Friday, 7 October 2016

OUR LITTLE SISTER – DECEMBER 3RD




Dec. 3: Our Little Sister
Hirokazu Kore-eda
JAPAN, 2015
Japanese with English subtitles 128 minutes
Principal Cast: Haruka Ayase, Masami Nagasawa, Kaho, Suzu Hirose

After their estranged father’s death, three twentysomething sisters discover that they have a teenaged step-sibling, in this gentle, deeply affecting family drama from Japanese master Hirokazu Kore-eda (Like Father, Like Son).

The three Koda sisters have been on their own ever since their parents’ divorce, their mother having moved away shortly after her husband left her for another woman. Now in their twenties, the sisters still live together in the house that once belonged to their grand- mother. The eldest sister, Sachi (Haruka Ayase), the de facto head of the family, works as a nurse; the middle child, Yoshino (Masami Nagasawa, From Up on Poppy Hill), has a suc- cessful career at a bank; while the youngest, Chika (Kaho), is a fashionable, fun-loving free spirit. When they receive news of their father’s death, the sisters are surprised to discover that they have a step-sibling, the 13-year-old Suzu (Suzu Hirose), who grate- fully accepts her elder sisters’ offer to come live with them. The presence of the shy young Suzu, for whom the loss of her father is still a fresh wound, stirs long-dormant memories among the three sisters, who had thought of their father (if they thought of him at all) as a phantom. And the painful past becomes fully present once more when the women’s mother suddenly reappears after 15 years.

Our Little Sister is a subtle meditation on loss, absence, and the acceptance of death. Carrying on a great tradition of Japanese filmmaking, Kore-eda once again transforms everyday life into a deceptively simple yet truly majestic masterpiece.

The film is quiet, understated and gentle, allowing the audience to take pleasure in teasing out its narrative subtleties, and presented with wonderful freshness and clarity... It is impossible not to be touched and beguiled by it.   —Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian


THE TRAILER:


LO AND BEHOLD – NOVEMBER 26TH







































Nov. 26: Lo And Behold: Reveries Of The Connected World
Werner Herzog
USA, 2016
English 98 minutes
With: Werner Herzog, Elon Musk, Leonard Kleinrock

In his unmistakable, Bavarian-accented dead- pan voiceover, the great Werner Herzog (Cave of Forgotten Dreams, Grizzly Man) guides us through this eccentric, entertaining and enlightening meditation on our intercon- nected digital world.

Since its humble inception in 1969 — where it began as a short message shared between two computers — the internet has become, as Herzog describes it, “one of our biggest revolutions.” Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World investigates the history of the internet’s integration into every aspect of our lives and how it became an essential part of our public infrastruc- ture. Through interviews with researchers, scientists and entrepreneurs at the cutting edge of digital technologies — and taking time for his trademark, often wonderfully comic digressions — Herzog considers the new possibilities in health care, robot- ics and transportation opened up by the internet, and speculates on how humanity and the world will be impacted by these developments.

These promises of a bright future are tem- pered by the darker realities presented in the film, from self-imposed internet exiles living off the grid in West Virginia as they recover from “internet overdose” to the victims of online harassment. Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World ultimately strikes an ambivalent tone, and refrains from any final judgments on the assimilation of the digital sphere into our daily lives, instead leaving the viewer to consider the implications on their own lives and hopes for the future.

These discrete “reveries of the connected world” represent the latest of Herzog’s heady explorations of what it means to be human (and even post-human), rendered in his characteristically personal, decidedly analog style.   —Justin Chang, Variety


THE TRAILER:


ANGRY INDIAN GODDESSES – NOVEMBER 19TH



November 19: Angry Indian Goddesses
Pan Nalin
INDIA, 2016
English, Hindi 104 minutes
Principal Cast: Amrit Maghera, Rajshri Deshpande, Pavleen Gujral, Anushka Manchanda, Sandhya Mridul, Sarah Jane Dias, Tannishtha Chatterjee

On the eve of their friend’s wedding in Goa, a group of women discuss everything under the sun in this largely improvised and refreshingly frank depiction of contemporary Indian soci- ety from award-winning director Pan Nalin (Samsara), which has been billed as “India’s first female buddy comedy.”

