Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Something's coming, something good

Just a quick check-in this week, but I wanted to highlight a couple of local notables:

Empire 7 Cinemas, Ottawa - National Theatre Live: King Lear, Feb. 3, 2011, 7pm


http://www.empiretheatres.com/movie/nt-live-king-lear


Black Canadian Scholarship Fund Video Contest - Prize: $500, Deadline: Feb. 11, 2011
"The Black Canadian Scholarship Fund is holding a video contest for  Black History Month. Participants must create a  3-5 minute video on their opinion about a pressing issue affecting black youth."

http://www.blackhistoryottawa.org/welcome.php?pid=127&lang=en


Kanata Choral Society - "Songs from West Side Story", Sat. Feb. 19, 2011, 3pm
Songs from West Side Story by Leonard Bernstein and songs from the reportoire of the King Singers. Scott Auchinleck, director. St. Paul's Anglican Church, 20 Young Road, Kanata

http://www.kanatachoralsociety.ca


SCREEN SHOTS



Ottawa International Film Festival | oiff.ca






Ottawa Movie Fans (MEETUP) | meetup.com/ottawamoviefans


That's pretty much it for now. As for the progress made in retooling moviequips.ca, the main page is getting there - despite far more coding clashes than I can be bothered with. There's still some tweaking left to do, but I didn't see why it couldn't go live anyhow. Beyond the obvious, here's another sneak peek from the new archive portion of the site:



Thanks for checking in.


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Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Shh. You'll wake up that monkey

So, are you happy with the big screen winners fêted by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association at this year's Golden Globe® Awards?

I enjoyed watching the pre-awards red carpet arrivals coverage again. It's fun to see movie stars in their unnatural habitat. It's fun to laugh or wince or gog at the bits of vague designer fashion some celebrities choose to wear. Her dress looks like a shower curtain. That one's so Trash '80s. A tuxedo is still considered evening wear, even in Los Angeles (fail).

What's funnier is that none of the televised commentary before or during or after the Golden Globe® Awards actually bothered to focus on - or question - the HFPA's choices. Where were all the resident network film critics and reviewers? Why weren't they there, ringside at the red carpet, all chomping at the bit to voice their opinions whether or not The Social Network deserved the best dramatic movie of 2010 nod? Was The Kids Are All Right truly a better Comedy or Musical (?!) than absolutely anything else released on the big screen last year? Really? There's total consensus? Worldwide? Really? Spooky.

Looking at the HFPA membership listed at its website (goldenglobes.org), none of the names stood out as recognizable to me. Are these film critics I've read or seen or heard? Nope. Doing a quick, totally unscientific Google search using a random handful of those names didn't result in much either. Outside the current trivial news about a lawsuit accusing the HFPA of accepting payola (how quaint), there's barely any useful info about this supposed iron-fisted star chamber of ex-pat stringers slumming it on Sunset Blvd.


goldenglobes.org

Many apparently believe a Golden Globe® Awards win can lead to Oscar gold. I'm not quite sure how the HFPA's relatively small membership of less than 100 could influence the hundreds of members of the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS), the organization that runs the annual Academy Awards (oscars.org) and doles out the Oscars (oscar.go.com). The Golden Globe® Awards represent an arm of the media awarding the film industry. The Oscars represent the film industry awarding the film industry. Ditto for the SAG Awards, pretty much.

Perhaps the HFPA's influence - if any - on the voting decisions of AMPAS members comes from HFPA nominations being announced in December. The Screen Actors Guild also announced its SAG Awards noms in December (sagawards.org). This year, the Golden Globe® Awards aired live on Jan. 16, two days after the AMPAS nomination deadline had reportedly closed. AMPAS is due to announce its Oscar nominations on Jan. 25, and the 83rd Academy Awards air Feb. 27.

It's reasonable to speculate that a few AMPAS voting members would defer to the HFPA short list of nominees to decide what flicks merit Academy Award attention. The Ottawa Citizen's movie column used to go by the fairly refutable tag line, "We see all the movies so you don't have to." For any Academy voting member short on time, the math is easy enough when choosing between sitting through the four to six hundred movies released annually versus considering the HFPA's 70 nominations sporting lots of overlapping film titles.

