display until December 31, 2014
fall 2014 / can$6.50 us$5.00
p u b l i s h e d b y t h e d i r e c t o r s g u i l d o f c a n a d afall/ 2014 w w MONTAGE w. d g c . c1a
Film & Television Relief Program
Emergency Financial Aid for Film & Television Workers
“The Actors’ Fund is a fantastic support system” “As it turned out, an initially promising year turned into the worst 11 months of my life. In June of 2013, I was admitted to my first (of many) hospital stays and at the same time my husband lost his job. It was terrible timing, but something we knew would eventually come to an end…
Photo: Sydney Sharpe
I was finally released from hospital in September of 2013, hopeful to jump right back into life, but found myself unable to return to work for months and months on end. With my husband out of work, and EI falling short, we turned to the Actors’ Fund for some help in December 2013.
The Actors’ Fund of Canada - They. Were. Amazing.
featuring
featuring
MICHAEL MOORE
DOUGLAS TRUMBULL
Toronto International Film Festival September 5–11 Glenn Gould Studio, 250 Front Street West
In person September 11
™Toronto International Film Festival Inc.
sponsored by
Donate now
Register now at tiff.net/industry
actorsfund.ca
Lucy MacLeod, Production Manager
1.877.399.8392
THE FILM & TELEVISION RELIEF PROGRAM IS A PROGRAM OF THE ACTORS’ FUND OF CANADA THAT PROVIDES FINANCIAL AID TO INDUSTRY MEMBERS IN CRISIS. Charitable Registration 118777457RR0001 fall 2014
INDUSTRY CONFERENCE
In person September 9
Now, feeling better than ever and back at work, I want to say ‘Thank You’ to everyone involved with the Fund. You are a fantastic support system for anyone involved in the entertainment industry experiencing hard times and I, for one, would like to spread the word!”
MONTAGE
DOC CONFERENCE
Toronto International Film Festival September 9 & 10 Glenn Gould Studio, 250 Front Street West
Easy to deal with, and fast in their decisions, the Fund stepped in when we REALLY needed it and afforded us enough time for me to get truly better and return to the production job I love so much.
2
7 days 200 guest speakers 5,000 attendees 1 industry conference
/TIFF
/TIFF_NET
/TIFF
/TIFF
/TIFF_NET
/TIFF
/TIFFINDUSTRY
/TIFF_INDUSTRY
#TIFFConference
/TIFF_NET fall 2014
MONTAGE
3
4
MONTAGE
fall 2014
all 201
CONTENTS
T hi s p a ge : Wo lf Co p (L o w e ll D e a n, 20 1 4 ). C o u rte s y S ha w n F u l to n . O p po s it e: B a te s M o te l . C ou rt es y Jo s e ph L e d ere r
Phot os:
D I RE C T O R S G U I L D O F C A N A D A
pub lished b y t he
FA L L 20 1 4 , M o n ta g e
CHRIS CHAPMAN
co ver pho tog raphy:
-
12 20 26 34
6
7
10
50
Viewpoint
Listen Up!
Spirit of Place
Parting Shot
by Tim Southam
by Brian Baker The 1% Solution How to fund authored work in Canada
by Kendrie Upton Growing Into It An idyllic childhood in the country inspires a top location manager
by Tom McSorley Peter Harcourt 1931-2014 Remembering an iconic Canadian film teacher
Editor’s note
by Marc Glassman
38 42 46
FEATURES IN CONVERSATION WITH… T IM S OU T H A M by MARC GLASSMAN Th e career an d t h o u g h t s o f the new c hair of the DG C are d i s cu s s ed i n t h i s f a r-ranging interv iew co n d u ct ed b y t h e ed i t o r o f Montage
LA COLLABORATION ENTR E LE RÉALISATEUR ET L’ ASSISTAN T-R É A LIS AT E U R TIM SOUTHAM INTER VIEWS ARCAND, SIMONEAU AND FA LA R D E A U ON ASSISTANT DIRECTORS edited by MARTIN DELISLE
CLEMENT VIRGO’ S THE BOOK OF N E GR OE S b y ADAM NAYM AN V i r g o ’s ad ap t at i o n o f Lawrenc e Hill’s award-winn i n g n o vel i s an eag er l y an t ic ipated TV series
CREATIVE SASKATCHEWA N ? HOW MUCH IS GOING ON IN A P R OVIN C E WITHOUT A TAX CREDIT? b y CAR LE STEELE Th e m aki n g o f Wo l f Co p m eans some films will b e m ad e i n Sas kat ch ewan . But what kind of an i n d u s t r y wi l l d evel o p i n a prov inc e that d o es n ’t i s s u e t ax cred i t s ?
GO GREENE by ANN ELLE Justis Greene has produced films such as A History of Violence, The Time Traveler’s Wife and Snakes on a Plane. Montage’s Ell caught him on the set of the TV series Bates Motel and found out more about this veteran B.C. producer
I AM TRACEY by SUZAN AYSCOUGH Pro f i l e o f Tr acey Deer, d i rector, writer an d f i l m m aker
ROLLING ON THE ROCK by JASON ANDERSON As Republic of Doyle enters its final season on CBC, Allan Hawco and four DGC members from the mainland relate their experiences working in Newfoundland on this long-running series
fall 2014
MONTAGE
5
DIRECTORS GUILD OF CANADA publisher
DGC NATIONAL 111 Peter Street, Suite 600 Toronto, ON M5V 2H1 Tel: 416-925-8200 Fax: 416-925-8400 Toll Free: 1-888-972-0098 En français: 1-855-904-1880 E-mail: mail@dgc.ca www.dgc.ca ALBERTA DISTRICT COUNCIL 2526 Battleford Avenue, S.W., Suite 133 (Building B8, Currie Barracks) Calgary, AB T3E 7J4 Tel: 403-217-8672 Fax: 403-217-8678 E-mail: dgc@dgcalberta.ca www.dgcalberta.ca ATLANTIC REGIONAL COUNCIL 1496 Lower Water St. Suite 501b Halifax, NS B3J 1R9 Tel: 902-492-3424 Fax: 902-492-2678 E-mail: inquiries@dgcatlantic.ca www.dgcatlantic.ca BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTRICT COUNCIL 1152 Mainland Street, Suite 430 Vancouver, BC V6B 4X2 Tel: 604-688-2976 Fax: 604-688-2610 E-mail: info@dgcbc.com www.dgcbc.com MANITOBA DISTRICT COUNCIL The Union Centre, 202B-275 Broadway Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3C 4M6 Tel: 204-940-4301 Fax: 204-942-2610 E-mail: dgc@dgcmanitoba.ca www.dgc.ca/manitoba ONTARIO DISTRICT COUNCIL 111 Peter Street, Suite 600 Toronto, ON M5V 2H1 Tel: 416-925-8200 Fax: 416-925-8400 E-mail: odc@dgcontario.ca www.dgc.ca/ontario QUEBEC DISTRICT COUNCIL 4200 Saint-Laurent Blvd., Suite 708 Montréal, PQ H2W 2R2 Tel: 514-844-4084 Fax: 514-844-1067 E-mail: action@dgc.ca www.dgc.ca/quebec SASKATCHEWAN DISTRICT COUNCIL c/o 111 Peter Street, Suite 600 Toronto, ON M5V 2H1 Tel toll free: 1-888-972-0098 Fax: 416-925-8400 E-mail: sdc@dgc.ca www.dgc.ca/saskatchewan
viewpoint
Tim Southam, president Brian Baker, national executive director
With our own medium in flux, filmmakers can be forgiven for looking upon the up-
mail@dgc.ca
heavals facing magazines as an unsettling cautionary tale. Much has been made of
associate publisher
the challenges facing printed words and pictures. Yet as I consider all the tools that
Alejandra Sosa
help people everywhere to understand the Directors Guild of Canada’s membership
editor
most supple and accessible.
art director
Alexander Alter copy editor
Jocelyn Laurence
hot topics of the day. Each issue is a fresh opportunity to innovate on content and
Anne-Marie Stuart photo research
Nick Gergesha advertising sales
Anne-Marie Stuart
design. Each issue can be mailed anywhere, picked up any time, distributed to any office, any forum. More and more issues can be consulted online. The accumulating web archive of Montage issues and accompanying video is a precious record of our members’ achievements and values going back in time. And it can evolve forever.
This issue, the first since I was elected National President, builds on the editorial team’s work over many years.
We have added a French feature article to the mix and its English version will be available online at the DGC Montage website. We continue to look for excellence wherever it thrives in Canada and around the world. We continue to make the
Montage is published twice a year by the Directors Guild of Canada. www.dgc.ca montage@dgc.ca
diversity, of quality for all who thumb these pages, literally or electronically. We continue to assert that film begins with
Please direct all editorial inquiries and letters to the editor at montage@dgc.ca Letters may be edited for length and clarity. Please include your name, address and daytime phone number.
point that talent knows no limits—geographic, cultural or otherwise—and we aim to set a standard of inclusiveness, of people and the Directors Guild of Canada exists to protect and promote these very people—our workplace rights, our creative opportunities and our livelihoods.
Welcome to this generation of Montage. My thanks to our dedicated Editorial Board and to the team at the helm:
Editor Marc Glassman and Designer Alex Alter, ably supported by Communications Director Alejandra Sosa. TIM SOUTHAM PRESIDENT, DIRECTORS GUILD OF CANADA
editor’s note As editor of Montage, I’m pleased to thank Tim Southam for his gracious “view-
Montage is available free of charge to all DGC members. Copies of Montage are available for $6.50 from the publisher and news outlets across Canada. Canadian subscriptions $12, United States US $15 and International CDN $39 For subscription information or to order back issues, please contact DGC Montage. Subscriptions: montage@dgc.ca All contents are copyright 2014 DGC. All rights are reserved and contents, in whole or in part, may not be reprinted without permission. Points of view expressed in Montage do not necessarily represent those of the DGC. The publisher assumes no responsibility for advertisers’ claims, unsolicited art, photographs, manuscripts or other materials. Printed in Canada by Thistle Printing, Toronto, Ontario
point” on the DGC’s magazine and staff. We enjoy the challenge of putting out a publication that reflects the goals and concerns of a Guild that advances the cause of media culture—and, of course, the needs of its members—in our country. It’s our job to advance the Guild’s positions on policy issues while offering incisive pieces about important DGC-staffed films and television productions being made here. As a corollary, we write about Guild artists who are making an impact through their work. It’s an exciting time to be making work in Canada and I hope we convey some of that enthusiasm in Montage.
This being the first issue with Tim ensconced as president, it makes sense to have our regular interview feature “in
conversation” with Mr. Southam. The Guild’s membership will be keenly interested in its new leader; this is clearly the time to find out more about him. In our conversation, interested Guild members and general readers will discover much about Tim’s work, which, like that of past presidents Allan King and Sturla Gunnarsson, has traversed the terrains of feature narrative films, documentaries and television dramas. That diverse background has served the Guild well before and it’s clear Tim Southam intends, as King and Gunnarsson did, to take on a strong leadership role, aided by extensive experience in many genres of media work.
Publication Mail Agreement 40051973
We were lucky to have Tim involved as the moderator/interlocutor of a panel discussion with Denys Arcand, Yves
MONTAGE
fall 2014
by BRIAN BAKER
How Canada’s funding system can create a boom in authored work. The DGC’s “asks”are in italics and offer a cheap solution to an on-going problem
UP N
LISTE
Call it a bend or shift in ideology or an excellent business move. Either way, a 1% realignment of the existing Canadian funding system would see a boom for our talent, our culture and our economy. In the last issue of Montage, it was argued our industry needs to generate more work that puts Canadian creators on the crest of production. Television series provide opportunities to a variety of DGC members. For director members, high-level series work brings acclaim and significant income. But if we are to advance our talents, develop our voices and express our culture, we need every industry stakeholder to get behind Canadian-authored work. Directors who also write or writer-director teams need their narrative feature films and documentaries to be supported and financed. Their work, their success and their talents will then migrate to, and generate success at, the television level. By doing this we will create global hits and ensure our own future viability.
Simoneau and Pierre Falardeau about the relationship between directors and their assistants. The conversation was in French and is published in its own language in this issue—a breakthrough for Montage. We are publishing an English translation of it on the DGC / Montage website. This is a new initiative that we will continue in future issues.
Our cover story is on veteran DGC director Clement Virgo, who is just completing a dream project, the adaptation
of Lawrence Hill’s excellent novel The Book of Negroes. Appropriately, he was photographed in one of the few remaining antiquarian bookshops in Toronto, David Mason Books. As a former owner of an independent bookstore, Pages, I am personally very pleased to see Clement’s love of literature reflected beautifully in the environment of such a great shop.
Adam Nayman’s profile of Clement Virgo ushers in two other fine portraits of DGCers, Justis Greene and Tracey Deer.
It’s a pleasure to acknowledge their work in these pages. Finally, Carle Steel offers a hard-hitting look at what’s happening in Saskatchewan—a province without a tax credit system—while Jason Anderson celebrates Newfoundland and Republic of Doyle.
We hope you enjoy this issue of Montage—and please join us in welcoming on board Tim Southam.
MARC GLASSMAN EDITOR
6
Each issue evolves with the times, evolves with our members, evolves with the
Directors Guild of Canada astuart@dgc.ca
Undelivered mail returned to: Directors Guild of Canada, National Office 111 Peter Street, Suite 600 Toronto, Ontario M5V 2H1 Tel. 416-925-8200. Fax 416-925-8400
The 1% Solution
and what we do, Montage magazine and its online version strike me as among the
Marc Glassman
content manager
identified an absence of broadcasting policy to support the promotion of Canadian feature films.
The Canadian Media Landscape’s Major Issue Canada is ranked as the thirdlargest movie-watching nation in the world, yet we have not built the feature film side of our industry to match this demand. Canadian films make up only 6% of the sector’s overall production. This is due in part to the risk associated with feature films in the market, a risk largely manufactured via ever-changing policies and support mechanisms for producers and distributors. The Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage had
A 2009 Telefilm study notes, “Unlike the situation in Europe, the Canadian broadcasting system has not supported Canadian filmmakers to the degree that is necessary. In that sense, the government’s feature-film policy is operating in a silo of its own, instead of being integrated and supported by our broadcasting system. This needs to change.” Canada’s relatively small population and proximity to the United States necessitate safeguards and support mechanisms for cultural industries like the feature-film sector. The conventional broadcaster business model favours simulcasts of U.S. TV series and Canadian versions of reality shows over original fiction or documentaries made by Canadians. In Europe and elsewhere, broadcasters and distributors provide this support. Canada’s broadcasting regulator, the CRTC, has made several decisions aimed at promoting Canadian film and greater access to Canadian content. These measures have all failed in their implementation. There is a solution to the problem, one that does not rely on new, additional sources of taxpayer dollars. It relies instead on common sense and the simple modification of existing arrangements. Broadcasters’ support can be gained with new spending representing 1% of their overall revenue on feature films and documentaries. The resulting boost to Canadian filmmakers and writers would be astounding. The crest and the wake of this decision are directly linked to how the CRTC works and enforces its mandate and how the big stakeholders interpret that mandate. Programs of National Interest In 2010 the CRTC adopted a policy– later to become a condition of license for major private broadcasters–to allocate 5% of revenues as an expenditure requirement for the production of Programs of National Interest (PNI). PNI is a category that includes dramatic series, comedy series, award shows, theatrical features and long-form documentaries–more than a dozen categories and sub-categories overall. But this fall 2014
MONTAGE
7
The 1% Solution
well-intended policy did not address all forms equally. PNI is failing theatrical feature films and long-form documentaries because broadcasters overwhelmingly prefer dramatic series. They more effectively aggregate audiences and build brand power during their broadcast run. The state of the feature film within the broadcast television sector is dire. Despite TV being the preferred way in which Canadians watch movies, broadcasters have drastically reduced their support for Canadian film. In the English market alone, direct broadcaster support for feature film went from $16.3-million in 2003 to just $3.3-million in 2011. That’s a drop of 79%.
To help reverse this pattern, and ensure PNI resources are available to support the production and use of theatrical feature films and long-form documentaries, the CRTC should increase the PNI requirement for private broadcasters from 5% to 6% and dedicate that 1% increase to augment existing broadcaster spending for theatrical feature films and long-form documentaries. This requirement would be costneutral as it would leave unchanged the general requirement on broadcasters to spend 30% of overall revenues on Canadian Production Expenditures (CPE).
