Friday 29 September 2017

True North: Ryan Sidhoo Explores Canada’s New Game

When it comes to sport, hockey traditionally occupies a sweet spot in Canada’s national psyche — but spend a few days on the streets of Toronto, now one of the planet’s most diverse cities, and another picture quickly bounces into view.

More and more young Canadians are playing basketball — over 350,000 according to the 2014 Canada Youth Sports Report — and the trend is particularly pronounced in and around Toronto where a wave of second and third generation Canadians are shaping Canada’s new game.

Toronto’s big basketball moment

“Basketball in Toronto is having a moment,” says documentarian Ryan Sidhoo, currently shooting True North, an episodic web-series in production at the BC & Yukon Studio. “We’re really fortunate on this production to spend time with families who’re navigating this landscape at a time when Canada’s youth basketball scene is exploding. They’re letting us into their lives, and giving us a chance to share their stories.”

Inspired by the Toronto Raptors, the only Canadian team in the National Basketball Association, many of the GTA’s aspiring athletes are setting their sights on Division One scholarships to American universities. And basketball kingmakers south of the border have been taking notice. Canada now has over a dozen players in the NBA, more than any other outside country.

American journalist Michael Fletcher, writing recently in The Undefeated, comments on Toronto’s new status in US basketball circles: “Increasingly, major universities and the pros see Canada, particularly the Greater Toronto area, as a basketball recruiting hotbed on par with, or even surpassing, cities such as New York, Chicago or Philadelphia.”

Basketball has been one of my great teachers

With True North, Sidhoo is crafting a series of intimate portraits of young Canadian players and their families — charting the development of Toronto’s red-hot youth basketball scene while keeping a sharp eye on the highly competitive terrain that athletes must navigate in order to get a shot at a full-ride scholarship to one of America’s powerhouse basketball colleges. Pictured above: Toronto’s Northern Kings at practice.

“Basketball has been one of my great teachers,” says Sidhoo, a second-generation Canadian, born in Vancouver, who graduated from New York’s New School in 2013 with a master in media studies. “I grew up with the game, and it has introduced me to new cities and cultures, opening my eyes to all kinds of stories and situations that extend beyond sport. I’m using it as a narrative tool here, as a way to shed light on contemporary family life in a rapidly developing city — issues that all kinds of people can relate to. At the same time I get to immerse myself in a world that I care deeply about.”

Hoop Dreams: “a kind of landmark

Back in 1994 director Steve James scored a major hit with Hoop Dreams, a feature doc that charts the progress of two young men from inner city Chicago in their bid for basketball glory. “That film is a kind of landmark,” says Sidhoo. “You can divide all sports documentaries into those that came before and after Hoop Dreams, but so much has changed since then. Kids are dealing with a whole new set of pressures. The idea of exposure has taken on new meaning in the digital boom. Young athletes can be temped to post highlight reels on YouTube or Instagram, and families can feel pressured to build brands around their kids.”

Producer Shirley Vercruysse, executive producer of BC & Yukon Studio and lead producer on the project, recently accompanied Sidhoo on a shoot in Nevada, where he was following a handful of Canadian players during the Fab 48 Tournament. “Ryan has remarkable access to these young players,” she says. “He genuinely loves the game and that comes through all the time — in the trust he’s established with his subjects, and in the footage itself. He’s exploring the fascinating relationship between sport and society in a completely engaging way, appealing to new audiences.”

I get to expand on this idea of Canadian identity

The project serves as a prism though which Sidhoo can investigate shifting notions of Canadian identity. “My dad’s side of the family are from India, and my mom’s side came from Eastern Europe, Ashkenazi Jews from Poland and Russia — and growing up in Vancouver, it’s not like my family had a built-in history of hockey and winter sports. So I’ve never really meshed with that classic idea of Canadian culture — you know, guys playing hockey on frozen ponds. I grew up playing basketball and I always felt at home in gyms. Basketball had more of a multicultural feel, and by focusing on game and the city of Toronto, both incredibly diverse worlds, I get to help expand on this idea of Canadian identity.

“I want the project to sound like Toronto” 

Toronto’s musicians have been showing another side of Canada to global audiences for some time, with artists like Michie Mee, Kardinal, and more recently OVO, enjoying major international success. Sidhoo has enlisted Filipino-Canadian musician Alexander Punzalan (aka Alexander Junior,  pictured above), noted for his work with electronic-soul duo DATU, to create an original score.

