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Stardom.


Stardom

Directed by Denys Arcand
Adapted from the article Denys Arcand, from Wikinfo, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.


Georges-Henri Denys Arcand, C.C., O.Q.
 

rStarring Jessica Pare, Thomas Gibson For other persons named Thomas Gibson, see Thomas Gibson (disambiguation).

Thomas Gibson (born on July 3, 1962 in Charleston, South Carolina) is an American actor currently starring in the CBS series Criminal Minds, as Agt.
 and Dan Aykroyd Daniel Edward Aykroyd CM (born July 1, 1952) is an Academy Award-nominated and Emmy Award-winning Canadian/American comedian, actor, screenwriter, and musician. He was an original cast member of Saturday Night Live  

*** (out of five)

WHEN DENYS Arcand introduced his film Stardom to the audience at the Vancouver International Film Festival, he described it as a light subject with very serious overtones. It is a comedy, but a dark and ribald rib·ald  
adj.
Characterized by or indulging in vulgar, lewd humor.

n.
A vulgar, lewdly funny person.



[From Middle English ribaud, ribald person, from Old French, from
 one. Newcomer Jessica Pare stars as Tina Menzhal, a hockey player from Cornwall, Ont., who is discovered and begins her ascent towards stardom as an international supermodel.

Among the men who seek to take her under their wings and into their beds are the photographer who discovered her (Charles Berling), a restaurateur res·tau·ra·teur   also res·tau·ran·teur
n.
The manager or owner of a restaurant.



[French, from restaurer, to restore; see restaurant.
 (Dan Aykroyd) and the Canadian ambassador to the United Nations (Frank Langella). Tina's business affairs are managed deftly by an agent (Thomas Gibson) and her rise to fame is chronicled by an avant-garde photographer (Robert Lepage). It's a story that's been told before -- young pretty girl becomes international superstar -- but Arcand tells it in a most interesting way.

Arcand chooses to tell the stow of Tina Menzhal through television. In this media-obsessed age, if something important is happening, it's on television. While reality TV shows like Survivor and Big Brother try to create real life in real time on TV and recent films like The Truman Show and Ed TV seek to expose the complex relationship between "life" and "TV", Stardom chooses another way.

From beginning to end, Arcand skips from cut to cut, from cable TV shows to "infotainment" specials to news clips. It's as if you're sitting at home with TV channel changer Changer

The name given to a clearing member that is willing to assume the opposite position of a futures contract within a larger alternative exchange, of which it also is a clearing member.
 in hand, surfing through the story of Tina's rise to stardom. You see her at the hockey rink, in the cable TV studio, on the entertainment portion of the nightly newscast, on the set of the talk show. She's always looking beautiful, but has little to say.

The life of an international supermodel is all about appearances, in two dimensions. She smiles for the cameras, but cries herself to sleep. Everyone wants to know her, to touch her, but until the end of the film she is unable to find someone with whom she can truly be herself.

Stardom lets us look at this world of appearances, laugh at the inane chat that we endure from our TVs and asks us to think about why we are so drawn to beauty and to fashion.

One of the most delightful parts of this film is the way Arcand captures Canada, particularly eastern Ontario Eastern Ontario is the region of the Canadian province of Ontario which lies in a wedge-shaped area between the Ottawa and St. Lawrence Rivers. It shares water boundaries with Quebec, to the north and New York State to south.

Population: 1,392,346 (2001), est.
. The cable TV interviews are hilarious parodies of community-based television. Particularly memorable is an interview with two members of the local Lions Club -- they can answer only in one-word responses, leaving the whole interview up to the host. We are a people of a few words.

Jessica Pare is amazing a·maze  
v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es

v.tr.
1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise.

2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex.

v.intr.
 as Tina. When you see the depth of her anger towards her absent father, or hear her rationalizations for her intimate relationships, you understand Tina as a wounded person, seeking the love and acceptance that she never had.

All the supporting actors are first rate, especially Dan Aykroyd as the entrepreneur with the mid-life crisis. But it's Arcand who's the star of this film, seamlessly weaving a pastiche pastiche (păstēsh`, pä–), work of art that combines themes and styles from various sources in such a way as to appear obviously derivative.  of images and ideas, holding popular culture up to the mirror, exposing its superficiality, and revealing the pain and emptiness behind the people who achieve stardom, and the culture that creates it.
COPYRIGHT 2000 General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Anglican Journal
Article Type:Movie Review
Date:Nov 1, 2000
Words:561
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