Filming of farewell tour started in a flash
TORONTO Making The Tragically Hip tour documentary Long Time Running was a shotgun project of sorts for its filmmakers.
“It started on a dime,” co-director Nicholas de Pencier said Wednesday during the film’s red carpet première at the Toronto International Film Festival.
“Five days before the first show,” said Jennifer Baichwal, the film’s other director.
That’s a rarity for the filmmaker couple, who had previously worked together on the 2013 documentary Watermark.
But they say getting the chance to follow The Hip on their defining Man Machine Poem tour was an opportunity they couldn’t pass up.
The documentary follows the Canadian band as it embarks on run of farewell shows and faces the reality of Gord Downie’s incurable brain cancer diagnosis.
The Hip frontman was absent from the première, though his bandmates Gord Sinclair, Johnny Fay, Rob Baker and Paul Langlois all showed up. They declined to speak with reporters about the making of the film.
Unlike most projects, the filmmakers say this one came together almost on the fly. Downie’s health condition meant the musicians were never entirely certain they’d be able to complete the tour.
“Normally there’s a lot of preparation,” de Pencier said. “This was:
‘No, we’re running away and we’re joining the circus. We’re on tour now and we’re filming.’ So we had to play catch-up and work really quickly.”
The documentary makers say knowing the band members personally for 20 years helped them get accustomed to the touring atmosphere.
“It’s not that we wanted to do it, it’s that we were asked to do it,” Baichwal said. “We all were sort of in this, ‘Is this really the right thing to do in this moment?’ And it was, and so that’s how it came together ... They trusted us.”