Let's look at some HFPA, AMPAS and SAG Best Picture votes:

2009 Noms & Nods
HFPA Best Picture, Drama: AVATAR, The Hurt Locker, Inglorious Basterds, Precious, Up In The Air
AMPAS Best Picture: Avatar, The Blind Side, District 9, An Education, THE HURT LOCKER, Inglorious Basterds, Precious, A Serious Man, Up, Up In The Air
SAG Best Picture: An Education, The Hurt Locker, INGLORIOUS BASTERDS, Nine, Precious

2008 Noms & Nods
HFPA Best Picture, Drama:
The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, Frost/Nixon, The Reader, Revolutionary Road, SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE
AMPAS Best Picture: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Frost/Nixon, Milk, The Reader, SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE
SAG Best Picture: The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, Doubt, Frost/Nixon, Milk, SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE

2007 Noms & Nods
HFPA Best Picture, Drama:
American Gangster, ATONEMENT, Eastern Promises, The Great Debaters, Michael Clayton, No Country For Old Men, There Will Be Blood
AMPAS Best Picture: Atonement, Juno, Michael Clayton, NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN, There Will Be Blood
SAG Best Picture: 3:10 To Yuma, American Gangster, Hairspray, Into The Wild, NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN

2006 Noms & Nods
HFPA Best Picture, Drama: BABEL, Bobby, The Departed, Little Children, The Queen
AMPAS Best Picture: Babel, THE DEPARTED, Letters from Iwo Jima, Little Miss Sunshine, The Queen
SAG Best Picture: Babel, Bobby, The Departed, Dreamgirls, LITTLE MISS SUNSHINE

Take a second look at that list, if you don't notice the similarities. It's pretty funny.


It's pretty much been my opinion for a while that if you want a sense of which actors or what movies are liked by known foreign press film critics - what ever 'foreign press' might mean to you - then subscribe to the various media outlets they individually work for. Most probably crank out an annual Top Ten or Best Picks column to appease their content-hungry editors and blog readers, I imagine.

Beyond that, it's sometimes interesting to check out what members of the International Federation of Film Critics (fipresci.org) pick as their top flick. This year, The Ghost Writer directed by Roman Polanski won FIPRESCI's Best Film of the Year. The White Ribbon won last year. No consensus there. Finally.


fipresci.org

The FIPRESCI roster of affiliate organizations worldwide includes two from Canada: l'Association Québécoise des Critiques de Cinéma (aqcc.ca) founded in 1973, and the Toronto Film Critics Association (torontofilmcritics.com) begun in 1997. The AQCC hasn't yet released its awarded picks for this year, but the TFCA's faves of 2010 were made public earlier this month - before the Golden Globe® Awards aired:

TFCA Best Picture: The Social Network
TFCA Best Director: David Fincher, The Social Network
TFCA Best Actor: Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network
TFCA Best Actress: Jennifer Lawrence, Winter’s Bone
TFCA Rogers Best Canadian Film Award: Incendies

The TFCA's nod for Best Picture of 2009 was a tie between Hunger and Inglourious Basterds, with Polytechnique winning the Rogers Best Canadian Film Award. La Donation won the AQCC's Prix du long métrage québécois last year.


Canada doesn't have a Golden Globe® Awards. Possibly the closest thing to that would be the glamour and hype of the Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF), the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) or Montréal's le Festival des Films du Monde (FFM). TIFF (tiff.net) was founded in 1976, a year before the FFM (ffm-montreal.org), and both September events offer publicly voted awards and a FIPRESCI prize. VIFF (viff.org) began in 1982 and also features publicly voted awards during its annual run in October. Additionally, VIFF and FFM are juried film festivals.

In 2010, Incendies won Best Canadian Feature and Wasteland won the Rogers People’s Choice Award at VIFF. Dalla vita in poi won FFM's Special Grand Prix of the jury, and Parajos de papel tied with Das lied in mir for that festival's most popular film as voted by the public. The King's Speech won the Cadillac People's Choice Award at TIFF. 

Yes there are other film festivals in Canada. A big bunch of 'em. Lots. yup.


"The Canadian Film Awards (CFA), which were awarded from 1949 to 1978, were initiated by the Canadian Association for Adult Education (CAAE), to honour distinguished Canadian films (...) The first presentation was 27 April 1949 at the Little Elgin Theatre in Ottawa, with Prime Minister Louis St-Laurent in attendance." - thecanadianencyclopedia.com

The CFA would eventually become the Genie Awards (genieawards.ca), organized annually by the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television (ACCT). This year's Genie nominations are expected to be announced in February, and it's anyone's guess if the Genie Awards ceremony slated a month later will be televised or webcast or just quietly, anonymously posted on a Government of Canada-funded YouTube knock-off. Sadly, to compare the Genie Awards to the Academy Awards would be naively optimistic at best - except to humbly point out that both are self-awarding film industry organizations.


