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Welcome to their nightmare: or to live and die in suburbia ... Ginger Snaps.


JOHN FAWCETT The name John Fawcett might refer to:
  • John Fawcett (actor)
  • John Fawcett (director)
  • John Fawcett (theologian)
 & KAREN WALTON EXPLAIN WHY

STRANGE things are afoot in Bailey Downs, a sleepy suburb on the edge of nothing (or, more accurately, Brampton, Ontario Brampton (IPA: ˈbræmptən, ˈbræmtən) is a city in the GTA of Ontario, Canada and the seat of Peel Region. As of the 2006 census, Brampton's population stood at 433,806. ). The sun appears to have gone into permanent hiding. Neighbourhood pets are being horribly mutilated mu·ti·late  
tr.v. mu·ti·lat·ed, mu·ti·lat·ing, mu·ti·lates
1. To deprive of a limb or an essential part; cripple.

2. To disfigure by damaging irreparably: mutilate a statue.
. Stray body parts are turning up in sandboxes. Even the mad-hockey games somehow seem sinister.

The liveliest and oddest inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 of this eerily normal-looking town are the Fitzgerald sisters: fiery, extroverted ex·tro·vert·ed also ex·tra·vert·ed  
adj.
Marked by interest in and behavior directed toward others or the environment as opposed to or to the exclusion of self; gregarious or outgoing:
 16-year-old Ginger (Katharine Isabelle Katharine Isabelle (born Katherine Murray in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a Canadian actress. Her father Graeme Murray is a production/art designer who has won two Emmys for his work on The X-Files. Her mother, Gail Murray is an amateur Vancouver writer/producer. ) and her dependent younger sister Brigitte (Emily Perkins). Gothic types, the Fitzgerald sisters are determined to keep as much distance as humanly possible between them and the other students at the conformist con·form·ist  
n.
A person who uncritically or habitually conforms to the customs, rules, or styles of a group.

adj.
Marked by conformity or convention:
 high school that Brigitte deems a "hormonal toilet." Banding together against an oppressive outside world, they have sworn to get out by the time they both turn 16 or die trying. Their bond has taken on an almost supernatural element (neither of them has had their period yet), and it's about to get even closer and weirder.

While executing a prank on one of their more popular and vicious schoolmates, Ginger finally gets her period and is promptly attacked by a huge, ferocious animal. The next day she starts sprouting long, bushy bush·y  
adj. bush·i·er, bush·i·est
1. Overgrown with bushes.

2. Thick and shaggy: a bushy head of hair.
 hairs all over her body and develops an apparently voracious appetite for sex, violence and neighbourhood pets (though not necessarily in that order). It's as if we're seeing George Bailey's ideal housing project from It's a Wonderful Life six decades later when the repressed re·pressed
adj.
Being subjected to or characterized by repression.
 have returned home to wreak havoc.

In a landscape where smart, commercial and genre can seldom be used in the same sentence, Ginger Snaps is a novel and welcome addition to Canadian cinema. Directed by John Fawcett (The Boy's Club) and written by Karen Walton, it's witty, biting and as anti-authoritarian as its heroines. Primarily a portrait of suburban teenage angst, Ginger Snaps feels entirely contemporary, yet it avoids the smarmy self-consciousness of most current horror films. Instead, its comic elements and allegorical equation of menstruation menstruation, periodic flow of blood and cells from the lining of the uterus in humans and most other primates, occurring about every 28 days in women. Menstruation commences at puberty (usually between age 10 and 17). , adolescence and physical betrayal evoke the great American (and sometimes Canadian) horror films of the 1970s. Running underneath the film is the primal teenage fear that your body will invariably in·var·i·a·ble  
adj.
Not changing or subject to change; constant.



in·vari·a·bil
 betray you, force you to enter a duplicitous world you find despicable, and make you abandon the people you're closest to.

"When you're actually considering making a horror film, you sit down and ask, `Okay, what scares me?'" says Fawcett while being interviewed in the Toronto office of the film's distributor, TVA TVA: see Tennessee Valley Authority. . "The thing that I find frightening is the idea that you could wake up one day and find that you have a tumour you didn't have last week. In a sense, your body's betraying you and that's what it's like in adolescence. You think you've got the world figured out and then all of a sudden things change on you. All of a sudden you're menstruating men·stru·ate  
intr.v. men·stru·at·ed, men·stru·at·ing, men·stru·ates
To undergo menstruation.



