Preludes.2000 75m prod Rhombus Media exp Niv Fichman CAMERA p Jody Shapiro d/sc David Cronenberg ph Andre Pienaar ed Ronald Sanders pd Carol Spier s Bruce Carwardine, David Evans David Evans may mean:
John Laing plc is a British developer and operator of privately financed, public sector infrastructure projects such as roads, railways, hospitals and schools through Public-Private Partnership (PPP) and , Lou Solakofski m Howard Shore with Les Carlson; THE LINE p Jody Shapiro d/sc Atom Egoyan ph Paul Sarossy ed David Wharnsby pd Phillip Barker s Ross Redfern, Steve Munro, Daniel Pellerin m Mychael Danna; CONGRATULATIONS p Paul Pope, Jody Shapiro d/sc Mike Jones ph Robert J. Petrie ed Derek Norman pd Pam Hall s David McCallum David Keith McCallum, Jr. (born September 19, 1933) is a prolific Scottish actor and the son of concertmaster violinist David McCallum, Sr.. He is best known for his role as Illya Kuryakin, a Russian-born secret agent, on the popular 1960s television series The Man from U.N.C.L. , Lou Solakofski m Paul Steffler with Mike, Andy and Cathy Jones; SEE YOU IN TORONTO p Edouard Faribault, Jody Shapiro d/sc Jean Pierre Lefebvre ph Robert Vanherveghen with Marcel Sabourin; THE HEART OF THE WORLD p Jody Shapiro d/sc/ph Guy Maddin ed Guy Maddin, Deco Dawson pd Rejean Labrie s David McCallum, Lou Solakofski with Leslie Bais, Caelum Vatnsdal, Shaun Balbar, Greg Klymkiw; A WORD FROM THE MANAGEMENT p Jody Shapiro d/sc Don McKellar ph Douglas Koch ed Christopher Donaldson s John Thomson, Steve Munro, Daniel Pellerin with Don McKellar; 24FPS (Frames Per Second) The measurement of full-motion video performance. See frame. fps - frames per second p Jody Shapiro d/sc Jeremy Podeswa ph Greg Middleton ed David Wharnsby s Alan Geldart, David McCallum, Lou Solakofski m Alex Pauk, Alexina Louie; THIS MIGHT BE GOOD p Jody Shapiro d/sc Patricia Rozema ph Andre Pienaar ed Michelle Czukar pd Kathleen Climie s Bissa, David McCallum, Lou Solakofski m Lesley Barber with Sarah Polley, Don McKellar, Mark McKinney, Fides Krucker; Prelude p Jody Shapiro d/sc Michael Snow ph Luc Montpellier ed David Wharnsby pd Phillip Barker s John Thompson, David McCallum, Lou Solakofski m CCMC CCMC Commission for Case Manager Certification CCMC Communications Consortium Media Center CCMC Certified Career Management Coach CCMC Community Coordinated Modeling Center (NASA) , Michael Snow with Esther Jun, Diane Sidik, Bill Chan, Tuan Tran, Leanne Poon poon n. Any of several trees of the genus Calophyllum, of southern Asia, having light hard wood used for masts and spars. [Sinhalese p , Robert Lee; LEGS APART p Peter Lhotka, Jody Shapiro d/sc Anne Wheeler ph David Frazee ed Lara Mazur s Shane Connelly, James Genn, Paul Sharpe, Iain Pattison m Tim McCauley with Patricia Harras, Hrothgar Mathews, Alec Willows, Tom Butler, Gabrielle Rose. Let us now praise Guy Maddin. Unlike his compatriots across the country, the wonderfully eccentric filmmaker from Winnipeg rose to the challenge offered by Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) director Piers Handling to make a short piece on any subject as a prelude for TIFF's 25th anniversary. While directors ranging from Anne Wheeler to Jean Pierre Lefebvre created safe, predictable appetizers for the cinematic main courses offered by the festival's featured galas, Maddin decided to go where artists should always roam, on the outside, and into the wilderness of his own fevered imagination. The Heart of the World, Maddin's celebration of the abused genre of melodrama stirred audiences at the festival and it will surely do so again during its extended run on the nationwide TMN (Telecommunications Management Network) A set of international standards for network management from the ITU. It is used by large carriers such as Sprint, Verizon and AT&T. -- The Movie Network cable channels. To be fair to the other directors, the Preludes were not set up in a way that would inspire anyone to think big. Conceived by Piers Handling to honour the festival, the whole project was put into place, like so many Toronto events, over a glass of wine with cronies in a downtown bistro. Bill House, then of Telefilm tel·e·film n. A film produced for television broadcasting. Noun 1. telefilm - a movie that is made to be shown on television Canada and now of Alliance Atlantis, festival insider Debra Henderson, Rhombus producer Niv Fichman and Sun Life Financial's Robert Pattillo were there with Handling that evening, ready to lend monetary and technical assistance to his notion that Canadian filmmakers be asked to create short pieces as their tributes to the festival. Just like a westerner's concept of a Canada Council jury, the selection of the 10 filmmakers for Preludes was ostensibly os·ten·si·ble adj. Represented or appearing as such; ostensive: His ostensible purpose was charity, but his real goal was popularity. countrywide while being heavily skewed skewed curve of a usually unimodal distribution with one tail drawn out more than the other and the median will lie above or below the mean. skewed Epidemiology adjective Referring to an asymmetrical distribution of a population or of data toward Toronto. The Atlantic provinces are represented by Newfoundland's Mike Jones, Quebec by old-timer Jean Pierre Lefebvre, the west coast by Anne Wheeler and the Prairies -- thank the cinematic gods! -- by Guy Maddin. The other six filmmakers -- Jeremy Podeswa, Patricia Rozema, Michael Snow, Atom Egoyan, Don McKellar and David Cronenberg -- just happen to live within two miles of TIFF's headquarters at Carlton and Yonge. Although Handling offered all filmmakers carte blanche CARTE BLANCHE. The signature of an individual or more, on a while. paper, with a sufficient space left above it to write a note or other writing. 