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Stardom.


2000 88m prod Alliance Atlantis Alliance Atlantis Communications Inc. (formerly traded as TSX:AAC) is a Toronto-based media company, which now operates primarily as a specialty service operator in Canada. , Serendipity serendipity

happy finding of an unexpected object or solution while searching for something else.
 Point Films, Cinemaginaire, Cine b p Robert Lantos, Denise Roberts d 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.
 sc Denys Arcand, J. Jacob Potashnik ph Guy Dufaux ed Isabelle Dedieu pd Zoe Sakellaropoulo c Michel Robidas sr Claude La Haye In French, La Haye mainly refers to The Hague in Holland, although La Hague is the name of a specific region of Normandy. La Haye is also the name or part of the name of several communes in France:
  • La Haye, in the Seine-Maritime département
, Marcel Pothier m Francois Dompierre with Jessica Pare, 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 , Robert Lepage, Charles Berling, Camilla Rutherford, Thomas Gibson, Frank Langella.

Tina Menzhal plays for the women's hockey team in Cornwall, Ont. At a team practice, a local photographer snaps some shots of her which he hopes to sell on the open market. They get into the hands of a local talent agent who sees the potential in Tina's fresh-faced beauty. She is called into the agency and given the full model "treatment." Tina is hired for her first commercial, to promote a local dairy product, where she meets fashion photographer Philippe Gascon Gascon

inhabitant of Gascony, France; people noted for their bragging. [Fr. Hist.: NCE, 1049]

See : Boastfulness
. Gascon promotes her, and soon Tina has left the agency and is on her way to Paris and the big time.

There she has an unhappy experience with the pressures of fame and the fashion industry, and returns home to Cornwall where, by now, she is a local celebrity. She starts seeing a wealthy restauranteur, Barry Levine, who is married, and is introduced to the famous fashion photographer Bruce Taylor, who is also a documentary filmmaker. He wants to make a film about her life and starts to follow her around with his camera and small crew. Tina is picked up by a high-powered New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 agent and her career starts to take off. She moves to New York and is followed by the restauranteur, who has become so infatuated in·fat·u·at·ed  
adj.
Possessed by an unreasoning passion or attraction.



in·fatu·at
 that he leaves his wife and children to be with her. At a New York shoot for the fur industry, Tina is attacked by a spray can-wielding protester, whom she decks in true NHL NHL Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, see there  style and puts the woman in hospital. The Canadian UN ambassador comes to her rescue and he, too, becomes infatuated with her. Tina moves from New York to Europe to the Caribbean, followed by Levine and Taylor, who records her every move on film.

Tina is assaulted by Levine, who has gone over the edge with his desire for her, and he is arrested. The photographer Gascon has nude pictures of her, which he tries to exploit, but his New York show is closed down by Tina's agent. He, too, is arrested when he is found to have kiddie porn on his computer files. Tina draws closer to the ambassador, who pays for her recoupment from Levine's assault. They marry, but Tina wants to work while the ambassador wants her to be his trophy bride. Some very public arguments erupt as Tina is stalked by paparazzi pa·pa·raz·zo  
n. pl. pa·pa·raz·zi
A freelance photographer who doggedly pursues celebrities to take candid pictures for sale to magazines and newspapers.
. The ambassador loses his composure and gives an inflammatory speech at the UN. He, too, is carried away. Tina returns to Cornwall, where she marries a local doctor and settles down.

From the famed director of Le Declin de l'empire americain and Jesus de Montreal, comes this slight satire on the television and fashion industries, and, by extension, the cult of female beauty. While the previous two films established Denys Arcand's reputation as a wicked satirist, a master of bourgeois angst and one of Canada's greatest cineastes, Stardom is a limp statement from a talent in decline. It's not that the film is bad -- it isn't -- it's just that Arcand's previous efforts raised the bar so high that this minor work is a major disappointment.

