Calgary Herald

Comedy goes to pot

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

You can sense the good idea that led to Canadian Strain.

With our government turning a page and making cannabis legal as of late 2018, why not a comedy about a pot dealer forced to pivot when her illegal business dries up?

The trouble with this well-meaning feature from writer-director Geordie Sabbagh is that it’s not overly funny.

And what humour there is hinges on an alternate-reality version of Canada where Shoppers Drug Mart sells weed.

“I have a points card!” says one user, explaining her decision to change suppliers.

But give it up for the cast, headed up by Jess Salgueiro as Anne Banting — what a Canadian name!

When her only source of income disappears, she finds herself drawn into a club scene where much harder drugs are on the menu.

And she gets a job at the newly

formed CDCBO, or Cannabis Distributi­on and Control Board of Ontario.

Her supervisor, played by Naomi Snieckus, nails the goofy tone of a government bureaucrac­y lifer, while Colin Mochrie nicely underplays the role of Anne’s father.

And to be fair to Sabbagh, he apparently made this feature on nine days and a shoestring, and that doesn’t show at all — the results look sharp and profession­al. (The last thing you want is for your marijuana comedy to look like it was made by stoners.)

But the story is too thin even for the film’s 79-minute runtime. Not a bad trip; more of a weak joint.

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