8
MONTAGE
fall 2014
The addition of the further 1% of broadcaster revenues to PNI would result in an estimated increase of $66-million per annum towards direct production expenditures for theatrical features and long-form documentaries. It would thus annually leverage another $200-million towards production. CBC Our public broadcaster also needs to up its game. As the CBC’s mission comes up for review in the wake of recent budget cuts, it’s time for our mandated national broadcaster to embrace, once again, its founding principles. Those fundamental ideas include: “be predominantly and distinctively Canadian…actively contribute to the flow and exchange of [national] cultural expression… contribute to shared national consciousness and identity.” It’s time for the CBC to become the home of Canadian indigenous television production. The broadcaster must strengthen its commitment to long-form drama and documentary and become the natural place to showcase the best and the brightest of our feature-film writers and directors. Providing audience access Canadian taxpayers support the production of Canadian films through a number of refundable tax credits made available by federal and provincial levels of government, but they see very few of the films made by the Canadian industry. Theatres are dominated by U.S. tent-pole films that leave smaller Canadian films to fight for boxoffice scraps. As a result, Canadian features average around 3% of total box-office revenues in Canada each year. The CRTC requires all pay-perview and video-on-demand (VOD) services to license all new Canadian feature films that comply with relevant industry codes and are suitable for each service. Pay-television services, meanwhile, are subject only to an “expectation” (rather than a condition of licence) that they “license all Canadian films that are appropriate for the service.” This is a far cry from the original CRTC requirements that pay-television services license every Canadian feature film that complied with the relevant industry code and schedule those films evenly throughout their programming day. These provisions were well-intentioned on the part of the regulator
but they have failed to achieve their purpose. They leave it entirely up to broadcasters to decide which films are “suitable” or “appropriate.” Approximately 100 new Canadian films per year are made available for Canadian audiences. Only a small portion are ever seen. There are serious loopholes the broadcasters use to minimize their obligations and thus lose sight of the CRTC’s original aim: to make virtually all feature-film productions widely available to Canadians. Overall there has been a striking decline in the airing of Canadian feature films on English-language television, which, according to one study, has dropped from 73% (of Canadian feature-length productions) to 36% between 2004 and 2011. Financing dollars from Pay TV for English-language films have also dried up, with a staggering 98% decrease from $9.2-million to just over $300,000 over that same time frame. Licence fees for Canadian films, an important marker of use, have fallen by as much as 50% in a recent two-year period.
The CRTC should clarify its regulatory requirements relating to each of the licensed pay, pay-per-view and VOD services and their obligations with respect to Canadian feature films. This could be accomplished by amending the wording in each case to reduce or eliminate the discretion available to broadcasters that flows from the use of words like “suitable” and “appropriate.” If they do, the financing of Canadian feature films and accessibility to a wider national audience would be greatly improved. Over-the-top services In recent years Canadian broadcasters have had to compete with new over-the-top (OTT) services. The most prominent is Netflix, which now has well over three million Canadian subscribers and is operating under a CRTC Digital Media Exemption Order. The Commission has repeatedly indicated that the presence of OTT providers in Canada has not had a negative impact on the ability to achieve the policy objectives of the Broadcasting Act. However, it is without question that Netflix’s unique, unregulated environment has enabled it to avoid the
sector-building requirements shared by other content-providers. As a result, OTT providers operate as free riders with regard to ensuring Canadian content and culture in the broadcasting sphere. Pay-per-view providers and VOD services that compete directly with unregulated OTT providers face a regulatory requirement to contribute 5% of their revenues to the production of Canadian dramatic content. The Broadcasting Act states, “Each element of the Canadian broadcasting system shall contribute in an appropriate manner to the creation and presentation of Canadian programming.” It’s time OTT providers, such as Netflix and others, were making such a contribution. A solution Theatrical feature films and longform documentaries are the cultural heart of our industry. To create more of these authored works we need to realign our collective imperative. We should be able to achieve these objectives without any new sources of taxpayer funds, without any new public institutions and with no fresh grants or subsidies for an already robust and growing industry. Instead we can depend on the responsible management of existing arrangements and the application of clear policy to achieve already affirmed and established goals. Taken together, these steps would mean more resources for production, more films and guaranteed access for audiences to the films Canadians author and create. Brian Baker is the National Executive Director of the Directors Guild of Canada.
You entertain. We promote. We’re better together. We help Canadian creators and producers reach the world. The Canada Media Fund is dedicated to funding exceptional Canadian content, providing vital industry research, and promoting what is uniquely ours, here, and abroad. Together, we can entertain the world. cmf-fmc.ca Visit canadaonscreen.ca to view great Canadian productions.
Join the conversation on Canadian content #eyeoncanada fall 2014
MONTAGE
9
one side and grazing pastures, complete with fruit trees, to the other. The river, an everpresent theme, lent an undeniable beauty blended with an industrial charm as the fishing community was literally at our doorstep.
GROWING INTO IT by KENDRIE UPTON
SPIRIT OF PLACE
My childhood was extraordinarily idyllic. My father spent part of his youth in B.C.’s Chilcotin as a ranch hand and my mother, like so many girls, dreamed of horses. When they had children, they made the choice to live outside the city in what is now the large suburb of Delta but at the time was a reasonably small town with a rich history of fishing and farming, in a two-acre homestead in Port Guichon that we called home. The 13-room rambling antebellum was situated across from the south arm of the Fraser. Its massive farm-style kitchen rarely saw a meal without guests, though many were unexpected. This had been the homestead of the Guichon family before my parents were captured by its bucolic charm. Early on, they ran a boarding stable and horse folk provided an endless loop of entertainment and affordable, if not entirely appropriate, babysitting. On Sundays my father would line the fence posts with martinis and on Mondays my mother would wonder why it was so tough to make ends meet. The house was framed by lawns and mighty hedges in front, a fenced backyard that, in later years, included a pool, a riding ring and horse barn to
10
MONTAGE
fall 2014
To a five-year-old with the freedom to wander at will, this property was its own universe. Hours were spent imagining my realm to be everything from an alien planet to an ancient ruin. Our shed made a formidable castle and the hen house doubled brilliantly as a drive-in with a pick-up window. In his teens, my brother took a tiger torch to a massive blackberry thicket at the rear of the property and created a thorny labyrinth with rooms and passages. I shudder to think of my own child climbing the rooftops of that massive old house across which we scurried constantly. My connection to this landscape was unyielding. Each hiding place was a friend to me. I understood, from among my earliest memories, the value of place and the importance of setting. The way in which environments shape us and our experience and the true value of home. No two days of my youth were anything alike and my creativity proved to be my most trusted companion. To this day I’m happiest in my head. This pastoral upbringing didn’t betray my dark side. I’m a proverbial film brat. My father followed his short-lived career as a cowboy with a stretch in radio that led to his starting up a production company in Vancouver long before B.C. really knew what a production was. While he was busy writing, producing and directing, my mother learned to edit and co-produced many of his early projects. Later she returned to school and joined a public relations firm. But her escape from film was brief and soon that familiar magnetic force drew her back into “the life,” this time as a publicist.
In his youth my brother, Rory, was hyperactive and hyperintelligent. He stripped our Apple II computer down to its chassis and left the hubcaps spinning on the living room carpet before puberty set in. Mom was unimpressed. Until he reassembled it with no ill effect whatsoever. I still have the letter he received from an explosives company. “Dear Roderick. Thank you for your enquiry. If you’d please provide your shipping address, we would be very happy to fill your order.” He was 12. While it’s true that he had, like many six-year-old boys, wanted to become a fireman, there was a moment in time when all that shifted. Perhaps he just realized that starting fires for a living would be way more fun than extinguishing them. One year, when my parents were in production, Rory stumbled upon John Thomas’s Special Effects shop in back of Panorama Studio in West Vancouver. I’m sure it wasn’t seven seconds before he knew this was his destiny. He spent the entire summer back there as John’s youngest apprentice ever. Then there was me. I’d been an extra in every film my father had ever made yet, much to my parent’s surprise, I had no interest in the space in front of the camera. I wasn’t drawn to film’s technical jobs either. As I came of age to enter the workforce, I found myself pinned at a crossroads. I knew that film was my home. After all, if I didn’t work in film, what the hell would I have to contribute at the Sunday dinner table? But where exactly did I belong? Then one day there was a knock at our oversized front door that brought with it my answer. A personable young woman introduced herself to me and explained she was a location scout looking for a place to make a movie. “You’re a what?” My ears perked up. She explained
her job of finding locations for films as I listened in rapt amazement. “They pay you for that?” I asked skeptically and was assured that was the case. How could I have missed this? Those people I live with are keeping things from me. I began asking questions rapid fire. When I revealed to her that my family were all in the industry, she must have thought I was being held captive and had just broken free before opening the door to her. She grabbed some photos hastily and made good her escape lest I should trap her in a Vulcan mind meld. My mind was blown. It had never occurred to me that there was a realm in film that would allow me to explore the whole world with the same lens through which I’d seen my childhood home. Despite my family business being make-believe, somehow I thought that being an adult would mean tempering or even abandoning my reverie. The notion of being paid to search for amazing places, to this day, almost 30 years later, still makes me think that I’m pulling off a truly awesome scam. My career has taken me to many amazing places and given me unique glimpses of the world that most people never have the pleasure of experiencing. I’ve walked on the roof of BC Place stadium, flown over huge portions of British Columbia and peered into the depths of buildings, boats and dams. Some would argue that the job of Location Manager is highly administrative these days and they aren’t wrong. But I consider filing the paperwork to be the price of admission and, as often as not, the show is seriously spectacular.
Mom said that after Rory and I left they began to feel as if they should close off a wing or two. So they built themselves a float-home, carrying on with the river theme, and started a new chapter. I always love having the opportunity to drive out that way, especially with people who’ve never seen the property before. It’s still got the type of street appeal that realtors dream of, majestic in its stance, historical, somehow sagacious in its beauty. My parents celebrated their 50th anniversary this past weekend. We hosted a small dinner in our backyard. Our place is nothing special, I admit. Just a suburban lot in another part of Delta, as it turns out. As our family reflected on all that 50 years of marriage can contain, I was struck by how truly unique and special a life I’ve led and how grateful I am to them for having commuted and paid for oil heat and kept horses and insisted steadfastly that 4260 River Road West was the only place to live. Because from where I’m sitting, they could not have been more spot on. Kendrie Upton has been a Location Manager and DGC member in B.C. since 1986. She’s also taught in the field of locations throughout her career. Her father, Keith Cutler, is a past President of the DGC National as well as a Past Chair of the DGC B.C. District Council. He received the DGC Lifetime Service Award in 2004. He and his wife, Dixie, now live in Whiterock, B.C.
Photo Left: River Road West now. Kendrie Upton as a child. Author’s print of 4260 River Road West. All photos courtesy Kendrie Upton.
My parents sold the family home many years ago now, remarkably returning it to the Guichon family in the process.
fall 2014
MONTAGE
11
The new President of the DGC, Tim Southam, is a man of many qualities. He possesses a fierce intelligence and strong will, vital characteristics for a film and TV director. Leavening that rock-solid core are droll wit and sophistication—this is a man who appreciates dance and theatre but is just as concerned with politics and business. Southam is a nerd when it comes to governmental policy issues as well as the right kind of equipment to use on a film shoot. He burns white hot when answering questions about the state of Canada’s media industries and the tough road that creative people have to travel to get work done in this country. But he is just as passionate about Aboriginal people in Canada and how their rights have been betrayed. With Tim Southam, the roles of art and politics merge. As a director, Southam has had a diverse career. Considering his wide range of interests—the performing arts, Aboriginal rights, Canadian politics, an intense love of literature—that isn’t too surprising. The main thrust in his work has been a fascination with narrative. It’s storytelling that has been his keenest pursuit, whether in documentaries, feature films or television episodes. His love and respect for all genres in media shine through his work, as does his unyielding professionalism.
ati
ers onv
in c 12
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Photo: Gail Harvey
…
ith on w
Southam’s filmography has a variety of through-lines. His weather eye for the right detail marks his work with such dance and theatre artists as Veronica Tennant (Satie and Suzanne), Jean-Pierre Perreault (Danser Perreault) and Brent Carver (Home Through the Night). Southam’s appreciation of literature informs such films as David Adams Richards’ Bay of Love and Sorrows and Michel Marc Bouchard’s The Tale of Teeka. His love and anger about politics fuelled Trudeau 2 and One Dead Indian. Southam’s concern for the intricacies of narration and how to effectively tell a story are the challenges he faces every time he directs House and Bones, the hit American TV shows that have launched him in the U.S. —Marc Glassman fall 2014
MONTAGE
13
Montage: Your directing career begins with Satie and Suzanne. Can you tell me about it? Tim: It was a virtually narrative-free one-hour exploration of what I thought was going on inside the head of the French composer Erik Satie at a very specific moment in his life. It was as non-narrative as a film is allowed to get, and yet the most exciting formal exercise of my life in that we set ourselves the challenge of making a film that was visually born entirely of special-effects techniques that were performed inside the camera the way they would have been in 1923. I love to return to this kind of abstract filmmaking, as I got to do over the years with films like Perreault Dancer and, just recently, with a tribute film I made for Brent Carver’s Governor General’s Performing Arts Award. The very next thing it occurred to me to do after Satie was to go to the folks making the mainstream Global television series Traders, and to suggest to them that I become one of their writers. My objective there was to learn to write conventional narrative scripts, and by a complete set of happy accidents I ended up doing just that.
Previous page: a young Tim Southam. Courtesy DGC. Top: The Bay of Love and Sorrows (Tim Southam, 2002). Courtesy Yergeau Images. Bottom left: The Tale of Teeka/L’histoire de l’Oie (Tim Southam, 1998). Courtesy Tim Southam. Bottom right: One Dead Indian (Tim Southam, 2006). Courtesy Mongrel Media
Marc Glassman, Montage’s editor, talked to Tim Southam at the DGC office in Toronto about a host of subjects ranging from Canadian film policy to his own filmography.
Montage: Tim, your education was somewhat disparate—liberal arts and then an economics degree— and you travelled quite a bit. What was the draw for you to go into film and television? Tim: I was really a person in search of a calling. I was absolutely steeped in media. I come from a family that was involved exclusively for 125 years in getting the news out. I happened to be very interested in what it means to reach out to fellow human beings through media, and of course what is it to build a business around that. That preoccupied everyone I heard around the dinner table, all through my life, so I’m a media brat. Montage: I thought of you first off as a writer. Would that be true? Tim: I’m a writer of essays. What I learned subsequently as a director was that I have the ability to interpret text into something else. It means working with this road map that we call a script and doing something aggressively creative, which is transforming the written word into sequences of film and sound. Coming at this profession from the position of a very active reader is what all of the members of the Directors Guild of Canada do: We receive a script and we turn it into film on all screens and all formats all over the world. I also pursued something I thought would be useful, which was economics. It allowed me to understand some of the other dimensions of what our Guild is about, which is the strict economics of bringing people to work on a film project.
14
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Montage: Did your business background help you? Tim: It did. Prior to becoming a filmmaker, I had studied economics and spent several years selling advertising space to bankers. That gave me what I describe as a meta-knowledge of economics and banking, which I was then more than happy to sell by the pound to Traders, the plots of which were all about the stock markets and banking in the tail end of the exciting go-go years of the ‘80s and early ‘90s when bond traders ruled the world. The people who made Traders thought this would be useful. Then I was given the opportunity to write a treatment for an episode, and then to write the episode itself. I didn’t know it at the time, but I was being helped and mentored in this activity by two of the greatest television writers in modern history— Hart Hanson, who created Bones, and David Shore, who created House, both of whom are Canadian. They showed me how to write this script, and I did my best, and we were all nominated together for Geminis for our separate scripts but I knew very well where mine had come from. At the end of that season I went back to what I really wanted to do, which was to make films. I came away from Traders with at least a slightly better ability to make narrative films. Traders taught me to make linear storytelling my mission, so I then set out to do that on a variety of long-form projects. Montage: You were able to bring those narrative skills to Drowning in Dreams, which is a documentary. Tim: Right. I got into a more narrative form of storytelling with Drowning in Dreams, which is set on the north shore of Lake Superior and which I feel draws on the abstract dance filmmaking and the more narrative drive of linear storytelling that I acquired from Traders. To my mind, it was a satisfying blend, and I feel it told the story of these very real people. Montage: I’d like you to talk about that notion of abstraction. You have very interesting abstract notions in Satie and Suzanne. You’ve got that whole sense of what cinema history was and you also evoke Preston Sturges in Drowning in Dreams. This was not normal practice for a documentary filmmaker at the time. Tim: My overriding preoccupation in both Drowning in Dreams and Satie and Suzanne was to create a state of complete suspended consciousness. The idea
I had was to use a specific menu of techniques to do this. In Drowning in Dreams the idea was to metaphorically throw this character into Lake Superior and as the character descends towards the object of his desire, which is a sunken shipwreck, everything that happens psychologically to him and the other five narrators of the film is revealed to us. It gets particularly loopy when our divers are caught by rapture of the deep—nitrogen narcosis. In Satie and Suzanne we found ourselves inverting sets and using all kinds of special art department and in-camera techniques to induce a suspended state—an absinthe-driven one in Satie and Suzanne. Montage: On The Tale of Teeka you got to work with Michel Marc Bouchard, a brilliant playwright. Did that help in the education of Tim Southam as a writer and director? Tim: My mission to essentially stalk and harass writers began early. So it seemed perfectly normal for me to stalk David Shore and Hart Hanson when I was working on Traders and it was equally normal for me to stalk, harass and otherwise badger one of our great playwrights, Michel Marc Bouchard, into allowing me to film his screen adaptation of his play L’histoire de l’Oie. Making that film introduced to me the missing link, which was how to drive a story at a prosaic level with relentless suspense and an ability to engage audiences with characters, but also to have, at a subliminal level, the element of abstraction. What I found with the making of The Tale of Teeka was that I was on the front lines of art as manifesto—the very dangerous front lines of what art could do to provoke people. As soon as the film was ready for broadcast, the Catholic School Commission in Quebec put it on their famous Index, which is to say it was censored.
