VIFF ends, and movies move out into the world

Credit to Author: Dana Gee| Date: Wed, 09 Oct 2019 18:02:22 +0000

The curtain closes on another Vancouver International Film Festival on Oct. 11.

For the past two-plus weeks, more than 330 films — feature-length and shorts — from 70 countries around the globe have hit Vancouver screens. During that time, film fans filled their tanks with foreign fare, fascinating documentaries and even some Hollywood-award-season bait.

But even the most diligent of moviegoers knows they may have missed one or two — or 20 — films on their must-see list.

The good news, though, is that, now, thanks to good, old-fashioned movie theatres, specialty TV channels and streaming services, these films can live on long after the festival has wrapped up. So, instead of beating yourself up over what you missed, why not start a whole new list of films to keep a keen eye out for?

With that in mind here are six VIFF films that arts-writers Dana Gee and Stuart Derdeyn still want to see — and think you should keep a watch out for too:

Pain and Glory

Spanish actor Antonio Banderas, complete with shaggy salt-and-pepper hair, has once again brought to life director Pedro Almodóvar’s cinematic alter ego. In this new film, Banderas plays a gay film director who is trying to get his mojo back. Depressed and reflective, the filmmaker struggles to understand and survive past choices while also trying to navigate the world that is crashing in around him. Think aging man in a creative slump. Think Federico Fellini’s 8½. For his work, Banderas has been applauded loudly, including the best-actor prize at Cannes this year. Almodóvar’s other favourite film regular, Penélope Cruz, also shows up in this one.

Film critic Pauline Kael was loved and hated by many during her career. But one thing for certain, she was never ignored. Kael’s work and her legacy are showcased in the Rob Garver documentary What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael. Photo: Courtesy of VIFF Courtesy of VIFF / PNG

What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael

Legendary film critic and New Yorker (among others) writer the late Pauline Kael was a love-her-or-hate-her-but-never-ignore-her kind of writer. This Rob Garver documentary makes use of tons of archival footage and interviews with many filmmakers who were actually affected by Kael’s take-no-prisoners film reviews. As someone who loves films and who has to talk about film all the time, this look at the person many people considered the greatest film critic seems like a savoury side dish to the movies we’ve all dined on over the years.

Anthony Hopkins, left, and Jonathan Pryce play a pope and a pope to be in this new film fittingly called The Two Popes. The film is directed by Fernando Meirelles. Photo: Courtesy of VIFF Courtesy of VIFF / PNG

The Two Popes

Hidden away in the Vatican, the very Big C-conservative Pope Benedict (Anthony Hopkins) and liberal Pope Francis-to-be Jorge Mario Bergoglio (Jonathan Pryce) put their heads and hats together to try to find a common ground that will help them and a billion other people move forward on a new path for the Catholic Church. While this monolith still holds a lot of sway, it seems interesting to see how that sway is massaged and packaged for the parishioners. Also Hopkins and Price going head-to-head is an acting title bout for sure. The film is directed by Fernando Meirelles, the guy behind the remarkable 2002 movie City of God.

 

 

Assholes: A Theory, a documentary by John Walker inspired by the New York Times-bestselling book by Aaron James. PNG

Assholes: A Theory

Taking its inspiration from University of California philosophy Prof Aaron James’s New York Times bestseller of the same name, Canadian documentary filmmaker John Walker digs into the burgeoning global rise of the a–hole in daily doings, business, arts and culture and — obviously — politics. From the privileged toxic Ivy League frat clubs to the gated communities of Silicon Valley giants such as Google and Facebook, Walker tries to understand why and when it became OK to be someone who really isn’t concerned with what anyone else thinks. The ramifications of rampant a–holedom are easy to see everywhere, everyday, and interviews with everyone from John Cleese to RCMP whistleblower Sherry Lee Benson-Podolchuk will doubtless expand our understanding of the contemporary reality. As a former editor of The Economist so succinctly puts it in the trailer: “When you elect an a–hole to run your country, what you get is someone who frames everything around their own needs.” Could be required viewing.

Vai is a portmanteau feature film made by nine female Pacific filmmakers, filmed in seven different Pacific countries: Fiji, Tonga, the Solomon Islands, Kuki Airani (Cook Islands), Samoa, Niue and Aotearoa (New Zealand). PNG

Vai

Nine female Pacific filmmakers filmed in seven different countries — Fiji, Tonga, Solomon Islands, Kuki Airani (Cook Islands), Samoa, Niue and Aotearoa (New Zealand) — to craft this omnibus tale of eight separate moments in the life of one woman named Vai. In each of the nations involved, Vai is the word for water, and the title characters’ journey of empowerment through culture flows together across each vignette. Said to be something like watching a memory-highlight reel from a single lifetime, Vai has been a hit at film festivals all over the Pacific and will most likely make a splash wherever it goes. Bringing in so many women’s voices across such a vast expanse of ocean to tell a story is all pretty amazing.

Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom. Film from Bhutan by director Pawo Choyning Dorji. PNG

Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom

“Shot on location at the world’s most remote school,” director Pawo Choying Dorji’s story is set in the mountain highlands of Bhutan. That alone makes this film of interest as the nation with the Gross National Happiness index doesn’t crank out that many movies that get global distribution. Follow a teacher named Ugyen, who would rather be singing in Australia than finishing out his government teaching service in a remote village located at 5,000 metres, where yaks outnumber humans. Along the way, this educated urbanite apparently learns about life and his culture. Although the story is hardly one that hasn’t been written many times before, the landscapes are breathtaking, and who doesn’t like a look at somewhere most will probably never venture?

 

dgee@postmedia.com

sderdeyn@postmedia.com

twitter.com/stuartderdeyn

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