 

  
<rss version="2.0">
    <channel>
        <title><![CDATA[Omnivision]]></title>
        <link><![CDATA[http://www.metronews.ca/blog/107081]]></link>
        <language>en-us</language>         

        
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[Not A Heritage Moment, or Why I Hate Canadian Cinema]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[As I write this, I'm in the middle of my third day at the film fest, though compared to previous years - this is my 25th festival, by the way, a milestone to be dealt with in an upcoming Metro feature - it feels equally as tense but nowhere near as hectic. Reasons to follow in a later post ... Up until Thursday, the rest of the Metro writers and I were mostly occupied with screenings - the dozens and dozens of preview screenings set up for local journalists to get a head start on their festival duties, and incidentally to clear them out of the regular festival screenings as much as possible when the hordes of out-of-town journalists finally arrive. Very few of the really anticipated films were screening in the run-up to the fest, leaving mornings and afternoons crammed with screenings of arty foreign and independent films whose reels had already arrived in town, thanks either to eager, businesslike producers or local press reps. And a lot of Canadian films. It's been a few years now since the festival tore down the wall that kept local product in the ghetto known as Perspectives Canada - a program title that evoked a grade school textbook loaded with Susanna Moodie excerpts and Bliss Carman poems, and which conveniently allowed festival-goers to ignore a whole section of the program book when planning their screening schedule. By mixing Canadian films in with the other stuff, they were likely presuming that filmgoers would make their choices according to the program synopses - if you have a taste for gritty, low-budget dramas about dysfunctional rural families, failing farms and incest, why should you care whether it's set in Yorkshire, Moldova or Nova Scotia? That, I can only presume, was the thinking. At this point, I certainly can't give much credence to the notion that it was because Canadian film had, finally, matured into something truly worthwhile. It's a dirty secret that Canadian film critics swallow hard and set their face in a stoic grimace when called upon to review local product. Obviously I have no scientific basis for this; there's no poll or movement or manifesto articulating it, but based on years of experience, observation and anecdotal evidence, it's an almost inescapable conclusion. Just as unhappy is the fact that, weary of sounding negative and (occasionally) unwilling to piss too close to where we eat, many critics are sparing when it comes time to write their reviews, with the result that the industry - in the absence of anything like healthy box office returns for their work - might be deluding itself that it's aesthetically healthier than it really is, and that a mass artistic breakthrough is just around the corner. The late John Harkness of NOW magazine was one of the few truly outspoken voices on this subject, and his passing late last year deprived us of the one voice that might be relied upon to apportion scorn where it was truly deserving - a fact that I think might have been cause for unspoken relief in some quarters of our cultural industries. I found myself missing John, for not the first time, as I left screenings of films like Passchendaele and Control Alt Delete on the eve of the festival, two products of the Canadian film business, from very different extremes of the budgetary scale, on offer at this year's fest. John would probably have given the latter a miss - though he would have gleefully thrown in a shot in some other context - but he would have taken on the former with undisguised glee. As it turns out, if you read between the lines of the vast majority of reviews of Canadian films at TIFF this year, you can discern a pale, or even occasionally bruise-blue shadow of the impatience and disappointment that I was hearing much more openly in the last couple of weeks, and in the last year or two. My peers in the critic business here have found it harder and harder to be discrete with their unhappiness with what passes for our national cinema, at least with each other, and especially with what they regard as their grim duty to trudge into yet another screening and produce one more in a long line of lukewarm appraisals of films that can't seem to deliver, even when they've set their artistic sights so low. Quizzed on this dilemma, the critics I've spoken to sound resigned, mostly, and almost inevitably make sure they make an exception for Quebecois cinema, which exists in another world - its own small but vital solitude - and which we get brief glimpses of at the festival every year. Produced for a small but eager audience in the province and, occasionally, in France, Quebecois films succeed where English-Canadian films so often fail, both commercially and artistically. I remember sitting through Jean-Marc Vallee's C.R.A.Z.Y. three years ago, smarting at its ambition and audacity, knowing that I'd never seen anything like it from English Canada, and probably never would. Almost inevitably, Canadian critics will shrug and mutter about &quot;cultural insecurity&quot; and regionalism among a host of potential reasons for our failures, and ritualistically talk about Hollywood as either some malign influence that either makes even our best efforts seem half-formed or as a yardstick that we shouldn't even try to measure ourself against, preferring to suggest Britain or Europe as better models for our local industry. When they name their own favorite films, however, they'll inevitably mention American films, both big-budget and independent; this is how it should be - they're our closest neighbour, our virtual linguistic twin, and a cultural doppelganger even if they usually act as if they barely know we're here. Finally, they'll shrug and talk about the cultural bureaucracy that funds film in this country - the arts councils and provincial and federal funding entities that seem to make their decisions on what will get made based on filmmakers' resumes - ensuring that the same people who've made the same dismal pictures will keep producing - or vague criterion full of words like inclusion, alienation, hegemony, diversity and marginal , none of which have ever been known to galvanize weekend ticket-buyers or, based on the evidence so far, encourage a nation to overcome its wise and longstanding aversion. That, they say, will have to change, but no one has any idea how that's going to happen. Few imagine that any kind of radical restructuring - the abolition of the bureaucracy or that dread phrase &quot;private funding&quot; - is either possible or even desirable. And so we critics, in our small way, ensure that the system will perpetuate itself, and that we'll be the authors of our own critical misery when their products are trotted in front of an either resentful or indifferent audience, almost as an afterthought. &nbsp;]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/108529</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[Toronto International Film Festival, Canada, Toronto, Canadian film, Canadian cinema]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Sep 2008 22:15:05 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/108529</guid>
                   </item>
             
