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Kelly Tatham – Multiverse Dating for Beginners (2018)

Kelly Tatham is a storyteller, artist, change-maker and rebel. Her work is a multi-faceted expression of and yearning for love and evolution, and spans from film to politics to essays to direct action activism and back again.

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Multiverse Dating for Beginners is a surrealist look at the romantic comedy that uses the the multiverse and the metaphor of different timelines to explore all the "what ifs" at the beginning of a relationship.

Kelly Tatham headshot

We had the opportunity to show your film during our 2018 festival - tell us a bit about the journey of bringing this film to life

I desperately needed to tell this story, but it almost didn't get made. If Sara Canning hadn't signed on, I don't think I would have pulled it together. I was in such a rush, I didn't save any money or have time to do a proper crowdfunding campaign, so I asked family and mentors for financial support and ended up subletting my room for a month after I spent every last penny I had.

 

What was your biggest victory with this project?

Connecting with audiences and hearing that it helped them better understand their dating experiences. And having it continue to reach people -- 350K+ views on YouTube!

 

What was your hardest lesson learned?

People can't read your mind, you have to get really clear on your vision to be able to communicate what you want; plan your colour correction in advance.

 

Where do you look for inspiration?

In my emotional confusion; the parts of me I'm scared to share.

 

What's a favourite piece of Canadian media for you right now?

The Tyee

 

What are you working on now? And what's next for you?

Writing, writing, writing...

 

Instagram - Twitter - Website

 

RSVP on Facebook and join us April 18th 2021 for Choice Cuts to head back to the multiverse and catch up with Kelly during our Q+A!

Joel Salaysay – Last Night (2017)

The “Last Night” team is a group of mostly SFU alumni and friends working out of Vancouver.

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Sarah answers a desperate call in the middle of the night from her best friend Jamie.

Joel Salaysay Headshot

We had the opportunity to show Last Night at our 2017 festival - tell us a bit about the journey of bringing this film to life

“Last Night” was the first movie I made after film school. It was an important story for me to tell, and required I dig deep and challenge my abilities as a filmmaker. It was written, filmed, and edited in the after hours of a hectic work schedule, and probably the hardest short I’ve had to make.

 

What was your biggest victory with this project?

Being able to let it go.

 

What was your hardest lesson learned?

The longer you wait between projects, the harder it gets to make them.

 

Where do you look for inspiration?

The independent film community in Vancouver.

 

What's a favourite piece of Canadian media for you right now?

A clip online called “Picnic in the Park with Leonard Cohen,” where the famed musician recalls beating Pierre Trudeau in a thumb wrestle.

 

What are you working on now? And what's next for you?

I am directing a 3D animated series for Wildbrain Studios, and developing a short film about reconnecting with one’s roots.

 

Instagram - Twitter

 

RSVP on Facebook and join us April 18th 2021 for Choice Cuts to revisit Last Night and catch up with Joel at our Q+A!

Daniel Jeffrey – Sad Hill with Sad Hill (2016)

Daniel is an independent filmmaker whose comedy and documentary short films explore subjects like adult circumcision, cinephilia, and pet euthanasia. Since graduating from SFU's film program in 2013, he has worked professionally in Vancouver as an editor, videographer, actor, and now filmmaker for Lush North America. His editing work has been selected by TIFF, VIFF, CBC, Crazy 8s, Telus Storyhive, IGN, Vimeo Staff Picks, Booooooom.com, and has received two Leo Award nominations.

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Two cinephile best friends travel to a remote filming location from "The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly" to create a shot-for-shot remake of the iconic sequence that inspired their friendship.

Daniel Jeffery - Headshot

We had the opportunity to show your film during our 2016 festival - tell us a bit about the journey of bringing this film to life

This short film came about while myself, Will Ross, and Devan Scott were filming the feature-length documentary, We Three Heathens (2015). As we were documenting our 5-week walk along the famous pilgrimage route, the Camino de Santiago, we couldn't resist also visiting the iconic shooting location of the climactic sequence from The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly, which we knew was just 80km outside of Burgos, Spain. For fun, we hoped to recreate the scene using ourselves as stand-ins, and camera angles matched as closely as possible to the original production from 50 years earlier. This location was of extra special importance, not only for being from one of Will and Devan's most beloved films, but because its sequence was what initially sparked their friendship through online discourse some 7 years earlier, and culminated in their production company, Sad Hill Media (named after the fictional Sad Hill Cemetery). So I knew that besides simply filming the recreation, this would be a fruitful opportunity to document a true holy grail moment in Will and Devan’s lives and friendship. What resulted was indeed (I believe) wonderfully absurd, profound, and sacred.

