Toronto Star

THE LAST LAUGH GETS AN EXTENDED RETURN AT HOT DOCS

Other highlights include Toronto Short Film Festival, Shadow Girl documentar­y and Candys’ Family Fan Day

- JASON ANDERSON

The Last Laugh: What with the doc’s abundance of comedy greats such as Mel Brooks, Rob Reiner and Sarah Silverman, Renee Firestone may not count as the most famous interview subject in The Last Laugh, a Hot Docs 2016 selection that returns for an extended run this week. Yet as a survivor of Auschwitz, she may have the most interestin­g take on the film’s core subject, which is the always-provocativ­e combinatio­n of humour and the Holocaust. In one scene, Firestone describes her feelings of bemusement (albeit belated) when she met Josef Mengele, who told her she really ought to get someone to take a look at her tonsils if she survived the war — it turned out he gave her sound medical advice.

Another survivor in the film — Robert Clary, who was a French teenager when he was imprisoned at Ottmuth and Buchenwald — speaks of singing and performing in cabarets for both his fellow prisoners and their captors. He later starred on Hogan’s

Heroes, still the only U.S. sitcom to ever combine Nazis and slapstick. The film includes a delightful encounter between Clary and Firestone where they again find some mirth amid the pain.

Such moments add great richness to The Last Laugh’s thoughtful yet still funny examinatio­n of the importance of levity in the face of tragedy, and of comedians’ drive to break taboos and test the limits of free speech.

Director Ferne Pearlstein augments his star-studded lineup of talking heads with clips from the “Springtime for Hitler” musical number and the making-out-in-Schindler’s-List episode of Seinfeld. The Last Laugh plays Friday to March 28 at the Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema.

Shadow Girl: The latest documentar­y by Maria-Teresa Larrain will also be her last film. The reason is the progressiv­e myopia that has inevitably had a dramatic impact on the Chilean-Canadian filmmaker’s life and work. A new documentar­y that plays its Toronto premiere this week,

Shadow Girl is about her efforts to come to terms with her vision loss by creating a cinematic travelogue.

Larrain will surely have more to say about her unique personal journey at the Q&A after the screening at the Revue on Sunday.

Toronto Short Film Festival: A fiver is all it costs to see one of the 10 programs of minimovies screening at the Toronto Short Film Festival (TSFF) this week. The Carlton again plays host to the third annual offshoot of the T.O. Indie fest. Among the offerings by Canadians in the selection are a preview of Katie Uhlmann’s new comedy web series My Roommate’s

an Escort and Forgivenes­s, a new effort by actor and playwright Andrew Moodie. The TSFF runs Monday to March 17.

Burden: Plenty of famous people suffered for their art, but only Chris Burden asked someone to shoot him in the arm for it. The legendary American performanc­e artist and sculptor who had a very special relationsh­ip with pain, Burden is the subject of an eponymous documentar­y that caps off the AGO’s spate of new art docs at Jackman Hall Wednesday to March 18.

Canadian Screen Awards’ Family

Fan Day: As part of the weekend festivitie­s for the Canadian Screen Awards on Sunday, the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television invites fans to a free event the day before at the Sony Centre for the Performing Arts. On Saturday, YTV’s Carlos Bustamante hosts a “Family Fan Day” that includes meet-andgreets with cast members from Letterkenn­y, Murdoch Mysteries, Heartland, Kim’s Convenienc­e and more.

 ?? HOT DOCS ?? Mel Brooks is one of the comedy greats interviewe­d in the documentar­y The Last Laugh, which examines the importance of levity in the face of tragedy. The documentar­y returns to Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema this week.
HOT DOCS Mel Brooks is one of the comedy greats interviewe­d in the documentar­y The Last Laugh, which examines the importance of levity in the face of tragedy. The documentar­y returns to Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema this week.

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