suggest either a source of longing or nostalgia, but eventually, through sheer force of duration begins to represent nothing but marks on a surface.

Marks on a surface, life as the sum total of all banal, mechanically-performed routine, people reduced to their most baldly metabolic functions (pissing, eating, sleeping, crying, etc.)… if Tsai’s vision is so bleak, then why do I find his films and especially Stray Dogs so strangely life-affirming? Exiting the film, going from darkness into blinding outside light, I felt re-oriented and revitalized, with an uncanny sense of my own pace, obvious though that may sound. It’s not something that Tsai’s films haven’t offered before, though the sensation comes across stronger here. If this really is Tsai’s swansong, it’s as good a sign-out as one could expect; a frame emptied of transient bodies, with only an illuminated tableau left for us to project upon at will.


oehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fird2qXpjEA
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Shorts Celebrate Theatre Centenary

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Elgin and Winter Garden Theatre Centre, and as part of the anniversary celebration, the Ontario Heritage Trust has commissioned a series of short films that use the theatres as settings, both historical and present-day. The project is called Stage to Screen, and each of the six short films will be shown during this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. One of the shorts, Danis Goulet’s Wakening will open the festival, screening before the Opening Night feature, The Fifth Estate, at the Elgin. I had a chance to watch most of the films and thought I’d let you know what I thought. In addition to their TIFF screenings, all the films will be available to watch online soon at BravoFact.

The Archivist

The Archivist (Director: Jeremy Ball, 10 minutes)

Synopsis: A young assistant projectionist investigates a series of mysterious disappearances at the cinema where he works.

My take: Unfortunately, the film wasn’t ready to view at press time.

The Good Escape

The Good Escape (Director: Nadia Litz, 6 minutes)

Synopsis: Set in a time when the movie house was a place of escape and dreams, a criminal takes a break in a theatre audience.

My take: A little hard to figure out what’s going on, unless you know that in 1934, infamous bank robber John Dillinger was shot and killed by federal agents as he exited the Biograph Theater in Chicago. The original seat in which Dillinger sat is now at the Elgin Winter Garden. This film was the shortest of the six and could have used another few minutes to establish the characters a little more fully.

Silent Garden

Silent Garden (Director: Dylan Reibling, 10 minutes)

Synopsis: A silent film set against the backdrop of popular entertainment’s tumultuous transition from live vaudeville performances to silent film projections.

My take: Despite a plot device lifted directly from the Woody Allen film Purple Rose of Cairo, this one works really well, using black and white cinematography and a virtually silent soundscape to recreate a bygone era. It also uses the Elgin Winter Garden the most effectively as a character and not just a location. Despite a few anachronisms (the bars across the emergency exit doors are particularly glaring), Silent Garden mostly succeeds in immersing us in the era when projected images gained the upper hand on stage performers.

Tiny Dancer

Tiny Dancer (Director: Doug Karr, minutes)

Synopsis: The young daughter of a tiny family that lives in the Winter Garden Theatre longs to dance on the big stage.

My take: Another one that wasn’t ready to see before publication time.

Wakening

Wakening (Director: Danis Goulet, 9 minutes)

Synopsis: An ancient aboriginal myth told as a post-apocalyptic story, set in the Winter Garden Theatre.

My take: Although this didn’t use the theatre setting in quite the standard way, I think it’s a very strong story. Melding aboriginal folklore with a post-apocalyptic setting is original, though now I’m finding the story missing some pieces. An aboriginal hunter arrives in the theatre and encounters the Witigo/Wendigo, a monster who feeds on human flesh. The filmmaker’s notes say the hunter has come in search of the creature who can save her people, but the film never makes that clear enough, nor how exactly this beast could be controlled. Nevertheless, Wakening displays a bold voice, and perhaps a feature could fill this story out in a more satisfying way.

Winter Garden

Winter Garden (Director: Alex Epstein, 9 minutes)

Synopsis: A wildly successful playwright desperately tries to renegotiate a deal he made for his success.

My take: This spin on the Faust tale is pretty lightweight. In fact the Devil/Muse figure only appears at the very end, and we never really understand the terms of the bargain. As well, the jaunty musical score makes this much less dark than it might (and in my opinion, should) have been.

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Jobs

Jobs

Jobs (Director: Joshua Michael Stern): Steve Jobs is the title Walter Isaacson gave to his authorized biography of the former Apple CEO. It is thorough, honest and insightful. By contrast, Joshua Michael Stern’s biopic is suitably titled Jobs. It provides a pedestrian summary of Isaacson’s book, brings nothing new to the table and ignores the most interesting and final phase of Steve Jobs’ career.

Rather than fast-forwarding through Jobs’ life, it might have been interesting to slow down and examine a few of the things that made him “insanely great.” The film glosses over Jobs’ relationship with his estranged daughter, his complicated friendship with Bill Gates, his marriage, the years at Next, Pixar and more.

The film covers a 30 year period beginning in 1971 with a barefoot, hippie Jobs, a Reed College dropout who experiments with drugs. It ends with guru Jobs in a black turtleneck and captures the excitement around the 2001 launch of the iPod music player.

Apple fanboys will enjoy how the film gives us a glimpse of what it was like to be in Silicon Valley at a Homebrew Computer Club meeting, the West Coast Computer Faire, or the famous garage where Apple began. Despite all of my misgivings, Jobs is an entertaining look back at the personal computer revolution.

Ashton Kutcher does a credible job of portraying Steve Jobs in the way he talks and gestures. He also mimics Jobs’ unique hunched over walk but in some scenes it is too forced and he ends up looking like a bouncing muppet. It’s difficult to accept Kutcher in a serious role but to his credit he pulls it off.

There is a great supporting cast with Dermot Mulroney, Matthew Modine, Lukas Haas, J.K. Simmons and Josh Gad but most of these actors are sidelined by Kutcher who dominates the film. Josh Gad kind of looks like Steve Wozniak and provides one of the best scenes in the movie when he tearfully leaves Apple. Unfortunately this part of Apple history was fabricated by screenwriter Matt Whiteley along with a few other events in the film.

Whitely’s script tends to put Jobs in a favourable light most of the time and glosses over anything that makes him look weak. We never see the Jobs that Isaacson describes as running out of meetings, crying in defeat. There are so many incredible stories about Jobs that could have been leveraged to provide a different take on his story or some new insight into what made him great.

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