 

What was your biggest victory with this project?

Besides our very affectionate audience response at Cinema Spectacular in 2016, our biggest delight was having the film be prominently featured in the 2017 documentary, Sad Hill Unearthed, which included interviews with Ennio Morricone, Clint Eastwood, and other original crew from The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. (The film is available to watch on Netflix if you haven't' seen it. We'd recommend!)

 

What was your hardest lesson learned?

Due to having to pack light for pilgrimage travel, we only had a compact tripod that could raise to about 4-5 feet in height. This meant that to achieve the eye level angles from the original film, we had to crouch and squat below frame for long periods of time - often resulting in severe and painful leg cramping. When travelling to remote locations, one should always bring the right gear.

 

Where do you look for inspiration?

For documentary, I most often find inspiration in real life characters who I am wholly endeared by and feel the need to candidly capture and relate to an audience in an entertaining and (hopefully) deeply sympathetic way.

 

What's a favourite piece of Canadian media for you right now?

A legitimate recommendation (and also a legitimately biased plug) is the nuts and bolts oriented film podcast, Film Formally, hosted by Will Ross and Devan Scott, which features conversations and topics with many local independent filmmakers, as well as quite a few eminent film professionals. It is always very thoughtful, rigorous, and informative.

 

What are you working on now? And what's next for you?

My most recent self-financed short film, A New Leash On Life (2020), is about a magical talking dog named Basketball who must convince his owner not to put him down for his ill temper. The film is finishing up its festival run, having now screened at over 25 festivals including Vancouver International FF '20, Edmonton International FF '20, and DC Shorts '20, and will hopefully be available online in the coming months! For my next short film, I will either be making a $0 solo labour of love on green screen with stolen stock footage, or a large crew production with fancy movie gear and stunts (depending on financing 🤞).

 

Youtube - Vimeo

 

RSVP on Facebook and join us April 18th 2021 for Choice Cuts to hang out at Sad Hill and catch up with Daniel during our Q+A!

Nathan Douglas – Son in the Barbershop (2015)

Nathan Douglas is a Vancouver-based writer and director. Originally from Ajax and Cobourg, Ontario, he studied film at Simon Fraser University, graduating in 2012 with a BFA.

Since 2015, Nathan’s short films have screened worldwide at festivals including Locarno, Clermont-Ferrand, Busan ISFF, FNC Montreal, and the Vancouver International Film Festival. His first feature, Honey From the Rock, is in development. Nathan also writes at The Vocation of Cinema, a newsletter about cinema, philosophy, and theology.

A teenager overhears a phone call and inserts himself into the father-son story behind it.

A teenager overhears a phone call and inserts himself into the father-son story behind it.

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We had the opportunity to show your film during our 2015 festival - it was our very first Audience Choice Award recipient! Tell us a bit about the journey of bringing this film to life?

SITB's journey was a bit of a roller coaster. I had the idea in 2012 when I was going through a tough spot and went to get a haircut. I felt very isolated and while I was in the chair and the barber was positioning my head that this was the closest I was going to get to any sort of human contact that week. Nobody knew, of course, what I was feeling - barbershops are fun, lighthearted places which glide along. That was a pretty hard thing to realize but the feeling of a character going through that isolation surrounded by people struck me as a potent film idea. So I held on to that and later the idea of bringing a father-son conflict in as the main dynamic came up. For me, to get through procrastination is always a matter of getting the key collaborators onboard and then I have no choice but to accept that I'm making the film. I knew I wanted Donat Kazanok as the lead; I'd worked with him on my student films and kept wanting to do more challenging material with him. Alexandra Caulfield enthusiastically came on to produce and that helped me to commit to ending the post-school malaise I was in and embrace the reality of making a new film. I asked Devan Scott to shoot it and he blew my mind during our preparation process; we've never stopped working together since. We found Michael Meneer (the dad) through an audition process and he just came in and blew us away. We shot in that same barbershop - Top Barbers in the Burnaby Heights - in April 2014. We did eight takes, and only five or so were usable. I had locked picture by May and had done a rough sound design, and then made the mistake of sending that version out to the fall Canadian festivals as an official rough cut. It was rejected flat out and I took that pretty hard and shelved the film for eight months. In March 2015, I had an opportunity to attend a young adult conference in Rome, and it was suggested to me that I present a film. I took SITB with me and screened it for the 6 or so other people in this arts category and a small jury and we received an award. So that put a bit of wind back in the sails and I came back to Vancouver ready to finish the film. Will Ross and I tackled the sound edit and mix and finished it, and we premiered with CineSpec a couple weeks later. And then the film's festival life was a whole other adventure...