[Late Latin m
 or you're growing hair all over your body. I think that's why teen films or films about adolescence are so interesting. It's a period of your life about extremes."

A well-matched team, Fawcett and Walton each bring something different to the film. Fawcett provides an aficionado's awareness of horror movies and an efficient, crisp directorial style, honed while working on his award-winning short, Half Nelson, and his first feature, The Boy's Club (as well as episodes of the cult television series Xena). Walton (whose first professional gig was on CBC's teen series The Teen Series is a popular name for a group of US combat aircraft. The name stems from a series of late US supersonic jet fighters built for the United States Air Force during the late 20th century.  Straight Up) brings a feminist perspective and a background in capturing the way teenagers speak, live and breathe. The end result is a film that's as sharp in its portrait of teen angst as the best of Buffy, the Vampire Slayer, even though both Fawcett and Walton were more than aware of the risks they were taking, on a variety of levels.

"I liked the idea of a transformation movie," says Fawcett. "Then I started to think about horror, and the werewolf werewolf: see lycanthropy.
werewolf

In European folklore, a man who changes into a wolf at night and devours animals, people, or corpses, returning to human form by day.
 legend, which is where a person could transform into something else. I realized that the werewolf movie hadn't been done very well too many times, so there was lots of room to explore. But it was also kind of frightening because audiences have a bad preconception pre·con·cep·tion  
n.
An opinion or conception formed in advance of adequate knowledge or experience, especially a prejudice or bias.

Noun 1.
 about what a werewolf movie is. There's a really fine line. I didn't want the audience to hear the word werewolf. Actually, you do hear it once out of Brigitte's mouth."

Like the Fitzgerald sisters, Fawcett and Walton swore their own oath, back in 1995, when they first embarked on the project. "John Fawcett wanted to make a horror film, and he wanted to make a teenage girl horror film," recalls Walton. "When he approached me, I originally said, "Gab! No, why would I want to do that?" This was before Scream, and I was a little concerned about making horror for my debut feature because I wasn't sure we could even get it done. So we approached it this way: I said, `Okay, but the girls can't be running around in tight shirts for the hell of it, screaming, and getting saved by a boyfriend.' That was my shtick shtick also schtick or shtik  
n. Slang
1. A characteristic attribute, talent, or trait that is helpful in securing recognition or attention:
. His shtick was, `Let's do it, but let's break every rule that we think confines us in any way.'"

That pact was tested by a lengthy pre-production process and two false starts, including an offer to produce the film by a mid-range American company. "I got kind of afraid of them," confesses Fawcett about his last foray into Hollywood. "For one, they didn't want to put the kind of money in the film we thought it needed to pull it off even on a low-budget level. And they wanted the world for that. But then they started getting weird conceptually. They started saying things like: `Instead of Ginger growing a tail maybe she could just get bigger breasts.' At the time, Species II was playing, with Natasha Henstridge on the poster looking like a babe. That was their whole angle on Ginger Snaps. They wanted a very sexual sort of werewolf."

So Fawcett and Walton headed back to Canada where they found more supportive backers, including 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. But it wasn't exactly smooth sailing. The Columbine High School massacre The Columbine High School massacre occurred on Tuesday, April 20, 1999, at Columbine High School in unincorporated Jefferson County, Colorado near Denver and Littleton. Two students, Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, embarked on a shooting rampage, killing 12 students and a teacher,  took place around the time Fawcett began casting, and the Taber, Alberta, copycat killing not long afterwards. These events made everyone ferociously sensitive about teens and violence, and some people in the media and the industry misrepresented the script. Long before filming even began, Ginger Snaps became fodder for radio talk shows and generated a variety of false reports. At one point, it was described as a vampire film and scenes that depicted accidental deaths were reported as grisly murders where corpses were dismembered.

"I think that Telefilm took a lot of flack for putting money in the film because it was perceived early on by people in the press as basically a kind of slasher slash·er  
n.
One that slashes.

adj.
Characterized by gory violence: slasher movies.


slasher
Noun

Austral & NZ
, bloodletting bloodletting, also called bleeding, practice of drawing blood from the body in the treatment of disease. General bloodletting consists of the abstraction of blood by incision into an artery (arteriotomy) or vein (venesection, or phlebotomy). , exploitative kind of a thing," recalls Fawcett. "They [the press] didn't understand what we wanted to do with it. That whole thing came on the heels of the Columbine columbine, in botany
columbine (kŏl`əmbīn), any plant of the genus Aquilegia, temperate-zone perennials of the family Ranunculaceae (buttercup family), popular both as wildflowers and as garden flowers.
 killings. I thought the comparisons were completely unwarranted, but the story became exaggerated through several tellings. I got a little scared because I knew that Telefilm was getting swamped with emails."

