A conference presentation for the University of Toronto Cinema Studies Graduate Conference, Sightlines, which took place on February 27th, 2016 at Innis Town Hall. - D.D.
***
Don Owen and the Birth of Toronto
Cinema
It’s
an unfortunate coincidence that Don Owen passed away, due to health reasons,
earlier on in the week, but in honor of him and his important work, I want to
dedicate this talk to his memory. Owen is one of the founding fathers of
Toronto, English-language Canadian cinema, especially for his film Nobody Waved Good-bye (1964).
Steve
Gravestock, in his book, Don Owen: Notes
on a Filmmaker and his Culture, describes how in the early sixties,
filmmaking in Toronto was non-existent (there were no production companies),
and with the city’s conservative and religious values, it was resistant to it.
The National Film Board in Montreal, which started in 1939, was the heart of
the industry, and Owen had to go there, to its Unit B Candid Eye program, to
get the training and resources to start making films. But he would return to
Toronto to make a couple of short documentaries, Runner and Toronto Jazz,
before making Nobody Waved Good-bye,
which, similar to Gilles Carle’s La vie
heureuse de Léopold Z (1965), started out as a documentary (on juvenile
delinquency) before becoming a narrative feature.
Nobody Waved Good-bye is the story of a rebellious
teenager (Peter Kastner), who drops out of school and moves out of his parents
house, gets a job working at a parking lot, before trying to leave the city in
a stolen car with his girlfriend. Its accomplishments are four-fold: There’s
still something about Peter’s plight that resonates today – his charm,
indecision and frustration in face of a restrictive society still rings true –,
Owen’s guerilla filmmaking, open to improvisation and chance, breathes life
into the film and it still feels modern today (Matt Johnson even cites it as an
influence); its depiction of the city is valuable as a historical document; and
it would establish the groundwork for a Toronto-based film culture and the
framework for English Canadian cinema in general.
It’s
this depiction of Toronto as a modern urban center, in contrast to a vast
uninhabited landscape, and the contribution to building of a major and
alternative industry, which makes Owen such an important figure today. The film
would also directly address the relationship between Canadian culture and the
dominant mainstream one of the United States – Peter makes fun of the Hollywood
epic Cleopatra –, which also points
to some reasons for its certain marginal status in Canadian consciousness.
The
history of Canadian cinema is full of one-off films, poor reception, lack of
funding and limited audiences, which is still a sad reality today. Owen made
his film, which was modestly positively received, but after his brief stint at
the NFB, his career never really took off – the subjects of his later
documentaries would have many parallels with his own life, as he would usually
focus on outsider artists, who live a bohemian-style life, at the margins of
society.
***
How to Support an Independent
Toronto Cinema?
There’s
not enough mainstream images that bring together the country and the cultural
memory of film-goers is not documented sufficiently. How to remedy this? Watch
more Canadian films, support them, and perhaps write about them? So the
following is my attempt to do just this.
The
Toronto DIY Filmmakers should best be seen, not necessarily as a group or
movement, but a fortuitous coincidence of several young people becoming
filmmakers, who are based out of Toronto, who started making films, shorts,
animation, experimental and feature films, around the same time, since
2009-2010.
So
the Toronto DIY Filmmakers are these young filmmakers from the Greater Toronto
Area region who are making more independent and artisanal films. The films are
mostly shot digitally and most of the filmmakers are from one of Toronto’s film
production schools, such as Ryerson and York University. The young filmmakers
offer a new perspective, from their vantage point of millennials, on the
Canadian experience, which typically are more raw and melancholic, vital and
full of life than some of the nation’s more ‘official’ media output. And to
actually see them, one must be aware of these one-off or short-run screenings,
as their theatrical experiences are either micro- or personal screenings,
typically with a small to medium attendance.
The
origins of the Toronto DIY Filmmakers can be traced back to 2009 with Kazik
Radwanski’s completion of his MDF
Trilogy: Assault, Princess Margaret Blvd, and Out In That Deep Blue Sea, Simon Ennis’ You Might as Well Live and Matt Johnson’s Nirvana: The Band.