In the scenic beachside state of Goa, Frieda (Sarah Jane Dias), a strong-willed and success- ful photographer, gathers her closest friends on the eve of her nuptials. The diverse group offers a snapshot of modern Indian society: Su (Sandhya Mridul), a businesswoman and mother; the engaging Nargis (Tannishtha Chatterjee, Siddharth, Anna Karenina); Jo (Amrit Maghera), an aspiring film actress; Pammy (Pavleen Gujral), a housewife; Mad (Anushka Manchanda), a singer-songwriter; and house servant, Lakshmi (Rajshri Deshpande). Everything’s set for a night of celebration. There’s only one issue: Frieda won’t say who her betrothed is. As the women banter their way through the evening, covering topics ranging from sex to street harassment to the buff (and often shirtless) next-door neighbour, we become acquainted with the women’s dreams, desires, fears and, above all, the unbreakable bond between them — a bond that will eventually lead them to take some extreme actions.

Developing the film’s dialogue almost entirely out of improvisations with his actors, director Nalin allows her narrative to take surprising turns that upend genre expectations and explore the pressing issues of gender and sexism in contemporary Indian society. Shuttling from the jubilantly comic to scenes of touching pathos, Angry Indian Goddesses is a refreshing and frank depiction of female empowerment from a key figure in independent South Asian cinema.

The cast are a talented and spirited bunch, enjoying the opportunity to let loose with grievances while revelling in the togetherness of female-centric safety. —Jay Weissberg, Variety


THE TRAILER:


DARK HORSE – NOVEMBER 5TH




Nov. 15: Dark Horse
Louise Osmond
UNITED KINGDOM, 2015
English 85 minutes
With: Jan Vokes, Brian Vokes, Howard Davies


A story of dreams, determination, and class consciousness set in the world of horse racing, this inspirational documentary from director Louise Osmond (Deep Water) follows a group of friends and neighbours in a small Welsh town who find themselves breaking social barriers by competing against some of the wealthiest racehorse owners in the UK.

In the beleaguered former coal town of Cefn Fforest, South Wales, a middle-aged barmaid named Jan Vokes rallies a syndi- cate of friends to pool their £10 per week towards breeding, raising, and training a racehorse they call Dream Alliance. Unexpectedly, Dream Alliance shows great promise, and the Welsh townsfolk are soon competing against the sport’s elite. Though their gamble is the furthest thing from a sure bet, and requires years of perseverance through a multitude of factors outside of the stakeholders’ control, for the team behind Dream Alliance it’s not all about money: in the words of one backer, “Dream took us to places you couldn’t even imagine.”

Osmond elicits warm and funny inter- views from the participants, particularly the plucky Vokes, who fondly recalls how she first pulled her underdog syndicate together back in 2000. Illustrating the team’s anecdotes through carefully chosen archival footage and artful re-enactments — with cinematographer Benjamin Kracun capturing the horses so beautifully you’ll want to reach out and touch them — this remarkable true story about a long shot is a sure winner.

A heartwarming true story that has been expertly crafted into an irresistible, emotion-charged documentary.  —Allan Hunter, Screen International


THE TRAILER:


SING STREET – OCTOBER 22ND



October 22: Sing Street
John Carney
IRELAND, 2015
English 105 minutes
Principal Cast: Ferdia Walsh-Peelo, Lucy Boynton, Jack Reynor, Maria Doyle Kennedy, Aidan Gillen


Irish writer-director John Carney refreshed and revitalized the film musical with the Oscar-winning Once and his follow-up Begin Again. With his new film Sing Street, Carney takes us to 1980s Dublin for a semi-autobiographical tale about a teenager who turns to music to escape his chaotic home life — and, naturally, to impress a girl.

Forced to start over at a rough public school when his parents pull him from private school due to their financial struggles, 14-year-old Conor (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo) becomes enamoured of the beautiful and mysterious Raphina (Lucy Boynton). Eager to make an impression, Conor invites Raphina to star in his band’s music video — despite the fact that he has not yet formed a band, or even written any music. With the guidance of his drop-out older brother, Conor restyles himself as “Cosmo,” recruits some enthusiastic but musically untrained schoolmates, and sets out to make a band from scratch by studying and emulating the New Wave stars of the era like A-ha, Duran Duran, and Spandau Ballet. Soon, the ragtag group is shooting music videos on a less-than-shoestring budget and looking to wow their fellow students at the upcoming school ball — and meanwhile, Cosmo starts making progress in his quest to win Raphina’s heart.

Featuring a stellar soundtrack that mixes nostalgic hits and original music, Sing Street combines the scrappy energy of 2013 Film Circuit favourite We Are the Best! with the sweetness and charm of a coming-of-age love story. As with the director’s previous hits, Carney’s latest is sure to have audiences cheering and singing along once again.