genieawards.ca

To be fair, the Genie Awards primarily celebrate Canadian-made movies. If American or other foreign movies are cited, it's normally because those movies included location shots produced someplace, somewhere, somehow in Canada. That said, the "four to six hundred movies released annually" equation mentioned earlier isn't an issue in Genie world. If all a voting ACCT member is voting on are twelve months' worth of Canadian-made movies, the HFPA's short list of 70 Golden Globe Awards® nominations - with its lots of overlap - is still likely a heavy burden by comparison. I'm not knocking Canadian films, there simply aren't many made annually compared to the amount cranked out by the States - fewer still that are recognized or seen by the average movie fan - unless a Canadian-made movie garners attention by HFPA or AMPAS, or the films attract loads of territorial support, such as French Canadian films screened in Québec.

In the spirit of comparison and idle curiosity, let's take a look at a Canadian version of the list I did earlier:

2010 Nods
TFCA Best Picture:
The Social Network
FFM Special Grand Prix of the jury: Dalla vita in poi
TIFF People's Choice: The King’s Speech
VIFF People’s Choice: Waste Land
ACCT Best Picture: Polytechnique

2009 Nods
TFCA Best Picture
(tie): Hunger / Inglourious Basterds
FFM Special Grand Prix of the jurys: Weaving Girl
TIFF People's Choice: Precious
VIFF People’s Choice: Soundtrack for a Revolution
ACCT Best Picture: Passchendaele

2008 Nods
TFCA Best Picture:
Wendy and Lucy
FFM Special Grand Prix of the jury: The Necessities of Life
TIFF People's Choice: Slumdog Millionaire
VIFF People’s Choice: Il y a longtemps que je t’aime
ACCT Best Picture: Away From Her

2007 Nods
TFCA Best Picture: No Country for Old Men
FFM Special Grand Prix of the jury: Noodle
TIFF People's Choice: Eastern Promises
VIFF People’s Choice: Persepolis
ACCT Best Picture: Bon Cop, Bad Cop


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Friday, January 14, 2011

My Wicked friday indulgence

I'm pretty stoked about seeing Cats at the NAC here in February. I saw it once before, at the New London Theatre in the late '80s, and remember it as being the first stage play I enjoyed.

Anyhow, getting those tickets paired with the news Tamir's (www.tamir.ca) documentary Dreamcoat hits the screen next week showcasing its members' stage performance of Andrew Lloyd Webber's Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat piqued my interest in what Webber's up to these days.

Judging by how well Wicked has done as page-to-stage unofficial prequel of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, what I discovered looks pretty cool:



"Produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Bill Kenwright, The Wizard of Oz is an enchanting adaptation of the all time classic, totally reconceived for the stage (...) This new production contains all the much-loved songs from the Oscar winning movie score, plus a few surprises along the way, including new songs by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice."

I imagine it's only a matter of a couple of years or so before the screen version of this new London stage adaptation of the 1939 MGM film classic shows up on moviegoers' radar. I'm still waiting for a film version of Cats, never mind the tragic screen versions of Webber's stage hits Jesus Christ Superstar and The Phantom of the Opera.

Checking out Wikipedia about the original L. Frank Baum novel The Wonderful Wizard of Oz first published in 1900, it was interesting to find Baum involved with the first Wizard of Oz stage adaptation just a couple of years after the book launched.




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Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Hump Day exposé

It's a happy coincidence that my checking out archival photos of various old Ottawa cinemas and theatres (such as this c.1867 look at Her Majesty's Theatre on Wellington St., from Topley Studio) earlier this week leads to citing a couple of film-related events hosted today at Library and Archives Canada. Sorry for the short notice, check it out:

Ottawa Film Society: Série Française - 12-13 janvier, 2011, 19h, Auditorium, Bibliothèque et Archives Canada (395, rue Wellington) Members only.
Joueuse (2008) / La merditude des choses (2009). "The OFS (Ottawa Film Society) is Canada's oldest film society and we are currently presenting our 76th season of film series. The Ottawa Film Society is a volunteer organization and needs the active participation of its members to ensure the continued success of its operation."


http://www.filmfilmfilm.ca/francaise_10.html


Canadian Bookbinders and Book Artists Guild - Ottawa Valley Chapter: Night at the Movies - Jan. 12, 2011, 7pm, Library and Archives Canada (395 Wellington St.)
The Machine that Made Us - Story of Johann Gutenberg. "A look at the story of Johann Gutenberg, inventor of the world's first printing press in the 15th century, and an exploration of how and why the machine was invented. Features Stephen Fry." (found on cbc.ca/ottawa/community/#)

http://www.mmcgovern.com/cbbag-ov/Program.html


Cineplex: 2010-2011 Classic Film Series - Jan. 12 and 23, 2011, SilverCity Gloucester Cinemas and Coliseum Ottawa Cinemas
A Star is Born (1954). "The intent is to showcase classic films that, in most cases, have not been seen on the big screen in this format before."

http://www.cineplex.com/Events/ClassicFilmSeries/Home.aspx


SPEAKING OF DOMS & SUBS...