The
Toronto DIY Filmmakers include Kazik
Radwanski, Igor Drljača, Matt Johnson, Andrew Cividino, Isiah Medina, Antoine Bourges, Luo Li, Rebeccah Love, Fantavious
Fritz, Kevan Funk, Calvin
Thomas and Yonah and Lev Lewis, Simon Ennis, Nadia Litz, Daniel Cockburn, Sofia Bohdanowicz,
Nicolás Pereda, Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson, Steven McCarthy, Stephen Dunn, A.J. Bond,
Albert Shin, Blake
Williams, Mitch Ariel, Trevor Juras, Leslie Supnet, Sofia Banzhaf, Sol Friedman
and Eva Kolcze.
It’s
a diverse group and there are sub-categories that could be drawn within it: The
Toronto-born DIY filmmakers, First/Second generation filmmakers, women filmmakers,
queer filmmakers, experimental and short-film filmmakers. So even within this
already small filmmaking movement, which in itself is against the cultural
mainstream, there’s distinct and minority voices being expressed. The
ethno-cultural conflicts in these Toronto films, which deal with local,
national and transnational issues, reflect the cultural, racial, and linguistic
diversity of the city. This urban imaginary shows the effects of globalization
in Toronto, and through it the films are able to subvert the iconic and
stereotypical representations of the city. So these films participate in
challenging the Anglo-Canadian hegemonic identity, and taken all-together they
present a larger, more complex reflection of contemporary Canadian realities.
The
Toronto International Film Festival in September, which showcases many of these
works, is important for getting them international exposure and positive
receptions, and its headquarters, the TIFF Bell Lightbox, which opened in
September 12th, 2010, is one site of programming and socializing for
some of them, and so is the Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival and the Canadian
Screen Awards.
But
what’s important is the creation of a grass-roots film culture. In regards to this, the small
screenings of these Toronto DIY films, which have only grown over the years, are
really important, especially around the MDFF screening series, which takes
place either at Double Double Land, Camera Bar, CineCycle and The Royal. There
is the creation of a community and public sphere at these events as, through
the films, there’s a meditation on what it’s like living in Toronto, which
continues into a post-screening discourse on the subject between film-goers,
critics, filmmakers and programmers. Some issues that are discussed include
living in the city and overcoming social and economic problems, as well as the
filmmaking process and styles of filmmaking. There’s also an aura around these
small-scale events: One needs to be there, and go out to these screenings to actually
see the films, since the films are not available any other way (only rarely do
they get released on DVD, more likely some form of video-on-demand, or on websites
like Mubi and Fandor).
As a
whole, these films show a stalled Toronto, that of being depressed, angered and
saddened towards the state of the country and the world. It’s a world of young
adults trying to find themselves and integrating in society and being faced by
many challenges, or that of parents trying to do their best, even though they
don’t know what’s right or are just plain wrong. This is the Toronto of
political scandal and corruption, such as the Rob Ford debacle, and Canada of Stephen
Harper’s conservative government, which participated in un-regulating the
market to the detriment of natural resources and the decline of the overall
quality of life, as well as Bill C-51 which pushed back against immigration.
An important
aspect of this group is youth, the average age of the filmmakers range from the
early twenties to the early thirties, which means that they are more in touch
with growing up in the 21st century urban Toronto, the transition to
adulthood and a familiarity with the young-adult geography of the city. The
films reflect this dynamism. As well, since they are so young and new in their
careers, it means that the majority of them have only completed a few
short-films and perhaps one or more full-length features.
***
Parameters
Some
parameters are necessary to draw the limits surrounding this movement: Their
dominantly narrative films, by Toronto filmmakers, about Toronto residents, set
in Toronto. The young filmmakers offer a youthful, fresh perspective on growing
up in the city – childhood and schools are an important feature of them (e.g. Amy George, Green Crayons, The Dirties)
and so is being a young adult (e.g. Everyday
is like Sunday, Diamond Tongues, Tower, Drawing Duncan Palmer) – and they
offer a unique look on specific parts of Toronto’s urbanism and geography. As well, they have to be DIY, therefore, it excludes major productions
and films with major funding: these DIY filmmakers use non-professional,
non-ACTRA actors and technicians, and they don’t work within the industry or
with its unions.
The
filmmakers chisel away on their films on their own time and with their own
money, so they end up being more personal for this reason.
The
films attempt to reflect
their creator’s own vision of some kind of personal experience that takes place
in and around Toronto. For example, Isiah Medina’s For May and December is about how he had to move out of his
apartment, Radwanski’s How Heavy This
Hammer is about family dynamics focused on a father, Cividino with Sleeping Giant is referencing his own childhood
summers in the cottage country, and Luo Li’s I Went to the Zoo the Other Day documents a trip to the Toronto
Zoo.