“I want the project to sound like Toronto, with all its musical influences — with splashes of rap, hip-hop, soca, dancehall. Alexander is multi-talented, experimenting with all kinds of different sounds, and we’re already using some of his temp music. It’s one of the joys of the whole process, putting music to image.”

Among his cinematic influences Sidhoo mentions Spike Lee’s early films, first enjoyed at his dad’s side, and the 2005 release The Protocol of Zion, a feature doc by New York filmmaker Marc Levin with whom Sidhoo interned during his time at the New School.

“King of the Hill was a revelation” 

Also on the list is the 1974 NFB film King of the Hill, in which NFB filmmakers Donald Brittain and William Canning profile legendary baseball pitcher Ferguson Jenkins. “That one was a revelation,” says Sidhoo. “I watched it on a plane, flying back from one our shoots in LA, and as a result I decided to shoot some sequences on 16 mm film.”

oehttps://www.nfb.ca/film/king_of_the_hill/

Sidhoo’s credits include a number of short web productions for VICE and Welcome to Fairfax, a ten-part docu-series about Los Angeles youth culture that was produced for Participant Media. True North is his first collaboration with the NFB.

“Making an episodic series that’s destined primarily for online distribution is something new for us,” says Vercruysse, “Ryan is a real discovery, a talented and dynamic young director, and he brings all kinds of valuable practical experience to this project.”

Sidhoo is working with Toronto-based cinematographer John Price, a noted independent filmmaker in his own right who’s worked with directors like Bruce Macdonald, Peter Lynch, Liz Marshall, Annette Mangaard and Mike Hoolboom. Price’s credits include Charles Officer’s Mighty Jerome, about track-and-field stay Harry Jerome, and Mina Shum’s Ninth Floor, hailed by TIFF as one of ten best Canadian films of 2015.

Editor Graham Withers, who’s cutting the series in Toronto, has done work on episodic series like Payday and Cold Water Cowboys as well as stand-alone doc projects like Alias, (Michelle Latimer), Les bons, les méchants et la bicyclette! (Lara Fitzgerald) and Highway Gospel (Jarett Beliveau).

Sidhoo and his crew are filming on numerous locations across the GTA and at selected events in the USA with a view to wrapping production in September. True North, conceived as a ten-part web series, is produced by Shirley Vercruysse for the BC & Yukon Studio.

Pictured above: Ryan Sidhoo with basketball dad Rohan Fisher. Check out more of Ryan Sidhoo’s own amazing photography.

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Tuesday 26 September 2017

Revisit 60s fashion—Expo 67 style!

The 1967 World Exhibition celebrates its 50th (happy birthday!).

To mark this anniversary and as part of the festivities surrounding the 375th of Montreal (happy birthday!), the McCord Museum and the NFB have teamed up to suggest you dive into 1960s fashion.

Ready? Off you go! Head to Man and His World – and don’t forget your passport!

60s fashion

The perfect trendy accessory: your passport for Man and His World! (Photo: ONF/NFB archives)

60s fashion

Candy colours and pastel shades were the in thing for the hostesses at the Expo 67 Kaleidoscope! (Photo: Government of Canada. Reproduced with permission from Library and Archives Canada (2016)/Canadian Corporation for the 1967 World Exhibition/e000996021)

60s fashion

Class and a telescopic beehive make a classic mix. (Photo: Library and Archives Canada. Reproduced with permission from Library and Archives Canada/Weekend Magazine Collection)

60s fashion

The hostesses of the Australian Pavilion in a Star Trek setting. (Photo: National Archives of Australia)

60s fashion

Rachelle Goyette and Germaine Lafontaine, two hostesses from The Telephone Pavilion, take your call! (Photo: Bell Canada Archives/A-29707- 03)

60s fashion

Model at the Polymer Pavilion, 1967; sequined combination by Jacqueline Familiant. (Photo: Courtesy of Jacqueline Familiant)

60s fashion

Enid Park (married name) models the uniform to be worn by the hostesses of the Expo 67 Telephone Association of Canada Pavilion. Designed by Michel Robichaud. (Photo: Bell Canada Archives/A-29736-05)