"James Bond’s vacation is over. After the financial wrangling over the fate of MGM led the family that produces the 007 films to halt development of their 23rd installment last year, the project is back on track with plans for a Nov. 9, 2012 release date, MGM confirms to EW. (Deadline first reported the story.)"


http://www.imdb.com/news/ni6806804/

This good news above, found on imdb.com, also seems timely, locally. Hot on the heels of its Charlie Chaplin showcase, the Mayfair Theatre torques O-town's adrenaline and innuendo quota elbow deep with an arsenal of James Bond flicks starting this weekend with Dr. No (1962) at 1pm.


http://mayfairtheatre.ca/schedule/

Other tasty Mayfair moments worth a peek are the Lost Dominion Screening Collective's Canadian Cult Revue Double Bill, Jan. 19 (lostdominion.blogspot.com) and the Drunken Master Revue's Painted Lips and Lolly Licks sexy film fest, uh, coming Feb. 11 (odessafilmworks.com/paintedlips). The latter is purely adult content, and its 2011 call for submissions is on now. Elbow deep with an arsenal, too, maybe...


MORE LOCAL LOVE

The Writers' Room Ottawa: Screenwriters Meeting - Jan. 16, 2011, 2pm, The Carleton Tavern (Upstairs, Parkdale at Armstrong, Hintonburg)
"Third Sunday every month (...) meeting of the minds, to discuss, swap, critique and get feedback on the characters, scenes and scripts that we’re all working on." (found on ottawafilm.ca)


http://thewritersroomottawa.wordpress.com/


Canadian Film Institute: Best of Ottawa 2010 - Sat. Jan. 29, 2011, 7pm, Auditorium, Library and Archives Canada (395 Wellington St.)
"ONE NIGHT ONLY! The Best of Ottawa programmes showcase many audience favorites and films awarded top honours from the OIAF Official Competition (...) Best of Ottawa 2010 is only a sample of the outstanding animated works screened at the Festival. Don't miss out on the full festival experience! Join us at the 2011 Ottawa International Animation Festival taking place September 21-25, 2011."

http://www.cfi-icf.ca/index.php?option=com_cfi&task=showevent&id=62


Carleton Music Showcase: Music Theatre Showcase - Mar. 31, 2011, 7:30pm, Kailash Mital Theatre, Carleton Univesity (1125 Colonel By Drive)
"The Kailash Mital Theatre is Carleton University’s fully equipped 444 seat performance Theatre. Professionally equipped, managed and staffed, the Kailash Mital Theatre is suitable for Dramatic Productions, Acoustic and Amplified Concerts, and both Conferences and Meetings."

http://www2.carleton.ca/km-theatre/events/carleton-music-showcase-iii-music-theatre-showcase-march-31/


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Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Beyond the reel (and the city limits) and back

Just a quick mid-week scan of what's going on, film and acting-wise:

'These Are Not Movies, Screenplays for films that will never be made' book launch - Saturday Jan. 8, Raw Sugar Cafe, 692 Somerset St. W.
"This book is both a love letter and a cold shoulder to the cinema, praising its beauty even as it tells it to go to hell. It is eight writers forgoing all that moving-picture foolishness to make touching, shocking, hilarious movies with words alone (plus a few stills)."

IFCO 19 Anniversary Party - Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011, The Collection/Bar 56, 56 ByWard Market
"2011 will see the Independent Filmmakers Co-operative of Ottawa Inc. (IFCO) celebrating 19 years of amazing indie filmmaking in the Nation's Capital (...) Join us on Saturday, January 15th at the Collection/Bar 56 (Mercury Underground Lounge Level - 56 ByWard Market Square), and start 2011 off with a BIG BANG! Cover: $5."

MIFO Objectif Cinéma, Orléans (Ottawa) - 13 et 27 janvier 2011 à 19 h 30 ...
"Festival du film d'Orléans. L'équipe d'Objectif Cinéma présentera dorénavant deux films par mois! Notez les dates à votre agenda et parlez-en à vos ami.e.s!"