Sing Street makes you feel like you’re growing up all over again.  —Ethan Anderson, Slashfilm


THE TRAILER:


THE DRESSMAKER – OCTOBER 15TH





October 15: The Dressmaker
Jocelyn Moorhouse
AUSTRALIA, 2015
English 118 minutes
Principal Cast: Kate Winslet, Liam Hemsworth, Judy Davis, Hugo Weaving

This wickedly comic drama stars Kate Winslet (Steve Jobs, Labor Day) as a worldly dressmaker returning to the Australian backwater that exiled her. The latest feature from writer-director Jocelyn Moorhouse (How to Make an American Quilt) after an almost 20-year hiatus, The Dressmaker is a sumptuous, saucy, and scandalous tale of love and vengeance in the mid-1950s. It also has the most fabulous gowns this side of the red carpet.

Tilly Dunnage (Winslet) arrives in the small town of Dungatar like a gunslinger: broad-brimmed hat on her head, sleek pumps on her feet, trusty Singer sewing machine at her side. Driven away when she was just 10 years old for supposedly committing a heinous crime, the resilient Tilly found her way to Paris, where she trained under legendary designer Madeleine Vionnet. She has come back to look after her ailing mother, Molly (Judy Davis, The Young and Prodigious T.S. Spivet, To Rome With Love), but, with her beguiling, form-fitting dresses, she’s soon turning heads at the town rugby game — most notably the one atop the broad shoulders of star player Teddy McSwiney (Liam Hemsworth, Cut Bank).

When Tilly is hired to design and custom-make haute couture for the more rebel- lious local ladies, a battle line is drawn: on one side, those who love Tilly’s progressive style, and on the other side, Dungatar’s conservative busybody contingent. As tension between these camps escalates, Tilly’s shadowy past becomes her enemies’ most potent weapon — but this fearsome fashionista has resolved to never let Dungatar get the best of her again.

Winslet exudes femme-fatale danger and sexiness as Tilly — she’s Clint Eastwood meets Rita Hayworth. And Moorhouse, working with co-writer P.J. Hogan in adapting Rosalie Ham’s novel, infuses The Dressmaker with a perfect blend of glamour and edginess, gen- erating laughter and intrigue right up to the explosive finale.

Moorhouse’s adaptation of Rosalie Ham’s 2000 novel may lead audiences to expect a primmer, more well-behaved movie based on its title alone, but that doesn’t mean it won’t have them in stitches.
—Justin Chang, Variety

THE TRAILER:


Monday, 11 April 2016

GOD OF CARNAGE – April 26th to 30th – 8 pm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  SHOWTIME IS 8 PM EACH NIGHT

 

 

 

 

 

Pocket Theatre and Cinema CNC present....  

GOD OF CARNAGE 

a play by Yasmina Reza.


For cinema fans, this is like a movie, but in SUPER-ENHANCED 3-D! So real! so alive! You’d almost think you are there!

Our production takes place April 26th to April 30th. Tickets are available at Books and Company for all five screenings  shows. Seating is limited, the run is short, so get on down to B and C and secure your place in Prince George dramatic history, all for the low, low price of $15 regular, $12 student, senior, unemployed.

Our skilled cast – Frank Caffrey, Katherine Trepanier, Mark Wheeler, and Allison Haley – brings this story to life for you in room 1-306 at the College of New Caledonia.


Play Description:
Winner of the 2009 Tony Award for Best Play [USA] and the 2009 Olivier Award for Best Comedy [UK], God of Carnage presents two couples, the Novaks and the Raleighs, trying to resolve a playground incident in which the Raleighs’ son, Benjamin, knocked out two of the Novaks’ son, Henry’s, teeth with a stick.

The forced veneer of civilization presented by Veronica and Michael Novak and Annette and Alan Raleigh peels off rather quickly, as any attempt to proceed civilly somehow gets sidetracked, proving that we don’t ever get too far from the playground and the rules of engagement therein. The delight of watching Yasmina Reza’s play finds itself described in that most lovely of German words: Schadenfreude!


        “God of Carnage,” definitely delivers the cathartic release
        of watching other people’s marriages go boom.
        A study in the tension between civilized surface and
        savage instinct, this play is itself a satisfyingly
        primitive entertainment with an intellectual veneer.”
            – BEN BRANTLEY, The New York Times

Film Day! April 20th – DEFENDOR and THE WORLD BEFORE HER

Cinema CNC, in conjunction with CNC Communications Services presents FILM DAY IN CANADA, April 20th. This event is free and open to everyone; come on in and celebrate Canadian Film with us. Both screenings will be in room 1-306 at the College of New Caledonia.