60s fashion

“Mon pays c’est l’hiver” dress by Jacques de Montjoye. (Photo: McCord Museum)

60s fashion

Expo 67 hostess uniform by Michel Robichaud; gift of Sybilla J. Mansfeldt.(Photo: McCord Museum/M2012.50.1 1-4)

60s fashion

Paper dress by Eleanor Ellis; caricatures by Robert LaPalme (1967). Gift of The International Ladies Garment Workers Union of Montréal. (Photo: McCord Museum/M2012-20.1.1-4)

60s fashion

Hostess uniform, Quebec Pavilion (1967) by Serge & Réal. Gift of the Quebec Pavilion. (Photo: McCord Museum/M967.93.1-2)

60s fashion

Hostesses in front of flags at the Place des Nations. (Photo: Library and Archives Canada. Reproduced with the permission of Library and Archives Canada/Canadian Corporation for the 1967 World Exhibition Fund /e000990933

60s fashion

In front of the large inverted “Katimavik” pyramid of the Canada Pavilion, three hostesses (Danièle Touchette, Jean Murin and Lyse Michaud) proudly wear their uniform! (Photo: Courtesy of Danièle Touchette, 1967)

Want to see more?

  • Drop by The McCord Museum for FASHIONING EXPO 67! Known for its extensive collection of Canadian fashion and costumes, the Museum is currently celebrating the fashion of Expo 67 through a colourful exhibition that will take you back to the exuberant spirit of this era. Discover hostess uniforms from a variety of pavilions, designer clothes from Quebec and products from all sectors of Canadian fashion. Hurry, the exhibition ends on October 1, 2017!
  • In the evening, visit the Place des Arts esplanade in Montreal for  EXPO 67 LIVE, a unique NFB experience that will help you live (or relive) the highlights of the Expo. Karine Lanoie-Brien takes you on a spectacular journey through time on giant screens set up on the exterior walls of the Maison Symphonique and Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier. Until September 30 only…and it’s free!

60s fashion

From miniskirts to men’s suits, Expo 67 was a place for all styles! (Photos: Library and Archives Canada and ONF/NFB archives)

How about you? What is your favourite sixties fashion item?

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Monday 25 September 2017

Revel: A Curated Mobile Shopping Experience

Revel is a communal mobile marketplace, featuring lifestyle products and stories from emerging brands and creators.

Clothing With A Story

There are more than a few problems with shopping on a mobile device. Most online stores still aren’t built to be viewed on a tiny phone screen, and pinching, zooming, and clicking to the next page grows tiresome. Revel is a shopping app designed to be used on mobile devices, but it also goes a step beyond its competitors. Rather than just featuring items for sale, Revel features in-depth stories about the creators behind the products it features. It’s like reading a really good issue of GQ, but being able to click and buy the items you see in the images instantly.

Read, Watch, and/or Buy

Like GQ, a lot of the clothing items Revel features can be costly. Revel describes itself as selling “lifestyle products,” and they definitely promote items that cater to a higher end market. But part of the beauty of the app is that you can still use it if you appreciate the stories and products featured. You don’t have to ever buy anything, and you can still get some enjoyment out of the app. In addition to the written articles, the app also integrates videos that can be viewed seamlessly. Although Revel is a difficult app to describe, it’s incredibly well done and everyone should download it.


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Letterboxd: Your Life In Film

Letterboxd lets you start a film diary, and tell your friends about it.

Goodreads for Film

Letterboxd, essentially Goodreads for film, is such a simple idea it’s surprising that the concept hasn’t successfully been done before. It has been attempted—by sites like the unimaginatively-named Good Films—but none have been able to build as large of a community around a quality product like Letterboxd. The site is also comparable, in a way, to Rotten Tomatoes, but it doesn’t use the same rating system or have a section for critics. It’s truly a social network for cinephiles, a place for people to discuss movies they’ve seen and peruse a collection of titles for potential future viewing. 

