EIFF REVIEW: Muscle Shoals does its namesake proud
Posted on September 25, 2013 By Jeremy Loome Entertainment, entertainment, Film, Front Slider, Music
The great electric blues guitarist Otis Rush had some cracking albums in his day – and like his live gigs, they always started out with something smoking that really set the tone. In 1969 it was an album called “Mourning in the Morning.” Like most things musical, attempting to describe its incendiary, note-stabbing kickoff, all […]
EIFF REVIEW: Punk rock doc a homage for fans only
Posted on September 24, 2013 By Derek Owen Entertainment, Film, Front Slider, Music
Lemmy Kilmister of Motorhead was once asked what it meant to play music outside of mainstream tastes. His brief and poignant response perfectly captures the ethos of Filmage: the Story of the Descendents/All: “It means you’re f—ing broke.” Screening Oct. 1 as part of the Edmonton International Film Festival, Matt Riggle’s documentary pays a fawning, […]
EIFF REVIEW: Hellish brunch meets Armageddon in hilarious It’s a Disaster
Posted on October 4, 2012 By Barry Hammond Film, Front Slider
If the idea of a Sunday “couples brunch” makes you want to kill yourself, then It’s a Disaster is for you. Even if it doesn’t, this darkly delicious black comedy has so much going for it that you won’t want to miss the brunch almost literally blowing up. The premise is simple: shortly after a […]
EIFF REVIEW: Plimpton as Himself reveals genius beneath goofy facade
Posted on October 1, 2012 By Barry Hammond Film, Front Slider
For those who know George Plimpton only as the plumy-voiced, New England accented socialite who appears in TV commercials, “Plimpton! Starring George Plimpton as Himself” will be a revelation. Screening at The Edmonton International Film Festival (EIFF) on Wednesday, Oct. 3, the film by writer/directors Tom Bean and Luke Poling takes a serious and in-depth […]
EIFF REVIEW: Darwin not the end of the Earth, but you can see it from there
Posted on September 30, 2012 By LH Thomson Film, Front Slider
At the end of a bleak road in Death Valley – itself one of the most inhospitable places on Earth – Monty Brannigan lives life as a gloriously unique individual. A Buddhist with a history of violence, an artistic savant who creates sculptures reminiscent of Henry Moore, a widower whose wife was shot in a […]
EIFF REVIEW: Unmade in China better than the film they ruined
Posted on September 29, 2012 By LH Thomson Film, Front Slider
“Unmade in China” is a brilliant documentary about how the Chinese government turned a decent film into a terrible film. It’s not new turf, but it’s rarely covered better than this often absurd examination of what happens when a mild mannered American director tries to make a movie in China. Both the film and the […]
EIFF REVIEW: Director’s cut shows good film despite toltalitarian meddling
Posted on September 29, 2012 By LH Thomson Film, Front Slider
Gil Kofman is some sort of genius. The director of The Memory Thief makes two appearances at the Edmonton International Film Festival (EIFF), first as the protagonist in a documentary about making a film in China (Unmade in China); the second, with a showing of his cut of that film, Case Sensitive. Without giving too […]
EIFF REVIEW: Montage makes all the difference in gringo-out-of-water films
Posted on September 28, 2012 By Mike Ross Film, Front Slider
What we have in “A Band of Rogues” and “Mariachi Gringo” may be a recurrent theme at the 2012 Edmonton International Film Festival (EIFF) – gringos messing around where they don’t belong. These two films are similar on the surface. A Band of Rogues deals with a young American musician with prescription drug issues, who […]
EIFF REVIEW: Happy Family shatters fourth wall in brilliant Italian comedy
Posted on September 28, 2012 By LH Thomson Film, Front Slider
Happy Family breaks the fourth wall constantly, with characters talking to the screen. It’s done in the same lighthearted vein as in the classic Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, but is wonderfully off-the-wall and part of why this Italian film is so funny. Well, that and the writing, which is brilliant: touching, thoughtful, poignant, almost never […]
EIFF INTERVIEW: Trevor Anderson, the Filmmaker That Got Away
Posted on September 26, 2012 By Mike Ross Film, The Latest
We have waited a long time – maybe too long – for the Edmonton premiere of The Man That Got Away, the latest film by Trevor Anderson. And now that it’s finally making its public debut at the Edmonton International Film Festival (EIFF) this weekend, the local filmmaker isn’t even going to be here. At […]
EIFF REVIEW: Oxygen for the Ears celebrates jazz city that Ken Burns missed
Posted on September 26, 2012 By Barry Hammond Film, Front Slider, Music
When Ken Burns’ 10 part series on the history of jazz premiered in 2001, you can just imagine German filmmaker Stefan Immler watching the segments on New York, Chicago, St. Louis, or Kansas city in his new home-town and screaming, “Hey! What about Washington, D.C.?!” He’d have a point – and makes it beautifully in […]
EIFF REVIEW: Golf meets orphan movie genre in Becoming Redwood
Posted on September 25, 2012 By Mike Ross Film, The Latest
For instant drama, you can hardly do better than an orphaned child-cruel stepparent scenario. Ask Disney. Becoming Redwood – the gala opening film at the Edmonton International Film Festival – offers more insight than the usual stories of this sort, into parenthood, into how kids cope with parents who split up, and into the nature […]