Home
IFN - The Youth Animation Project 2011
- Details
- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Film
- Hits: 1994
We were in Kensington to take in the charm and ambiance of the Roasterie, followed by a quick bite at Higher Ground Cafe (It's Global Vegetarian Night, a 3 course meal for $19.00), followed by ... ??
I give the boy a choice, there appears to be a free Youth Animation Shorts across the street at the Plaza, of which I know nothing, and a play at the Pumphouse, of which I know too much.
He chooses the film.
And so, after dinner we make our way across the street to the theater. Now it's advertised as free and I'm not too hopeful, guessing it's a showcase for student work.
Which it is, the lobby is full of people chatting and the theater is as full as I've seen it, there's tables full of information (which I dismiss, entirely happy in my ignorance, why ruin it?) and we find our seats and wait for the film to begin.
My desire for ignorance is thwarted, however, by the abundant speechifying that goes on before the film. It is, apparently, a "workfare" project sponsored by the Calgary Police Force, Public Library, Alberta Fish and Wildlife, the Plaza Theatre, Alberta Government, etc.... the gist of which is that unemployed/unemployable "Youth" (ranging in age from, say, 20 to 35 years of age) are taught remedial job skills in the production environment of an animation studio.
So the animated shorts we're about to see aren't born of any overwhelming creative urge to tell a story or work in a new medium so much as they are medium to teach "Youth" relevant job related skills, like working a cash register or how to safely handle fast food (important if you have any hopes of working or making a career in the arts...I'M NOT MAKING THIS UP!!!!).
Once that's out of the way the film begins.
Not the shorts, no, first there's a short documentary on the workfare program that's gotten these people out of bed to tell their stories.
It's an upbeat, well done little documentary that introduces you to the directors and cast of this evening's show. All of whom are present in the audience, by the way.
Now the shorts, they're unreviewable. They range from the absurdly, comically bad to the half decent sort of thing one might find on the NFB website.
This is good. Some are so bad, soo WTF that we can barely restrain our comments and laughter. The directors are in the audience, after all, and the rest of the audience are taking it quite seriously, the worst of the shorts generating the kind of applause that would make even Tim Burton proud ....
It's good because how often do you see work this bad? And, bearing in mind that it's student work - and "Workfare" student, not people who chose this, it's amazing. You have no idea of how bad things can get.
And it's good, after it's own WTF fashion.
And, surprisingly, some of the pieces are actually not too bad. Good, even.
Here is a trick. I'm used to seeing bad painting (the author of this myself), appreciating even the work behind a bad piece of art, I understand (somewhat) bad prose, but you seldom, if ever, see bad film or animation. It's too demanding, the equipment, the time, the effort, even the worst sitcom on TV has a bigger budget, staff than these productions, has - well, a polish, a thousand years of combined experience behind it. But each of these shorts, each of these films, they're a a world unto their self.
And at the end all of the directors take the stage to talk about their film, their experience making it, how the program changed their life, fielding questions from the audience, and for this alone it's excellent.
The boy, he's now profoundly depressed and his future career in the performing arts has never, ever looked so glum. This is a side to things he's never seen, and despite my reassurances that most of these people didn't "choose" the program, most of them will (hopefully) never make another film in their life, all of them were assigned to the program to teach them basic life skills that somehow or other life overlooked, he's not seeing it, he's seeing, well....
It's made him think.
Dr. Michael Persinger
- Details
- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Ideas & Questions
- Hits: 2083
Now I'm a bit skeptical, it's true, and the spirit of skepticism suggests, even demands that I be open to his ideas and not dismiss them outright.
And they're curious ideas indeed, and he's doing the research. He's charming, well spoken, and has that steampunk style that seems entirely natural and unaffected. Do I agree with his conclusions? Well, not necessarily, I don't know, but I'm glad there are people out there investigating these things.
More here: Wiki on Dr. Michael Persinger, Laurentian University, at Wired.
Klockwerks by Roger Wood
- Details
- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Link of the day
- Hits: 1703
familiar places, a so-so movie...
- Details
- Written by: Rod Boyle
- Category: Dreams
- Hits: 1773
My dream landscape has some places that seem oddly fixed, recurring places that show up - once in a while - in different dreams. They have no counterpart in the real world. There's a thrift shop, Women In Need, beside the Higher Ground in Kensington, and there's another in a basement - Salvation Army perhaps? on 14 Street, just a bit North of Kensington Road.
Only, of course, it's not Kensington Road in my dream, or not the same Kensington Road, it's the Kensington Road in London, only closer to my house, the thrift shop is one that doesn't exist, only in my dreams, and always I'm arriving just before close to discover a few treasures, I always remember that it's fallen off my map and I rush down at the last minute, it's getting dark outside, the inside of the thrift shop is cozy and inviting and there are glass cabinets everywhere with all sorts of trinkets...
***
And I dreamed that I was surfing the web and came across a website that was promoting a new movie, and I recognized the director as a friend of a friend and so I clicked on the play button to see what it was all about...
...and I found myself in a run down "artiste's" house, lots of people there for the special screening, it's on a tiny retro-tube TV on her dresser and we're all sitting on the floor to watch but as soon as she turns it on the size doesn't matter, everyone is watching and it's kind of silly with some special effects and Bob and Doug McKenzie, it's exactly that sort of movie and I don't know what to say other than "it will probably be very commercially successful"...
Page 716 of 890




