Start Writing a Diary

The core feature of Letterboxd is the film “diary,” or a user’s collection of ratings, reviews, and tags of each movie they view. Users can also build lists of movies, and share those diaries and lists with other members of the Letterboxd community. Not all of the reviews on Letterboxd are as thoughtful as the critiques on the aforementioned Rotten Tomatoes, but sometimes it’s nice just to quickly read what an “average person,” or a trusted friend, has to say about the most recent releases. Letterboxd, like Goodreads, is also a great place to find out about movies both old and new that you may have missed. It’s fun to browse the site, discover new films and people’s thoughts on those films. If you’re a fan of cinema and looking for a likeminded community, consider signing up.


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5 Docs About Crime and Punishment Through the Ages

Crime movies are thrilling and chilling struggles between good and evil, full of like grisly murders, tense drug deals, and shootouts right in the middle of downtown. In real life, though, crime is a little more complicated than it looks in the movies. It’s often messy, full of people born into difficult circumstances and struggling to get by, the line between good and bad not so distinct.

Do you want a peek behind the curtain at what the world of crime and punishment is really like? Our collection is home to many documentaries that capture the lives of criminals and law enforcement through the ages. Here are a few you ought to check out.

Police

Upholding the law can be many things – challenging, upsetting, and even boring. This doc offers a look at these different facets of life working as a police officer, showing scenes of mundane patrolling and training right alongside scenes of distress for a realistic depiction of life on the beat. Its setting in 1950s Toronto also lets us see some downright silly practices that were the norm just a few decades ago. Imagine dusting for fingerprints without wearing gloves!

http://ift.tt/2htCj5O

Cell 16

Prison is not meant to be an enjoyable experience for the incarcerated, but not everyone realizes the toll that being locked up can take on a person. This creative doc makes great use of an intense score and frantic speech to put its audience inside the mind of a man who is imprisoned. It’s an interesting perspective, and great food for thought about just how punishing the prison system can be.

http://ift.tt/2hu2wxc

Sentenced to Life

This doc offers a perfect example of the ways that difficult circumstances in one’s early life often lead to criminal behaviour later on. The story of a woman sentenced to life in prison for committing a murder at age 19, it offers a glimpse into her life before and after the killing. It shows that some of those who commit the worst of crimes are not wholly unsympathetic, but are instead complicated people, often from very difficult backgrounds.

http://ift.tt/2htCjTm

Kids in Jail

Depriving people of normal experiences is part of the point of prison – but what about when the people in jail are teenagers? This doc offers a fascinating look at the lives of teens living in correctional facilities, and at the particular struggles they go through while locked away. It takes a sympathetic viewpoint with the stories the kids tell, and shows why prison is uniquely challenging for those yet to come of age.

http://ift.tt/2hu2xBg

NCR: Not Criminally Responsible

A rollercoaster ride of emotion, this doc explores the intersection of mental illness and violent crime, asking difficult questions about how and when freedoms ought to be restored to those whose mental illness once led them to commit atrocities. Thought-provoking, sometimes quite uncomfortable, yet uplifting in parts, it’s a film that is sure to garner strong reactions the whole way through.

http://ift.tt/2d6VAmp

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Friday 22 September 2017

Ariel Nasr Unspools Afghanistan’s Forbidden Reel

The headquarters of Afghan Film occupy unassuming premises, one of many bullet-scared structures in central Kabul, with little indicating its vital role in Afghanistan’s cultural history.

Yet it was from this modest two-story building that ‘Engineer’ Latif Ahmadi and his peers brought forth a vibrant cinema culture in one of the most underdeveloped societies on earth, working in circumstances that would unnerve the most seasoned western director.

And it was here, in an episode worthy of Le Carré, that a small gang of heroic cinephiles pulled off a remarkable coup, saving their nation’s cinematic heritage from the iconoclastic fanatics who would later destroy the great Buddhas of Bamiyan.

With The Forbidden Reel, the Afghan-Canadian filmmaker Ariel Nasr is bringing his own account of this story to the screen. Currently in production in Afghanistan, the feature-length documentary is co-produced by Montreal’s Loaded Pictures (Sergeo Kirby, producer) and the NFB Quebec Atlantic Studio (Kat Baulu).

A veteran of numerous Afghan shoots and something of an expert on Afghan cinema, Nasr has been developing the ambitious project for several years. “I’m particularly invested in this project,” he says, having recently returned from a three-week shoot in Kabul. Two additional Afghanistan shoots are planned for later this year.