We are pleased to present two films that represent the range of Canadian Cinema: DEFENDOR is a comedy, and THE WORLD BEFORE HER is a documentary. There will be popcorn, prizes, and fun for all. Check out the description and trailer below and tell your friends.









































April 20th, 2016, at NOON: DEFENDOR

2009 - 95 mins - Comedy
Cast: Woody Harrelson, Kat Dennings, Sandra Oh, Elias Koteas
Director: Peter Stebbings
Writer: Peter Stebbings
Producers: Nicholas Tabarrok


 A crooked cop, a mob boss and the young girl they abuse are the denizens of a city's criminal underworld. It's a world that ordinary Arthur Poppington doesn't understand and doesn't belong in, but is committed to fighting when he changes into a vigilante super-hero of his own making, Defendor. With no power other than courage Defendor takes to the streets to protect the city's innocents!


The trailer:









































April 20th, 2016, at 2 pm: THE WORLD BEFORE HER

2012 - 90 mins - Documentary
Director: Nisha Pahuja
Writer: Nisha Pahuja
Producers: Ed Barreveld, Nisha Pahuja, Cornelia Principe

Ruhi Singh is a small town girl with big city dreams. She sets off to Bombay to win the title of Miss India--a launching pad to fame and a surefire way to stand out in a country of 1.2 billion people. Just hours from the Miss India beauty boot camp is another training ground for girls--that of the Durga Vahini, a Hindu nationalist group exclusively for women. Here we meet Prachi Trivedi, a young, fearsome drill sergeant training Indian girls to fight against Western culture, Islam and Christianity by any means necessary including violence. Gliding back and forth between the action of the two camps, the dreams and conflicts of India and young Indian women are laid bare-- the two opposing worlds aren't as far away from each other as they seem.

The trailer:


Tuesday, 15 March 2016

I Brought a Friend

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

POPULAR "I BROUGHT A FRIEND" CAMPAIGN BACK 
FOR CINEMA CNC'S 20TH ANNUAL FILM FESTIVAL! 

If you have attended Cinema CNC in the past and have bring a friend who is coming for the first time, you are BOTH eligible for our “I Brought A Friend” campaign.

The bringer will be entered in a draw for a lovely Cinema CNC prize package, and the bringee will get a voucher for free pop and popcorn... a win, win, win situation, don’t you think?

Just go to the IBAF booth where our crack group of volunteers will validate your claim!

While it’s a one-time offer to be a first-timer at Cinema CNC, the next film you come to you can be the Bringer, rather than the Bringee!

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

BOREALIS – MARCH 20: 9:30




March 20th: 9:30         Borealis
Director: Sean Garrity
Cast: Joey King, Clé Bennett, Emily Hampshire
Canada    2015    95 minutes

Jonah plays poker at a seedy back-room game overseen by Tubby Finkleman, who
reluctantly grants Jonah one-hundred grand in credit, which Jonah promptly loses. The volatile Tubby takes Marvin – Jonah’s family dog – as collateral, and warns Jonah that if he doesn’t pay up by first thing in the morning, he and his daughter, Aurora, are going to get hurt. When Jonah appeals to his girlfriend for a loan, she dumps him, tired of his lies and his negligent parenting.

Oblivious to her family’s danger, Aurora undergoes an eye exam, and her doctor
delivers the prognosis to Jonah in private: she’s going completely blind. But Jonah’s
unable to tell Aurora the truth. Instead, he urges her to come on a road trip to Churchill, Manitoba. There, Jonah once witnessed the most beautiful sight he’s ever seen – the Northern Lights. His motivation is two-fold: flee from danger, and assuage his guilt by showing her the amazing Aurora Borealis - before she loses her vision completely.

Along the way, with Tubby hot on their trail, Jonah and Aurora finally confront their tragic pasts and their individual vices in unanticipated and often comical ways. And when Jonah finally reveals the truth to Aurora about her failing vision, she shares a profound encounter with a mysterious small town hipster, before reuniting with Jonah for the final leg of the journey and the film’s exciting climax.

The Trailer:


MY INTERNSHIP IN CANADA – March 20: 7 pm




March 20th: 7 pm        My Internship in Canada
Director: Philippe Falardeau
CANADA, 2015
French, English, Creole, with English subtitles     108 minutes
Cast: Patrick Huard, Suzanne Clément, Irdens Exantus, Clémence Dufresne-Deslières, Sonia Cordeau, Paul Doucet, Jules Philip, Robin Aubert, Micheline Lanctôt

In this satirical look at the vagaries of Canadian politics from Academy Award nominee Philippe Falardeau, a Member of Parliament finds himself thrust suddenly into the spotlight, and it’s up to his young Haitian intern to help the hapless backbencher navigate the complexities and pitfalls of Parliament Hill.