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[Meaner is better]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[I'm watching Hell's Kitchen UK right now - Fox's replacement for the Gordon Ramsay Hell's Kitchen , which ended last week with an entirely unconvincing win by Christina. The British show has a celebrity spin - instead of aspiring chefs, the contestants are celebrities - boxers, models, TV presenters and the like. The only names I recognize are Kelly LeBrock (anyone remember The Lady In Red ?) and singer Paul Young (I'll never forgive him for his cover of Joy Division's Love Will Tear Us Apart .) The chef in charge isn't Ramsay but his mentor, Marco Pierre White, a man whose reputation as an authoritarian and bully actually exceeds Ramsay's. White retired at the top of his game years ago, after realizing that his third Michelin star signalled how little fun he was getting from cooking, and retired to a montage of fishing and shooting - killing stuff, basically. He's a broody, unhappy looking man, redolent of curdled testosterone. He's described by Piers Morgan of Celebrity Apprentice fame as &quot;the only man, to my knowledge, who's ever made Gordon Ramsay cry.&quot; &quot;I didn't make Gordon Ramsay cry,&quot; White rumbles. &quot;He made himself cry.&quot; That's a line I've got to use, with almost limited variations. &quot;I didn't punch him in the face. He made me punch him in the face.&quot; &quot;I didn't crash that car. The car made me crash the car.&quot; &quot;I didn't make that owl extinct. The owl made me make it extinct.&quot; Gold. Pure gold.]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137152</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[ Television,]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2008 17:19:00 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137152</guid>
                   </item>
             
