How Heavy This Hammer, The Waiting Room and Sleeping Giant will be playing at the Festival du nouveau cinéma* in the upcoming
week (October 7th – 18th) and there’s something
validating about seeing these young new Toronto directors being highlighted.
Kazik Radwanski and Igor Drljača’s
second film’s testifies to their improvements as filmmakers. After Tower and Cutaway, in How Heavy This Hammer Radwanski explores the middle age Erwin (Erwin Van Cotthem)
as he goes through a life crisis. There are more characters, situations and
confrontations than his previous film, which makes this feature more visually complex
and interesting in its portrayal of depression and aimlessness. While in The Waiting Room, Drljača continues to
explore the Yugoslavian diaspora through the story of Jasmin (Jasmin Geljo) trying
to find work as an actor in Toronto as he balances his family life at home and
abroad.
A couple of examples of their
striking scenes: In How Heavy This
Hammer the whole family is watching a movie in the living room as Erwin is
sleeping. One of his two sons wakes him, which causes a fight that would lead
to Erwin separating from his wife and moving out. The look of the two boys
wanting to spend quality time with their father, the wife (Kate Ashley) wanting
everything to work out, and the arrogance of Erwin, all which is illumined by
the blue of the TV screen and with what sounds like a John Williams score, contribute
to a very striking moment. In The
Waiting Room, Jasmin is in an audition for the role of a thug. He repeats
the scene with variations due to the director’s suggestions. And through his
repetition what's on display is Jasmin’s work as an actor, the process of
being stereotyped, and the resistance to it through Jasmin's use of his native
language. It’s sub-story on a sound stage of filming a road-movie about the
Bosnian War is another example.
Andrew Cividino’s first
feature Sleeping Giant, which premiered
at the Critic’s Week at Cannes, is about the experiences of three teenagers spending
their summer in cottage country Thunder Bay. Its coming of
age story through its emphasis on loss, disillusionment and melancholy captures something universal about growing up. Cividino’s
directing style, which has been evolving through out his many short films, seems
here to be fully achieved as Sleeping Giant is reminiscent of both Stand by Me and the films of Jeff Nichols.
And there are connections between
all of these films: In The Waiting Room
Jasmin’s son hits another kid playing soccer, which echoes Erwin’s violence playing rugby in How Heavy This
Hammer. In Radwanski’s film the Toronto director Matt Johnson has a cameo
(just like how he did in Diamond Tongues)
which makes one further anticipate his upcoming film, Operation Avalanche. Another connection is how many of the technicians
on the crews jump from each other's different projects.
There’s something really exciting
about the Toronto film community and it seems to be precipitating towards
getting more international attention. Some of the other directors include Sofia
Bohdanowicz, Antoine Bourges, Daniel Cockburn, Simon Ennis, Clint Enns, Fantavious
Fritz, Kevan Funk, Matt Johnson, Eva Kolcze, Calvin Thomas and Lev and Yonah
Lewis, Luo Li, Rebeccah Love, Isiah Medina, Katrina Orlowski, Nicolás Pereda, Pavan
Moondi and Brian Robertson, Albert Shin and Blake Williams. Hopefully there’s
interest for all of their work and that people start noticing them. The quality
is there.
See also interviews with some of these directors : Interviews with Cinephile Directors.
* There are also two Philippe Grandrieux films, Meurtrière and Malgré la nuit, and a special screening of Ishii Katsuhito’s The Taste of Tea with a commentary by Jean-Marc
Vallée going on.
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