“In recent years I’ve spent extended periods living and working in Kabul, often in collaboration with Afghan Film, and I’ve established strong relationships with Latif Ahmadi and other Afghan filmmakers. I have an enormous amount of admiration for them, not just for their work but for their personal courage and perseverance. In the process I’ve also unearthed surprising new information about the thirty year-period during which they were active.”

“We’ve assembled the elements of a gripping story, but I also get to challenge the received wisdom about Afghanistan. Mainstream western media often represents Afghanistan in a reductive manner. Whether it’s the Afghan-Soviet War or the current struggle with the Taliban, it gets presented as a simplistic good-vs-evil narrative. I try to paint a more complicated picture, to deliver a more authentic, and ultimately more interesting, account of Afghanistan and its artists.” Pictured above and below: Nasr interviewing Latif Ahmadi in the wartorn Darul Aman Palace near Kabul, currently undergoing reconstruction.

Afghan’s tradition of progressive auteur cinema

The very existence of a sophisticated auteur tradition in Afghanistan comes as a surprise to many. Yet during the 1970s and 1980s the country witnessed the emergence of a fascinating national cinema, one focused on telling Afghan stories and putting Afghan concerns onscreen.

At the centre of it all was “Engineer” Latif Ahmadi, who rose to prominence during the 1980s. Raised by a movie-loving single mother, Ahmadi began experimenting with film as an engineering student, soon abandoning his studies altogether to establish his own production company. Starting with commercials and animation, he quickly graduated to features, scoring a major hit with Gonah, a drama about class and gender that he made with help from Siddiq Barmak, another emerging talent. Ahmadi was still a young man when he was appointed president of Afghan Film, a state-funded agency that had been established in 1968 during a period of relative liberalism.

“It was a hugely ambitious project, yet the people at Afghan Film succeeded in creating a national cinema,” says Nasr. “They nurtured creative debate, encouraging filmmakers to draw on multiple influences, and the result was unique, as close to Italian neorealism as South Asian or Iranian cinema. It was an auteur cinema that championed women’s rights and other progressive ideas, filling cinemas in Kabul and Herat – something that seems unbelievable now.”

Following the communist coup of 1978 and subsequent Soviet invasion, Ahmadi proved adept in navigating the new political context. “Some filmmakers joined the Mujahedeen resistance, but Ahmadi chose to stay on as president of Afghan Film. Yet even while overseeing production of pro-Soviet propaganda, he was able to create independent auteur work. He made some of his most important movies during the Soviet occupation, films that were subject to censorship yet still somehow managed to paint a compelling picture of ordinary Afghan life. Films like Akhtar the Joker, Immigrant Birds, and Escape provide a fascinating window onto Afghan history and the whole late Cold War period.”

“Their passion for cinema transcended politics”

Actress Yasmin Yarmal, a frequent collaborator of Ahmadi’s, would take on some of her most memorable roles during the Soviet occupation, but Siddiq Barmak, Ahmadi’s old friend and collaborator, ended up working with the Mujahedeen resistance, and later directed Urooj, a groundbreaking feature made in collaboration with Ahmad Shah Masood’s forces.

Despite finding themselves on opposing sides in the civil war, Ahmadi and Barmak never viewed each other as enemies. “There was never any antagonism between them, “ says Nasr. “Their passion for film transcended politics. Afghan culture and politics are never as simple as they appear — and that’s an underlying theme of this project. Even at the height of the conflict, Ahmadi was able to negotiate with Mujahadeen rebels. Cinema tended to be respected by all sides.”

“That was true even during Taliban rule,” says Nasr. “The Taliban was a repressive regime, but they were not uniformly unenlightened. That’s one of the many remarkable aspects of this story.”

Making use of Afghan Film’s vintage equipment

Nasr’s key interviews include the ‘Engineer’ himself, who recently returned to Afghanistan after a long exile; Ibrahim Arify, the current president of Afghan Film; Siddiq Barmak, Yasmin Yarmal, and a number of inside players who are speaking out for the first time.

Interview footage will be cut with clips from the storied Afghan Film archive, many of them from films that are unknown to the wider world, along with stylized recreations that evoke key episodes in the story.

