Thread of Canadian cinema.

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I searched and didn't any thread on this subject. So let's discuss Michel Brault, Pierre Perreault, FUBAR, Zach Kunuk, the NFB, Denis Villeneuve, Guy Maddin, Patricia Rozema and let's ask ourselves countless questions like: when was the last time Egoyan made a good film? Is Porky's really the highest grossing canadian film of all time? or have I ever actually seen a canadian film? Perrault made a lot of great documentaries, which one should I watch?

Van Horn Street, Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:16 (eight years ago)

Yeah, what happened to Egoyan? Last one I saw was "Where the Truth Lies," which was pretty good, iirc.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:19 (eight years ago)

as good a place as any to plug my fave obscure QC film of all time, Vie d'Ange
http://elephantcinema.quebec/video/recherche/paule%20baillargeon/vie-dange/1241772353001

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:21 (eight years ago)

re: Egoyan, I actually liked Adoration for some reason

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:22 (eight years ago)

Egoyan's The Captive? More like The Craptive

Last few Canadian films I've liked has been Etienne Desrosiers documentary about Roger d'Astous, which, I know, is niche, but it's really really good. And he was great to do a Q&A with, smart guy. Also, the GYBE visual guy, Karl Lemieux, had his debut feature Shambles in competition at CPH:PIX, and it looked quite a lot like a GYBE video, but with an added crime plot that was kinda superfluous. Great visuals, though.

Frederik B, Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:32 (eight years ago)

I too would love a guide to Perreault, btw.

Frederik B, Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:33 (eight years ago)

re: Perrault, I've only seen La bête lumineuse but it rules

a serious and fascinating fartist (Simon H.), Saturday, 20 May 2017 21:36 (eight years ago)

one year passes...

https://thewalrus.ca/how-indigenous-filmmakers-are-changing-contemporary-cinema/

I wish it discussed Searches a little more but it's a nice primer on the subject of First Nation and Canadian cinema.

Van Horn Street, Friday, 20 July 2018 15:06 (seven years ago)

three years pass...

I went to find out when this was released (a friend e-mailed me about it today), and it turned to be last night! You can watch it on YouTube already, though:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-OMDsOTdJ3o

Like a lot of the people interviewed, Saturday Night at the Movies was an early influence on me. It debuted before VCRs hit the market (and years before TCM), so that was where I first saw a bunch of old movies. His Girl Friday sticks out in my mind, for some reason. I'm pretty sure Elwy came to speak to one of my film classes once...very informal, sitting around a table. I watched Magic Shadows, too, for a time, but didn't like the way films were chopped up over four or five nights. I wonder what TVO plans to do with all those interviews.

clemenza, Sunday, 28 November 2021 23:55 (four years ago)

My brother watched this documentary; aside from growing up with Elwy Yost on the TV, we're both curious about him being born and raised here in Weston.

I never met him, but one of my professors did some kind of film review show with him in the 70s and was very dismissive about his critical acumen: "if a film had pictures moving on a screen, Elwy liked it".

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 01:23 (four years ago)

I don't think he ever tried to pretend he was anything other than an unabashed fan--he embraced the term "movie buff." It was so genuine with him, he had a deep connection with his viewers. But there's a clip of him in the film, him being interviewed, where he defends the violence in The Wild Bunch, and the first three films shown on Saturday Night was the Bergman Trilogy; his enthusiasms led you to you interesting places.

clemenza, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 02:06 (four years ago)

Sure, he was an ideal host and interviewer for a show like Saturday Night at the Movies, which is why it's incongruous that he worked as a proto-Siskel/Ebert.

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 02:20 (four years ago)

I just thought I'd drop in a plug for Before Tomorrow, the last film of the trilogy that began with The Fast Runner. We watched it a month ago and unlike most films we watch, this one stuck with me.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Tuesday, 30 November 2021 02:25 (four years ago)

Atanarjuat...didn't know there was follow-up.