2. In the course of business, it not unfrequently occurs that for the sake of convenience, signatures in blank are , most must have assumed that they were being called upon to produce little cinematic bonbons. Mike Jones's Congratulations is a sly piece in which a helicopter plucks the Jones family -- Cathy, Andy and Mike -- from obscurity on an outport outport Noun Canad an isolated fishing village, esp. in Newfoundland Noun 1. outport - a subsidiary port built in deeper water than the original port (but usually farther from the center of trade) farm into the limelight, temporarily, so they can send a congratulatory message to the bigwigs down in Toronto. Anne Wheeler's Legs Apart equates filmmaking with delivering a baby; it's a lame comedy that no hospital official or script doctor could fix. Even worse is Lefebvre's See You in Toronto in which a bewigged be·wigged adj. Wearing a wig. Quebecois (Marcel Sabourin) gives us a history lesson on imperialism in politics and the cinema. Somehow, the Toronto festival escapes radical analysis as an Anglo institution; however, and rather shockingly, the pretentious narrator NARRATOR. A pleader who draws narrs serviens narrator, a sergeant at law. Fleta, 1. 2, c. 37. Obsolete. gets the date of the festival's inaugural year wrong -- it was 1976, not 1975, Jean Pierre. Festival insiders Egoyan and McKellar produced similarly minor works. Using a tracking shot and a script culled from Egoyan's own memories of lineups during the festival's early years, The Line 1976-2000 has the air of a nice knock-off about it. So does McKellar's A Word From the Management, which, again, is built around the filmmaker's memories of being a theatre manager at the festival 15 years ago. Patricia Rozema's This Might Be Good is so well-edited and shot that it arrives at a higher level of achievement than do her two friends in the Toronto film scene. McKellar pops up here, again, as a film projectionist who charms star Sarah Polley when she realizes that her lover has shown up with his wife at a film festival gala. Jeremy Podeswa's 24fps is a heartfelt tribute to cinema and memory. Using a wonderful score by Alex Pauk and Alexina Louie, based on Colin McPhee's Balinese compositions, the film recounts his father's love of Marcel Carne's Les Enfants du Paradis, an epic romantic film of the 1940s. Rather more arty are the entries by two of Toronto's most feted filmmakers, David Cronenberg and Michael Snow. Camera by Cronenberg takes a disturbing premise, the relationship between photography and death, but does little to dramatize dram·a·tize v. dram·a·tized, dram·a·tiz·ing, dram·a·tiz·es v.tr. 1. To adapt (a literary work) for dramatic presentation, as in a theater or on television or radio. 2. it. Prelude by Snow, is a typically arbitrary film in which the sound for a narrative piece is presented backwards to the visuals we are seeing on the screen. A nice experiment, but ... ... and then there's Maddin. As he has ironically noted, "I thought I'd just lie low in the bushes and ambush some of those other feature filmmakers." He most certainly did, creating a cinematic masterpiece that recalls elements of Lang's Metropolis, Eisenstein's Potemkin and Murnau's The Last Laugh. Shot in a warehouse in Winnipeg, Maddin evokes the magical art direction of the 1920s, combines it with a melodrama worthy of Dickens while gripping audiences with his propulsive editing style. It's a deranged de·range tr.v. de·ranged, de·rang·ing, de·rang·es 1. To disturb the order or arrangement of. 2. To upset the normal condition or functioning of. 3. To disturb mentally; make insane. silent classic resurrected like a Frankenstein beast that isn't afraid to strut itself in front of a stage lit with a single word, Kino kino the juice of certain plants, some tropical and some Australian eucalypts, used in medicine as an astringent. . Kino or cinema is what the festival is all about. Maddin has provided Handling with the sweetest of tributes, a work that reminds us all why we give a damn Verb 1. give a damn - show no concern or interest; always used in the negative; "I don't give a hoot"; "She doesn't give a damn about her job" care a hang, give a hang, give a hoot about the movies. ABBREVIATIONS: prod-production company; exp-executive producer; p-producer; ap-associate producer; d-director; sc-screenplay; ph-cinematographer; ed-editor; pd-production designer; ad-art director; c-costumes; s-sound; sr-sound recording; s ed-sound editing; sfx-special effects; m-music. |
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