NFB Showcases 9 Shorts at Ottawa Festival

Posted In | News Categories: Events, Films, Short Films | Geographic Region: All, North America | Site Categories: Events, Films, Short Films

The National Film Board of Canada will present nine new shorts at the event's 33rd edition (Oct. 14–18), three of them in competition. The line-up displays a variety of inventive techniques and powerful themes, continuing the NFB tradition of innovation and excellence in animation art. On top of the festival's official selection of new productions, the OIAF has curated a special Rarities program of seldom seen NFB classics to celebrate its 70th.anniversary. The NFB will also present the Public Prize.

Among other themes, NFB films selected for this year's OIAF probe lost and regained love (Oscar winner Chris Landreth's THE SPINE (http://www.awn.com/articles/profiles/chris-landreth-talks-ithe-spinei) and the perverse human drive toward chaos (Oscar nominee Cordell Barker's RUNAWAY. With classics such as NEIGHBOURS (1952) and stunning recent films such as MADAME TUTLI-PUTLI (2008), the NFB has shown that animation shorts pack considerable expressive power into their brief running times. NFB films, deploying techniques ranging from traditional hand-made animation to adventurous digital innovation, provoke strong emotions and thoughtful discussion with their eye-opening, witty and sometimes very funny explorations of life on earth.

Barker's RUNAWAY, the Winnipeg-based filmmaker's highly anticipated third collaboration with the NFB, is a provocative, hilarious follow-up to his zany Oscar-nominated THE CAT CAME BACK (1988) and STRANGE INVADERS (2001). In RUNAWAY, Barker takes a hard look at reality and asks sardonically: What would happen if the world were a driverless train thundering recklessly over bumpy tracks? Produced by Michael Scott and Derek Mazur for the NFB, the film's wild ride careens to music by Benoît Charest, whose score for THE TRIPLETS OF BELLEVILLE contributed to that film's frantic rhythm.

RUNAWAY rolls into Ottawa after stops at the Cannes Film Festival, where it won the Petit Rail d'Or for Best Short, and the Annecy International Animation Festival, which granted the film a Special Jury Prize.

In Alcock's bittersweet VIVE LA ROSE, an ancient chanson performed by the late Newfoundland musician Emile Benoit is brought to life with melancholic passion. A woman dies in the film and a simple man devastated by loss sings to her in a last farewell. Co-produced by Tina Ouellette (Global Mechanic) and Annette Clarke and Michael Fukushima (NFB), Alcock's first NFB collaboration is a spectacular animation filmed on location, with available light, in Newfoundland. Fishhooks, shells, driftwood and rocks lend the mixed-media short an unusual texture. The film uses a unique visual triptych design to amplify the song's emotions while honouring land, sea and the harsh lives of local fishermen.

In Phillip Eddolls' GIT GOB, produced by the NFB's Michael Fukushima and associate produced by Maral Mohammadian within the Hothouse 5 program for emerging animators, two creatures ponder the meaning of a hole. The fuzzy, brightly colored humanoids have different points of view. Their debate leads to an idea that changes the world. This is a story of practical magic, whimsy with a cosmic conclusion.

Landreth's THE SPINE, the director's eagerly awaited follow-up to his groundbreaking, Oscar-winning RYAN (2004), wooed spectators at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival and was named Best of the Festival at Melbourne's animation event. Like RYAN, THE SPINE raises the bar on the ability of digital animation to probe deeply into human emotions, merging realism with surrealism in the director's trademark "psychorealist" style. A National Film Board of Canada production in Association with Copperheart Animation and C.O.R.E. Digital Pictures, the film is a strangely beautiful and highly original look at a man and a woman trapped in a spiral of mutual destruction after 26 years of marriage. The NFB's Marcy Page produced the short with Copperheart's Steve Hoban and Mark Smith. The production also benefited from the creative participation of Autodesk Canada CO. and Seneca College School of Communication Arts.







Comments

  No comments. Be the first to comment below.


Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Use <!--pagebreak--> to create page breaks.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.