The
films use metaphors as narrative devices to fictionalize the problem that the
young filmmakers are faced with in Toronto: Nirvana: The Band is about these young musicians attempting to book
a concert at the Rivoli, which stands in for the filmmakers trying to achieve
recognition in an unwelcoming creative industry; and so is Tower which is about an animator whose struggling away at his
depressive personal project. Health issues are also dealt with in these films:
In The Oxbow Cure a woman goes off
to an isolated cottage to deal with her recovery and grieving process, and a
similar story takes place in Trevor Juras’ The
Interior. The films of Rebeccah
Love (Abacus, My Love, Drawing Duncan
Palmer) also deal with the emotional toll of family death and its
bereavement.
***
Many
of these filmmakers did their undergrad and/or Masters in film production, at
one of Toronto’s film production schools, most notably Ryerson and York
University. Because of this, their technical medium is that of a new digital
cinematography, which, unique to this movement in Canadian film history, parallels
the total industry shift of film stock to digital.
The
Toronto DIY Filmmakers’ focus on an urban imagery – the streets, neighborhoods,
homes and apartments in their vicinity – which is one of the defining features of these
digital productions. This is in contrast to the richness of celluloid,
especially through how its photo-chemical material could capture the visual richness
of the pastoral beauty of rural landscapes, which is that of an older realist
tradition in Canadian cinema – a quality that owes more to the landscape
painting tradition of the Group of Seven.
A
unique perspective on Toronto is offered throughout these films. For example, Amy George is set past the Don Valley
in the east-side, The Waiting Room
in low-cost housing projects in the city’s outskirts, How Heavy This Hammer around Bloor and Gladstone, Drawing Duncan Palmer around St. Clair
Avenue, Bohdanowicz’s Dundas Street on the street of its title, Nirvana: The Band around Queen and Spadina, and Diamond Tongues around the gentrifying
Ossington Street.
These
films are also in opposition to the dominant, state-sponsored English-language
television and film production in Toronto and Canada, whose films are perhaps a
little bloated, test-marketed for demographics, and made to reflect a somewhat optimistic
nationalist discourse. They are also made by an older generation who are
somewhat out-of-touch with the interests and sensibilities of the youth.
These
smaller Toronto DIY films, on the other hand, are not made with what might seem
like a ludicrous amount of taxpayer dollars. These are smaller productions,
made in small groups, mostly of friends and acquaintances, as they do not rely on
the salaried labor of hundreds of employees.
***
Canadian Film History
The
Toronto DIY Filmmakers have also been labeled the ‘Toronto New New Wave’ or as
the Northern neighbors to the New York DIY Filmmakers. These two labels
understand it in relation to Canadian film history, and the Toronto New Wave of
the eighties in particular, as well as to the independent spirit of 21st
century American independent cinema.
Some
brief context on the major developments in English-Canadian cinema: There’s the
creation of the NFB, the Capital Cost Allowance which led to the tax-shelter
films in the seventies, and then the Toronto New Wave, which, more major figures
aside, include Ron Mann, Peter Mettler, Bruce LaBruce, and Patricia Rozema.
I
want to posit the Toronto DIY Filmmakers as an extension of these previous developments.
The
films reflect a knowledge of Canadian film history and build upon it: Radwanski’s
realist cinema recalls Allan King’s documentaries (Warrendale, A Married Couple) and the actress Kate Ashley, from How Heavy This Hammer, was in Bruce
LaBruce’s No Skin Off My Ass (1991)
and Super 8½ (1994). Matt Johnson
mentions that Don Owen’s guerilla style filmmaking was a major influence for him,
and one can also compare his work to that of Paul Gross’ acting and directing career.
The surrealist qualities of Diamond
Tongues (the boil-water advisory sub-plot) recalls Don McKellar’s Last Night (1998), and Nadia Litz’s Hotel Congress (2014) recalls the
lovers on the run story in Bruce McDonald’s Highway 61 (1991). Rebeccah
Love’s Abacus, My Love (2014) has
similarities with some of Jean-Marc Vallée’s theatrical stylistics. And Blake Williams’ work brings to
mind Michael Snow’s structural films.