The degree of misinformed reporting is painfully evident from the film's skillful skill·ful  
adj.
1. Possessing or exercising skill; expert. See Synonyms at proficient.

2. Characterized by, exhibiting, or requiring skill.
 opening sequence, and even more shocking when you see the scenes that were alluded to in the press. For example, the death of a classmate is, to some degree, accidental. And the body isn't cut up. It falls apart because the two girls panic, stuff the corpse in the freezer, then have to wrench it loose in order to bury it. The scene is designed, in part, to reflect a teenager's revulsion about bodily processes and other facts of life. "I was very conscious of the messages that I would be giving about being a young woman," says Walton. "I didn't want to see guns in kids' hands. I didn't want it to be a world where that was considered a viable option. Did I worry about Ginger Snaps glorifying violence? No, because the entire story is about the girls trying to avoid violence and trying to stop Ginger before she loses control of herself."

"It hurt for awhile," says Fawcett of the furor that erupted around the film. "It definitely hurt while casting in Toronto. I had a partial boycott by agents who weren't passing the script onto their clients. But in the end I have to say it backfired because, frankly, the controversy was good for the film." The boycott helped the film in a variety of ways, facilitating the casting of Vancouver-based actresses Emily Perkins and Katharine Isabelle as the sisters. Both deliver stellar performances, aided by a rather unique bond. Unbeknownst to Fawcett and his collaborators, the girls had known each other since childhood. The quality of their work is evident in the way they capture not only the nuances of their own characters but the complex and sometimes parasitical bond between the sisters.

"All they have is each other," Walton says. "That relationship was crucial for both of them. It's a relationship that has to change for either of them to continue. Brigitte needs to come into her own. It's her story, the story of a kid who is incredibly dependent on her sister in order to survive a day. Ginger is just as dependent, but in a different way. The dynamics of a co-dependent relationship fascinate me. People who need each other for all the wrong reasons. It's subtle, but very early in the movie you understand that Ginger is a lot of talk. But I think she's really lonely. She knows she's missing out on something and she knows she's not going to get it from Brigitte. Brigitte is the brains of the operation and Ginger is the passion. She's a rock star in her own mind and Brigitte is her only fan. She is Brigitte's mom in many respects until she can no longer fulfill that role. It's really hard for Ginger to come to grips with the fact Brigitte should be taking care of her."

Ginger and Brigitte become surrogate parents for one another, a fact that only makes their doomed relationship seem even more tragic. Their teachers are confused and uncertain how to respond to anything. Witness the quizzical quiz·zi·cal  
adj.
1. Suggesting puzzlement; questioning.

2. Teasing; mocking: "His face wore a somewhat quizzical almost impertinent air" Lawrence Durrell.
 reaction of Mr. Wayne, the guidance counsellor (played by Peter Keleghan) to the sisters' photo essay on life in Bailey Downs; a presentation comprised of ludicrously staged death scenes (in one of the shots Ginger is run over by a lawn mower) and garish, graphic suicides. The flustered flus·ter  
tr. & intr.v. flus·tered, flus·ter·ing, flus·ters
To make or become nervous or upset.

n.
A state of agitation, confusion, or excitement.
 guidance counsellor first compliments them on all the work they put into the presentation, then shifts gears, admonishing ad·mon·ish  
tr.v. ad·mon·ished, ad·mon·ish·ing, ad·mon·ish·es
1. To reprove gently but earnestly.

2. To counsel (another) against something to be avoided; caution.

3.
 them: "Well, I was totally disgusted by that, wasn't I?"

"There's a complicated admission of defeat that Peter plays so well," says Walton. "Our parents were the rebels of their generation. These were cool people, who fought for a lot of things that we now enjoy, but it's almost as if they took early mental retirement. They're at a loss about what to do with themselves in terms of continuing to develop their own lives. So it becomes all about the kids or the house or the vacation to get away from the kids and the house. It must be hard to sit around and continue to obey the tolerant party line and not be their parents, which they try so hard not to do."