“The directors are “My mission to like giddy kidsstalk on set. essentially and harass They get to dowriters things began early.” they’ve never done —Tim Southam before.” Montage: Let’s abandon your film chronology and leap ahead to One Dead Indian. The Tale of Teeka dealt with the consequences of child abuse when the issue was still steeped in controversy. You were in the forefront again with One Dead Indian. What brought you to the project? Tim: One Dead Indian was also an adaptation, this time a great script by Andrew Wreggitt and Hugh Graham from an excellent non-fiction book by Peter Edwards. In terms of the question of abuse, it felt a lot like The Tale of Teeka. We were talking about a community that had been absolutely misunderstood. Our objective as filmmakers was to provide the humanity of the events in as cogent a way as possible. We were making a film about Mike Harris’s Conservative government, which was exceeding its brief and engaging in abuses of power the likes of which we had never seen in 20th-century Ontario and which whipped a peaceful protest into the shooting of Dudley George. fall 2014
MONTAGE
15
book, the play and the novel. You have been able to adapt all of them to the dramatic media of television/ film. Tim: Reading well, understanding something and then translating it to the screen is what I do. On the filmmaking side, I delight in chasing down writers who have said something I would like to say differently but respectfully on film, and on the TV side it’s the same—I look for writers who are doing something I feel is making me laugh, making me cry, making me think in a different way, and who have figured out how to do it in the medium of their choice. I try to get on board with them for as long as I can.
Top to Bottom: Haven (Syfy Network). Courtesy eOne Films. Satie and Suzanne (Tim Southam, 1994). Courtesy Rhombus Media. Perrault Dancer (Tim Southam, 2005). Courtesy Tim Southam
Montage: Tim, you’ve been working a lot in the States over the past few years on the hit shows Bones and House, and some upcoming fairly hot cable shows. What’s your work experience been like there, in terms of crews and the ability for you to perform as a director? Tim: For me it comes back to this agenda of stalking great writers and, with that, looking for a chance to work and learn with the greatest actors and crews. We all want to do our best, and a director really gets to do his or her best when script, cast and crew are at their best. Bones and House are state-of-the art productions set in these hybrid “dramedy” universes I adore, and they have budgets. You’d have to be crazy not to want to have those experiences and learn everything you can from them. The real dialogue was around how to do it properly in terms of representing the Stony Point and Kettle Point communities, and telling the story in a way that made sense to everyone involved. And the dialogue was not just with our actors but also with Dudley George’s family to make sure we were doing things in a way that was representative of the community, because every community is different. I found that to be far from the abstract, dream-driven world of fantasy filmmaking I had been doing up until then. I was coming back to an absolutely crucial responsibility to be as socially truthful as possible and for me, One Dead Indian was an exercise in being as humanly truthful as possible. Montage: Now to peel back, to give it a bit of chronology: We jumped over The Bay of Love and Sorrows and again, having worked with Michel Marc Bouchard, you got to work with one of the great novelists in Canada, David Adams Richards. Tell me about that experience. Tim: The attraction of The Bay of Love and Sorrows was that it articulated in a very original way the story of a mid-20th-century prototype that has always interested me, which is the Gucci socialist—the socialist-in-theory who has a personal backup plan, who has money. The story in The Bay of Love and Sorrows centres on wealthy Michael Skid, returning at the age of 18 or 19 to the small town he grew up in on the Miramichi River with big ideas about communal living, where everyone would pool their money and live together. All of the films I have done, apart from the performing-arts films, have to do with the land. The Bay of Love and Sorrows is set in the woods along the Miramichi River, a very wild and fascinating part of the world that David Adams Richard knows intimately, having grown up there. Montage: Can you talk about the process of adaptation? We’ve been talking about three different forms really—the non-fiction investigative journalistic
16
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Montage: When did you join the DGC? Tim: I was forced—because you literally could not direct Canadian episodic television with an accredited producer without joining the Directors Guild of Canada. So I was in mid-shoot on my first show, which was Blue Murder, and found myself in the position, after 10 years of directing in a non-guild posture, of being forced to join the DGC and, having done so, then discovering that here was an organization that was going to give me healthcare, which was going to eventually offer me a pension if I worked enough, which was going to defend my rights on set when the going got tough, which was going to make sure the scheduling of these shows, the workplace safety aspects and my rights as a director were reasonably protected, even in an extremely high-pressure environment like episodic television, where hard decisions have to be made every day. There are baseline rules for how these decisions are made, which are entirely the product of negotiations between the unions and the engagers. I learned all of this and, most importantly, from my point of view, here was an organization that was doing an absolutely stellar job at convincing lawmakers in Ottawa that what we do has relevance, that we are culturally and economically so important that all governments needed to continue to take an interest in homegrown filmmaking in Canada, that we had a choice between being exclusively serviceproviders to powerful U.S. producers and working for those people or we could also grow film and TV here. We’re still in mid-flight on that project, and the Directors Guild is heavily engaged in making that case and also internally with our partners, looking for solutions to the question of how to do this better: How can we make these films better? How can we make these series better? What should we argue for? What should we get together and workshop? How can we bring much more diversity into the mix? How can we be really, truly competitive on the world stage and also speak clearly and well to our ever-evolving
Canadian population? All of this with only 12 million households hooked up to cable and budgets a third or less of the budgets that can be achieved in the larger U.S. market. Montage: It’s interesting that, with the exception of House and Bones, which of course are American shows, albeit with Canadian writer/producers, we’ve been really talking about Canadian artists all along. It seems to be that there is something within you, which is a true belief in Canadian art and Canadian identity. Would that be correct? Tim: For the members of the Directors Guild of Canada, in some sense there is a slogan that we could all reach for: “Proud to tell our stories, great at telling yours.” Our members are world-class filmmakers who can either make something up and move it all the way through the process to screens around the world—that would be known as domestic production or homegrown production—or we can rent or sell our services to producers from other places and provide the very best filmmaking available to those people anywhere in the world. We are extremely strong artists and extremely strong craftspeople and we practise those skills, in some sense, in an unpredictable way. We never know if we’re going to have a chance to suddenly become financed—and a new film or series may suddenly become the next great Canadian success—or we may find ourselves working for years on other people’s work. That duality, that dichotomy between working for someone else as a filmmaker or working on your own material, is well known to all our members. It’s all good art and we’re happy to be good at both. The fact that we are seen as such cutting-edge artists that we could work on the very best shows anywhere in the world is something our members are very proud of. Montage: Before becoming the DGC president, you were head of the NDD, the National Directors Division, for a number of years. Can you talk about that and what that role was? Tim: The National Directors Division, in bringing directors together at the national organization, has been given the informal mandate to negotiate its own contract for directors nationally. It’s the only caucus currently that negotiates a national contract for a group of members, at least within the standard agreement, which is a big piece of the country. We’re hoping something similar will evolve for the entire membership and a more nationally coherent contract will emerge for all of our categories—all of this is, of course, at the behest of our district councils, which hold our negotiating rights. The other piece of the NDD’s function is the sophisticated, multi-pronged conversation we’ve introduced through workshops and screenings and Montage and the Awards around doing what we do better and better as the playing field keeps shifting massively beneath us. Filmmaker Rob King is the newly elected NDD Chair and I’m hugely optimistic about the course he’s charting. Montage: We talked a lot about The Tale of Teeka, among others, including the fact that you shot in both French and English and you were raised in both languages. Tim: I see our efforts to become more effective in French as simply our obligation to be vigorously representative of French-speaking members in all categories, anywhere in the country. fall 2014
MONTAGE
17
in feature film and in television in Canada, particularly English Canada—a consensus emerges quite quickly that we may not have found a way yet, in our various production services, to identify and support the creative team in the way we see similar teams being supported elsewhere internationally. There is a chance that Canadian production is hampered by a tendency towards creation by committee, and a worthwhile experiment rests ahead of us where the creative team, however it is defined, is really given the opportunity to soar.
Top, Left to Right: Heartland (CBC). Courtesy eOne Films. Flashpoint (CTV). Courtesy Bell Media. Bottom: Southam on the set of Bones. ©2014 Fox Broadcasting Co. Cr: Jordin Althaus/FOX
Montage: As the president of the DGC, how do you see ways in which the conditions across the country can be made better across the board, and are there ways of sharing information or of doing something more collectively in terms of the financing of films? Tim: The Directors Guild of Canada is a very active cultural lobby for film. One of the sad ironies of where we are right now in film and TV in Canada is that, in some ways, things have never been better. Seemingly, in television, there has never been a better legislative framework for getting Canadian television shows onto the prime-time schedule on the networks. On the film side, Quebec in particular has produced a new generation of truly international stars. Beneath that success story, we also know there are some terrific challenges. On the feature film side, you can argue that, while the flame is burning bright in Quebec, it has probably never been dimmer in English Canada in terms of the prospects for emerging filmmakers and the prospects particularly for repeat filmmakers who are contemplating their second film in Canada. It is a commonplace to say that much of the energy and vitality of independent feature film have shifted to the television universe and, along with it, many of the actors and writers and directors of this generation—particularly to cable and the Internet, where the opportunity for unique and audacious expression is higher than it has ever been in television. Having said that, there are filmmaking centres around the world, including Quebec, which are showing there is still a great deal of potential vitality in feature film, so why is English Canada seemingly sitting out that opportunity? Montage: As well, why is it that, with a few exceptions, the equivalent of the HBO and Showtime kind of authored TV shows aren’t really happening here either? Tim: When we ask the question of all of our members—what they think would take us to the next level
18
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Montage: What would be your evolving agenda in terms of working with Telefilm, the CMF, the CMPA and all the other organizations to make sure these conditions actually happen, so that the creative teams can actually create authored work in film and television? Tim: It’s all part of asking what we can do together to really float Canadian television upwards and have it join the extraordinary surge of quality that is happening worldwide. And what we can do to produce recognizable, branded and known cadres of repeat names in feature filmmaking, what we can do to get past that first feature on the English-language side. What can we learn from Quebec? Should we be talking about greater commitment from our provinces to equity investment in feature film, in addition to the tax credit? Is there a way in which we can aggressively single out strong voices in feature film and give them another shot? We’re already doing a good job of understanding that the measure of a film’s success is not purely box office in a world that is increasingly watching films at home. What can we do to bring the entire system into the actual ebb and flow of creation in film in an increasingly platform-agnostic world? Under our constitution, the national organization is tasked with dealing with all issues of national or international import, as well as membership services and being the home of the director. Many of the questions I’ve raised around how to build a better mouse trap in television and film and on the web have to do with the director’s role in both. The National Directors Division already has a very full slate of initiatives designed to pull writers, producers, editors, composers, production designers and directors into environments where they can really work out the best ways and means. We know we’ve had an impact; we know certain shows’ creators and entrepreneur producers, by virtue of attending some of our events, have chosen to move to a new approach to making their shows. Montage: Do you feel our broadcasters, producers and distributors are being entrepreneurial and innovative enough in terms of the product that has been produced for them? Tim: The fact that there are relatively few players in a highly managed environment, industrially in Canada, means the highly managed component of that environment requires scrutiny by non-industry players, by citizens and by unions. I dare say that, without unions in this country, the level of scrutiny that is necessary to the proper management of what is essentially a cartel-driven economy would fail. I feel it is almost a sacred obligation for guilds to understand the industries they work in, to understand how quickly they evolve and change, to have the courage to scrutinize how these highly managed economies are being managed and to have the courage to challenge how they are being managed, all the time. I believe the Directors Guild of Canada has an obligation to be a scrutineer in this small economy.
Montage: Over the period of the next three years, what would you like to see happen? Are there goals you can articulate? Tim: I’d like to see a new generation of repeat filmmakers on the independent film side. I’d like to see a generation of empowered and enabled filmmakers feeling confident they will get a second and third and fourth film made, and there will be some name recognition attached to them as artists, in Canada and around the world. We don’t have that right now in English Canada and we have to. I would like to see the same thing for the creative teams that are responsible, more as a collective, on the television and web side, because of the sheer scale of series producing; making anywhere between 13 and 24 episodes of any given title a year requires teamwork. I would like to see those teams properly empowered. I would like to see a filmmaker’s voice emerge more truly in Canadian television-making in the way that it has in the U.S. market and the European market.
“The directors “I would like theare industry to better acknowledge likethe giddy kids on set. intense diversity of TheyCanadian get tosociety.” do things —Tim Southam they’ve never done I would like to see the conditions of film workers before.”
currently working right on the edge of their ability to survive on a low hourly wage radically improved. I would like to see all of the guilds get better at understanding the very awkward nexus between commercial filmmaking and independent filmmaking. We have constant friction between a type of filmmaking that is inherently profitable, or at least functional commercially, and a kind of low-budget filmmaking that is done on a wing and a prayer and is costing the filmmakers their entire livelihoods and their homes and their cars. I’d like the Directors Guild of Canada to come up with a way, with producers, to properly articulate an independent film contract that will get us further down the road in optimizing opportunities for independent filmmakers at a very low budget level. I think we can do a more supple job together. That can only help with the new kind of independent TV that’s going to come up—low-budget television that will be essentially like a low-budget film except it will be a serialized production for television or for the Internet. Similarly, we are already well on our way to articulating a creative environment for the Internet. I’d like to make sure we understand who is playing in that field, what they are doing and what that business is like because it’s evolving so quickly. I would like the industry to better acknowledge the intense diversity of Canadian society and reflect it in our hiring practices. And finally, I’d like the Directors Guild of Canada to continue to be as nimble as it is in surfing the unbelievable level of change, which is in a way energizing and in other ways eroding our industry and our craft and our art form in this decade. I feel we’re already light on our feet—I’d like to stay that way, and the way we do it is by staying in touch with our members, staying in touch with our engagers, staying in touch with our government partners and articulating a vision for the future of Canadian production. Marc Glassman is a night owl. He likes to imbibe Earl Grey tea, soya sauce and Sauvignon Blanc, but not together. fall 2014
MONTAGE
19
LA COLLABORATION ENTRE LE RÉALISATEUR ET L’ASSISTANT-RÉALISATEUR 20
MONTAGE
fall 2014
En avril dernier se tenait la table ronde des réalisateurs, organisée par la Guilde canadienne des réalisateurs — Québec. Quatre réalisateurs chevronnés y ont discuté du rôle de l’assistant-réalisateur et de sa collaboration avec le réalisateur. Avec générosité, ils ont livré leurs réflexions et leurs anecdotes inspirées de leurs années d’expérience cinématographique. Il nous fait plaisir de partager avec vous le fruit de ces discussions sur le rôle déterminant de l’assistant-réalisateur.
fall 2014
MONTAGE
21
photo d’immense talent avec qui j’ai eu le plaisir de travailler. Je suis moi-même originaire de Gatineau, ainsi que notre collègue Anne Sirois*, qui est avec nous ce soir, dans la salle. Ensuite, nous nous entretiendrons avec Yves Simoneau, un citoyen du monde par sa personne et par son œuvre, dont il nous parlera. Yves, c’est vraiment le pionnier du « Je m’en vais » et qui est revenu. Finalement, nous discuterons de notre sujet avec monsieur Denys Arcand, dont nous connaissons tous l’œuvre. Il nous présentera également un clip tiré d’un de ses films. Philippe, avant de présenter l’extrait de ton film, aimerais-tu en parler un peu ?