“Afghan Film has generously given us access to their camera equipment, the same sturdy Russian-made cranes and dollies that the Engineer and other filmmakers would have used back in the 70s and 80s,” says Nasr. “We’re shooting selected sequences on 35mm, referencing the sweeping style and feel of those classic movies, and we’ll be using the same gear.”

Among Nasr’s producer credits is the Oscar-nominated short Buzkashi Boys (2012), a powerful coming-of-age drama filmed in Afghanistan. His wrote and directed his first film Good Morning Kandahar in 2008, when he was still learning Dari. The film turned a critical gaze on Canada’s military presence in Afghanistan — exploring the paradox of “my country Canada is bombing my country Afghanistan” — and marked the start of his association with the NFB. He continued exploring various facets of Afghan life in two subsequent NFB productions, the Gemini Award-winning The Boxing Girls of Kabul (2011) and Kabul Portraits, (2015), an interactive project which counts actress Yasmin Yarmal among its six featured subjects.

“Ariel is a visionary, a completely committed filmmaker,” says producer Serge Kirby. “It takes determination to make a film like this, and The Forbidden Reel is a real labour of love. He’s telling a powerful and nuanced story, one that completely reframes our understanding of Afghanistan.” Kirby’s Loaded Pictures credits include H2Oil, Roadsworth, and Wal-Town.

As part of its involvement in the production, the National Film Board is assisting Afghan Film with its ongoing preservation work. “The Forbidden Reel is all about the power and importance of cinema – its precarious and precious place within Afghan culture – and it’s great that we’re able to share with Afghan Film some of the knowledge and expertise we’ve developed during the digitization of our own collection, ” says Kat Baulu, producer for the NFB’s Quebec Atlantic Studio.

The NFB has a long tradition of producing work that looks onto the wider world through a Canadian lens, going back to Churchill’s Island (1942), the first film to win an Oscar in the newly created Documentary Short Subject category. Often directed by filmmakers who’ve grown up in diaspora communities, tracing their heritage to other parts of the world, these films bring nuance to international stories and issues. The Forbidden Reel follows in the line of titles like The Apology (2016), Tiffany Hsiung’s acclaimed film on sexual slavery in WWII Japanese-occupied Asia; Up the Yangtze (2007), Yung Chang’s epic feature doc on the monumental Three Gorges Dam; and Four Women of Egypt (1997), Tahani Rachid’s study of the complex divisions that mark contemporary Egyptian society.

The Toronto-based cinematographer Duraid Munajim, whose credits include work on The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty, is director of photography on The Forbidden Reel, with Nasr himself operating the second camera. Saleem Mohammed Yousofzada is the Kabul-based production assistant. The Forbidden Reel is co-produced by Loaded Pictures (Sergeo Kirby, producer) and the NFB Quebec Atlantic Studio (Kat Baulu, producer). Executive producers are Sergeo Kirby and Annette Clarke. Production continues through 2017. Photography courtesy of Loaded Pictures.

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Tuesday 19 September 2017

Animation News: Sharp Shorts for a New Millennium

The idea that animation can serve as a vehicle for important public messages is embedded in the very foundations of the NFB animation tradition. Back in 1941, when John Grierson hired his first staff animator, a gifted New York-based Scottish artist by the name of Norman McLaren, his most pressing assignment for the wildly inventive young modernist was to create animation that plugged Canada’s part in the war against fascism.

Within months McLaren had conjured up visual wonders like Mail Early (1941), V for Victory (1941), Five for Four (1942) — entertaining, ingeniously crafted shorts that helped mobilize the Canadian war effort, transmitting urgent yet upbeat messages to movie audiences across the continent. This early work quickly established the NFB as a pioneering force in the animation arts. Picasso himself, upon seeing McLaren’s dazzling experimental short Hen Hop (1942), is reputed to have declared: “At last, something new.”

oehttps://www.nfb.ca/film/v_for_victory/

Over seven decades later this dual commitment to formal innovation and contemporary content informs Naked Island, an experimental online animation project that has racked up over two million views since its February launch. Framed as “public service alerts for a new era,” the 15 mini-shorts are the work of contemporary animation artists who, cleverly subverting advertising conventions, issue brief pointed statements on subjects like climate change, digital culture, consumerism and the nature of 21st century protest.