The key representative of the adult world is the sisters' mother, Pam, who is essentially hamstrung by her good intentions. Even when her daughters do something completely bizarre, she looks away, not wanting to be a pushy push·y  
adj. push·i·er, push·i·est
Disagreeably aggressive or forward.



pushi·ly adv.
 mother. She's bossed around by Ginger, and by the end of the film, Brigitte figures out how her sister manipulates her. "Karen and I had huge conversations about what that mum character should be like," says Fawcett. "We knew that she was going to be a funny character. We didn't have a problem making fun of adults. I always had this idea of her as this terry-cloth wearing, fanny-pack mum who is really interested in everything that is going on and wants to be a part of her daughters' lives. She is different from the 1950s mum because she has read enough Chatelaine magazines -- at least enough about how to deal with teenage daughter issues -- that she's taken a `They'll talk to me if they want to' hands-off approach. It's basically trying to be a friend instead of a mother to your children. Ultimately, that character is funny because you assume that she has no idea what's happening, but she actually puts two and two together."

Fawcett's casting coup was Mimi Rogers (Someone to Watch Over Me Someone to Watch over Me may refer to:

In television:
  • "Someone to Watch over Me" (Frasier), episode from the second season of the television show Frasier
  • "Someone to Watch over Me" (Voyager episode), episode
In
 and Tom Cruise's first wife) who plays Pam. While many actresses of her stature and beauty would have balked balk  
v. balked, balk·ing, balks

v.intr.
1. To stop short and refuse to go on: The horse balked at the jump.

2.
 at playing such a frumpy frump  
n.
1. A girl or woman regarded as dull, plain, or unfashionable.

2. A person regarded as colorless and primly sedate.
, seemingly clueless clue·less  
adj.
Lacking understanding or knowledge.


clueless
Adjective

Slang helpless or stupid

Adj. 1.
 character, Rogers embraced her role wholeheartedly whole·heart·ed  
adj.
Marked by unconditional commitment, unstinting devotion, or unreserved enthusiasm: wholehearted approval.



whole
, improvising one of the film's most amusing scenes. When she discovers Ginger's underwear coated in blood after she contracts the werewolf virus, Pam simply pulls out a bottle of Spray 'N' Wash and continues with the laundry. "Because of the size of picture [its final budget was $5 million]," says Fawcett, "we were looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 an adult, an actor who had a name that we could put into that part, who would help give it some name recognition. But it's a scary business hiring actors [of that stature] because you can't get to know them. You can't call them up and talk to them. You pretty much just have to offer them the part. Mimi just went for it 100 per cent."

Like its ancestors from the 1970s, Ginger Snaps rests on rather uncomfortable truths. Pam and Mr. Wayne's good intentions are contrasted with the insatiable primal urges that overtake Ginger, and there are urges that can't be resolved or dealt with using advice from Chatelaine. (The girls' bedroom functions as a parents' worst nightmare; a private place where Brigitte pierces Ginger's belly button belly button Medtalk Umbilicus, navel  with a silver hook in a failed and bloody attempt to cure her.) That desperate and deluded need for comfort and security is one of the film's favourite targets; a desire for vengeance inspired in part by the creators' own spell in the suburbs.

"I was not a happy camper in the suburbs," confides Walton. "I did have belonging issues and I'd never seen anything like it. Identical homes with two cars in every driveway. Big fat wide streets that nobody parks on, freshly paved every other year. Because it's so homogeneous, culturally dry and barren, it felt like a desert. I had a keen desire to comment on that as the perfect world and for good reason. It's the classic model of suppression. Look at American Beauty, where you are what you keep in your garage."

Of course, ultimately what drew both Walton and Fawcett to the project is the Fitzgerald sisters themselves. "Usually [with] teenagers who are misfits, it's all about fitting in or getting accepted," says Walton. "That was important for me because my biggest personal problem in high school was I too had no desire to fit in. I really wanted two female leads to reflect that attitude." Fawcett adds, "They started off as Edward Gorey stick figures, as cartoons in my head. I knew that they were these sort of Gothic girls who didn't fit in at all. But as they grew and developed personalities, I knew what the film had going for it was different from other teen horror films. It had characters that were weirdly real. Certainly more real than we normally see teenagers portrayed in films. They're both tough characters. It's nice to see girls like that."
COPYRIGHT 2001 Canadian Independent Film & Television Publishing Association
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Gravestock, Steve
Publication:Take One
Date:Mar 22, 2001
Words:2631
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