Encadré : Quelques œuvres des réalisateurs invités Denys Arcand Le déclin de l’empire américain (1986) Jésus de Montréal (1989) Léolo (1992) Les invasions barbares (2003) L’âge des ténèbres (2007) Le règne de la beauté (2014) Philippe Falardeau La moitié gauche du frigo (2000) Congorama (2006) Monsieur Lazhar (2011) Yves Simoneau Les fous de Bassan (1987) Dans le ventre du dragon (1989) Free Money (1998) Nuremberg (2000) Napoléon (2002) Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (2007) Assassin’s Creed: Lineage (2009) L’appât (2010) Tim Southam Président, Directors Guild of Canada Drowning in Dreams (1997) The Bay of Love and Sorrows (2002) One Dead Indian (2006)
Previous page, Left to Right: Tim Southam, Phillippe Falardeau, Yves Simoneau, Denys Arcand. This page: Left Tim Southam. Right: Yves Simoneau
22
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Présentateur : Bonsoir, et bienvenue à tous. Nous avons le plaisir d’accueillir ce soir messieurs Denys Arcand, Philippe Falardeau, Yves Simoneau et Tim Southam (voir encadré). Ces quatre réalisateurs ont accepté d’échanger avec nous sur le rôle et le travail des assistants-réalisateurs. Si vous avez des questions ou des commentaires, n’hésitez pas à intervenir. C’est vraiment la bonne soirée pour le faire. Tim Southam sera notre animateur pour la soirée. TS : Bonsoir, et merci d’être avec nous. Je m’appelle Tim Southam. Je suis ici parce que je suis très impliqué à la Guilde canadienne des réalisateurs. Je suis heureux d’être avec vous ce soir et d’avoir le privilège de m’entretenir avec trois très grands réalisateurs, dont les œuvres sont totalement imbriquées dans notre conscience culturelle. Vous les connaissez de nom : Philippe Falardeau, Yves Simoneau et Denys Arcand. Nous nous entretiendrons avec eux de la relation réalisateur, ou metteur en scène, et premier assistant. Nous parlons toujours de l’œuvre de l’un ou de l’autre, tout en sachant pertinemment qu’il y a une équipe derrière. De façon pratique, qu’est-ce que cela signifie ? Il est important que ces trois réalisateurs soient présents, parce qu’on retrouve une formidable cohérence, une formidable intégrité de ton et d’exécution dans leurs films. Comment s’y prendon pour que dans certaines productions, les comédiens, les figurants ou les membres de l’équipe derrière la caméra, toutes ces personnes arrivent au bon moment, à l’étape voulue, en sachant exactement où elles sont et ce qu’elles doivent faire? Je crois que cela découle en grande partie du talent de ces trois messieurs, mais également de la façon dont ils constituent leur équipe. Et ce soir, c’est de cet aspect dont nous nous entretiendrons. Comment s’y prennent-ils pour pallier les accidents inévitables d’un tournage ? Ceux qu’on connaît tous, puisque nous sommes tous assujettis aux mêmes réalités d’horaires, de budgets ou de catastrophes climatiques. Voilà ce que nous discuterons avec eux, après avoir regardé leurs clips. Je vous présenterai d’abord Philippe Falardeau qui est originaire de Hull, une région riche en talents. Philippe a un frère, Martin, un directeur
PF : Mes assistants-réalisateurs ont été mes professeurs, mon apprentissage. J’ai commencé avec Éric Parenteau, qui est ici ce soir. Mon principal défi était d’avoir l’air de quelqu’un qui savait ce qu’il faisait, alors que je devais assimiler comment on fait un film. Les assistants-réalisateurs nous font super bien paraître quand la scène est un tant soit peu compliquée et exige la participation d’un grand nombre de personnes. Quand tout fonctionne et que ce qu’on avait en tête est bien transmis à l’écran, c’est souvent l’assistant-réalisateur qu’il faut remercier. Aujourd’hui, je voulais montrer la scène d’ouverture de Monsieur Lazhar que j’ai décidé, à la dernière minute, de tourner en plan-séquence. C’est une scène où on devait révéler la présence d’une personne pendue dans une classe d’école. J’ai longtemps réfléchi avant de me décider à montrer cela. Puis, comment le présenter du point de vue des enfants ? C’est en visitant le lieu, en étant dans le corridor, en voyant la porte et la petite fenêtre de la porte que j’ai eu l’idée. Et là, forcément, la première personne qui était concernée, c’est Carole (ndlr : Doucet), mon assistante. On s’est mis au travail en se demandant « Comment va-t-on faire cela avec les figurants ? ». C’est un plan-séquence qui devait s’étaler sur plus de deux minutes. La scène n’a rien d’hyper spectaculaire, mais elle allait fonctionner seulement si tous les cues tombaient à la bonne place, à la fois dans les silences et dans les gens qui se bousculent.
la possibilité d’installer tout cela en même temps. Après, c’est un peu la magie qui opère, et je pense que les assistants aiment quand on leur dit: « O.K., il va y avoir de la figuration, il va y avoir beaucoup de cues. » On a tourné dix-huit prises pendant un avant-midi, ce qui permettait de travailler les cues dans les premières prises. Comme on tourne en numérique et surtout, avec des enfants, c’est important pour moi de pouvoir tourner beaucoup. Donc, on a pu placer les cues un peu au fur et à mesure. Dans ce cas-ci, je n’ai pas voulu faire trop de mises en place pour ne pas brûler mes comédiens, mais finalement, c’est la dix-huitième prise qui était la meilleure. Sachant que le son serait refait, je pouvais parler à voix haute. Ce que je trouve bien, c’est qu’entre le moment où je sens que le cue doit venir, que je donne le cue et que la personne à l’autre bout du corridor le reçoit, il y a toujours un délai. Les assistants ont un flair pour ces choses-là et ils s’ajustent rapidement. J’aime ce travail à la chaîne. C’est encore plus fascinant quand la scène doit être tournée sous plusieurs angles différents et qu’on la reprend rapidement. Les assistants savent exactement où tous les figurants sont rendus à ce moment précis. C’est un art de la valse, du ballet, de la chorégraphie qui est vraiment plaisant. Je retrouve dans tout cela l’essence de la relation entre un assistant et le réalisateur, du repérage jusqu’à la prise finale. Ceci illustre vraiment un cas où l’assistant et ses tentacules ont le don d’ubiquité : j’avais des cues dans l’escalier, j’avais des cues pour deux comédiens et pour le groupe, j’avais des cues de l’autre côté à deux reprises. C’est bien si on a le temps. Sinon, cela devient stressant. Je savais qu’il n’y a pas d’événement, qu’il ne se passe rien dans le film Monsieur Lazhar. C’est un gars qui va en classe tous les jours avec les enfants. Ce qui se passe, c’est une tension latente. Et cette tension, elle naît là, dans ce plan. Si ce plan est raté, je n’ai pas de film. Je n’ai pas de film parce que le fait de découvrir le cadavre par le regard de deux enfants, on sait qu’à un moment donné, ça va ressortir, puis ça va exploser. Alors, si cela n’est pas réussi, le film aura de la difficulté à s’en remettre.
(EXTRAIT VIDÉO) TS : Bravo. Je tiens à souligner que non seulement tu as agencé le lieu et la trame, mais aussi, tu as introduit les deux jeunes personnages principaux et tu leur as lancé le défi non seulement de faire des choses tout à fait anodines, comme fermer leurs casiers, mais aussi de réagir au phénomène de cette personne suicidée. Tu as couvert tellement de territoire. J’aimerais que tu nous expliques quels étaient tes objectifs et comment tu as dépouillé cela pour ensuite avoir tout ce qu’il te fallait. PF : Pour moi, cet extrait tombait sous le sens pour parler de la relation assistant et réalisateur, parce que beaucoup d’idées viennent du repérage. Personnellement, la réécriture que je préfère, c’est lorsque j’ai tous mes lieux en tête. À ce moment-là, je reprends le scénario. Il est possible dans un plan de présenter non seulement les personnages mais aussi les lieux. Lorsque les enfants arrivent dans un certain désordre le matin, comme on le voit ici, il est possible de présenter cela. Il y a moyen aussi de dire que la mort s’est infiltrée dans l’école. Donc, en ayant une caméra là, vivante, dans un plan-séquence, j’avais
TS : Comment les consignes ou les demandes se diffusent-elles dans l’équipe durant la période de préparation ? Bien sûr, tu pars de tes chefs d’équipe. Mais, avec trente-cinq comédiens en tout temps, comment Carole et son équipe étaient-elles impliquées dans le déroulement pour que tout soit en place et compris tous les jours ? PF : Je dirais que cela repose beaucoup sur l’assistant. J’ai travaillé avec seulement quatre assistants différents dans ma vie. Certains sont très impliqués au niveau du contenu, d’autres vont se soucier davantage de me donner tout l’espace mental nécessaire pour que je puisse me concentrer à la création plutôt qu’à la logistique. Ce qui était génial, c’est que les enfants aiment Carole et qu’elle aime les enfants, ce qui était essentiel dans son rôle d’assistante. Chaque fois que j’ai fait un film avec des enfants, c’était une condition sine qua non que les enfants soient en confiance avec l’assistant-réalisateur. Carole sentait si les enfants avaient besoin d’une pause et m’en informait. Les enfants ne sont pas des professionnels, alors quand on travaille avec eux, il faut leur laisser cette bulle. J’avais besoin
qu’elle soit en mesure de discipliner le plateau, surtout dans les scènes émotives. Un des aspects critiques du rôle de l’assistant-réalisateur, c’est d’aller vers les gens. Pouvoir tenir ce rôle de policier avec doigté, c’est formidable, un peu comme un professeur d’école qui doit garder le contrôle de sa classe. J’essaie de laisser l’assistant intervenir de cette façon le plus souvent possible, parce que si je dois faire un ou deux speechs dans le film, il faut qu’ils aient du poids. Si par contre j’interviens trop souvent, la portée ne sera pas la même. Voilà pourquoi il est important que l’assistant-réalisateur soit directement relié à tout cela. TS : Merci, Philippe. Maintenant, nous allons passer au clip d’Yves Simoneau, tiré de la minisérie Napoléon. YS : Cet extrait, c’est une scène montée dans laquelle il y a beaucoup de plans. C’est une scène avec un moment d’action dangereux, alors que l’armée doit traverser le Danube, une rivière assez menaçante, sur un pont flottant fait de bateaux par l’armée napoléonienne. Tout cela est basé sur des faits historiques. Il y avait donc en partant un espace restreint devant accueillir des centaines de figurants avec des animaux qui traversaient. L’armée ennemie lance un bateau enflammé pour frapper ce pont, qui va exploser. Il y aura des gens précipités dans l’eau, des animaux qui brûlent, etc. Donc, c’est la scène à faire et on doit la tourner le lundi. Nous faisons le repérage le samedi. Toute l’équipe est présente et la grande question est «Est-ce que ça va tenir ? ». Le directeur artistique avait déjà bâti un pont dans le film et des tonnes de dynamite avaient été nécessaires pour le faire sauter, tellement il était solide. Donc, j’avais pleinement confiance en lui. L’assistant-réalisateur qui était là, c’était un Hongrois qui avait eu trois mois de préparation. Il était d’une précision un peu exagérée, mais je trouvais qu’il prenait cela au sérieux. Quand il voit le pont flottant, il s’exclame : « On va tous mourir ! » Il se dit qu’il y aura des centaines de figurants là-dessus. Puis il ajoute : « Je veux un Zodiac par figurant, au cas où ils tombent à l’eau. » Parce que si tu tombes à l’eau dans le Danube, tu ne peux pas t’arrêter, tu décolles et tu meurs. J’ai demandé : « Bien, y a-t-il 500 Zodiacs en Hongrie ? » Il répond : « Je ne pense pas. » Pendant tout ce temps, je croyais qu’il plaisantait. Il me lance alors, à la fin de la conversation, « I don’t like you. I’m quit ». Il est parti et a amené toute son équipe avec lui. C’est le samedi soir, on doit tourner le lundi matin. Le lendemain est jour de congé. Il fallait donc décider si on allait annuler une journée de tournage aussi importante. On devait faire cette séquence-là en une journée. Le bateau était là, tout était là, tout était planifié. Il faut remplacer le gars, sinon qu’est-ce qu’on fait ? Tu peux appeler n’importe où dans le monde un samedi soir, personne n’est disponible. On était assis le dimanche matin et le réalisateur de la deuxième équipe, Mario Luraschi, dit : « Mon jeune assistant est pas pire, il s’appelle Tamás. » J’ai fait venir Tamás. C’est un jeune assistant-réalisateur. Il a environ 26 ans. Celui qui vient de démissionner, c’est le plus grand, le plus fameux assistant-réalisateur de Hongrie. Je demande à ce jeune : « Est-ce que tu serais prêt à prendre la relève pour nous aider ? » Il a toute cette pression sur lui, et il répond « Est-ce que je peux voir le lieu de tournage ? »
On arrive sur le lieu de tournage et les assistants qui avaient démissionné, les deuxièmes, troisièmes, étaient là, je les reconnais. Je demande à Tamás s’il les connaît. « Bien oui, je les connais. » Alors, « Il faut que tu leur demandes de revenir. C’est une question de fierté nationale. Vous êtes en train de donner une très mauvaise image du pays, alors il faut vraiment que ça marche lundi matin. » Il est allé les voir, les a convaincus de venir l’aider et, le lundi matin, on s’est tous retrouvés là à regarder les bateaux. « Envoie 20 figurants, envoie 50 figurants, envoie 100 figurants, envoie les chariots. » C’était absolument sécuritaire. Il y avait environ une demi-douzaine de Zodiacs pour récupérer les personnes qui allaient tomber, parce qu’il y en avait qui devaient tomber. Et celui qui était un jeune assistant-réalisateur pratiquement inconnu est devenu du jour au lendemain l’assistant-réalisateur le plus connu de Hongrie. Parce que la journée s’est super bien passée. TS : Sur Bury My Heart, je pense que j’ai repéré cinq assistants-réalisateurs.
J’AIME CE TRAVAIL À LA CHAÎNE. C’EST ENCORE PLUS FASCINANT QUAND LA SCÈNE DOIT ÊTRE TOURNÉE SOUS PLUSIEURS ANGLES DIFFÉRENT, ET QU’ON LA REPREND RAPIDEMENT. LES ASSISTANTS SAVENT EXACTEMENT OÙ TOUS LES FIGURANTS SON RENDU À CE MOMENT PRÉCIS. C’EST UN ART DE LA VAISE, DU BALLET, DE LA CHORÉOGRAPHIE QUI EST VRAIMET PLAISANT. —PIERRE FALARDEAU YS : Quand il y en a plusieurs, on ne peut pas avoir cette loyauté qui est tellement importante entre les deux, le réalisateur et l’assistant-réalisateur. On se fie un peu à l’impression, puis à l’expérience, au curriculum vitae et aux recommandations. Il y a trois grandes sphères : la relation personnelle, la chimie qu’on a avec la personne; la partie préparation, parce que ce film, c’est vraiment une opération militaire; et la partie exécution. On ne peut mesurer l’équilibre entre ces trois sphères. Il y a un coup de chance là-dedans. Pour être un bon assistant-réalisateur, il faut beaucoup de psychologie, beaucoup de générosité aussi, énormément de générosité. Puis, il faut savoir rire. TS : Regardons ton clip. (EXTRAIT VIDÉO) YS : Ce qui est extraordinaire, c’est que cela s’est super bien passé. C’est une des journées où on a perdu le moins de temps. Tout s’est bien réglé, il n’y a pas eu d’accident, sauf à un moment, en répétition. Quand on a terminé la journée, on avait traversé tous ensemble une bataille et cela a soudé l’équipe d’une façon extraordinaire. C’était le début du tournage en Hongrie, on avait six semaines à faire. fall 2014
MONTAGE
23
TS : Parle-moi un peu de la structure de la préparation pour un tournage de cette envergure. YS : C’était une mécanique militaire. D’ailleurs, on avait notre conseiller, le commandant Raguet, un spécialiste des guerres napoléoniennes. Il a fait venir toute l’équipe d’assistants-réalisateurs, directeurs artistiques, costumes, accessoires. Il leur a donné un système de couleurs et de chiffres, parce que les gens ne parlaient pas la même langue. Ceux qui avaient un carton bleu et un chiffre 4 allaient à l’endroit indiqué par un carton bleu et un chiffre 4. C’était très simple et tous ont immédiatement compris le système. Grâce à la méthode du commandant Raguet, je faisais tous les jours, tous les plans avec tout le monde, puis je libérais 300 Russes, 300 Autrichiens. Cela nous a aussi permis d’ajouter la séquence au Maroc, qu’on avait prévu couper parce que trop chère. C’est purement et simplement parce que la production était d’une très grande efficacité, grâce à une communication parfaite. TS : Merci, Yves. Monsieur Arcand, Denys, aimerais-tu nous guider dans la séquence d’ouverture des Invasions Barbares ? On revient presque dans le huis clos. C’est une scène d’introduction d’un film où l’hostie est apparemment le seul médicament dans cet hôpital. Aimerais-tu voir la séquence avant ?
This page, Right: Denys Arcand. Left: Phillippe Falardeau. Opposite page: crowd shots; all directors except third from the Top, which does not include Arcand. All photos courtesy Jean Demers
ALORS, MON PREMIER CRITÈRE POUR CHOISIR UN ASSISTANT, COMME POUR LES COMÉDIENS, C’EST DE SAVOIR SI J’AI ENVIE D’ALLER MANGER AVEC CETTE PERSONNE.... DONC, LA PERSONNALITÉ DU PREMIER ASSISTANT, C’EST FONDAMENTAL. JE VEUX QUE CE SOIT LE FUN. C’EST MON PREMIER CRITÈRE. CE SERA UNE AVENTURE AGRÉABLE, PARCE QUE LA VIE EST TRÈS COURTE. —DENYS ARCAND DA : Oui, j’aimerais cela parce que je l’ai oubliée un peu. (EXTRAIT VIDÉO) DA : D’abord, je suis moins bon que Philippe Falardeau, parce qu’il y a une coupe. J’espère que vous l’avez remarquée. L’hostie nous permet de couper. TS : Je me disais que c’est parce que tu te servirais à nouveau de ce corridor. DA : Non, pas du tout, ce n’est pas le même. En fait, le secret, c’est qu’on a eu la chance d’avoir pour nous un hôpital vide. C’est mon assistant, Jacques Benoît, qui a tout fait le reste. Paix à ton âme, Wilbrod. Moi, je n’ai rien fait. Je ne suis pas vraiment bon pour cela parce que je regarde toujours les acteurs principaux. Donc, je me fie entièrement à mes assistants ou à mon assistante pour savoir s’il y a eu des figurants, s’ils étaient bien, s’ils étaient à la bonne place.