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[Why I'm Here - The Dark Knight round tables]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[I arrive at my round table room fifteen minutes early to find that every seat at the table has already been taken, and that a second row of chairs have been dragged into the hotel suite, for a second tier of interviewers now hugging the walls. I haul another chair into the room and find a position off to the side, then settle into to listen to my fellow junketeers - faces I recognize from previous months of this sort of thing - gossip and complain. At one point, one of Warner's press girls comes in and summons the woman sitting directly to the right of where our subject will be sitting to come with her and move to another room. As soon as she leaves the rest of the room explodes in relief - it seems that she's foreign press, not domestic, and notably unloved by the other junket veterans, who tell each other how much they were dreading her apparently aggressive questioning style and preoccupation with the more gossipy, personal questions that the European press lives on. One of the veterans - a white-haired older gentleman I see at most of these things - admits that he was the one who alerted the Warner press girls to her presence in the room and got her moved, for which he receives a round of congratulation. The junket press is an organism, timidly but functionally self-policing, which deals with threats and irregularities like an immune system, isolating infection in the interests of self-preservation. Or at least that's how I see it. I wonder how long I'll be able to cultivate - at least for myself - a provisional outsider status on the junket circuit. I'm probably already fooling myself. The afternoon goes smoothly, after the almost ritual 15-minute delay in starting. We get Dark Knight 's producers first, then director Christopher Nolan, then the stars. Gary Oldman is funny, adopting a perhaps-calculated blokey persona peculiar to some English actors to a subtly distancing effect, and uses his familiarity with some of the veterans to buy himself some happily-proferred goodwill, just a little gesture of recognition flattering them into docile interrogators - not that an L.A. press junket is HUAC, exactly. Christian Bale is intense, his eyes hooded and almost expressionless, and he's clearly thought his way through his interpretation of his characters with a thoroughness that would do a critic proud. He's a real oddity in Hollywood today - someone known entirely for his work, with a personal life about which not a single detail comes readily to mind. I've gotten used to discovering, with few exceptions, that too many female actresses are much prettier onscreen than in real life. The pounds - 10-20 depending on which truism is being invoked - that the camera really does add (it looks more like 30 to me, going by my handful of TV appearances) suggest flattering curves on actresses who look dangerously underweight in real life. I recall being surprised at how attractive Diane Lane was in person during a junket for Untraceable last year - she's done her level best to look haggard in several recent roles - and I have the same reaction to Maggie Gyllenhaal, who has the sole female role of any real size in Dark Knight . Onscreen, Gyllenhaal is often cast as the oddball - the eccentric girl, the smart and randy weird chick in a larger group of women (see Mona Lisa Smile .) At the junket, her appeal is as much personality as looks - she comes off as amused, engaged and confident, and the assembled press fall into the approved rapt attitude. She ends her stint in our room - her handlers practically tugging at her shirt - telling us that the Hollywood indie film is dead, and that there is no way she could make the films that made her name just a few years in today's harsh entertainment economy. An interesting statement to make at an event for a movie whose budget - never mind potential earnings - could probably fund a whole city's elementary school budget for a year. Almost everyone makes a point of talking about the late Heath Ledger, whose absence is noted continually all afternoon, in nothing but the most glowing of language; many even conspicuously use the present tense when referring to him. All of them make a point of insisting that he didn't seem in any say depressed or emotionally fragile while making the film - there are rumours that Ledger's portrayal of the Joker absorbed him to an unhealthy degree. His death, they all insinuate, was misadventure - an accident, not a suicide. This is clearly a message we're supposed to take away from this afternoon.]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137151</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[ Film,]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Mon, 30 Jun 2008 21:49:00 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137151</guid>
                   </item>
             
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[Why I'm Here: Dark Knight]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[Back in the '50s, and then again in the '70s, when the movie industry was suffering at the hands of television or simply in a creative doldrums, there was an explosion of new formats and gimmicks - VistaVision and CinemaScope, Technirama and Cinerama, 3-D and Sensurround. For some reason - which might be obvious - we're seeing that again, with the sudden viability of IMAX theatres and the return of 3-D. I couldn't help but think of this as I sat down in the The Bridge IMAX Theatre at the Howard Hughes Center to watch a screening of The Dark Knight. At first, it looked like Chrisopher Nolan's sequel to Batman Begins was simply going to be a bigged-up print splashed across the centre of the IMAX screen, but then suddenly the frame expanded to fill the whole expanse in front of us, with an establishing shot that felt positively vertiginous. The film would do that again and again, returning to regular widescreen then blowing up again, with a noticeable change in image quality; anyone with a fear of heights should be given fair warning about one particular shot, with Christian Bale in Batman drag standing on the top of the Sears Tower while the camera swings around him, then settles next to him on the ledge. I actually felt a bit queasy myself. In a summer full of box office monsters, Dark Knight is potentially one of the biggest of them all, and I see no reason to see why it won't. I also see no reason why it was given a PG-13 rating, considering that it's probably one of the darkest films anyone will see all summer - a 2 hour and 32 minute downer delivered at maximum volume and velocity. It's also goin to get the late Heath Ledger an Oscar nomination, in all likelihood; a lot of pretty astounding things happen onscreen, but his performance is probably the most memorable thing overall. Nolan has managed to do what Ang Lee failed to do with The Hulk - depart from the essential silliness of the comic book film, but mostly by banishing anything resembling levity or satire; it's no surprise that the painted-on smile on Ledger's Joker is the closest thing to humour in all of its 152 minutes.]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137150</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[ Film,]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Sun, 29 Jun 2008 18:47:00 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137150</guid>
                   </item>
             