***
Film Magazines
The
magazine Cahiers du Cinéma had a
feature, New York: La Génération "Do
It Yourself", in September 2011 (N.670), where they interview a range
of up-and-coming independent New York filmmakers (Bronstein, Safdies, Perry) and
ask them questions regarding filming, their motivation to create, and what they
think about the city.
The
filmmaking issues brought up parallels many similar developments that were
occurring in Toronto, and which the Toronto DIY Filmmakers engage with, and so
it provide a comparative framework to better analyze and understand what’s
going on in Toronto.
As
well, there’s an influence of American independent cinema in general, like that
of filmmakers such as Joe Swanberg and Matt Porterfield, and its historical
tradition which goes back to John Cassavetes. The Toronto DIY Filmmakers have
to hustle to make these small-scale films, and there is a lot of work that goes
into getting funding to make the films, communal work to get them made, and
promotional work to get people to see them.
The
two Toronto DIY films that are particularly under this Bronstein-Safdie
influence are Tower and Amy George. Just like the protagonist
from the New York films, these two films have protagonists that wander around
their respective neighborhoods trying to reach out to others, to have
meaningful connections, but instead, their desires always seem to get thwarted.
As
well, the Québécois magazine, 24 Images,
which proposed a similar conceptual framework in their discussion of a ‘New Québécois
Generation’ of filmmakers.
From
this group, Denis Côté is important as a major influence on the Toronto DIY Filmmakers.
Not only does he propose a model for how to be a major filmmaker on the
festival circuit, rotating between short-films and features, more commercial
films to the experimental; He is also friends/acquaintances with many of the
Toronto DIY Filmmakers, offering constructive feedback and support for many of
their films.
Though
in Toronto, there are many print and digital publications that support a
domestic independent cinema, it’s usually tied to ‘film reviewing’, publicizing
an event going on, in the upcoming weeks. But the major support for these
filmmakers comes from the Toronto-based film magazine, Cinema Scope, which brings together serious film criticism and
programming, and as some of they’re contributors are also programmers, this
kind of attention can greatly benefit the filmmakers, getting them programmed
at internationally recognized film festivals, which in terms of Canadian
funding, makes them eligible for more monetary grants.
***
The End, or, What’s Next?
“Talk to us about the horrors of the world or the powers of life, of
death, of love or our times, the beauty of a sky or the realities of the work
place, of whatever you want to speak about, but the urgent thing is, for it to
be art, there needs to be thought, politics, the circulation of joyous affects,
which disinhibits, liberates.” – Jean-Philippe Tessé
It’s
not just the cliché: that culture will make us better. But instead, with the
growth of urban expansion, rise of population, there’s something vital about what
these filmmakers are doing in capturing a distinct Toronto experience and
putting it out there in the collective imagination and memory. Their breathing
life, into what sometimes seems like a impenetrable city, creating a community
where people can come together, be less alienated, and show and talk about
their experiences and work in a positive and constructive sphere.
Nobody’s
asking these filmmakers to make their work, and they’re not always encouraged
or rewarded to do so. But it’s this agency and urgency, that they have to make it, which makes their work so compelling. Cinema is an expensive medium and its
distribution is now harder to navigate than ever. These Toronto DIY Filmmakers
are doing something important. There’s a leap into the abyss, not knowing what they’re going to make
or how, that they’re creating something new, which pushes towards a common
good, that of sharing the same world. These stories breathe life into the city.
No
Toronto resident would pick the CN Tower, which is supposed be its official
symbol, as a defining aspect of how they experience and see the city, so
instead the city’s residents find their own communities and places that they
identify more strongly with. These Toronto DIY films capture, and contribute,
to creating an intimate space and public sphere within the city. They help understand
Toronto’s urban and international realities and how to define the contemporary
Canadian identity.
To
conclude: What can be done to either improve the films or help them get
distribution and more attention?
Hopefully
you can support them by going to see some of their newest films when they come
out. In the upcoming months, hopefully, How
Heavy This Hammer, The Waiting Room, 88:88, Operation Avalanche, and Sleeping Giant will get a theatrical
exhibition, and, hopefully, short films like Lewis and Drawing Duncan Palmer get a larger premiere. The MDFF events are great
public sphere screenings and social events. And there are many other films in production,
whose titles are: Sundowners,
Nirvana: The Band (Part. 2), Dim
the Fluorescents, Props Girl, Spice it Up, Sublet, and
The People Garden.
The
future of Toronto and Canadian cinema is in their hands.
No comments:
Post a Comment