24
MONTAGE
fall 2014
INTERVENTION D’ANNE SIROIS : Le souvenir que j’ai de travailler avec toi, Denys, c’est que tu ne te souviens pas de toute l’information que tu donnes. Dans le film qu’on a fait, tu as donné à chacun beaucoup d’information. Les petits détails, oui, on les a ajoutés nous-mêmes, mais c’est toi qui a nous a informés de ce que tu voulais. Quand je vois cette scène, je peux comprendre que Wilbrod a fait énormément de travail et que les décors ont apporté beaucoup à la scène. Mais c’est toi qui as dirigé dans cette direction. Je crois que tu t’enlèves beaucoup de crédit. Je suis garante de cela. DA : Bien, merci beaucoup. Oui, c’est possible, effectivement. TS : Il y a aussi une question qu’on n’a pas vraiment abordée. On change souvent d’assistantsréalisateurs dans le métier... DA : Je ne change pas beaucoup. Très peu. En fait, je travaillerais encore avec Wilbrod s’il n’était pas mort. C’est très particulier. Parce que je tourne très peu, une fois tous les cinq ou six ans, je me sens un peu comme un imposteur si je me compare à eux. Alors, mon premier critère pour choisir un assistant, comme pour les comédiens, c’est de savoir si j’ai envie d’aller manger avec cette personne. Il m’arrive de prendre des comédiens un peu moins bons, mais que j’aime, parce qu’on sera bien ensemble. J’ai envie de travailler de cette façon. Donc, la personnalité du premier assistant, c’est fondamental. Je veux que ce soit le fun. C’est mon premier critère. Ce sera une aventure agréable parce que la vie est très courte. La seule autre fois où j’ai changé d’assistant, c’est quand j’ai fait mes deux films en anglais, une série pour la CBC qui s’appelait Empire. Mon assistante, qui était de Radio-Canada, ne parlait pas anglais. Alors les acteurs anglophones devenaient paranoïaques parce que nous, on se parlait en français vite, très vite, et qu’ils ne comprenaient pas. Donc, lorsque je tournais en anglais, je prenais un assistant-réalisateur et un directeur photo anglophones pour être certain de parler anglais sur le plateau. C’était là une raison de changer d’assistant; autrement, j’ai tendance à garder le même monde. PF : Moi, j’avais une conception un peu romantique de ce qu’était un assistant avant de commencer le travail, il y a 15 ans. Peut-être une conception européenne, où l’assistant fait partie du processus créatif bien en amont, alors qu’on n’est encore que deux autour d’une table à regarder une ébauche de scénario, à aller s’inspirer des lieux. C’est vraiment un travail bicéphale. Ma relation avec l’assistant commence en pré-préproduction, et elle commence avec l’horaire. La première réunion, c’est en fait le premier horaire établi à partir d’un scénario qui n’est souvent pas fini. Mais si je veux une deuxième tête avec moi pour m’aider tant sur la structure et la logistique que sur le contenu, c’est un autre métier. Quoiqu’il en soit, cela ne fait pas partie de cette culture nord-américaine du travail de l’assistant et pourtant, je pense qu’il y a des assistants qui seraient assez ouverts à cela. Personnellement, je ne sais pas encore comment font les assistants pour démêler un horaire. Mais il est vrai qu’il y a différentes dimensions au travail de l’assistant, parce qu’entre établir un ho-
raire et avoir le doigté pour gérer un plateau, il y a deux mondes. Fusionner les deux, ce n’est pas évident. J’aime travailler avec Éric Parenteau, parce qu’il arrive qu’en repérage, je repère un lieu, puis je cherche Éric, et Éric est sur une colline. J’arrive et je regarde ce que lui vient de voir. Et oui, Éric a compris le contenu du scénario. Je me souviens que le film C’est pas moi, je le jure ! se termine avec le personnage qui, juste avant d’essayer de se suicider avec une balle de bowling, parle à la caméra. Au début du film, après sa tentative de pendaison, il y a une scène d’un souper avec la famille; ça va mal, personne ne se parle, on entend les cuillères qui frappent très fort le fond des bols. Je devais avoir une voix hors champ du petit garçon pour démarrer le film et Éric m’a dit : « Puisque tu finis avec le garçon qui s’adresse directement à la caméra, pourquoi ne commencerais-tu pas le film de la même façon ? Puis au souper, au lieu d’avoir la voix hors champ, l’enfant parlerait à la caméra pendant que les autres mangent. » Je trouvais que cela bouclait très bien cette idée de narration. C’était une idée d’Éric qui, au moment où on tournait la scène, est venu me voir et a dit : « Essaie-le, ça ne coûte rien ». Cette relation-là, c’est ce que je cherche. DA : Un des plus beaux moments que j’ai vécus avec un assistant-réalisateur, c’est avec David Webb, un super assistant qui reste maintenant à Hollywood. Je devais tourner une scène à Times Square, un samedi soir. Je vais faire le repérage le vendredi, la veille. Il y a 100 000 personnes et c’est une petite scène, mais quand même, c’est 100 000 personnes. Puis, il faut la tourner dans la rue, en fait juste sur le petit triangle qu’il y a au milieu de Times Square. Et là, je me dis : « Je n’y arriverai jamais, je suis incapable de faire cela. » Alors le samedi après-midi, je suis totalement démonté et je suis couché, tremblant, dans mon lit. David Webb frappe à la porte pour m’apporter quelque chose. Ma blonde, qui est productrice, est là et lui dit : « Va lui parler, parce que ça ne va vraiment pas du tout, il ne s’en sortira pas. » David entre dans la chambre et vient s’asseoir à côté de moi, comme auprès d’un grand malade : « Qu’est-ce qu’il y a ? » Je lui réponds : « Qu’est-ce que je fais ici ? Pourquoi j’ai écrit cela ? Je n’y arriverai jamais, c’est Times Square. » Alors il m’a regardé, puis il m’a dit: « Est-ce que tu sais les plans que tu vas faire ? » J’ai répondu : « Oui, les plans, je les sais par cœur ! » Il dit : « De quoi tu t’occupes ? Nous, on ne sait pas les plans, mais tout le reste, on le sait. On sait comment éclairer, on sait comment gérer la foule, on peut tout faire cela sans que tu t’en occupes. Si tu sais les plans, viens nous voir à 19 h ce soir, disles nous dans l’ordre, tu vas voir, cela va se passer tout seul. » C’était éblouissant. Je me suis toujours souvenu de cela. C’était un grand moment pour moi et c’était vrai. Autrement dit, il me disait de cesser de me préoccuper. YS : Un autre truc qui est drôle et qui correspond un peu à ces deux faits, c’est lorsque tu t’entends bien avec ton assistant, qu’il vient s’asseoir à côté de toi et te dit : « J’ai lu le scénario, as-tu vraiment besoin de cette scène-là ? » Je le regarde : « C’est vrai, tu as raison... parce que non, ça ne rentrait pas dans la journée. » TS : D’ailleurs, il faudra un jour qu’on change le nom « assistant-réalisateur » pour un terme qui
décrit vraiment les deux fonctions de gestionnaire et de co-metteur en scène. Bien sûr, nous savons très rapidement, la deuxième ou troisième journée, quand un premier assistant nous a vraiment sauvé la peau, ou quand il veille sur nous, quand on constate qu’on a assez de temps pour faire une scène importante et que cette scène est bien placée dans l’horaire. Même si cela nous échappe, quelqu’un de très expérimenté placera cette scène-là. Elle doit être là dans la journée, dans la semaine et dans la vie des comédiens qu’il connaît peut-être mieux que nous, sauf en séries. YS : Aux États-Unis, c’est un métier dangereux parce que si cela commence à traîner, le premier qui part, c’est l’assistant. On remarque aussi que peu d’assistants-réalisateurs y deviennent réalisateurs. La plupart deviennent directeurs de production, ou producteurs. DA : En France non plus. Il semble que ce n’est pas le bon chemin pour devenir réalisateur. INTERVENTION D’ANNE SIROIS : Voici mon point de vue sur cette question. On est toujours pris un peu entre l’arbre et l’écorce. On reçoit les vœux d’un réalisateur, on voit ce qu’il voit, on voit aussi les moyens que la production nous donne. Je ne peux m’imaginer réaliser. J’ai tellement l’habitude de tenter de tout ramener pour que ce soit faisable et réel que je serais incapable de lâcher la bride et figurer comment réaliser le mieux possible. La seule chose à laquelle je penserais, c’est comment le faire réalistement. Je ne crois pas que c’est cela, un bon réalisateur. TS : Cela rejoint également la question de la sécurité sur le plateau. C’est un sujet très important actuellement parce qu’on a eu de gros problèmes. Bien sûr, il y a une responsabilité légale, mais il faut qu’une personne puisse dire non. Elle doit avoir le pouvoir et être mandatée correctement par la production pour être en mesure de dire non à des idées du réalisateur qui en demande le plus possible, tout en sachant qu’il pourra essuyer un refus. DA : C’est fort possible aussi que cela demande un talent différent. Il y a très longtemps, j’ai eu un assistant absolument génial. Il s’appelle Jacques Méthé. Il est devenu un directeur au Cirque du Soleil, parce qu’il est génial pour organiser des trucs invraisemblables. Lui, c’est ce qui l’excite. TS : L’assistant avec qui je travaille actuellement a été cinq fois gagnant sur Jeopardy. C’est la personne la plus intelligente sur le plateau. Je dis cela sans condescendance, parce qu’on sait que le cinéma est un lieu de gestion autant que d’invention. Ces deux aspects doivent coexister et j’estime que le point d’intersection, c’est le premier assistant. Ce qui, à mon avis, démontre la pauvreté du terme « premier assistant ». Merci beaucoup, messieurs. *Anne Sirois, première assistante à la réalisation sur Le règne de la beauté de Denys Arcand. Présidente du Conseil du Québec de la Guilde canadienne des réalisateurs. An English version is available on the DGC/Montage website. fall 2014
MONTAGE
25
THE BOOK OF CLEMENT VIRGO’SNEGROES When Canadian author Lawrence Hill’s historical novel The Book of Negroes was released in 2007, it had the kind of integrated critical and commercial success that most writers can only dream of having. It was a national best-seller, shortlisted for the Giller Prize and won the prestigious Commonwealth Writer’ Prize, an honour previously accorded to the likes of Rohinton Mistry, J.M. Coetzee and Mordecai Richler. The praise from all corners was overwhelming, but at least one potential reader wasn’t convinced. “I just didn’t want to read it,” recalls DGC member Clement Virgo. “The title was very strange to me; I couldn’t imagine what a ‘book of Negroes’ was. I wondered what the story could possibly be. I had an aversion to the title. I’d pick the book up while I was in stores and then put it back down. And then I was at This Ain’t the Rosedale Library, a bookstore in Toronto’s Kensington Market, which is where I live. Molly Johnson, a local jazz singer, was there and she forced me. She took my wallet and forced me to buy the book right there. And even then, I left it on my coffee table. I didn’t want to read it. And then I did.”
26
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Photo: Chris Chapman
by ADAM NAYMAN
fall 2014
MONTAGE
27
28
MONTAGE
fall 2014
fall 2014
MONTAGE
29
Photos courtesy Joe Alblas
30
MONTAGE
fall 2014
At this point, it’s probably safe to say that Virgo has read The Book of Negroes as closely as anybody except its author. Working with help and input from Hill, the 48-year-old filmmaker has prepared a six-hour miniseries adaptation of The Book of Negroes, slated for broadcast in early 2015 on the CBC. (It will air in the United States on BET.) “I spent almost two years trying to make it into a feature film,” says Virgo, who agreed to an interview with Montage this summer while deep in the editing process at Technicolor in Toronto’s East End. “I couldn’t finance a film version. The budget would have been too high for the movie I was seeing in my head. There’s a renaissance in television right now, so it felt natural to approach the CBC. It supported us and suggested a miniseries and we agreed.” The director is right to cite the recent artistic renaissance of television productions, from True Detective to Masters of Sex to Orphan Black. Virgo has worked on several key television series–including, most impressively, The Wire (he directed two episodes in 2002). Based on the limited amount of footage that was made available at press time, The Book of Negroes joins the ranks of small-screen presentations directed with a cinematic eye. The footage from Episode 1, which describes the abduction of 11-year-old Aminata from her home in West Africa by white slavers in the middle of the 18th century, has a combination of epic physical scale (the miniseries was shot partially on location in South Africa) and intimate, detailed character work. The visual language is eloquent and concise. It’s also patient in a way that most feature films literally can’t afford to be. The old saying that “time is money” is never truer than when on a film set. “When you’re making [a feature] it can’t be much more than two and a half hours,” says Virgo, “unless you’re making Transformers. In television, you can open up the story and give yourself the time to tell it right.” That same sense of patience informed the entire production. The Book of Negroes came together slowly and deliberately over a period of several years. “Because it’s such a big project, we had to look at it as a co-production,” says Virgo. “I wanted to shoot in Africa, and one of the only countries that could support what we wanted to do there was South Africa. Our partner there was Out of Africa Productions. The producer, Lance Samuels, did Bang Bang Club [a
drama about war photographers] a few years ago. We wanted a company that could sell it internationally, so EOne came on board. We wanted exposure in the United States and showed it to BET and it was a match for them. And since the story is set partially in Nova Scotia, we ended up working with the Nova Scotia Film Development Corporation as well.” The international flavour of the film’s financing mirrors the contents of its story, which takes place on three continents. After being plucked from Mali and taken across the ocean in a slave ship—a genuinely nightmarish passage that at times feels like the literary equivalent to one of Hieronymous Bosch’s hellish canvases—Aminata works on an indigo plantation in South Carolina and in a well-to-do household in New York before resettling in Nova Scotia during the American Revolutionary War. Recruited by the British abolitionist movement, she accompanies a group back to Africa to begin a “free” community and then attempts to return to her ancestral home nearly seven decades after being forcibly removed in the first place. The story is told entirely in Aminata’s voice, which evolves from wavering naiveté to the rich, assured tones of someone who’s seen it all. It’s one of the rich ironies of Hill’s narrative that the little girl who wanted to become a storyteller is obliged to do just that at the end of her ordeal. Aminata’s stated fondness for the work of Jonathan Swift tips us off to her creator’s overarching literary strategy, which is to use a subjective point of view to tell a more panoramic story. Like Amanata’s beloved Gulliver’s Travels, itself the tale of a weary and worldly traveller, The Book of Negroes is picaresque, except instead of disguising sociology as a fairy tale, it renders history in a style that’s as fantastic, grotesque and disturbing as a work of science fiction. It’s the utterly visceral aspect of Hill’s writing that Virgo says sets it apart from other books on the subject of slavery, but it’s also what gave him pause while he was working on his adaptation. “I wasn’t interested in making a horror show,” he says flatly. “To me, it was always about the emotion. I didn’t want to focus on blood and gore and violence. That’s not as interesting as the interior journey of the main character. I wanted us to be there with her, going through it as a very subjective experience. It wasn’t about presenting horror but about developing some kind of an emotional investment.” While Virgo hasn’t seen Quentin Tarantino’s Django Unchained (2012), he says he’s leery of any film that attempts to exploit such a scenario for shock value. These sentiments are echoed by Hill, who knew his work would be altered somewhat in the transition from page to screen. “It’s a hard-edged story, but we didn’t want to assault the viewer,” explains the author over the phone from Saskatchewan. “This was the first time I’ve been involved in a television production, and I was very much a neophyte in that area. I was learning on the fly. One of the things I found was that a little bit of violence and horror goes a long way on the screen. You can’t throw things at a viewer like you can at the reader of a book.” At the same time, Hill says he didn’t want a “sugarcoated” treatment of what is inherently “hard-edged” material. One of the reasons he agreed to let Virgo do the adaptation after the director contacted him was because of the confrontational aspect of his previous movies. “I’d already seen Rude but I had him send me Lie With Me and Poor Boy’s Game, and I watched them with interest. In Lie With Me, I saw a lot of courage. It was provocative. It wasn’t timid. I knew from it that he couldn’t back away from a strong story and he wasn’t afraid of any subject matter. And in Poor Boy’s fall 2014
MONTAGE
31
Photos courtesy Joe Alblas
32
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Game, I saw something unusual: a depiction of the Black community in Nova Scotia.” The connection between Virgo’s acclaimed 2007 boxing melodrama and The Book of Negroes is entirely coincidental, but both Hill and Virgo see the Canadian location as crucial to the meaning of the work. “The story of Africans in Canada hasn’t attracted a lot of popular attention in Canada,” says Hill, who did extensive research with primary historical materials before beginning the book. “There have been Black people in Nova Scotia for nearly 400 years, and the migration there created boomtowns and radical novelty in their demographics.” Virgo, who was born in Jamaica and says his family originally came across the Atlantic Ocean during the middle passage generations ago, adds that for many people, both then and now, Nova Scotia has functioned as a sort of threshold to life in Canada. “You have to go through there to get to the rest of the country,” he says. The Book of Negroes is Virgo’s first attempt at a period piece after a series of very contemporary dramas, and he says he was humbled by the burden of representing history. “We think we know everything about slavery,” he says. “I thought I did, anyway. I know a lot of cursory things about Africa and the middle passage but the detail in Lawrence’s book is so impressive that it made me realize how little I actually did know. And so I really wanted to get all of those details into the series. The sense of smell. The sense of history.” The director knows the inescapable pop-culture reference points for his series are going to be Roots and 12 Years a Slave, but his true storytelling model was actually a film about a very different time and place: Roman Polanski’s 2002 Oscar-winner The Pianist, about the fall of Warsaw during World War II. “If one can have a favourite Holocaust movie, that would be it for me,” he says. “I love it because it’s so subjective. You’re with this one guy the entire time. You’re stuck in the apartment with him. You feel like you’re surviving right alongside him, amidst all this chaos and madness.” The Pianist is of course famous for earning Adrien Brody an Academy Award for his tour-de-force performance in the title role. Polanski’s film is basically a one-man show, whereas The Book of Negroes’ dramaturgy is more complex. Aminata is the clear pro-
tagonist and her experiences define the narrative, but there’s also a wide array of secondary characters who figure into her story. With this in mind, Virgo’s series is very much an ensemble production, with key roles for a pair of African-American Oscar winners—Louis Gossett Jr. and Cuba Gooding Jr.—as well as a Canadian star in Republic of Doyle’s Allan Hawco, who plays the extremely difficult role of Solomon Lindo, a Jewish-American slave owner whose compassion for Aminata very nearly obscures his complicity in a system he outwardly rails against. (Greg Bryk and Jane Alexander also star.) But of course the most important casting decision was Aminata, who has been called one of the greatest heroines in Canadian fiction, a steadfast yet hardly stolid survivor whose humanity and humour waver but never fail over the course of her ordeal. “The challenge is that the character ages from eight to 80 during the story,” says Virgo. “So I actually used Steven Spielberg as a model. In The Color Purple, you have two actresses playing Celie Johnson: there’s a child actress and then Whoopi Goldberg takes her the rest of the way. I wanted to do the same thing.” In Episode 1, Aminata is played by Shai Pierre Dixon; from there, she’s embodied by Aunjaune Ellis, a veteran performer who has appeared in many major American films and television series from Ray to True Blood but has never had a star showcase quite like this one.