Participating directors include emerging talent like Amanda Strong, Laurence Vallières and Frances Adair Mckenzie alongside veteran animators like Academy Award-winner Chris Landreth and Oscar nominees like Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski. The series is produced by Jelena Popović and Maral Mohammadian, and executive produced by Michael Fukushima. Pictured above: We Drink Too Much, by Lavis and Szczerbowski.

“Both a look to the future and a throwback to our earliest production”

Naked Island has been an exciting experiment for us,” says Fukushima. “It’s both a look to the future and a throwback to our earliest production. Maral and Jelena have found the right editorial tone, a smart tongue-in-cheek approach that clearly appeals to young millennial viewers active on social media networks. At the same time we’re referencing those wartime message films, employing an updated post-modernist sensibility, a new urgency.

“The initial response from participating filmmakers was quite spectacular,” says Fukushima. “It’s as if they’d been waiting for an opportunity to make this kind of work – short punchy films that address current political and social issues.”

Naked Island has been capturing attention on the international festival circuit and five titles from the series are among the NFB offering at this year’s Ottawa International Animation Festival. Four appear in the Commissioned Animation Competition: Simulated Life, a short sharp jab at VR technology from Alberta-born animator and comic book artist Malcolm Sutherland, and three darkly comic shorts from Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski, the creative duo behind the Oscar-nominated Madame Tutli-PutliWe Drink Too Much, We Eat Shit and Square Saint-Louis. A fifth title, Be Cool, is appearing in the Canadian Panorama program — an unapologetic poke at selfie-induced narcissism, directed by Chris Landreth who won an Academy Award and multiple other international honours for Ryan (2004).

“It’s gratifying to see this work go to Ottawa,” says Fukushima. “Naked Island was made primarily for online dissemination, and festivals tend to be reluctant to program work that’s already been released online. This success on the festival circuit augurs well for similar projects in the future.”

Other titles in Naked Island include Albertosaurus, directed and animated by Munro Ferguson; All We Need Is War, directed by Luka Sanader and animated by Frances McKenzie: Detention, directed by David Seitz and Elle-Maija Tailfeathers and animated by David Seitz; Blood, directed and animated by Theodore Ushev; Hipster Headdress, directed and animated by Amanda Strong; The Law of Expansion, directed by Malcolm Sutherland; Protest, directed by The Sanchez Brothers; Sext Apes, directed by Laurence Vallières; Sober, directed and animated by Elise Simard; and Survival of the Fittest, directed and animated by Eva Cvijanović. The entire series can be viewed online.

Renewing creative ties to former Yugoslavia

Now in its fifth decade, the Ottawa International Animation Festival has grown into a major launching pad for new animation and the NFB is heading to the 2017 edition with no fewer than twelve recent releases. Among them is The Tesla World Light, in which director Mathew Rankin displays something of the same offbeat sensibility of fellow Winnipegger Guy Maddin, riffing on early avant-garde cinema to craft a cinematic fantasy about Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla.

Tesla launched this spring at Cannes, during the 56th International Critics’ Week, and went on to successful dates at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival, where Rankin had won an Off-Limits Award in 2014 for Mynarski Death Plummet. “An audacious shock of cinematic genius,” says Patrick Mullen in POV Magazine. Programmed in the OIAF’s Narrative Short Animation Competition, The Tesla World Light was produced and executive produced by Julie Roy for the NFB’s French Animation Studio. Read our interview with Mathew Rankin here.

Also on the program at Ottawa are three international co-productions: Manivald, a Canada/Croatia/Estonia coproduction directed by Estonian-born director Chintis Lundgren, is a sweetly perverse tale of bestiality, featuring a repressed mother-and-son duo of foxes and a hot young wolf; Hedgehog’s Home, another Canada/Croatia co-venture, directed by Sarajevo-born Eva Cvijanović, employs needle-felted puppets to bring a beloved Balkan children’s story to the screen; and the Canada/Norway coproduction Threads is a spacious and elegant reflection on human attachment from Oscar-winning animator Torill Kove, arriving in Ottawa fresh from its North American premiere at TIFF.

 

“We’re particularly flush with co-productions this year,” says Fukushima, “and it’s no coincidence that two are with Croatian partners,” says Fukushima. “Our producer Jelena Popović was born in the former Yugoslavia, and she’s been keen to reconnect with producers in the region. Back in the 70s and 80s we collaborated with various Yugoslavian producers, so it’s great to be part of the rebirth of animation in that part of the world.”