A Conservative minority government trying to pass a bill that will enable them to go to war suffers a setback when one of the Tory MPs falls ill, leaving the key vote for the government’s warmongering initiative in the hands of independent MP Steve Guibord, a former hockey player whose pro career fizzled. Feverishly courted by the Tories and subjected to a moral tug of war at home — his ambitious wife wants him to vote Yes, his peacenik daughter, No — Guibord is unable to decide. As the vote nears and Guibord is beset on all sides, salvation arrives in the form of his new intern Souverain, a young Haitian student who knows considerably more about the ins and outs of our parliamentary system than does his boss.

Not only a witty and incisive portrait of wheeling and dealing in Ottawa, My Internship in Canada also exposes Canadians’ tendency to focus on the regional and specific at the expense of the wider picture. As Falardeau’s gently skewering satire demonstrates, sometimes it takes a person from another country to explain to us the workings — and the value — of the unique system that makes our democracy (sometimes) function.

“The performances are lived-in and the tone is refreshingly light. A genuine crowd-pleaser, no matter what colour that sign on your lawn might be.”
—Barry Hertz, The Globe and Mail

The Trailer:


LES ETRES CHERS [our loved ones] – March 20: 2 pm




March 20th: 2 pm        LES ETRES CHERS [Our Loved Ones]
Director: Anne Émond
CANADA, 2015
French, with English subtitles     102 Minutes
Cast: Maxim Gaudette, Karelle Tremblay, Valérie Cadieux, Mickaël Gouin

A film of ambitious scope and penetrating insight, this second feature from award-win- ning writer-director Anne Émond, follows a Québécois family over a thirty-year period as it traces the fallout from the suicide of the clan’s patriarch.

Protected by his well-intentioned siblings from the truth about his father’s death, the sensitive David has grown into a loving husband and father of two, living a seemingly fulfilling life in the Bas-Saint-Laurent region. But as the years go by, during which time his relationship with his wilder brother begins to strain and his kids grow into young adulthood, David begins to struggle with an insuppressible melancholia that gradually threatens to engulf him. Meanwhile, his daughter, Laurence, begins to recognize herself in her father, and sees that she’ll need to reckon with her emotional inheritance if she is to break this destructive cycle and take on the future.

Clearly one of Canada’s great new talents, Émond exhibits a wisdom and empathy for all her characters rarely found in young filmmakers. Though Our Loved Ones is epic in scope (spanning three generations, and taking us from Quebec to Barcelona), it remains unerringly attuned to the inner lives of the family, portraying their heartbreaks and joys with sincerity and grace.

“Simultaneously an expansive, richly detailed family chronicle and an intimate two-hander about a troubled father’s relationship with his spirited teenage daughter, this marks a decisive step up for Anne Émond.” —Boyd van Hoeij, The Hollywood Reporter


The Trailer:


INTO THE FOREST – March 19: 9:30




March 19th: 9:30        Into the Forest
Patricia Rozema
CANADA, 2015
English     96 minutes
Cast: Ellen Page, Evan Rachel Wood, Callum Keith Rennie, Max Minghella

After several years of acclaimed television productions, writer-director Patricia Rozema (Mansfield Park, I’ve Heard the Mermaids Singing) returns to the big screen with Into the Forest, a mesmerizing and powerful story of two teenage sisters who are forced to fend for themselves in a society that may be on the brink of collapse.

Based on Jean Hegland’s novel of the same name, Into the Forest takes place in the not-too-distant future, as a massive power outage overwhelms all of continental North America. Living with their recently widowed father in a house over thirty miles from the nearest town, sisters Nell and Eva gradually become aware of the severity of their situation as their supplies dwindle and the blackout continues with no end in sight. As they contend with the threats of intruders, disease, loneliness and starvation, the young women are forced to re-examine their place in the world and their relations to the land, their home, and each other.

Featuring brilliant performances by Page and Wood and offering a disturbingly plausible vision of an apocalyptic future, Into the Forest is a thought-provoking film about hope, despair, and the bonds of love.

