21st Vancouver International Film Festival - Festival Wraps

TAKE ONE, Dec, 2002 by Dale Drewery

Come on, admit it! You know the feeling. The one you get when you're sitting in a darkened theatre watching a movie and wondering whether you're the only one who completely perplexed. Your eyes dart furtively from side to side looking for any indication that someone else thinks the film is as tedious as you do. But on this particular day, my fellow filmgoers are no help at all. The man to my left is busy eating his lunch, and the one to the right is asleep. Welcome to a media screening at the 21st annual Vancouver International Film Festival.

The movie in question is Shanghai Panic, a contender for the Dragons & Tigers Award for Young Cinema. The Award carries a prize of $5,000, and it's presented to a new director from Pacific Asia for the most creative and innovative first or second feature-length film. I had already-seen quite a few of this year's contenders and, having loathed many of them, I am desperate to like Shanghai Panic. And it is truly amazing the excuses one can dream up in The interests of being open-minded, verging on politically correct: the subtitle translations are probably poor; I clearly don't understand the culture; and, am I getting too old to watch films about young people? Director/cinematographer Andrew Cheng follows a group of confused kid through the dance clubs, night streets and anonymous apartments of Shanghai tackling some tough subjects along the way, including HIV/AIDS, sexual identity and suicide. The film, however, never seems to rise above it's indulgences, and I can't seem to develop a shred of interest in the characters. I leave early, stumbling over my comrade's lunch bag on the way.

Besides, I am already a few minutes late for Punch, which is in the running for the Citytv Western Canada Screenwriters Award. Established this year, it carries the not-too-shabby prize of $12,000 awarded to the top screenwriter of a film from Western Canada, which, apparently, includes Manitoba. Splitting the country down it's geographic middle is bound to enrage Newfoundlanders, since they must now officially include Ontario in "the East"! Punch is a first feature for Vancouver writer-director Guy Bennett and it explores the unusual relationship between a single dad and his troubled 18-year-old daughter. What feels stilted off the top reveals itself as a profound discomfort they feel with each other and, more importantly, themselves. Despite the description, Punch is quite a funny film, and it has been picked up for distribution by ThinkFilm.

Flower & Garnet is writer/director Keith Behrman's debut feature, and it's a standout. The disturbing tale centres around a strange child, a father who refuses to participate in his boy's life, and the daughter, played terrifically by Jane McGregor, who keeps them together. Callum Keith Rennie is excellent as the dysfunctional dad, and the script has barely a false moment. A shoe--in for the Citytv Screenwriters Award.

Figuring out who is going to win before the judges make their announcement is enormously satisfying. It's an opportunity to prove how good your instincts are. So, when I finally see Too Young to Die, I proudly recognize this year's Dragons & Tigers Award winner. It's a charming and humorous docudrama by South Korean director Park Jin-Pyo that makes you confront your ignorance about the elderly. Seventy-three-year-old Park Chi-Gyu and his 72-year-old partner Lee Sun-Ye have a sex life that puts any swinging single to shame, and we, the audience, are privy to every uninhibited moment. The remarkable thing is that, after a while, you stop feeling uncomfortable, and start to hope that, when you reach their age, you are as fortunate as they are.

Although I'd already pegged the winner for the Citytv Award, I wanted to see Vancouver's perennial sweetheart Mina Shum's latest, Long Life, Happiness and Prosperity. Co-written with screenwriter Dennis Foon, it's a gentle movie that follows a young girl, played by Valerie Tian, as she tries to bring happiness back into the life of her harried, single mother, played by Sandra Oh. As usual Shum finds her inspiration in Vancouver's Chinese--Canadian community, and the film is peopled with her cast of eccentric and charming characters. It turns out Shum will win a Special Citation for Long and I'm truly hoping that festivals everywhere put a stop to this strange practice. It seems to me that you either win an award or you don't, and that a tip of the hat to a favourite son or daughter is embarrassing. This, however, is fodder for a whole other story.

The Vancouver festival ended on October 11th with all the usual hoopla. At the closing--night gala screening organizers announced that attendance had climbed past the 150,000 mark, up 10 per cent from the previous year. Not bad considering that the weather was beautiful and, when the sun shines, Vancouverites, determined to get out in it, are notorious for putting off things like watching films and even writing about them. The Air Canada Award for most popular film went to Michael Moore's Bowling for Columbine, and Vancouver documentary maker Nettie Wild was honoured for her film FIX: The story of an Addicted City. Wild shared the Federal Express Award for most popular Canadian film with Ontario director Deborah Day, who won for Expecting.

 

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