“As a filmmaker, I’m trying to figure out how to best represent a collective humanity.” —Clement Virgo “I looked at a lot of women,” says Virgo. “I needed someone who had youthful energy but who could also play older. And it had to be somebody who you could watch for six hours and who I could spend six months with. We looked in England, Canada and the United States. We looked at a lot of stars, too. Aunjaune came through, and I’m very excited to see how audiences are going to respond to her.” Given its source material’s popularity and pedigree, The Book of Negroes is likely to attract a wide audience when it airs on CBC and BET, and at a time when television is frequently written about more passionately and enthusiastically than even art-house cinema, it will surely receive critical attention as well. The possibility of a Canadian crossover hit is always exciting, and yet Virgo has no illusions about the potential pitfalls of putting so many resources into the adaptation of a story whose affirmative aspects are couched in a clear-eyed and rightly horrified perspective. “There are people who are going to have the same aversion to the series that I had to the book, just based on the title,” he says. “It’s something that you think about: Do I want to read a book about slavery? Or: Do I want to watch a story about slavery for six hours? Do I want to watch a movie about the Holocaust or about the Rwandan genocide? As a filmmaker, I’m trying to figure out how to best represent a collective humanity—to get people to recognize those feelings and those emotions.” It’s a considerable risk, but if it pays off, The Book of Negroes will have a special place in the pantheon of Canadian television productions– possibly right alongside Hill’s remarkable book in the contemporary popular canon. Adam Nayman teaches film at the U of T and Ryerson universities. His first book, It Doesn’t Suck: Showgirls, is out now from ECW Press. fall 2014
MONTAGE
33
CREATIVE SASKATCHEWAN: HOW MUCH IS GOING ON IN A PROVINCE WITHOUT
A TAX CREDIT ?
34
MONTAGE
fall 2014
by CARLE STEEL The morning of his unfortunate transformation into a werewolf, WolfCop’s protagonist Lou Garou stumbles out of bed, still drunk from the night before. A little hair of the dog and he’s off to work at Woodhaven’s police department. There he deals with the usual small-town problems: robberies, a biker gang, local politics, a goodie-two-shoes cop as partner. The town of Woodhaven is bleak, its rhythms enlivened only by politics, the annual Drink & Shoot festival, and a few pentagrams here and there. WolfCop is meant to be a party movie but in some ways, the film and its production are an inadvertent Heritage Moment. There is no mistaking Woodhaven for Moose Jaw, the city that is closest to Regina’s soundstage and was just far enough away to get an extra bump in the rate of the Saskatchewan Film Employment Tax Credit (SFETC). The locations are gritty, urban and have a peculiar iciness that is the backdrop to many projects in the last 10 years, among them Surveillance, Just Friends and Dolan’s Cadillac. The tax credit program, similar to those in jurisdictions all over North America and the world, was cut suddenly by the Saskatchewan Party in its spring budget of 2012. It was a move that effectively destroyed the film industry overnight. The loss of this support precipitated an exodus of film industry crew and production companies already beleaguered by the world economic downturn of a few years earlier and weakened by the demise two years before of the province’s broadcaster, SCN, which was killed almost as suddenly by the same government. The fallout was nuclear. The government’s move was perceived by many as a political attack on the sector, which is assumed to be urban, left-leaning and not typically part of the Saskatchewan Party’s voter base. (Many believe the cut was revenge for the portrayal of former Conservative premier James Gardiner in the Minds Eye biopic Prairie Giant: The Tommy Douglas Story.) Whatever the reason behind the decision, the cut was massively unpopular in the province, resonating with almost every demographic, whether local businesses, ser-
vice-providers directly involved with film and television or regular citizens who were fans of shows like Corner Gas and Little Mosque on the Prairie. Months later, after a complicated round of consultations with what remained of Saskatchewan’s film industry, the government announced Creative Saskatchewan, an annual $5-million investment fund that would support all of the creative industries through grants. By then, though, the industry was not viable for people like WolfCop creator and DGC member Lowell Dean. Without mainstays like SCN, Minds Eye and Partners In Motion as local catalysts, Dean found himself out of work and considering his options. A graduate of the University of Regina’s film program 10 years earlier, Dean had long ago overcome his initial reticence to staying in Regina. “Like many film school grads, I thought, ‘Where do I go, how do I get out of here?’ But it grew on me, and then I got a decent amount of work,” he says. “My dream is that Regina could be like an Austin, Texas for film: a cool, hip, indie place where you could still have a strong enough film community to sustain a crew base.” The cut to the tax credit ended any thoughts he had about staying in the province. “It’s hard not to be bitter,” says Dean. “I was aggressive in my support of any movement that would get us [the film community] anywhere but after a while, I felt I wasn’t making a difference. I want to have a career. I don’t want to be a martyr.” As a last act before he left the province, Dean decided to make a film. “My plan was to make this movie with all my friends and then go look for a real job, probably in Toronto or wherever I could get work.” The film was both a last hurrah and a love letter to Saskatchewan. Dean got together with his friends and made a trailer, hoping to attract an investor or some Telefilm micro-budget money. “We kind of had a hellor-high-water attitude towards making the movie,” says Dean. “In hindsight we didn’t have a hell of a lot of a plan. I was frustrated and a lot of my colleagues were frustrated. We just wanted to make a movie. I joke that the entire film industry volunteered for the trailer.” Then along came Cinecoup, the West Coast film accelerator that offered up to $1-million in production funding to make the film, plus a guaranteed theatrical release in Cineplex theatres nationwide. Part talent hunt, part old-fashioned Hollywood film studio, the Cinecoup model challenges participants at a 90-day marketing and social-media boot camp, with the winner selected at the Banff World Media Festival. The result is a project with a ready-made audience before it’s even shot. WolfCop captured that audience. “We wouldn’t have chosen WolfCop if we didn’t think it was awesome,” says J. Joly, head of Cinecoup. “WolfCop’s team got a green light for a number of reasons: they worked really hard, they had a strong original idea and a real persistence of vision. They knew what they were doing and what their fans wanted. At every level this project had serious legs.” That WolfCop came from a province that had destroyed its own film industry was both an irony and a challenge. “We felt it would hurt the project not to film in Saskatchewan, so we did everything we could to make that happen.” It took three months to negotiate a deal with the provincial government. After failing to get grandfathered in on the tax-credit program, Cinecoup received a $250,000 grant from Creative Saskatchfall 2014
MONTAGE
35
Left, Top to Bottom: Corner Gas (CTV). Courtesy Bell Media. Hungry Hills (Rob W. King). Courtesy Rob King Right, Top to Bottom: Corner Gas (CTV). Courtesy Bell Media. Hungry Hills (Rob W. King). Courtesy Rob King
36
MONTAGE
fall 2014
ewan. Between the grant, private funding, federal tax credits, sponsorships and an Indiegogo campaign for promotional merchandise, they pulled it off. On the heels of WolfCop came another big Saskatchewan project, the Corner Gas movie. With a budget of $8.5-million, that film was a better test of the province’s new granting system, which has a threshold for its production grants of $250,000 but can be doubled to $500,000 through an order in council. Even at the maximum amount, the program does not offer sufficient backing to bring in a production of that size. The government pulled another $1.5-million out of its tourism budget. The rest of the budget was filled out by Ontario and federal tax credits, Telefilm money and a Kickstarter campaign. Do the success of WolfCop and the resurrection of Corner Gas herald the beginning of the end of Saskatchewan’s film industry woes? It depends on who you ask. Regina Leader-Post columnist Murray Mandryk became a surprise hero in the film community with his continuing coverage of the saga of government support of film over the years. “They must have thought, ‘Whatever, we’ll offend a few artsy fartsy types and that won’t offend our voting base,’” he says about the government’s actions. “If they were really serious about whatever problem they had with it, it could have been fine-tuned.” The more flak they caught from the industry and the media, the more they dug in their heels. “Up until the threat of Corner Gas being shot in Manitoba. That became a huge problem politically.” And out came the tourism money, which to Mandryk is a terrible fit. “Yeah, the movie will show some pretty Saskatchewan sunsets, but so what? The theme song of Corner Gas is ‘Not a Lot Going On.’ I don’t think anyone wants that as their tourism slogan.” Saskatchewan film and culture veteran Valerie Creighton takes a longer view. She is currently head of the Canadian Media Fund and sits on the board of Creative Saskatchewan. As the former director of SaskFilm during the heyday of the industry, she oversaw the birth of both the tax credit and the building of Regina’s soundstage. Creighton says any film industry functions on a delicate alignment of vision and philosophy that meets the needs of the industry and the imperative of the government. Ideally, it finds a public that recognizes its value. “It’s a fragile thing. Without that alignment it’s much harder. You’re fighting local barriers and miscommunication, or sometime values aren’t shared across those factors. It doesn’t mean it can’t happen. It just means it’s a lot tougher.” She is open-minded about innovations funding such as Cinecoup. “We have a system that’s designed by gatekeepers. Cinecoup is a model that is designed by the end user. To me that’s an interesting approach,” she says. “Here you have a ground-breaking model landing in a province that was just breaking down an old model. That’s Saskatchewan.” As for Creative Saskatchewan, it may not be perfect, but it’s a start. Ironically, it’s a government body that is offering grants, something the taxcredit system did not do. She points to Alberta as an example of a province that threw their program out and left it with nothing for several years. “Everybody was gone in a heartbeat, similar to Sas-
katchewan. Now a lot of those people have come back and new players have emerged. Some stayed and started to rebuild the industry. Now they’re having a renaissance—there’s a multi-million-dollar build in Calgary for a new facility,” she says. For its part, Creative Saskatchewan says it’s working with the industry as best as it can on a daily basis. Creative Saskatchewan head J.P. Ellson says that 80 percent of the projects funded historically by the film employment tax credit received less than $250,000 and that 60 percent received less than $60,000. “Once we have the opportunity to go through some budgetary examples with them, they see that in many cases the model we’re using is actually better for them.” Whether the industry will survive long enough for an Alberta-style recovery is another question. It seems unlikely the new system will create an industry that can bring in talent like Terry Gilliam, John N. Smith and Charlize Theron, all of whom worked on films in Saskatchewan’s recent past. Since WolfCop and Corner Gas, two small features—The Sabbatical and Basic Human Needs— have been shot in Regina. Other than Saskatchewan Arts Board funding for The Sabbatical, both projects were financed by what is becoming a depressingly familiar mix of crowd-funding, volunteer and non-union labour, and in the case of Basic Human Needs, an Indiecan competition. In both cases, the budgets were alarmingly low, far below normal rates for a film or TV shoot. The pressure that puts on directors and film crews isn’t likely to be a sustainable economic model. From the set of Basic Human Needs, camera operator Layton Burton describes a bleak landscape where there is no crew, no work and no foreseeable future. “For professional filmmakers, it’s dire straits,” he says. “We’re told to forget the past and move on. Where there’s no industry, we can’t move on. Without the tax credit it’s impossible to attract bigger-budget film and television series to rebuild the industry. It’s a catch-22.” From the sidelines, the Saskatchewan film industry diaspora doesn’t see an easy way back, even if they wanted one. For director Rob King, the 18-month lag in between the tax credit and Creative Saskatchewan meant that talented people quit the industry or left the province. “All those years and dollars invested in training went off to other provinces,” says King. “The drain of talent and the loss of skilled labour have to be rebuilt. That will take years”—years of spooked outside partners who have more consistency in programs in other jurisdictions. Expat editor Daryl Davis agrees. “If there’s a lesson in any of this,” he says, “it’s to not take any funding system for granted, wherever you are in this country. Keep actively engaging public officials in the value of your process. Don’t rest on your laurels.” In the meantime, as far as big productions that might sustain the industry, as the song goes, there’s not a lot going on. Dean is working on the script for WolfCop II, another love letter to a beleaguered province. Whether it is received or not will depend on if there is anyone left to pick up the mail.
