Ottawa Citizen

CANADIAN MOVIES TELL ‘UNIVERSAL STORIES’

Films, VR works head to Sundance, Slamdance fests

- LINDA BARNARD

Two islands — one that risks being swallowed by the ocean because of climate change, the other the fictitious home of director Wes Anderson’s stop-motion animation dogs — are among the subjects Canadians are exploring at the 34th Sundance Film Festival.

Canada has 11 films and two VR works premièring at Sundance, which begins Thursday and runs through Jan. 28 in the mountain resort town of Park City, Utah, not far from Salt Lake City.

Another eight Canadian movies are on the bill of the edgy crosstown rival film fest, Slamdance. It unspools its 24th edition Jan. 19 to 25.

Started by actor-director Robert Redford to showcase independen­t film, Sundance has developed a reputation for programmin­g breakout movies that go on to bigger things, including Oscartoute­d Call Me by Your Name and Mudbound, which both had world premières at last year’s festival.

Two Canadian documentar­ies are in competitio­n at Sundance: Montreal filmmaker Matthieu Rytz’s visually stunning Anote’s Ark examines the doom awaiting Kiribati, a tiny Pacific island nation nearing extinction from rising seas and the desperate actions by then-president Anote Tong to save its people.

Israel-Canadian documentar­y The Oslo Diaries, directed by Mor Loushy and Daniel Sivan (who were at Sundance in 2015 with doc Censored Voices), sheds light on the secret 1992 talks between Israeli and Palestinia­n negotiator­s in an attempt to reach peace.

Un Traductor, directed by Toronto-based Cuban brothers Sebastian and Rodrigo Barriuso and written by Lindsay Gossling, also of Toronto, competes in the World Cinema Dramatic program.

The movie is based on the reallife story of the brothers’ father, a Russian literature professor at the University of Havana (played by Brazilian actor Rodrigo Santoro). He was given the task of working as a translator for child victims of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster when they arrived in Havana for treatment.

Montreal-based filmmakers François Simard, Anouk Whissell and Yoann-Karl Whissell, who team up as the collective RKSS (Roadkill Superstar), are bringing another film to Sundance’s genre-loving Midnight program with suburbia-set horror Summer of ’84.

The Vancouver-shot Summer of ’84 has echoes of Stand By Me and The ’Burbs as it follows four sleuthing teenage boys who are convinced the cop next door (Mad Men’s Rich Sommer) is a serial killer.

Canadians also make their mark in the virtual world with two projects from Felix Lajeunesse and Paul Raphaël of Montreal’s Felix & Paul Studios, which are being showcased in the New Frontier program.

Lajeunesse says a VR feature for Isle of Dogs lets audiences “step right in” to the elaborate world director Anderson created for his new film, which debuts next month in Berlin. The canine cast shares thoughts on their roles during the on-set virtual visit.

Also from Felix & Paul Studios, Space Explorers: A New Dawn is a docu-series about NASA astronauts training for space.

Carolle Brabant, executive director of national film funding and talent promotion agency Telefilm, says the Canadian presence at Sundance and Slamdance reflects the national and internatio­nal reach of Canadian films.

“Our creators really shine when it comes to telling universal stories that have a Canadian sensibilit­y,” she said. “It’s their Canadian point of view that gives them an advantage.”

At Slamdance, where features Fake Tattoos (Les faux tatouages) directed by Pascal Plante and Drew Lint’s M/M are on the bill, all six Canadian short films in competitio­n are directed or co-directed by women.

Among them is Rupture. Toronto-based Jordanian writerdire­ctor Yassmina Karajah, 27, got a social media shout-out from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for her short, which premièred at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in September.

Rupture is the second film in a trilogy about family, trauma and conflict. The three teen stars of Rupture, all first-time actors, are Syrian refugees. Shot in Surrey, B.C., the film centres on their trip to a local public pool.

 ?? SCANDAL CO-ACTIVE ?? Graham Verchere, left, Caleb Emery and Tiera Skovbye star in Summer of ’84, premièring this month at the Sundance Film.
SCANDAL CO-ACTIVE Graham Verchere, left, Caleb Emery and Tiera Skovbye star in Summer of ’84, premièring this month at the Sundance Film.
 ?? DAVE SIDAWAY ?? Filmmaker Pascal Plante walks through an area of Montreal that was used in his first fictional feature film, Les faux tatouages.
DAVE SIDAWAY Filmmaker Pascal Plante walks through an area of Montreal that was used in his first fictional feature film, Les faux tatouages.

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