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[Back to L.A. - the Dark Knight junket]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[There was a crowd staring through the windows of an opticians' shop on North Beverly Drive yesterday, on my walk back to the hotel from the Paley Media Center. Some of the crowd had cameras - big cameras, with flashes - so I had to assume there was a celebrity sighting in progress, but I didn't stick around to find out more. The crowd was small, and I assume this sort of thing isn't uncommon around here anyway. I'm in L.A. - again - for the Dark Knight junket, two nights at the Beverly Wilshire hotel and an afternoon of round table interviews with the stars. In the meantime, I'm here with a front row seat on Rodeo Drive, the white hot epicentre of conspicuous consumption on this side of the continent. In the meantime, I'm holing up in my hotel room with a copy of the Mad Men box set, hiding from the California sun with stories of early '60s ad executives in the skyscraper canyons of Manhattan at the dawn of the Kennedy administration. The Paley Media Center was my only extracurricular destination on this trip - no lightning shopping excursions this time. There are two Paley Centers - one in New York, one here, whose lobby most people might be familiar with from a Curb Your Enthusiasm episode where Larry gets into a feud with Ted Danson about his anonymous donation of a museum wing. I shared a plane here with Norm Wilner , Metro's former movie reviewer, and we split a cab to the hotel and discovered we had hours to wait for our rooms, so after lunch in the hospitality suite, my trip to the Paley got bumped to the top of my schedule. The Paley is a different sort of museum - its collection is mostly TV shows, stored in a library somewhere in the building accessible in a room of little TVs with headphones. You could probably lose yourself in this sort of thing - I know I could - but something tells me that the basic idea could be moved online at considerable savings in real estate and maintenance. I don't think Norm wanted to hang around and share some vintage William F. Buckley with me, so he heads off to find the LaBrea Tar Pits while I start the Firing Line 20th anniversary special from 1991. A copy of Buckley's last book was a Father's Day present from my wife, so I'm on a bit of a Buckley jag these days - three months late, with my usual perfect timing. If you go by what you read, Buckley's show was a political bull-baiting ring, and I have only the vaguest memory of ever seeing anything but glimpses of it during its long run. I think that reputation is probably due to Buckley's own reputation, which is based - for most people with the merest cursory knowledge of who he was - on a famous clip of him and Gore Vidal coming close to blows during their televised debates during the 1968 Democratic Convention. The truth is far from the image. At least from the shows I watched at the Paley, the pacing of Firing Line wouldn't last on cable news today - it's slow, even leisurely, the pace set by Buckley himself, who checks his notes frequently, pauses to find the right word, and lets his guests hold forth for far longer than any news chat show would tolerate today - in one of my favorite clips, he smiles brightly as Alan Ginsberg picks up his little harmonium and chants a sutra. Never mind how literate and substantial the show sounds now compared to, say, The Capitol Gang or The Daily Show , to name some very disparate examples - Buckley's cordiality is wildly at odds with his reputation for arrogance and high-handedness, especially when faced with less than politically sympathetic guests. It seems like an anomaly, unless you remember that his peers - interviewers such as Dick Cavett or David Susskind - employed the same sort of patient, convivial tone. No matter what you might feel about Buckley, you actually feel smarter when you watch the show, or at least feel a compulsion to rise to its level. More proof, if it were needed, that we are probably well down the steepening slope into grunting political inarticulacy.]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137149</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Sun, 29 Jun 2008 12:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137149</guid>
                   </item>
             
                  <item>
                      <title><![CDATA[So you think I wish I was deaf?]]></title>
                      <description><![CDATA[Alright then - one more So You Think You Can Dance post. Can't help it - this and Hell's Kitchen are my shows of the summer, and if I can't devote as much space to either show as I'd like in my column, I might as well bore you to death with it here. My beef of the night: I must really love this show, because most of the music is effing dreadful. I mean punch-to-the-temple, chopstick-in-the-ear dreadful. Tonight the lowlights on the elimination show were tunes by Ani DiFranco and Jason Mraz, chosen as the soundtrack to the routines the bottom six dancers danced to convince the judges not to eliminate them. The song choice alone would deserve a ticket home if I were Nigel Lythgoe. I'm just sort of a jerk that way. Why does no one choose Dylan, or the Gang of Four, or Black Flag, or Tim Buckley if they feel an overwhelming need to seem sensitive or somesuch? Why is whiny, amelodic, rhythmic twaddle pop to the top of the queue when dancers choose tunes? It isn't a rhetorical question.]]></description>
                      
                      <link>http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137148</link>
                      <author><![CDATA[]]></author>
                      <category><![CDATA[/Blog]]></category>
                      <keywords><![CDATA[ Television,]]></keywords>
                      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Jun 2008 18:58:00 -0400</pubDate>
                      <author>Rick McGinnis</author>
                      <guid isPermaLink="true">http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/blog/post/137148</guid>
                   </item>
             
    </channel>
</rss>

