The Standard (St. Catharines)

Doc brings kudos for Canadian

Producer gets Oscar nod through Netflix’s 13th

- DAVID FRIEND THE CANADIAN PRESS

Howard Barish wasn’t thinking about an invitation to the Oscars when upstart filmmaker Ava DuVernay stepped into his Los Angeles office about a decade ago.

The Winnipeg-born producer was happily managing his own company making TV network ad campaigns when DuVernay knocked on his door with a pitch to invest in her as a director.

“She’s one of the most intelligen­t, articulate and passionate people I’ve ever met,” Barish says. “Eventually, there was just no way I could say no.”

Three feature films into their partnershi­p, they’re heading to the Academy Awards on Sunday with a shared nomination in the documentar­y feature category for Netflix’s 13th. It’s Barish’s first Oscar nod and DuVernay’s second time in contention, after Selma competed for best picture.

A graduate of York University’s film program, Barish later learned about the Canadian entertainm­ent industry under influentia­l leaders such as Alliance Communicat­ions co-founder Robert Lantos.

He worked as assistant director on Canadian TV favourites like The Edison Twins and Night Heat before setting up shop in Hollywood with his production company Kandoo Films.

When DuVernay first walked into his office, she was a publicist with a good reputation around town. But she wasn’t shy about her ambition to make her own movies.

Barish agreed to give her access to his studio equipment in exchange for a producer role on her 2010 debut I Will Follow and the 2012 film Middle of Nowhere, which won the director award at the Sundance Film Festival.

Next for DuVernay was 2014’s Selma, which made her the talk of Hollywood.

But while Marvel was circling her with an offer to adapt superhero franchise Black Panther for the big screen, DuVernay was intrigued by a much smaller proposal from Netflix to direct a documentar­y. She told Barish she wanted to examine the 13th amendment to the U.S. constituti­on. Its abolishmen­t of slavery came with one exception — it didn’t include people convicted of a crime.

Barish says the film’s topic resonated with him, even as a Caucasian Jew who grew up in Canada.

“To me it didn’t matter what colour, creed, shape, size you are. Oppression is oppression,” he says. “This is a horrific story that has continued from the 1800s to today. It needed to be told.”

On the set of 13th, Barish’s role as producer extended beyond the usual responsibi­lity of managing the film’s budget. When they needed him, he’d grab a second camera to shoot impassione­d interviews with the likes of activist Angela Davis and politician Newt Gingrich.

“I was there for every shoot day,” he says. “It’s a logistics job and a creative job combined together.”

Even if 13th doesn’t win the Oscar, Barish says the film is already generating attention from viewers across the globe.

“I get a dozen calls a day from universiti­es and groups across the country all wanting to screen the film,” he says. “What I hope for this film is it incites change.”

 ?? SUPPLIED PHOTO/KANDOO FILMS ?? Canadian film producer Howard Barish is shown in an undated handout photo. Barish started filmmaking in Canada, but it wasn’t until Ava DuVernay stepped into his Los Angeles office that his career truly caught fire.
SUPPLIED PHOTO/KANDOO FILMS Canadian film producer Howard Barish is shown in an undated handout photo. Barish started filmmaking in Canada, but it wasn’t until Ava DuVernay stepped into his Los Angeles office that his career truly caught fire.

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