The films fundamental weakness lies in its subject matter. For Arcand, always considered one of Canada's most intelligent directors, to use his formidable skills to satirize sat·i·rize  
tr.v. sat·i·rized, sat·i·riz·ing, sat·i·riz·es
To ridicule or attack by means of satire.


satirize or -rise
Verb

[-rizing,
 the fashion industry is rather like taking a howitzer howitzer: see artillery.  to blast a butterfly. Robert Altman, another director with a laser intellect, had similar problems with Ready to Wear. The industry is so ripe with foolishness, pretensions and self-loathing that nothing can be said or done to make it appear even more foolish. It seems like a waste of time even to try, and Arcand adds to his problems by what he obviously thought to be the solution to making a film about a subject matter so shallow. Everything about Tina's rise to fame is mediated through a camera lens. This is the major conceit of the film and its major failing.

Stardom begins with a photograph of Tina (Jessica Pare) taken by an amateur. He later appears on a local cable station hawking his wares. This device is then repeated throughout the film. Tina is followed by a news crew as she becomes a model. She is seen through the lens of Philippe Gascon (Charles Berling), then interminably through the probing, documentary lens of Bruce Taylor (Robert Lepage). She appears numerous times on TV, from MuchMusic-style fashion clips to a heated discussion by French intellectuals. This mixture of visual styles goes on for the entire length of the film, but unfortunately runs out of steam at about the 60-minute mark. After that, it's merely repetition and you are just longing for one steady shot or a lengthy take.

The film is not without its moments of humour. When Tina knocks out the animal-rights protester, she then appears on TV with the ambassador (Frank Langella), who explains, straight-faced, that she is part aboriginal and therefore her actions where justified in a defence of her people's centuries-old right to practice hunting and trapping. Nor is it without true pathos. When Tina's long-estranged father shows up on an up-scale TV gab fest -- in the style of the Oprah -- he does so for the money, causing the distraught Tina to bolt mid-broadcast. Later she is caught by Taylor's camera crying with the pain of a child who has lost her father. These moments are not sustained, however, and one soon gets the impression there is not much to Tina. She glides through her changes in fortune without anything making much of an impression.

This blank slate is a deliberate distancing device that Arcand uses to explore the fascination some men have with female beauty. Arcand has said in an interview (Take One No. 29) that he is captivated cap·ti·vate  
tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates
1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm.

2. Archaic To capture.
 and made weak in the presence of beauty, but in our politically correct politically correct Politically sensitive adjective Referring to language reflecting awareness and sensitivity to another person's physical, mental, cultural, or other disadvantages or deviations from a norm; a person is not mentally retarded, but  times this is seen as a failing -- the chauvinistic and impolite im·po·lite  
adj.
Not polite; discourteous.



[Latin impol
 sin of "lookism look·ism  
n.
Discrimination or prejudice against people based on their appearance.



lookist adj. & n.
." As a sardonic comment on this "sin," Arcand has only the most craven of the men talk to the camera about Tina in this manner. Gascon has his theories, but in the end he is only out to exploit Tina. A nerdy TV host quotes Plato -- "beauty is a beautiful woman" -- and allows that beautiful women form a subspecies subspecies, also called race, a genetically distinct geographical subunit of a species. See also classification.  of the human race. Tina literally drives her men wild with desire. The restauranteur (Dan Aykroyd), is carried out of a courtroom ranting when convicted of assaulting her, and the ambassador destroys his career with a funny, inflammatory speech at the UN after their marriage is brought to an abrupt end. It's passion over reason, Arcand seems to be saying, and beauty trumps brains any day of the week.

Part tomboy tomboy Psychology A popular term for a girl whose developmental gender-identity/role is discordant with her genotype. Cf Sissy. , part high-fashion model, newcomer Jessica Pare is perfect for the part of Tina. However, the men who lust after her -- Berling, Aykroyd and Langella -- are merely okay and only Thomas Gibson, as the super-cool New York agent, stands out. Arcand occasionally achieves some impressive directorial flourishes but he is severely constrained by his self-imposed limitation of imitating a string of dreadful TV talk shows. Stardom, I suspect, looked better on paper.

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.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Canadian Independent Film & Television Publishing Association
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:Take One
Article Type:Movie Review
Date:Dec 1, 2000
Words:1272
Previous Article:Art of war.
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