Tag Archive: Canada


A TIMELY HONOR FOR ALICE MUNRO

Alice-MunroAlice Munro’s deserved receipt of the Nobel Prize for Literature is great news for Canada, women’s literature and the short story form. It’s also a timely risposte to the male chauvinist gits like David Gilmour, an instructor at the University of Toronto, who absurdly dismiss women’s writers as second rate.

LIFE OF PI directed by Ang Lee (USA, 2012)

piHitting a financial crisis, a family from Pondicherry in India decide to cut their losses and move to Canada taking their zoo with them so that they can sell the animals to help support themselves. During the ship journey they encounter a violent storm and all die expect for a zebra, a hyena, an orangutan, Pi and a Bengal tiger. Eventually this lifeboat load is reduced to just Pi and the tiger.

It’s an eccentric story that a couple of decades ago could only have been brought to the big screen in a cartoon format. Now, technology has developed to the point that director Ang Lee has been able to call upon the expertise of  Rhythm and Hues Studios in California to conjure up remarkably lifelike images of wild animals, flying fish and the changing moods of the ocean.

This studio has previously worked on films like Cat & Dogs and Narnia but nothing from their previous works reaches such artistic heights. Ang Lee adds the poetry and panache to the template. With a CV that includes Hulk and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, he’s no stranger to studio trickery although the challenges here are on an unprecedented scale.

The effects are quite extraordinary and bring the tiger named Richard Parker to life. The shipwreck scene is also a breathtaking piece of pure cinema. Continue reading

MONSIEUR LAZHAR’S LESSONS

MONSIEUR LAZHAR directed by Philippe Falardeau (Canada, 2011)

An elementary school in Montreal is concerned not to make a drama out of a crisis when a young female teacher hangs herself in the classroom.

A lone psychologist is appointed with the aim is to draw a line under the incident as quickly as possible and move on.

The dead teacher’s place is taken by an Algerian refugee, Bashir Lazhar, who applies for the job after reading the story in the newspaper and is appointed as the sole candidate.

It transpires that Lazhar is also attempting to come to terms with a private tragedy and seeking political asylum to try to build a new life.

Lazhar is conscientious but he’s no ‘seize the day’ teacher. He feels inadequate by the side of an experienced colleague whose class is much livelier and more spontaneous.

This teacher, who is obviously attracted to Lazhar, can’t understand why he doesn’t introduce his ‘exotic’ African culture into his classroom. Continue reading

PUNKS : PAST AND PRESENT

Malcolm McLaren RIP

Punk has always been as much about the spirit as the music – a state of mind, an attitude that you recognise as soon as you see or hear it.

Malcom McLaren was a master manipulator of others who had this Punk spirit – notably Johnny Rotten & Vivienne Westwood – but, personally, I would argue that he was not a bona fide Punk. I see him more as an entertainer – a Svengali-like attention grabber; a Warhol-like self publicist with an ego to match .

His slippery personality means that when you start talking in terms of integrity or honesty his reputation begins to become a little tarnished. Nevertheless, you can’t ignore the fact that, but for him, there would have been no Sex Pistols. His place in history is assured.

On the day he died, Anarchy In The UK was played on the radio both going and returning from a concert in Bologna by present day carriers of the flame, A Silver Mount Zion (SMZ) from Canada. Continue reading