“Into the Forest amply illustrates the vital need for female voices in the industry; Rozema possesses the insight and sensitivity to reimagine the apocalypse as a low-key trial of sisterhood instead of a race to avoid whatever deafening CGI eyesore might come next.”    —Charles Bramesco, The Playlist

The Stars discuss the movie:






REMEMBER – March 19: 7 pm




March 19th: 7 pm        Remember
Director: Atom Egoyan
CANADA, 2015    95 minutes
Cast: Christopher Plummer, Martin Landau, Henry Czerny, Dean Norris

Master filmmaker Atom Egoyan (Ararat, The Sweet Hereafter) tackles one of the darkest chapters of 20th-century history in the gripping thriller Remember, which gives legendary actor Christopher Plummer (Elsa & Fred, Beginners) a majestic role as an elderly
Holocaust survivor seeking revenge on the man responsible for the deaths of his family.

Plummer plays Zev, a recent widower whose deteriorating mental state forces him to be placed under permanent care. When he discov- ers that the concentration-camp guard who murdered his relatives is now living in America under an assumed identity, Zev
 resolves to fulfill his final vow to his wife by exacting vengeance on the escaped war criminal. With the support of his friend Max (Martin Landau, Lovely, Still, Ed Wood), Zev sets out on his mission with grim purpose — but his quest for retribution leads to
unexpected results.

Working from an original script by first-time screenwriter Benjamin August, Egoyan
generates nerve-shredding suspense as the unlikely avenger pursues the demon from his past. Plummer is remarkable as the driven Zev, and the stellar supporting cast — which also includes Henry Czerny (TV’s The Tudors, Fido), Jürgen Prochnow (TV’s 24, Das Boot), Bruno Ganz (The Reader, Downfall) and Breaking Bad’s Dean Norris as a neo-Nazi state trooper — help make Remember one of the most compelling thrillers in recent memory.

“Plummer’s performance is quietly magnificent, turning the heavy breathing, shaking hands and slow responses of the elderly into a heart-rending vulnerability while also capturing his character’s enduring intelligence and psychic pain.”
    —Kate Taylor, The Globe and Mail


The Trailer:

AL PURDY WAS HERE – March 19: 1 pm




March 19th: 1 pm        Al Purdy Was Here
Director: Brian D. Johnson
CANADA, 2015
English     92 minutes
With: Margaret Atwood, Joseph Boyden, Leonard Cohen, Bruce Cockburn, Sarah Harmer, Katherine Leyton, Michael Ondaatje, Eurithe Purdy, Tanya Tagaq

An icon of English Canadian letters, Al Purdy was equal parts rock star, raconteur, and rabble-rouser: in other words, all poet. Coming to prominence in the 1960s alongside a crop of other extraordinary talents (including Leonard Cohen, Margaret Laurence,
Margaret Atwood, and Michael Ondaatje), Purdy scorned the tired tales of rural life that had dominated Canadian literature and set out to create a different language, one that came from the contemporary Canadian experience.

Purdy’s impact on Canadian culture is detailed in this documentary by Brian D. Johnson, the former film critic for Maclean’s. Al Purdy Was Here artfully combines archival footage, including some of Purdy’s priceless television appearances, where he played the eccentric contrarian with everyone from Adrienne Clarkson to William F. Buckley, Jr., with readings and reminiscences from Purdy’s friends and colleagues, as well as performances by Bruce Cockburn, Tanya Tagaq, and Sarah Harmer, who set Purdy’s words to music.

What emerges is a far more complex portrait of Purdy than was suggested by his
public persona as the boisterous lover of booze, brawls, and verse, immortalized in his best-known poem “At the Quinte Hotel.” While Johnson does not skimp on anecdotes about Al’s delightful debauches, the Purdy he presents is a diligent, hard-working writer, and one of the first in English Canada who was actually able to make a living off his work. Underlying the whole of Johnson’s affectionate elegy, and investing it with a sense of urgency, is the realization that the fiercely proud cultural nationalism that Purdy
embodied has not been seen in Canada for decades — and perhaps never will be again.


The Trailer:


SLEEPING GIANT – MARCH 18: 9:30




March 18th: 9:30        Sleeping Giant
Director: Andrew Cividino
CANADA, 2015
English     90 minutes
Cast: Jackson Martin, Nick Serino, Reece Moffett

One of the most accomplished and exciting Canadian feature debuts in recent memory, Andrew Cividino’s Sleeping Giant is a finely observed, whip-smart study of the
emotional extremes of adolescence, and their potentially catastrophic effects.

