National Post (National Edition)

Rhyme & reason animated

- CHRIS KNIGHT

Ann Marie Fleming’s first feature-length animation in 12 years, Window Horses, tells the story of a young woman of Persian-Chinese descent, living in North Vancouver, who gets invited to a poetry contest in the Iranian city of Shiraz.

In other words, a quintessen­tially Canadian tale.

As the film opens, Rosie Ming (voiced in the unmistakab­le tones of Sandra Oh) has just self-published a book subtitled Poems By a Person Who Has Never Been to France. In fact, she’s never been much of anywhere, so when an invite to a poetry slam halfway across the world arrives in her mailbox, it doesn’t take much prodding from her best friend (Ellen Page) for her to accept.

Arriving in Iran, Rosie goes overboard trying to fit in, opting for the full chador rather than the more modern hijab or headscarf. Her out-of-place-ness is also signified by the fact that Fleming chooses to draw her in her signature “stick-girl” style, while the rest of the characters get fully formed bodies.

Rosie is also a bit in awe of the other poet/performers, who include a Chinese dissident and an annoying German poseur, the latter given hilarious voice by Don McKellar. Their work — and all the poems within the film — are presented in a variety of animation styles, and sometimes in the original language, without subtitles; we’re meant to understand them on an emotional level rather than a linguistic one.

This recalls a great line in Jim Jarmusch’s recent movie Paterson: “Poetry in translatio­n is like taking a shower with a raincoat on.” I was also reminded of the film when Taylor Mali recites his poem The Moon Exactly How It Is Tonight. Because while the verse in Window Horses varies wildly in quality, here was one I wanted immediatel­y to hang on my wall.

The plot is similarly uneven. While it’s true that the event is as much a cultural exchange as a poetry reading, it does sometimes feel we are being spoon-fed Persian literary history. “How is it everyone here knows everything about everything?” Rosie wonders aloud at one point, echoing what many an audience member may be feeling.

This gets more pronounced when she mentions that her father was an Iranian who abandoned his family when she was a child; suddenly it seems as though everyone with whom she comes in contact knew something of his tortured tale of the Revolution of ’79 and the subsequent eight years of war with Iraq. Rest assured, Rosie will learn much about her family history.

It’s not surprising that the film won the best B.C. and Canadian feature prizes when it played at the Vancouver festival; nor that The Poetic Persian Epiphany of Rosie Ming, to breathe out its full title, was named one of the top 10 Canadian films of 2016 by the Toronto festival group. ∂∂∂ Window Horses opens March 10 in Toronto and Vancouver, March 17 in Montreal, and March 31 in Ottawa, with other cities to follow.

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