WolfCop (Lowell Dean,2014). Left, centre: courtesy Adrian Dean. Right, bottom: courtesy Rory Geddes. Remaining photos courtesy Shawn Fulton
Carle Steel is a writer, journalist and cultural worker based between Regina and Toronto. She is a regular contributor to Regina’s alternative biweekly Prairie Dog Magazine and writes for other visual arts and cultural publications. fall 2014
MONTAGE
37
GO GREENE
On a warm summer evening, Vancouver-based producer and DGC member Justis Greene and I arrive at one of the night locations for The Returned. The show has taken over a block and half of residential North Vancouver, transforming the area into a Halloween night with ghoulish and clever decorations scattering across lawns and lurking out of windows. One house teems with crew, the murder scene. As we walk towards the action, Greene quietly ticks off the set’s costlier features lined along the road: the crane for a single aboveground shot, $12,000; three helium-filled lighting balloons, $7,000 each; snow, $20,000. I note it’s appropriate that the moon is nearly full for tonight’s scene. “Yeah, I ordered that last night,” Greene quips. Three years before Greene signed on to produce The Returned, he had been working on the Disney film Tomorrowland, starring George Clooney, when he received a call from NBCUniversal Television. The network asked if he would stop what he was doing and take on a new television series called Bates Motel. It’s unusual for a producer to leave a potential blockbuster to toil in the trenches of television, but this new project intrigued him. The creators, Carlton Cuse (Lost) and Kerry Ehrin (Friday Night Lights), are notorious for making great television, and set to star was Oscar nominee Vera Farmiga (Up in the Air). Greene flew to L.A. to meet with Ehrin and Cuse. The chemistry was immediate and Greene took the job. The new gig required a major adjustment. For the past decade, he’d been on a feature-film roll, producing Tron, starring Jeff Bridges, Time Traveler’s Wife, with co-producer Dede Gardner (president of Brad Pitt’s production company Plan B Entertainment), Snakes on a Plane, starring Samuel L. Jackson, and David Cronenberg’s A History of Violence, among others. Compared to film, “television is phenomenally hectic,” says Greene. “You
38
MONTAGE
fall 2014
fall 2014
Photo of Justis Greene courtesy Johan Renck
by ANN ELLE
MONTAGE
39
Top Left: The Time Traveler’s Wife (Robert Schwentke, 2009) .Courtesy Alliance Films Bottom Left: Bates Motel (A&E). Courtesy Joseph Lederer
40
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Top Right: The Outer Limits. Courtesy DGC Bottom Right: The Outer Limits . Courtesy Doug Curran
have to step up your game.” Instead of shooting two pages a day, the crew shoots quadruple that— seven to eight pages. “Your decisions have to be so much quicker,” he says. But Greene found Bates Motel’s dense schedule “refreshing.” It helped that the show, a Twin Peaks-inspired prequel to Hitchcock’s film Psycho, now going into its third season, had broken ratings records for scripted content on A&E and earned an Emmy nod, along with People’s Choice nominations for both its leads. So early this spring, when Cuse asked him if he would double the load and take on his new show, with Cuse’s showrunner Raelle Tucker (True Blood), Greene didn’t deliberate long. The Returned, a remake of the French hit series that tells the story of residents of a small town who grapple with the mysterious return of their dead loved ones, had Entertainment Weekly enthusing, “It has the potential to be one of the most compelling drama series on cable, thanks to the phenomenal scripts written by Carlton Cuse.” Greene couldn’t refuse. And for his part, Cuse says one of the key factors in his own decision to do the new show was the Vancouver producer’s involvement. “It gave me total comfort that the quality of the show would be at the highest level.” I meet Greene in his office at Vancouver Film Studios, where the elaborate interior sets for Bates Motel and The Returned are located. His crew— roughly 230 people, including shooting and office staff—was on track to complete A&E’s order of 10 episodes of The Returned by early fall. Tonight, the North Vancouver team is simultaneously filming episodes three and four while others are busy at headquarters, preparing episodes five and six. Still more staff are prepping Bates Motel, which would begin filming in eight weeks, the shooting of its first two episodes overlapping with the final two episodes of The Returned. Greene, a trim, stylish man with a languid style, exudes a calm certitude. As Cuse says, “I have yet to come up against a problem that Justis doesn’t have a plan for solving.” Greene will tell you that he comes from a crew background, so he has a deep familiarity with many of the technical aspects on set. It’s his greatest asset, he feels, in running a smooth operation. He’s also quick to credit his crew—“the best in the business”—and especially his long-time co-producing partner Heather Meehan, with whom he has worked on some 35 proj-
ects over the past 25 years. In fact, much of the crew has followed him from project to project for at least a couple of decades. Greene cultivates this loyalty by fostering a work environment that’s based on trust and collaboration. “He’s done so many jobs in the industry,” Meehan says, “so he has an appreciation for what everyone does. Because of this, he attracts great people and everyone wants to work with him.” Both Cuse and Meehan note he never lets himself get upset about problems that are beyond his or his crew’s control. “He leads with quiet strength,” Cuse says. But he’s also “extremely funny,” adds Meehan. “Not a day goes by when we don’t all have a good laugh even when the show is difficult.” During the course of our conversation, the many intricacies of his job continue to unfold. It’s knowing the world’s handful of top aerial cinematographers so he gets the expensive shots he needs the first time around, as was the case for the previous day, spent in a helicopter; it’s a familiarity with every piece of equipment involved in making a film so when a director requests the use of a $12,000 crane he knows that the same shot can be made without such a toy. Greene “sort of fell into” the business, but from the first time he walked onto a film set, he’s worked with the best. In the late 1960s, both Mike Nichols’ Carnal Knowledge and Robert Altman’s McCabe and Mrs. Miller filmed in the Vancouver area. Crews were in such short supply that Greene and all of his roommates landed jobs building sets on the films. At the time, he was a still photographer interested in fashion. On both sets, the people from William F. White noticed his affinity for cameras and lights and asked him to run the first branch of the Toronto-based company with the promise of training on every piece of equipment. Once the shop was up and running, he left it in capable hands and got back to crew work. In 1983, director Fred Shepisi’s Iceman was about to start shooting in northern B.C. and needed a production manager. With no PM experience but first-hand knowledge of the B.C.’s great white north, Greene was hired. Producer Norman Jewison spotted a talent and used Greene on his next film, Agnes of God. Greene’s first job as a producer soon followed for Glitter Dome, an early HBO made-for-television film. Since then, he’s rolled from one project to another, including multiple Disney films. Much of the work took him around the world so he was rarely home. In order to spend time in Vancouver with his wife and four daughters (the youngest now 25), he took on local television series and pilots like Neon Rider and Outer Limits. Early in his career, Greene also founded the British Columbia Film Commission, drumming up a tremendous amount of film business. In 1978, the year he started the organization, the province’s annual film revenue was roughly $5.5-million. When he left, three years—and many L.A. traffic jams— later, revenue surpassed $105-million. With the team he put in place, the industry hasn’t looked back. Greene’s behind-the-scenes commitment also saw him serve lengthy stints on both national and provincial Directors Guild of Canada boards. Interviewed for the DGC’s 50th anniversary archival project, Greene recalled of his early days: “We weren’t an industry. We weren’t anybody, we were just a bunch of goofs. Then all of a sudden people started taking us seriously because the government
wanted to support this industry. It went from, ‘Let’s not bother with them’ attitude to ‘This could be a significant thing.’” Greene considers himself fortunate to have never been without work, and for some time now, he’s had the privilege of choosing his projects. “I make choices based on who’s doing the show, rather than what it is,” Greene says. “If you’re going to spend 16 hours a day, five days a week on a job, it’s really nice to be surrounded by people who you like and trust. It makes it a lot more fun.” One career highlight among many was producing A History of Violence for David Cronenberg, someone for whom he “would drop everything to work on one of his films; he’s such a special guy.” Greene and his crew won the 2006 DGC Team Award for the film, which earned two Academy Award nominations. For his part, Cronenberg, in a thoughtfully worded e-mail, says he appreciated Greene’s “intelligence, acute sensitivity to human realities, non-vindictive toughness when necessary, and vast knowledge of the business.” Plus, added the director, he’s “a lot of fun to work with.” Greene had risen at 4:45 a.m., as he does every work day. He’s in the office by 7:30 a.m. in order to supervise daily tasks even when shooting takes place at night—and let’s face it, a neo-zombies series and a Psycho spinoff are not seeing a lot of sunshine. Indefatigable, Greene’s in good spirits that evening at meal break when he sits down with his longtime AD, Pete Whyte, and Meehan. It’s Friday, and the list of questions raised about Monday’s shoot is handled quickly. As the producer is about to depart, talk turns to weekend plans. A fan of local art, Greene recommends a visual arts festival. He’s also, incidentally, a motorcycle enthusiast and has owned some 30 different rides throughout his life, the latest a scooter. Before we leave, Greene wants to show me the hair and makeup trailer. One of his closest friends, key hair stylist Donna Bis, works here. She met Greene on the Iceman set and remembers the first moment she laid eyes on the crew’s production manager. “He was body-painting extras,” she tells me. “In those days, everybody did everything.” But Greene’s friendship with the effervescent Bis isn’t exactly what draws him to the blush- and pigmentladen bunker at the start of every day. “If you want to know how your cast is doing that day,” he says as we drive back to the city around midnight, “you talk to hair and makeup. They say things there they wouldn’t otherwise repeat.” He gets a heads up on what’s troubling them and the next thing you know, the problem’s gone. “Been doing it my whole life.” Ann Elle is a Vancouver-based freelance writer.
fall 2014
MONTAGE
41
by SUZAN AYSCOUGH
I AM
TRACEY 42
MONTAGE
fall 2014
We’ve all heard the horrific and hopeful story of Malala, a young Afghan woman who dared challenge local customs and stand up for individual women’s rights. Now we can also hear the story of Tracey, a young Mohawk filmmaker who dared challenge local customs and stand up for individual women’s rights in Canada. You may not know DGC member Tracey Deer’s story because no one gets shot, except with a camera, in controversial documentaries such as Mohawk Girls (2005) and Club Native (2008), which take direct aim at a Canadian measurement system called “blood quantum.” It’s a system that determines one’s Native status—or not—based on the percentage of one’s Indian blood. “This system was imposed on us by the Canadian government through the Indian Act to erase us from existence,” Deer told Montage over the phone from an editing room where she’s overseeing work on her first dramatic TV series (13 x 30 minutes), also named Mohawk Girls, a romantic comedy that premiers on APTN on November 25 at 9 p.m. “Having been forced to live under this system for over 100 years, the concept of measuring our ‘purity’ and therefore our ‘worth’ has been entrenched in many of my own people,” Deer continued. “I see it as brainwashing. We’ve been ‘trained’ to qualify, discriminate and exclude each other based on blood purity as the defining characteristic of what makes us who we are. It has led to a very negative attitude towards mixed marriages and mixed parentage. “I grew up knowing I was 89.62 percent Mohawk,” Deer says. “There are some people with 100 percent— they think they’re superior. When I was young, I felt ‘less than’…. I felt pissed. I was mad that my greatgreat-grandmother fell for a French guy (I think). I felt hatred for someone who ultimately gave me life. I hated my own lineage. I always felt gross about the whole system. What about who I am? I’m a percentage? A statistic?” Deer wrangled silently with such identity demons as a young girl but ultimately decided to speak out when she concluded, despite her fears, “We can’t sacrifice our lives for the collective.” “Courageous” is the word chosen to describe Deer by Alanis Obamsawin, the award-winning Abenaki filmmaker who was busy putting the finishing touches on her own Trick or Treaty for a timely premiere during TIFF 2014 when she was reached at her office at the
National Film Board of Canada in Montreal. Obamsawin had nothing but praise for Deer’s vision: “She was courageous, especially with Mohawk Girls, talking about blood quantum and tackling this very controversial thing about the status of Indians and measuring the blood of their own women. You could be excluded from your own community. How do you think a woman survives that? It’s very difficult.” “Being half black is worse than being half white,” Deer said on the same topic. She pointed to a real-life case affecting a good friend, a story that inspired some of the action in the upcoming Mohawk Girls, season one. Yet the bold filmmaker who today is creating, directing and producing Mohawk Girls, the TV series, has come a very long way from the fearful young woman who made Mohawk Girls, the feature-doc. “It was terrifying because I wanted to tell the ugly truth, and how were my people going to feel if the truth was ugly?” Deer asked rhetorically. “Our interaction with Canada has been marred by many awful things. I think the attitude is ‘Don’t give Canada any more ammunition against us.’ And with Mohawk Girls, I was afraid I was doing just that. “But they didn’t get mad. All that fear was for nothing, but it was part of my process. I’m not afraid any more. That process was me finding my feet. I feel proud of what I’m doing and I believe in it. I hope I’m making a positive contribution.” The series Mohawk Girls is being billed as a romantic comedy by executive producer Catherine Bainbridge (Rezolution Pictures), who says it’s like “Sex and the City, Mohawk style.” How did it become a romantic comedy? “These stories come from Tracey’s life and very existence and she’s been so generous in telling them. They’re told with sensitivity and humour and fun and love,” says Bainbridge, who believes the series will reach its target demographic of girls and young women. Deer also hopes Mohawk Girls the series will touch young Aboriginal women and bridge the gap with the rest of Canada. “With all my films, and the show itself, I like to put the mirror up to my own people,” she said. “We need to be looking at ourselves because things need to change for the better. Sticking our heads in the sand and playing the blame game, with the victim mentality—we’re not going to build something positive from that. I hope my work generates conversations. And if anyone gets mad at the honesty, that’s because it’s the reality we’re living in. Let’s look at the reality and change that. “The other prong is a goal to build bridges with Canadians,” she continued. “What Canadians are exposed to with regards to my people is very negative and superficial. News doesn’t dig into the context of the situation so I hope Mohawk Girls provides that context. It deals with universal themes everyone can relate to: love and sex and searching for identity.” So where did Tracey Deer, now 36 years old, find all this courage? Deer says it came during the summer of 1990 when she was just 12 years old. The Oka Crisis, as it was dubbed, went on from early July until late September and became international news when the Mohawks of Kahnawake (Tracey’s community) created a blockade on the Mercier Bridge to Montreal in solidarity with the Mohawk community of Kanesatake, after the town of Oka refused to cancel plans to dig up the latter’s ancestral burial ground to clear the way for another nine holes of golf (on an existing nine-hole course) and other developments. “The Mohawks of Kanesatake stood up and we backed them,” Deer says of the summer she grew up. “The Oka Crisis was running the gauntlet to adultfall 2014
MONTAGE
43
Left, Top to Bottom: Mohawk Girls (Tracey Deer, 2014). Courtesy (in order) Eric Myre, Philippe Bosse, Eric Myre, Eric Myre Centre, Top to Bottom: Mohawk Girls. Courtesy Eric Myre, Philippe Bosse, Philippe Bosse. Tracey Deer with first AD Erik Ajduk. Courtesy Eric Myre Right, Top to Bottom: All photos courtesy Georges Khayat
44
MONTAGE
fall 2014
hood. The Crisis marked the end of childhood for me. Before that, life was just a ball of fun. I have a huge family. They’re all within a couple of blocks from where I lived on ‘Sesame Street’ [a nickname]. We have a park right on our street. We lived right on the water. We played in the woods, made campfires and roasted marshmallows. It was tons of fun. I wasn’t very aware of the rest of the world or how different we were. “At first it was just an awesome adventure,” says Deer of the first two months of the Crisis. “This alternate cool universe. Go and get your daily rations and you didn’t know what you were going to get—it was fun. Until the rumour came that the army was going to invade and all women and children should leave the reserve.” The fun was over. Deer became very angry at how she and her people were treated. Eventually she “was able to harness that anger” and develop an attitude of “I’ll show you!” but that took time. “The world wanted me to disappear or be invisible,” she says. “They expected failure from me. I said, ‘You know what? I’m going to prove you wrong.’ In the documentary Mohawk Girls, I think I said, ‘I can take on the world.’” Deer’s new attitude was fuelled by another lifealtering event: “After the Oka Crisis we got our first video store on the reserve,” she explains. Seeing films like Medicine Man in which a scientist played by Sean Connery finds a cure for cancer was “quite empowering to a kid,” she says. “I began wondering, ‘How do I become this?’ I’ve always been very goal-oriented. And at the end of one movie, I finally thought, ‘I’ll get to be a part of that if I just make movies.’ It was so clear in that moment: ‘This is what I’m supposed to do.’ And I told my Mom and Dad and they said, ‘That’s great, sweetie.’” Deer became focused on getting her hands on the one camera the video store rented that “weighed 25 pounds” and she saved her allowance for two to three months to rent it for one weekend. “All my early films were horror movies,” she says. “Nobody stopped me from having their children running around with knives and killing each other. At 12 or 13 years old, my first movie was Halloween at Tota’s which means Halloween at Grandmother’s. Looking back, clearly I was in a dark place.” Also not long afterwards, Deer started going to a private girls’ school “on the island,” which is what Mohawks call Montreal. She then went to Dartmouth College in New Hampshire on a full scholarship and took film studies modified with photography. She did a four-month internship at Global News, which gave her some news chops. She did a 10-day intensive National Screen Institute (NSI) storytellers’ workshop and was “an observer” on the series Moose TV, under the wing of director Tim Southam. Southam, who also directed the powerful indictment of the Ipperwash crisis, One Dead Indian (2005), praises Deer for two reasons: “She’s fighting for the individual’s identity and rights and she also took the time to really develop as a skilled drama director.” In the NSI workshop, he adds, “She was fearless and at the absolute forefront. Now she’s applying advanced chops to something that really matters to her.” Southam also said she has the skill of a “mainstream director,” so it is her choice to create “niche programming.” Through all of this education, Deer began a practice that she still has today of having two homes and two perspectives. “I have a home in Montreal and I still have a home on the Reserve,” she said. Deer says all of her life experiences, her early horror movies and her education led her to work on her
“first real movie,” One More River with Neil Diamond (Reel Injuns) when she was 23. She had been planning to move to New York City when fate hooked her up with producer Bainbridge. They talked for a few hours and she “hired me on the spot” to work as Diamond’s production assistant, a position she parlayed into a codirector credit. “I went back to the producers and said, ‘I’m doing way more up there than being an assistant.’ I figured I’d go for director and negotiate my way down. After I presented my case, they said, ‘You are co-director.’ I was in a daze. I was so excited.” That’s why today, Deer tells younger filmmakers, “Don’t wait for lighting to strike you. You need to open the doors yourselves.” With One More River under her belt, Deer said Bainbridge made an offer over dinner: “If you have any of your own ideas to pitch, I’d be happy to hear them.’ So right there at dinner, I said, ‘Growing up, I felt invisible and voiceless. Telling the story of young people and who they are in Kahnawake is what I want to do.’” Bainbridge loved it and so did the NFB and APTN, and Mohawk Girls the doc was made.