“There’s a strong internationalist tradition here at the NFB animation studios,” notes Fukushima. “It’s always interesting to see how Canadian-based filmmakers like Torill and Eva can find inspiration in their countries of birth. As the son of Japanese immigrants, I’m always struck by this kind of cross-cultural creative collaboration. There’s something quintessentially Canadian about it.”

Manivald is produced by Chintis Lundgren Animatsioonistudio (Lundgren, producer), Adriatic Animation (Draško Ivezić, producer) and the NFB (Jelena Popović, producer); Hedgehog’s Home is produced by Bonobostudio (Vanja Andrijevic, producer) and the NFB ((Jelena Popović, producer); and Threads is produced by Mikrofilm AS (Lise Fearnley and Tonje Skar Reiersen, producers) and the NFB (Michael Fukushima, producer).

My Yiddish Papi Gets World Premiere

Making its world premiere in the Canadian Panorama program at OIAF is My Yiddish Papi, a moving personal work from filmmaker and cartoonist Éléonore Goldberg. Co-produced by Picbois Productions (Karine Dubois, producer) and the NFB’s French animation program (Julie Roy, producer).

 

Also appearing in Canadian Panorama is Skin for Skin, a foray into Canadian Gothic that recasts Hudson’s Bay Company history in arresting new light. The handiwork of Calgary animation duo of Kevin D.A. Kurytnik and Carol Beecher, Skin for Skin premiered earlier this summer at Montreal’s Fantasia Festival, with upcoming appearances at festivals in Calgary, Edmonton and Quebec City. Produced by Bonnie Thompson and executive produced by David Christensen for the NFB’s Northwest Studio.

Competing alongside Hedgehog’s Home in the OIAF’s Young Audience Section is The Mountain of SGaana, a vivid retelling of a Haida myth from BC director Christopher Auchter (associate producer, Teri Snelgrove, executive producers, Shirley Vercruysse and Michael Fukushima). Mountain goes on to dates at Toronto’s ImagineNATIVE and the Vancouver International Film Festival.

 

As part of its 2017 program the OIAF will also be exhibiting the VR incarnation of Théodore Ushev’s Blind Vaysha along with Donald McWilliams’ Eleven Moving Moments with Evelyn Lambart, an overdue tribute to Canada’s first major female animator, a frequent collaborator of McLaren and important artist in her own right. A former McLaren collaborator himself —and the Honorary President of last year’s OIAF — McWilliams playfully contextualizes key examples of Lambart’s oeuvre. The Ottawa International Animation Festival runs Sept 20 to 24. Click here for more info.

Finally here’s a fascinating example of McLaren’s WWII production, two minutes of straight-to-the-point cinema that employs gothic imagery to warn against wartime indiscretion:

oehttps://www.nfb.ca/film/keep_your_mouth_shut/

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Monday 18 September 2017

Streaks Workout: The Personal Trainer You Actually Want To Use

Streaks Workout is an app that inspires you to workout every day.

A Digital Personal Trainer

The hardest part about working out, if you’re not a fitness obsessive, is getting in a good routine. If you exercise at the same time every day and it fits into your schedule and makes you feel good, there’s a good chance you’ll keep working out at that time. If you need a little extra motivation, there’s Streaks Workout. The app aims to be a digital personal trainer, getting people in the routine of working out doing the routines that they want to do. You can download the app for iOS or Apple TV. The first step, then, of course, is using it.

Work Out Every Day

The best part about Streaks Workout is that the exercise routines it has on the app are designed to be done anywhere, without any equipment. The goal is just to do a workout every day, no matter where you are or how much time you have. You can tweak the specifics within the app. The app has a clean design, making the exercise instructions easy to follow. The app also displays data after each workout, showing how long you spent on each activity. Viewing statistics is helpful as you form your own routine and begin to work towards tangible exercise goals with Streaks Workout.


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How We Selected 80 NFB Productions to Commemorate Our 80th Anniversary

As part of our commemoration of the National Film Board’s 80th anniversary, we decided to choose a symbolic 80 powerful productions to high...