In an isolated cottage community during a bleak midsummer, teenagers Nate, Riley, and Adam deal with their boredom and idleness by getting drunk, playing video games, and engaging in dim-witted, invariably destructive shenanigans. The boys are a study in contrasts: Adam is wan and overprotected; Riley is more outgoing and socially adept, but his fascination with Adam’s upper-middle-class family (including the “open” way that Adam’s father talks to him) indicates something lacking in his own home life; while Nate is the most overtly troubled of the trio, a kind of pubescent Iago who talks an endless stream of smack and enjoys messing with people simply out of spite. Enter Taylor, a pretty girl who has known Adam for years (though they’re only good friends), and who seems very drawn to Riley. As the summer goes on, Taylor’s actions begin to infuriate both Adam and Nate, and push the volatile dynamics of the makeshift group towards a dangerous imbalance.

If you’ve ever spent a teenage summer in a rural area with little supervision and nothing much to do, you’ll instantly recognize both the ennui and the creeping atmosphere of mystery and menace that Cividino’s film so expertly captures. Boasting fine performances by the young cast, a singular visual style and some exquisite and insightful writing, Sleeping Giant is a stellar debut.

“Cividino creates a volatile, captivating and singular look at adolescence, wholly free of the sanitized antics of Hollywood.” The Globe and Mail

The Trailer:


NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT – March 18th: 7 pm




March 18th: 7 pm        No Men Beyond This Point
Director: Mark Sawers
CANADA, 2015
English     80 minutes
Cast: Kristine Cofsky, Patrick Gilmore, Rekha Sharma, Tara Pratt, Cameron McDonald

This wry mockumentary from Vancouver director Mark Sawers posits an alternate
history where an explosion of virgin births from the 1950s onwards has taken men out of the procreation equation — and now that only girls are being born, it seems that men’s days on earth are numbered.

At thirty-seven years old, Andrew Myers is now the youngest man in the world. He has a quiet life working as a nanny for Terra and Iris, until he begins having an affair with Iris, and the two have to hide their love from both Terra and the uptight, anti-sex authorities.

But just as the world’s few remaining males — who have been sent to “sanctuaries” where they can quietly finish their lives — decide that it’s time to stage a revolt, Andrew and Iris find themselves at the centre of a media frenzy spurred on by more extremist government leaders. As the men’s comically disorganized comeback flounders, and the end of humanity as we know it approaches, the couple’s actions will take on historical proportions.

No Men Beyond This Point is a smart, hilarious take on gender politics, sounding a call for balance — both philosophical and biological — even as it keeps us laughing. A feminist satire with a strong handle on comic role reversals, Sawers’ film is a riotous original.


The trailer:


The 20th Annual Cinema CNC Film Festival: March 18-20, 2016


Saturday, 6 February 2016

The 20th Annual Cinema CNC Film Festival – March 18-20, 2016

Cinema CNC is pleased to be presenting the 20th Annual Cinema CNC Film Festival, March 18th to 20th, 2016 at the Prince George Playhouse.

Tickets will be available on February 29th, at Books and Company, The CNC Bookstore, and The UNBC Bookstore. Please let your friends know about the festival. The films are all confirmed; the dates and times are subject to change... we hope to have a guest for the festival and would like to highlight his/her film, so need to be flexible.

The list of films and times [currently] follows. I will make individual pages at the end of the month. [Part of the reason for delay is that I (Peter) leave Monday to go to Berlin for the Film Festival there... I know, not as exciting as ours, but it will do for now. Hopefully, all will be finalized on my return.]


MARCH 18: 7 PM NO MEN BEYOND THIS POINT
DIR: Mark Sawers CANADA,  2015 

80 minutes
Cast: Kristine Cofsky, Patrick Gilmore, Rekha Sharma

This wry mockumentary posits an alternate history where an explosion of virgin births from the 1950s onwards has taken men out of the procreation equation: now that only girls are being born, it seems that men’s days on earth are numbered. At thirty-seven years old, Andrew Myers is now the youngest man in the world. He has a quiet life working as a nanny for Terra and Iris, until he begins having an affair with Iris, and the two have to hide their love. With the end of humanity as we know it approaching, the couple’s actions will take on historical proportions.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LezV543IB9s




MARCH 18: 9:30 SLEEPING GIANT
DIR: Andrew Cividino    CANADA, 2015  

90 minutes
Cast: Jackson Martin, Nick Serino, Reece Moffett

This is a whip-smart study of the emotional extremes of adolescence, and their potentially catastrophic effects. Nate, Riley, and Adam are dealing with boredom with dim-witted shenanigans until Taylor arrives to change their social balance. If you’ve ever spent a teenage summer in a rural area with little supervision and nothing much to do, you’ll instantly recognize both the ennui and the creeping atmosphere of mystery and menace that pervades the experience. Cividino creates a volatile, captivating and singular look at adolescence, wholly free of the sanitized antics of Hollywood.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z4SZXkKX7zo