 

What was your biggest victory with this project?

The biggest victory was taking a chance on a risky idea and seeing it work as I'd hoped it would. Making this helped me build confidence in my filmmaking instincts. In terms of measurable outcomes, the biggest practical victory came eight months into our very eclectic festival run, when I got an email saying the film had been selected for the international competition at the 2016 Clermont-Ferrand International Short Film Festival in France. That was a stunner. I attended the festival and experienced the most enthusiastic film culture I've ever seen - all focused on the art of short films. Sold-out screenings attended by the townsfolk of Clermont, every film screening every day to thousands of people, schools on holiday during the festival so entire families are showing up to watch a random film from Canada about a sad haircut, press conferences for every short filmmaker - it was a delight. It was one thing to receive the industry validation that Clermont offers but then to have that outweighed by the audience response to the film and realize that yes, "average" people do connect with it - it's a lot to process.

 

What was your hardest lesson learned?

The hardest lesson was learning that I need to just get the film done and not worry about how it is going to be received, by festivals or otherwise. I wasted a lot of time feeling sorry for myself while not finishing the film - and while those feelings were real and deserved to be processed, for me it became very easy to just not do anything in response.

 

Where do you look for inspiration?

This is a hard one, because it comes from a lot of places. Certain life situations or thick moments that happen to me personally (like with this film). Sometimes it's from spending time in prayer, or dealing with a moral or ethical question that is bothering me - I put it into the hands of a character and am struck by what they want to do with it. Music, especially liturgical music - Gregorian chant and Renaissance polyphony - has a way of opening up doors for me. All that said, the most consistent inspiration for me comes from certain turns of phrase that strike me while reading history, philosophy, theology, etc. I am a collector of potential titles; I have a document with probably 100 unused titles waiting for their story or character to meet them. Sometimes the title suggests an idea very quickly. I don't know how to describe it but I guess I'd say I try to be awake to the poetry of everything in front of me and ideas just come out of that.

 

What's a favourite piece of Canadian media for you right now?

My two favourite Canadian films of the last year are by Vancouver transplants to Toronto - Sophy Romvari's "Still Processing" is an incredible short film about grief that is on the circuit at present, and Kurt Walker's S01E03 is an undefinable slice of Vancouver summer vibes (available online). And to continue my obvious biases, my favourite Canadian podcast at the moment is Film Formally, produced by Devan Scott, Will Ross, and Paige Smith. They are having conversations about filmmaking and film-viewing that I find stimulating and all-too-rare in the present landscape. I also love The Way of the Heart Podcast, which is locally produced and focuses on conversations around men's spiritual and mental health.

 

What are you working on now? And what's next for you?

Right now I am developing what I intend to be my first feature, Honey From the Rock. It's a gently comic character study about a devout Catholic who is feeling left behind while all his friends get married. I swear it isn't a rom-com, but that synopsis is making me second guess. I am also starting a Substack devoted to writing about cinema, philosophy, and theology. It's called The Vocation of Cinema. Not sure if it will be up by the time this is out, but you can bookmark it for when it does (link below).

 

Website - Vocation of Cinema Substack - Instagram - La Cartographe on CBC Gem

 

RSVP on Facebook and join us April 18th 2021 for Choice Cuts to see Son in the Barbershop and catch up with Nathan during our Q+A!

SITB-thankyou-Jim

2021 Announcement

To our wonderful community of filmmakers, filmgoers, and supporters,

Like many festivals, Cinema Spectacular is experiencing some prescribed 2020 upheaval. After talking with filmmakers and members of our community, we have made the difficult decision to postpone our seventh festival until spring of 2021.

We had originally been anticipating our 2020 event to be taking place May 30th & 31st.While there’s a hole in our hearts where this year’s fest would have nestled in quite nicely, we are happy to be putting the health and safety of our communities first. But - here’s the good news!

If you have submitted projects, are they still in the running? Absolutely. Still need time to get a project to us? We have extended our final deadline until January 4th, 2021 with our regular deadline fees running throughout. With this unprecedented submissions season that has rolled forward into another year, we will be preparing for an expanded program in 2021 to showcase more local cinema love! Keep eyes out for discount codes (and we’re always available by email if you need a waiver) on our social spaces! We have also extended our maximum submission length to 20 minutes.

If you do find yourself with extra time this summer and fall and would like to lend a hand to what will, undoubtedly be our most monumental festival to date, we would love the help! We are looking for more members to add to our screening committee, as well as casual help with outreach and research. We’re open to suggestions as to what else we can be doing, too!