5th Annual Aultsville Winter Filmfest, Cornwall - Jan. 21-23, 2011
"Aultsville Theatre is located at 2 Belmont St. Cornwall ON., on the campus of St. Lawrence College. (...) Movie selections are chosen as close to the festival as possible to ensure that you are seeing the most current films available!"

Film Night International, Perth
"All Film Night International's profits, after expenses, are donated to the Perth and Smiths Falls public libraries. Films are screened at the Premier Cinemas, Smiths Falls at 7:00 pm. Ticket prices are $10.00."
http://filmnightinternational.blogspot.com

 
MUSE International Film Series, Peterborough
"Presented by the Peterborough Museum & Archives and the Toronto International Film Festival Group**, bringing Canadian and International Film to Peterborough since 1998. Screenings at Galaxy Cinema, Water Street, Peterborough."
http://www.peterboroughmuseumandarchives.ca/
http://www.peterboroughmuseumandarchives.ca/whatson.htm#muse
 
**"Film Circuit, a division of TIFF, provides filmgoers in under-served communities with transformative experiences through access to Canadian and international independent films. With over 195 groups in 163 communities across Canada, Film Circuit is essential in helping TIFF lead the world in building markets and audiences for Canadian cinema. (...) Operating since 1992, Film Circuit now reaches over 350,000 film fans annually at nearly 3,000 screenings in over 176 circuit centres across Canada." (very cool)



undercurrents festival - Jan. 26 - Feb. 6, 2011, GCTC
"undercurrents is your chance to see work by some of Ottawa's (and Canada's) most exciting and boundary-pushing theatre creators. GCTC's brand new festival will feature original plays by the city's most dynamic up and coming artists sharing the stage with the hottest independent shows touring the country. Each of the 6 productions in the festival will have a limited 4-show run. $15 per show."

Fairy-Tales by the Fire stage show - Jan. 8-9, 2011, Alumni Auditorium, uOttawa
"Once Upon a Kingdom Theatre is the theatre for the young audience that was founded by University of Ottawa students and graduates. The theatre opened its doors for the first time on January 9th, 2009" (check out the auditions call for The Little Prince).


 
A.C.T. Course Outlines - Winter 2011
"Ottawa’s only in-front-of-the-camera acting school that operates year round." (start Jan. '11)


http://www.actottawa.com/
http://www.actottawa.com/act-cou-winter2011.htm#Intensive%20Acting%20Classes


Thanks for checking in.


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Monday, January 03, 2011

Code relief, off the grid

So, it's the first blog post of the new year and moviequips.ca appears to be pulling a Garbo today. Inaccessible. Off line. Wanting to be left alone. 

It was fine, up until this morning. The problem - for now - seems to be with the server in B.C. Hopefully all the bills have been paid at my end, and that the Canadian West Coast hasn't slid into the Pacific overnight. Happy new year... sorry about the weirdness.

The retooling of moviequips.ca continues. I'd point you to the latest link to see the progress, but it's on the same server as the current site.

Much of what could be updated and added using feeds displayed on the main page has either already been done or is being debugged. I've decided using Google Feedburner is an odd adventure. It's partly my own fault. My HTML editor doesn't seem to like style sheets, and style sheets are pretty much required when handling the typography of the feeds I'm building in Feedburner. I don't want to go back to school. I needed to find a workaround.
 
It turns out RSS feeds processed through Google Feedburner end up gaining some attributes when then aggregated through Yahoo! Pipes. Why? I don't care. It could be a proprietary thing: Yahoo Vs. Google. I don't care. Web design talk is boring. I'm just mentioning it because using that Feedburner-to-Pipes process has let me handle typography without style sheets. A nice added bonus is that a total non-coder like me can add inset photos to certain RSS feed lists that apparently don't.

Blah, blah, blah. Get on with the movies...

Salt was fun Fugitive-like eye candy. Jolie and cast were pretty good throughout, but I found the camerawork to be lazy and the storytelling to be plain goofy.

In part, the same goes for Wall Street 2. Douglas and cast do a good job with their characters, but the story itself gets bogged down by a lot of fluff and nonsense that merely inspires audience exasperation. Douglas' Solitary Man is much better than Wall Street 2.

Also, check out The A-Team. Loads of fun, and enormously better than The Losers or The Expendables.

It looks like the updated moviequips.ca site will need a couple more weeks of gear tightening. The existing version should be back on track by the end of this week - if it's back online by then. I'll keep you posted on this blog.

Thanks for checking in.

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