MARCH 19: 1 PM AL PURDY WAS HERE
DIR:Brian D. Johnson   CANADA, 2015 

92 minutes. Documentary
With: Margaret Atwood, Leonard Cohen, Sarah Harmer, Michael Ondaatje, Eurithe Purdy, Tanya Tagaq

An icon of Canadian letters, Al Purdy was equal parts rock star, raconteur, and rabble-rouser: in other words, all poet. Coming to prominence in the 1960s alongside a crop of other extraordinary talents, Purdy scorned the tired tales of rural life that had dominated Canadian literature and set out to focus on contemporary Canadian experience. What emerges is a far more complex portrait of Purdy than was suggested by his public persona as the boisterous lover of booze, brawls, and verse, immortalized in his best-known poems.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ty4Kot0cASA
 




MARCH 19: 7 PM REMEMBER
DIR: Atom Egoyan    CANADA, 2015 

95 minutes
Cast: Christopher Plummer, Martin Landau, Henry Czerny

Master filmmaker Atom Egoyan tackles one of the darkest chapters of history, giving legendary actor Christopher Plummer a majestic role as an elderly Holocaust survivor seeking revenge on the man responsible for the deaths of his family. Plummer plays Zev, a recent widower whose deteriorating state forces him to be placed in permanent care. When he discovers that the concentration-camp guard who murdered his relatives is now living in America under an assumed identity, Zev resolves to fulfill his final vow to his wife by exacting vengeance on the escaped war criminal.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vFxXCoprNqc




MARCH 19: 9:30 INTO THE FOREST
DIR: Patricia Rozema CANADA, 2015 

96 minutes
Cast: Ellen Page, Evan Rachel Wood, Callum Keith Rennie

A mesmerizing story about two sisters who are forced to fend for themselves in a society that may be on the brink of collapse. Living with their recently widowed father in a house over thirty miles from the nearest town, sisters Nell and Eva gradually become aware of the severity of their situation as their supplies dwindle and the blackout continues. As they contend with the threats of intruders, disease, loneliness and starvation, the young women are forced to re-examine their place in the world and their relations to the land, their home, and each other.

The Stars Discuss the movie: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sPOURjOQw38




MARCH 20: 2 PM LES ETRE CHERS [Our Loved Ones]
DIR: Anne Émond    French w. subtitles, 

102 minutes
Cast: Maxim Gaudette, Karelle Tremblay, Valérie Cadieux

Protected by his well-intentioned siblings from the truth about his father’s death, the sensitive David has grown into a loving husband and father of two, living a seemingly fulfilling life. But as the years go by, during which time his relationship with his wilder brother begins to strain and his kids grow into young adulthood, David begins to struggle with a melancholia that gradually threatens to engulf him. While epic in scope this film remains unerringly attuned to the inner lives of the family, portraying their heartbreaks and joys with sincerity and grace.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M-0eZz4g9oA




MARCH 20: 7 PM MY INTERNSHIP IN CANADA
DIR: Philippe Falardeau 

108 minutes
Fr, Eng, Creole, w. subtitles 

Cast: Patrick Huard, Suzanne Clément, Irdens Exantus

In this satirical look at the vagaries of Canadian politics, an MP finds himself thrust suddenly into the spotlight, and it’s up to his young Haitian intern to help the hapless backbencher navigate the complexities and pitfalls of Parliament Hill. Canadians’ tendency to focus on the regional and specific at the expense of the wider picture is exposed. This gently skewering satire demonstrates that sometimes it takes an outsider to explain the workings, and the value, of the unique system that makes our democracy (sometimes) function.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QKLY6WxV5RU




MARCH 20: 9:30 BOREALIS
Director: Sean Garrity    Canada 2015 

95 minutes
Cast: Joey King, Clé Bennett, Emily Hampshire

Jonah gambles. Jonah borrows a lot of money. Jonah loses the money, so much money that it leaves the loan-shark threatening him, his daughter, and his dog unless the debt is paid. Meanwhile, his daughter, Aurora, goes for an eye exam, the results of which are shared with her father. Unable to tell her the truth about the devestating diagnosis and unable to pay his debts, Jonah decides to take Aurora on a road trip to Churchill, Manitoba, to see the single more incredible sight he has seen: the Northern Lights.

TRAILER: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TODAmQeKUvc