In the interim, we’ve got tons of plans to pass the time! Here we have an exciting opportunity to make changes, improve, and set a stronger foundation for future festival goings-on. It’s exciting! And we’ll certainly be using this time wisely; making new connections, taking on cool new projects, and continuing to promote our wonderful alumni! We’re committed to supporting the Canadian film scene through thick and thin - and we very much look forward to enjoying the silver screen with you again soon.

Stay patient, kind, and supportive,

 

Laurel & the Cinema Spectacular team

hello@cinemaspectacular.com

Cinema Spectacular 2020 and COVID-19

In a difficult, but necessary decision, Cinema Spectacular 2020 will be suspended until further notice. We will be revisiting our options for an event later this year, and will be working with VIVO,VIFF, and our supporters to make our festival happen when it is safe, responsible, and appropriate for the public again. Much of our funding and help comes from our community, and as this overwhelmingly unpredictable situation continues, that support should go elsewhere. 

This doesn’t mean we’ve stopped working. We’ve got some plans to bring some CanCon to your timelines with some fun plans for features, blogs, and more. We will certainly be using this time to build a better foundation for a brighter and more supportive festival to keep on loving local cinema when the time comes. We will also be sharing cool projects, good vibes, and resources to help our community as we find them.

In news that we still have control over: Our late deadline has been thrown out! This means regular deadline fees are in effect for the rest of our extended season! Our new final deadline is set for June 30th. There will be tons of discount opportunities going out over our social channels - and if you need a fee waiver, just send us an email!

A reminder that we no longer have a rule about a film’s completion date. You can submit any films from any time! For those of you stuck at home, we’d love to see those backburner projects; shorts that never got out into the world, films that are experiencing completion in isolation, and bottle-episode bright ideas!

If you do find yourself with some extra time and would like to lend a hand to our 2020 festival, we could certainly use it! We’re still bringing on members to our screening committee, our outreach teams, and are open to suggestions as to what else we can be doing. Get in touch!

Stay patient, kind, and support each other in these uncertain times.

We look forward to high fiving, hugging, and making movies with you all again soon,

Laurel & the Cinema Spectacular team

2020 Dates Announced!

That's right folks - it's 2020 and we're expanding! Cinema Spectacular 2020 is booked for May 30th and 31st! Obviously we're shaking it up in a big way for our seventh festival year. Here's some new things:

  • You heard right, we've gone to two days! We've still got our old faithful Sunday at the Vancity Theatre, where we'll see our legendary local cinema program and after party, but we'll be at VIVO Media Arts Center on Saturday, May 30th to have a day of talks from local artists, panels, and networking!
  • The Vancity Theatre is undergoing some *very* cool updates this year, but this means during our Sunday screening, we wont have access to the atrium. Many of the things we usually host in the atrium (live music, sponsor tables, photo booths) will be relocated to our wicked space at VIVO!
  • A bigger event this year means we'll need more support! Get in touch to become a sponsor or come volunteer with us!
2020 Early Banner

Our submissions are still open for Cinema Spectacular 2020! Our event is expanding this year, as well as moving to a later date than usual - and we are EXCITED! We've got waiver codes all over the web at the moment (always watch our social spaces for special deals), but our regular deadlines are in effect! That means $5 for trailers and $10 for all other projects - and with Filmfreeway's proper Canadian dollar implementation, submissions are now even more wallet-friendly!

We are so excited to see what you've been working on this year, Canada! Send your shorts, animations, music videos, upcoming project trailers to us on Filmfreeway.

Tons of event details are coming soon!

It’s the spooky season 🎃

It's autumn, the leaves are falling, the pumpkins are OUT, and we've got a spooky waiver code for you that will take a beastly 66.6% off your submission fee over on Filmfreeway!

Just use the code SPOOKTACULAR7 when you submit your projects and reap the rewards until MIDNIGHT, October 31st.

Have a safe and happy Halloween - we've got some big stuff in the works so make sure to keep up with us on our social spaces!

Facebook - Instagram - Twitter

Spooky Blood Logo - Submissions Open - BANNER WIDE
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2019 Thank you!

WRAP UP - THANK YOU

We had such a great time celebrating Canadian cinema this year! With live music by Funny Death, a wonderful haul of local goodies in our raffle (many thanks to our partners), and a killer program of short films - 2019 was a really hot one! Be sure to check out our photo galleries - shot by our talented photography duo, Karla Parker and Christian Nambayan!

Thank you to our wonderful filmmakers, our volunteers, and our sponsors!

Which film took home our Audience Choice Award? 👀