Director Kevan Funk proud of his ‘aggressively’ Canadian film
Hello Destroyer is a quiet, meditative look at systemic violence in our culture
Ahead of the release of Jay Baruchel’s Goon hockey-comedy sequel comes a very different kind of Canadian movie featuring the puck world: Kevan Funk’s Hello Destroyer.
Now playing at TIFF Bell Lightbox, the drama stars Jared Abrahamson as a young Canadian junior hockey player who falls into a dark space in his life when he critically injures a rival on the ice and becomes ostracized in the community.
The film, which is up for four Canadian Screen Awards on Sunday, is a meditative and quiet reflection on institutional and systemic violence in our culture.
“The hockey part is like a red her- ring or a misnomer,” Funk, the film’s writer and director, says. “The only reason it’s about hockey is that I needed a big cultural institution at the centre of this film.
“If I set it in the U.S., it would probably be the military. But I did want to make a film that was aggressively and expressively Canadian.”
Funk was born in Vancouver and grew up in Banff, Alta., where he didn’t play hockey but was on basketball and rugby teams. He says a lot of the film’s script stems from things he said or experienced.
“There’s a universal attitude or atmosphere that exists in any of those settings, especially in terms of this idea of this sense of discovering masculinity, and I also think what is really a lot about the fragility of masculinity in those circumstances,” he says.
“Because I think so much of this is an act and a front . . . which I think is based on a lot of fear of not being accepted. And there’s a tremendous amount of overcompensation as a result.”
Funk wanted to represent hockey realistically and avoid any stereotypical Canadian hockey-movie tropes and clichés. But he also wanted to make it identifiably Canadian, as he feels strongly about reflecting Canada’s true culture and identity onscreen.
Funk recently engaged in a public debate about Canadian film with Cameron Bailey, artistic director of the Toronto International Film Festival.
Funk sent an email to Bailey (which TIFF has published with permission on its website) in response to an editorial piece that ran in a Toronto newspaper.
In the op-ed, Bailey urged homegrown filmmakers to focus more on telling true stories, like those of Can- ada’s missing and murdered indigenous women.
Funk responded that he agrees Canadian filmmakers “need to be much more bold in terms of the films that we are producing,” but added, “the institutional and corporate conditions that exist in this country very much shape the films that get made.”
His letter mentions Goon and several other Canadian films.
“I can speak from experience, at length, about the radical disinterest that Canadian distributors and broadcasters generally have for the type of films that you are appealing to filmmakers to make,” he wrote to Bailey.
Funk says he wrote the email because he “had a very visceral reaction reading his op-ed.”
With his film out, he’s using the platform to continue the conversation, noting “there’s still so much more to talk about.”
“I also think that just another middle-class white guy is not the voice that needs to necessarily be leading this charge either,” Funk says.
“That’s where I would happily step aside and would want to invite more voices to the table.”
Funk says he ultimately feels strongly that “we need to stop pretending that we’re some sort of proxy to Hollywood in English Canada and start thinking of our films as foreign films.”
“Quebec does that already because they have the language element and I think it serves them well, but there’s a reason that countries like Australia and England have much healthier, defined film culture and industries,” Funk says.
“I think it’s that they have enough separation from the U.S. to treat their films as foreign films and to treat their cinema as having a national identity.”