(xpost) I guess what I'm saying is that, while he wasn't a critic--and, no, didn't belong on a show that purported to evaluate films--I don't think he deserved a dismissal of any kind; he was better that that.

clemenza, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 02:31 (four years ago)

"than that"

clemenza, Tuesday, 30 November 2021 02:32 (four years ago)

Finally watched a Canadian film I would have first read about almost 50 years ago: Don Owen's The Ernie Game, his 1967 follow-up to Nobody Waved Goodbye (with some shorter NFB work between). There's a beautiful print on YouTube posted by the NFB:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O5G9pQ-1vCU

Two great musical bits: Leonard Cohen performing "The Stranger" at a party (17:30), four years before McCabe & Mrs. Miller, and, at 31:40, Judith Gault dancing around her apartment to a Kensington Market song I'm trying hard to identify. The film is completely of its moment: aimless wandering, frolicking in the snow, Godard-like detours, downbeat ending. Jackie Burroughs, the other woman, played Christopher Walken's mother in The Dead Zone. (There are a bunch of Owen films on YouTube: just started Notes for a Film About Donna & Gail from '66.)

clemenza, Friday, 3 December 2021 02:29 (four years ago)

There’s also this thread: Canadian Film in the house

Goofy the Grifter (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 3 December 2021 02:40 (four years ago)

I guess Van Horn Street missed that. I don't know if can bear the burden of two threads...

clemenza, Friday, 3 December 2021 02:44 (four years ago)

That Kensington Market song wasn't on either of their albums. Aardvark is quite a bit stronger than their debut, it's a well above-average psychedelic pop record with a bunch of memorable melodies.

Halfway there but for you, Friday, 3 December 2021 03:51 (four years ago)

I know, I checked...I ended up e-mailing some site called Cult Montreal earlier--they had a piece on the film--to see if they could help me. There's actually supposed to be a soundtrack LP, but it's not listed on Discogs.

clemenza, Friday, 3 December 2021 03:55 (four years ago)

This never works, but I did find one of the band's founders on Facebook--still living in Toronto--and messaged him directly. Said message will sit in an unread hidden folder for eternity.

clemenza, Friday, 3 December 2021 04:04 (four years ago)

That's why the Kensington Market never took off - too rude to their fans on social media.
The master tape of the songs for the film is undoubtedly sitting in the back of some NFB vault somewhere, to be released in 2067.

Halfway there but for you, Friday, 3 December 2021 16:32 (four years ago)

one year passes...

Found the Blu-ray that pairs Goin' Down the Road with Down the Road Again at a library sale today. I've never owned Goin' Down the Road on anything except a home-taped VHS. I'm not sure that I can bring myself to watch the sequel; I've studiously avoided it for years.

clemenza, Tuesday, 28 March 2023 16:38 (three years ago)

two months pass...

I was looking up Claude Jutra's À tout prendre because of the 1963 poll that's up (I think I've seen it but I'm not sure) and came across this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Top_10_Canadian_Films_of_All_Time

Had no idea they've been doing this every decade, S&S style, for 40 years. Next one should be a year or two from now. I'd be surprised if Atanarjuat held on to #1. Claude Jutra's personal issues probably rule out Mon oncle Antoine returning to the top, and I think regard for Goin' Down the Road has faded a bit (not with me). Has anything really prominent come out in the last decade? Could Stories We Tell make a Jeanne Dielman-type leap to #1?

clemenza, Thursday, 15 June 2023 00:28 (two years ago)

I actually kept the results of this list on paper for years, but I can't say I've been living in anticipation for the next instalment.

I don't know if any Canadian film or filmmaker has really impressed themselves on the cognoscenti. Xavier Dolan (none of whose films I've seen) seems to be too divisive. Stories We Tell could have been a 20 minute segment on a CBC radio show and no worse for it. The top rated Canadian film on They Shoot Pictures, Don't They website is Wavelength, which frankly isn't going to draw much traffic into the Lightbox. There's an obvious disincentive to go back in film history and load the list with the works of dead or old white men. Is something like Kanehsatake: 270 Years of Resistance likely to garner much support?

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 15 June 2023 17:17 (two years ago)

Sad to see Patricia Rozema's I've Heard the Mermaids Singing drop off the list since '93. Perhaps the recent exhibition of it on the Criterion Channel will give it a boost (I think it also got a bit of a theatrical redistribution last year?).

