But the nearly
30 minute film by Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson is a fascinating work
of experimental cinematography and thinking about the cinema. Mark Peranson, in
his Cinema Scope Online review of the
film, brings up the influence of Pere Portabella’s Cuadecuc, vampire on Maddin’s project, along with on Ben Rivers’ The Sky Trembles and the Earth Is Afraid
and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers and A
Distant Episode. The vampirizing of the Gross film, similarly to what
Portabella did on Franco’s, allows the filmmakers to create some indelible
images: a moving green-screen that substitutes the background for Canadian
sights, black-and-white pixelated footage of soldiers running around the desert
landscapes, and inverted and fluorescent colors.
Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton engages in the contemplation of
filmmaking: there’s a quote from Sun Tzu on how war is the art of deception,
along with the hockey player Guy Lafleur’s song Scoring which discusses how to get the perfect shot. Michael
Kennedy, from Cineplex Magazine, promotes the film in a sensational manner,
while in lofty voice-over the nature of sight and style of filmmaking is
discussed. All different modes of thinking of cinema, which the film brings
together organically.
Other influences
include Sam Peckinpah (who recently benefitted from a Locarno retrospective and
a book from Capricci) as the title indicates, and even F.W. Murnau whose actual
head was recently stolen from his cemetery plot in Germany. But also, more
explicitly, Tim Horton, the famous Canadian hockey player, who founded the
famous doughnut and coffee chain. There’s something about hockey that’s
extremely important to the Canadian experience and Maddin is trying to find the
root to it. For him, it involves his childhood obsession of it, and his
relationship to his brother and father. This meditation on his personal
obsessions makes it a great companion to his earlier collection of writing, From the Atelier Tovar.
With Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton, The
Forbidden Room, and later the online components, Maddin
and the Johnsons have won this game. They’re rock stars.
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