The world wanted me to disappear or be invisible. They expected failure from me. I said, ‘You know what? I’m going to prove you wrong.’ – Tracey Deer
It’s also worth noting that Rez Pictures’ producer Christina Fon said Deer is very passionate about her work and topics but she is equally savvy about budgets. “Tracey is one of the rare artists that has two sides to her,” Fon said. “First she has a vision, but secondly, she is also sensitive to producers. She’s not at all hands-on financing but she really cares about being on time and on budget.” Initially that combo made it easier to get another picture happening. Up next was another gruelling doc about blood quantum called Club Native, after which Deer said she was “emotionally exhausted” and couldn’t imagine taking on another documentary right away, nor take on the “responsibility that goes with filming people’s real lives.” She took a long rest before she went back to Rezolution Pictures to pitch a fiction version of Mohawk Girls, which led to a pilot of the same name four years ago. “But one of the four leads declined the show, so we reshot the pilot with the rest of the series,” said Deer. “We rewrote and reshot the half-hour pilot that kicks off the new season.” The new season of Mohawk Girls, which kicks off on APTN in the fall, has an accompanying website, MOHAWKGIRLS.COM. Check it out to see webisodes, photo galleries, an interactive quiz and more.
Suzan Ayscough is a freelance journalist and president of her own media company, @OnCamera3000. She is also Director, Communications for the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television and co-founder of Playback’s Canadian Film & Television Hall of Fame. fall 2014
MONTAGE
45
ROLLING ON THE ROCKS
As Republic of Doyle enters its final season on CBC, Allan Hawco and four DGC members from the mainland reflect on the lively dynamic between the proud Newfoundlanders at the show’s core and the Come-FromAways who’ve contributed to its success
46
MONTAGE
fall 2014
by JASON ANDERSON
Previous page: the cast of Republic of Doyle in Newfoundland. Courtesy eOne films. All photos of Newfoundland courtesy Kendrie Upton
While the vagaries of weather are the bane of nearly every shoot that dares to brave the outdoors, there may be even greater surprises in store when you’re on an island in the North Atlantic. Stefan Scaini learned this lesson many times over during the days and nights he’s dedicated to Republic of Doyle, the CBC’s lighthearted mystery drama about a son-and-father detective team that handles the trickiest cases St. John’s has ever seen. In fact, the DGC member faced an especially daunting clash with the elements while directing an episode in the show’s second season in August 2010. “We were shooting on a rooftop in downtown St. John’s,” says Scaini during a break from his work on Republic of Doyle’s sixth and final season. “We could see the Narrows and Signal Hill. Don McKellar was our guest star and we were hanging him in a harness over the side of this 10-storey building. Then the fog socked in and we couldn’t see 10 feet ahead of us.” Since it was the only day the crew could have the location, Scaini was at a loss over what to do next— besides, of course, express his sympathies to the dangling McKellar. But as the director recalls, “Suddenly this wind came along and blew the fog away in less than five minutes. The sun came out and it’s like the angels were singing. I just looked out and said, ‘See, this is why we’re here—even God loves St. John’s because he wants to make sure we get it on camera!’” Of course, the Almighty doesn’t deserve all of the credit for making Newfoundland look so good. Since Republic of Doyle debuted four years ago, when it earned the CBC’s highest-ever ratings for a new dramatic series and continued to be a strong performer despite time-slot shuffles, its cast and crew have worked hard to convey the region’s many charms and idiosyncrasies to audiences in the rest of Canada and the over 90 other countries where it’s seen. Nor have viewers been the only ones to be enticed by this grand seduction, what with all the mainland talent that has been lured east to work with star Allan Hawco and his fellow Newfoundlanders on Republic of Doyle’s team. A multiple DGC Award
nominee and winner of ensemble awards for Heartland, Degrassi: The Next Generation and Spirit Bear: The Simon Jackson Story, Scaini is one of many DGC members with CFA status (that’s Come-From-Away in the local vernacular) who’ve grown attached to the region. Scaini helmed 17 of the 67 episodes in the series’ first five seasons and he handles four of the final 10. He keenly remembers the beginning of his tenure late in season one. “It was my first time in Newfoundland,” says the Toronto-based director. “I’d worked up in the Maritimes quite a bit but not here. I’ve found the personalities right across the province are just so wonderful and embracing. There’s such a joy and passion for life here and we’ve tried so hard to get all that into the show.” A guest director in season five who previously earned DGC Award nominations for his short film Lenny and 2005 feature Pure, Jim Donovan was just as struck by his first impressions. “I hadn’t been to Newfoundland before so it blew my mind,” he says in an interview from Montreal, where he’s working on Le Clan, a new TV drama for Radio-Canada. “I thought, ‘Ah, well, all those touristy pictures, you can make any province look interesting.’ But I really had no clue how beautiful it was.” He was similarly impressed by the production’s welcoming atmosphere, which is fostered in no small part by the social opportunities that the crew extends to visitors. First on the agenda is the weekly wrapparty gathering at the Duke of Duckworth, a St. John’s institution known colloquially as the Duke (it’s also a regular haunt for Hawco’s screen alter ego, Jake Doyle). “You’re not cool if you don’t show up,” says Donovan. “It’s almost mandatory.” Paul Fox, another guest director in season five, calls it “one of those jobs that everyone always wants to do because of the experience of going out there.” As Fox says from an editing suite where he’s working on Schitt’s Creek for CBC, “It’s great to be on shows where you can get a different perspective on the place than you would as a tourist because you can meet people who live and work there.” All three directors praise St. John’s for what Scaini calls the city’s “embarrassment of riches” when it comes to shooting locations and sheer beauty. “It’s so rich and so colourful and photogenic,” says Scaini. “You could be downtown with all the saltbox houses in their jelly-bean colours—that’s spectacular. Then you travel 10 minutes to the west and be at these dramatic cliffs overlooking the ocean and see lighthouses and whales. This past summer we’ve had these massive icebergs floating past. On the other side of it all, if we need something that feels a little darker and more urban, it’s not hard to find that, too. St. John’s is unbelieveable for its wide range of looks and styles.” At the same time, presenting St. John’s in all its grit and glory has never been the endeavour’s sole objective. Hawco makes that point during a rare pause from his own duties on the show, which the National Theatre School grad co-created with Perry Chafe and Malcolm MacRury and for which he served as showrunner for the first four seasons. “I have a difficult time with shows that make the place the plot, so to speak,” says Hawco. “To feel like the setting is so important takes me out of a show because it makes me question whether or not I care about that place. What’s most important in any drama is you care about the people you’re watching every week. In some ways we tried to incorporate the place as a character so that it wasn’t just ‘about’ the place.” Fox admits that’s not always so easy for outsiders to do, given the scenery. “Everything looks so fall 2014
MONTAGE
47
fabulous,” he says. “All the little wooden houses, the ocean and all these other things are so exotic to us as outsiders. But [the Doyle team] does divest you very quickly of that inclination to treat St. John’s as this bright, shiny object you want to show off. They don’t want it to become a pictorial. So what you do is what you do on any show, which is really plunge into the work and try to ignore the landscape in order to focus on the nuts and bolts of the characters and the stories.”
As Republic of Doyle comes to the end of a successful run, it’s easy to forget the gamble it once represented. After all, a young and largely unproven actor, writer and producer who was determined to develop a showcase both for his home province and himself was the spearhead of the project. In the process, Republic of Doyle not only helped establish a new infrastructure for Newfoundland’s film and TV industry, it proved the CBC’s drive for regional productions need not always result in folksy hokum. For all the impact the show has had on St. John’s, Hawco stresses it was never meant to be a “closed club” that benefited only the locals. “We’re striving to make the best work possible,” he says, “so you’ve got to surround yourself with the best people you can, whether they’re from here or somewhere else. We just didn’t have a big stable of experienced directing talent at our disposal in the beginning so we had to bring in people from away.” Another key talent among the CFAs at Republic of Doyle has been editor Caroline Christie. Having edited 30 episodes during her three years with the show, she jokes that she came to know all the routes and runs for planes between St. John’s and her home in Toronto. Christie arrived in the summer of 2011 as a hastily arranged fill-in for editor Nick Rotundo as he
48
MONTAGE
fall 2014
began treatment for cancer. (Sadly, he died that August.) Determined to learn the nuances of language and behaviour that gave Republic of Doyle its particular flavour, she immersed himself in the series and the city as fully as she could. “The city is really small,” she says, “so I would just walk around downtown all the time. I’d go to galleries and bookstores and see things. Then I would ask people questions—endless questions!” Thanks to that process and reading local histories like Paul O’Neill’s The Oldest City, the show’s references to St. John’s hangouts like Moo Moo’s ice cream shop gradually became less cryptic. She also developed an ear for the cadences, even if certain phrases could still throw her for a loop. Her favourite comes from Krystin Pellerin’s character, Leslie, when Jake tells her he’ll drive her car home and she replies, “Yes, by nose you will.” “There’s no real kind of translation for it,” says Christie. “I remember asking Allan and he said something and I was like, ‘But you’re not describing it—I still don’t get it!’ As editors, we’re doing the first pass on performance and it’s meticulous work so you sort of have to understand which was the right one and which wasn’t. I mostly got it right. Occasionally Allan would correct it and say, ‘Oh no, it’s that one.’ Then I’d listen to both again and think, ‘What was the difference?!’ Then I just got better at listening.” Scaini says he experienced much the same kind of learning curve, adding that he and the crew have gotten many laughs out of the Whaddaya App, a Newfie translator that’s a staple of iPhones and Android devices on the set. The degree of conviviality and commitment among the largely local crew has continued to be a major draw for him over his five summers on Republic of Doyle. “They’re all so passionate about this show, about what the stories are telling,” he says. What’s more, that passion is shared by the community at large. Says Scaini, “I’ll walk into a local corner store here and if I happen to be wearing my Republic of Doyle hat, people just go on about how they love the show. Someone will say, ‘Oh, my brother-in-law was an extra—do you know him? His name is Jimmy.’ That kind of thing goes on all across the province–they have such pride for this and show such support.” “Everybody in St. John’s watches the show,” says Paul Fox. “If I’m here in Toronto and somebody asks me what I’m working on, people may or may not know it. But there, everybody knows it and knows it in detail. They know the relationships between the characters and what’s happening to whom. You’re in this town of Doyle fans.” It’s not always a love-in, mind you. CFAs have sometimes struggled to find their place inside the welloiled machine that Hawco and his team have created. “We’ve worked with a lot of talented people,” says Hawco. “And this may sound generic but some people work out and some people don’t. Some people get that it’s not just about their vision, about what they want to shoot and the pictures or performances they want. “A big part of directing an ongoing television series is getting your days, not going into overtime and still managing to capture what’s integral to the story and what are the most beautiful or most inspirational shots you need to tell it. But you’ve got do it on time and on budget.” Jim Donovan notes that the six-day shoot was especially hard. “That speed is tough and you really do feel the compression,” he says. Showing up to lead a tight-knit crew that is not full of the familiar faces of
Toronto or Vancouver is another challenge for guest directors, as Fox admits. Yet he doesn’t believe that his experience at Republic of Doyle was marred by any wariness toward the CFAs. Says Fox, “That’s less to do with where you’re from and more to do with, ‘Is this guy gonna cause trouble or is he gonna be one of us?’ Any time you show up as the outsider, there’s that initial wait-and-see attitude.” In Donovan’s words, keeping Hawco “on his toes” was another big part of the gig. “The guy’s everywhere,” he says. “But he’s sharp, man—he knows everything he wants from that show and he’s at the centre of it. The trick is going, ‘What can I do for him? And how can I get him to step up or try something different?’ I didn’t really know Allan so it was an exercise in getting to know him and figuring out how I could stimulate his creativity.” Inevitably, a CFA’s chances for a satisfying stint on Republic of Doyle have a great deal to do with the rapport he or she can strike up with the show’s driving force. Christie can recall how the extent of her commitment stayed up in the air until she met Hawco. “The producers kept telling me, ‘We don’t know until you’ve worked with Allan.’ There was all this pressure because he didn’t get along with everybody. I found him a lovely guy to work with and have a great relationship with him but apparently some people don’t.” Christie found it especially difficult to have her first spell in the editing room with Hawco on the same day that the team found out about the Rotundo’s passing. “There couldn’t have been a weirder start to all of it,” she says. “As it turned out, it was fine and they liked what I had done. Allan said, ‘She doesn’t always make the choices I would make but I like the choices she does make!’” Having devoted so much energy to the show, Hawco clearly appreciates the opportunities to lighten the load. As he continues work on season six, he’s been getting better at savouring the moments at hand rather than “losing my mind because I have a draft to finish, pages I have to get out for tomorrow and a cut that needs to be done.” With the end in sight, he and the team are looking forward to other projects in Newfoundland, perhaps something closer to the “much edgier” incarnation of Republic of Doyle that Hawco initially conceived. He also expresses the pleasure he felt at being “just an actor on set” for Clement Virgo on the CBC mini-series The Book of Negroes, slated to air this winter. But first and foremost in his mind is his desire to do right by Republic of Doyle’s most dedicated viewers. “I’ve been doing this for a long time,” says Hawco, “and like all of us, you can tire yourself out and feel like there’s not necessarily a lot of people who pay attention. So when you have a circumstance where there’s a massive following and a huge audience base, you don’t want to leave them in the lurch. They’re genuinely devoted to the work you’re doing so you do feel an obligation. “Of course, you’ve got to make the work you’ve got to make. You can’t try to please everybody or you’d go crazy. But you want to be able to at least follow through with what you’re doing, which is why we’re so lucky to have the chance to end it.”
Jason Anderson is a film critic and writes regularly about movies for the Toronto Star, Cinema Scope and Artforum.com. He teaches film criticism at the University of Toronto and is the director of programming for the Kingston Canadian Film Festival. fall 2014
MONTAGE
49
PARTING SHOT
Peter Harcourt 1931-2014 by TOM McSORLEY
CONGRATULATIONS TO HOT DOCS FORUM ALUMNI PROJECTS PREMIERING AT TIFF 2014
“We are beginning to recognize that there is, in fact, a Canadian cinema that is inferior to nothing.” — Peter Harcourt Introduction, Film Canadiana 1975-76, Canadian Film Institute, Ottawa 1976 The italics are his. The emphasis, as in emphatic, is pure Peter Harcourt, the phrase “beginning to recognize,” full of confidence yet somehow tentative, utterly Canadian. This sentence captures the essence of Harcourt’s critical ethos and his legacy. On July 3, Canada lost one of its greatest intellects and Canadian cinema lost a passionate, articulate, inspirational champion. Harcourt was a gifted, perceptive commentator on Canadian cinema and Canadian culture. Throughout his career as an educator, critic, author and programmer, he dedicated his searching mind to illuminate post-war Canadian cinema. Like many university graduates of his generation, Harcourt went to England to further his studies. While at the British Film Institute, he had a revelation about his faraway, colonial country through the groundbreaking documentaries being made at the National Film Board. His 1964 Sight and Sound article, “The Innocent Eye,” represents not only his insightful appreciation of the films of Tom Daly’s Unit B but also, in a quietly radical sense, Harcourt’s decolonization. Canada was speaking for itself in these films, and he heard it. Returning in 1967 to teach, he began uncovering for us what he famously termed our “invisible cinema.” He would continue to speak with conviction about Canada’s diverse, eccentric and accomplished film practices. He took that imperfect risk: taking Canadian films and, yes, Canada seriously. “Inferior to nothing”: strong words, but necessary to spark post-colonial fires of thought across our emerging nation. Peter Harcourt was incendiary and he was luminous. He was my portal to the world of cinema, international and Canadian, as I was lucky enough to take Introduction to Film Studies with him at Carleton University. It was electrifying. Here was a teacher who clearly had a calling—one that did not ask you to follow but rather to join, to add your voice. To my astonishment, he wanted to know what I had to say. Since Peter’s passing, I recall Carlos Fuentes’ memory of his awestruck encounter with Thomas Mann; that experience gave Fuentes the confidence “…to approach the fire of literature and ask it for a few sparks.” That is what Peter Harcourt did for me. Thank you, Peter, for building a fire, for inviting me to stand in its warming light and for encouraging me to add my own modest fuel to keep it alive.
THE PRICE WE PAY
THE WANTED 18
D: Harold Crooks | Canada
D: Amer Shomali, Paul Cowan | Canada, Palestine, France
Tom McSorley is Executive Director of the Canadian Film Institute. He is an Adjunct Research Professor in Film Studies at Carleton University, where he teaches Canadian cinema in the same classroom where he took that course from Peter Harcourt.
APRIL 23–MAY 3, 2015
SUMISSIONS OPEN SEPTEMBER 16 Early-bird deadline: November 19, 2014 | Deadline: December 10, 2014 Late submissions excepted until January 7, 2015. Higher fees apply.
RENOWNED TWO-DAY PITCHING EVENT
CURATED ONE-ON-ONE PITCH MEETINGS
Distribution Rendezvous
PITCH FINISHED AND ROUGH-CUT FILMS YEAR-ROUND ONLINE DOC MARKET
Photo Credit: Joseph Michael Howarth
FOR MORE INFORMATION AND DEADLINES VISIT
WWW.HOTDOCS.CA 50
MONTAGE
fall 2014
Presenting Platinum Partner
Presenting Partners
fall 2014
MONTAGE
51
Making Movies together anywhere
Los AngeLes VAncouVer Mexico city new orLeAns AtLAntA toronto new york MontreAL London PAris BAngALore
twitter.com/technicolor 52
MONTAGE
fall 2014
facebook.com/technicolorCrea
technicolor.com/toronto