I really gotta see Les Bons débarras.

niall horanburger (cryptosicko), Thursday, 15 June 2023 17:28 (two years ago)

Forgot about Michael Snow--longshot, yeah, even with his recent death, although there are affinities between Wavelength and Jeanne Dielman. Cronenberg would seem like an obvious candidate, but Dead Ringers went down a notch last time.

clemenza, Thursday, 15 June 2023 21:53 (two years ago)

kinda related but not really, but MDFF has absolutely been killing it with their latest releases. Queens of the Qing Dynasty and The Maiden both have a good chance of placing in my top 10, even top 5 depending on how things go, this year

Murgatroid, Thursday, 15 June 2023 22:00 (two years ago)

I only watched I've Heard the Mermaids Singing last year; it's difficult for me to imagine that people who weren't there at the time will see its charms as more than modest.

I remember one of my film professors getting exasperated at Rozema squandering her industry goodwill with White Room.

Halfway there but for you, Thursday, 15 June 2023 22:04 (two years ago)

two years pass...

Screened Mon Oncle Antoine for my class on The Child in Canadian Fiction this week. The recent revelations about Jutra had slipped my mind when I made the syllabus, though I don't think it would have stopped me from teaching it anyhow. That said, I'm glad no one brought it up.

cryptosicko, Friday, 19 September 2025 00:35 (seven months ago)

seven months pass...

Saw Mile End Kicks today--the second film ever about a rock critic? (Maybe Between the Lines should get partial credit for Jeff Goldblum.) Kind of a mess, but, to use the hokiest cliche imaginable, its heart is in the right place. Some of the 33-1/3 stuff is unintentionally laughable. (Hey, how come I never got a Skype call?) Grace's reading right at the end was moving. I undoubtedly would have liked it more if I knew Montreal at all (I did enjoy Grace giving the finger to Toronto as she headed out).

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzaCmw_VrlI

clemenza, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:12 (three days ago)

Free screening of La Région Centrale (Michael Snow, 1971) last week in Vancouver. Apparently it formed the big inspo for Jeanne Dielman— Cinematheque is doing all Akerman this season— I’ve wanted to see The 80s for years and I missed it.

Ruminator 2: Self-Judgement Day (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:19 (three days ago)

Mile End Kicks is generating opinions. Detractors feel it underlines (but doesn’t acknowledge or engage with) the “indie divide” of the era, whiteness and class elevating some and excluding others. I haven’t seen it but I loved I Like Movies so I’ll def be seeing it. A friend saw Kicks, someone who was super involved in that scene, and said its recreation of that scene and that era was precise enough to trigger strange a strange eerie pain, that it almost seemed too real to be a period piece

Ruminator 2: Self-Judgement Day (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:24 (three days ago)

Very interested in hearing other opinions--I'm probably underrating it, in part because my equivalent moment was 1986, 25 years earlier. Plus, I'm male--I'm in that semi-circle Grace looks upon from the periphery.

clemenza, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:39 (three days ago)

that this thread got revived for Mile End Kicks but not for NTBTSTM or Blue Heron is v hilarious/depressing but feels about right for ILX

Murgatroid, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:50 (three days ago)

I saw Mile End Kicks at VIFF a few months ago and loved it. Definitely felt some nostalgia for the innocent period of 2010. I had a visceral reaction to some of the terrible decisions characters were making.

symsymsym, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:53 (three days ago)

Nirvanna was great too, was it discussed on the board anywhere?

symsymsym, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:53 (three days ago)

some uniquely Canadians forms of toxic bros in Mile End Kicks

symsymsym, Sunday, 19 April 2026 21:55 (three days ago)

that this thread got revived for Mile End Kicks but not for NTBTSTM or Blue Heron is v hilarious/depressing but feels about right for ILX

If you'd rather discuss these why not venture an opinion or observation about them as well?

Halfway there but for you, Sunday, 19 April 2026 22:42 (three days ago)

Or: why didn't you revive the thread yourself for those two films?

clemenza, Sunday, 19 April 2026 22:50 (three days ago)

Only now clicking in that Grace is played by the actress from Euphoria (she did seem familiar, but I probably put that down to the charactrer).

clemenza, Sunday, 19 April 2026 23:19 (three days ago)

there was a little Nirvanna chat on the rolling media 2026 thread

symsymsym, Monday, 20 April 2026 03:38 (two days ago)


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