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NFB leads Canada at Cannes Film fest

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  • NFB leads Canada at Cannes Film fest

    Canadian Press
    May 11 2004

    NFB leads Canada at Cannes


    Toronto — No Egoyan. No Cronenberg. No Arcand.

    This year, as it has so often in the past, the National Film Board
    will be carrying the can at Cannes for Canada.

    The NFB is bringing several shorts and documentaries to the
    prestigious festival, which opens Wednesday and runs until May 23.
    And at least one of them has the potential to spark an international
    incident.

    What Remains of Us (Ce qu'il reste de nous) is a feature-length
    documentary that follows a young Tibetan refugee in Quebec who
    smuggles a forbidden videotaped message from the Dalai Lama back into
    her native land and shows it to various Tibetan families. Chinese
    authorities could impose severe penalties on any Tibetan caught
    viewing the five-minute tape of the exiled spiritual leader and major
    security precautions were taken when the film was screened recently
    at Toronto's Hot Docs festival.

    There have been fears that if the Chinese get their hands on a copy
    of the film, they might be able to identify and track down the
    anonymous Tibetans who allowed their reaction to the tape to be
    filmed.

    Two years ago when Atom Egoyan's Ararat was screened at Cannes there
    were concerns the film would spark protests from the Turkish
    community because of its politically charged theme that the Turks
    inflicted genocide on the Armenians during the First World War.

    Trouble never materialized and the co-producer of What Remains of Us,
    Francois Prevost, isn't anticipating any this time either. But he
    says security will be in place anyway.

    "The reason for security obviously is not to have any pictures going
    out of the theatre," he says.

    Prevost is also in touch with a network of people within Tibet and
    says that so far nothing has happened to any of the 17 people there
    who were brave enough to take part.

    But he does hope the film initiates an international dialogue, with
    both foreign governments and the Chinese communities in their
    countries about the half-century of oppression of six million Tibetan
    people.

    "We see this culture disappearing," Prevost says. "Countries don't
    want to face China about this issue and they all want to keep their
    economic links. So that's a major, major, major point that is not
    talked about enough."

    The film will be screened out of competition next Sunday but
    co-director Hugo Latulippe isn't looking for any prizes, just the
    international exposure.

    "It's already a prize for us really to go there and bring our message
    to the world. It's fantastic."

    Another major film board entry will be a very avant-garde digital
    animation short called Ryan.

    The creation of Toronto-based animator Chris Landreth, it uses
    surreal 3-D imagery to tell the story of one of Landreth's
    predecessors, Ryan Larkin, a groundbreaking animator with the NFB
    back in the 1960s, whose decline, apparently a combination of
    creative block, alcohol and drugs, has left him panhandling on the
    streets of Montreal today.

    Larkin was nominated for an Academy Award back in 1968, but lost to a
    Disney entry. Landreth himself was also an Oscar nominee in 1996 for
    a creative digital short called The End — which bears some style
    similarities to Ryan — but he lost to Brit Nick Parks, creator of the
    Wallace and Gromit films.

    While none of Canada's major directors are represented at Cannes this
    year, the half-dozen titles submitted are still considered quite
    significant.

    Danny Chalifour, director of operations and international relations
    for Telefilm Canada, the federal funding agency that operates the
    Canada pavilion at Cannes, said there's more to do at Cannes than
    screen films.

    While he prefers not to use the word shmooz, Chalifour says bilateral
    discussions with delegations from Britain, France, Germany, Australia
    and New Zealand are vital for the future of the Canadian film
    industry, both in terms of export sales and co-productions.

    "If we're looking at financing a feature-film budget in excess of
    $6-$7 million in Canada, we basically need a partner. We can't fund
    it internally."
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