Winning
viewers for Caribbean Movies in Toronto and Trinidad
By Stephen
Weir
The
biggest news for the just completed Caribbean Tales Film Festival (CTFF), took
place not at home in Toronto but in Port of Spain, Trinidad. It was announced
last week that Frances-Anne Solomon, the
head of the CTFF, and a filmmaker herself had just won the People’s Choice
Award at the Trinidad and Tobago International Film Festival
|
Francis-Anne Solomon |
Ms. Solomon, in addition to
spearheading the Toronto festival, has been hard at work all spring and summer
completing her own film. That movie, HERO -- Inspired by the Extraordinary Life
and Times of Ulric Cross, was previewed and premiered at the CTFF in Toronto and
then rushed down to Port of Spain to be shown in competition in their T&T
film festival a week later.
The film is the first
Trinidad / Canadian feature length film to be premiered and previewed in both
country’s keynote festivals in the same year.
The movie tells the story of a man who leaves T&T in 1941 to join
the RAF, where he becomes the most decorated WW11 West Indian serviceman.
Post war, Cross moved to Africa to work as a government lawyer for several
emerging countries.
HERO opened the 13th annual CTFF early
in September and set the bar high for the 30 films that were screened over a
two-week period at seven screenings. Overall, organizers are happy with the results
of this year festival. There were new programmes added, there was expanded
outreach to Hamilton filmgoers, and attendance, with one notable exception (an evening of LGBTQ theme films) was strong.
“Our LGBTQ screening is always the
lowest attendance, from what I saw on the other nights our screenings were
quite successful with full cinemas,” Maya Bastian, the
festival’s Marketing
and Partnerships Manager told the Caribbean Camera. “I
worked hard to increase numbers at our LGBTQ screening this year, and we did
have an improvement”.
This year for the first time, there were three feature
length films – (US) Bruk Out, Rockers (JA) and Green
Days by the River (T&T) that were shown weeks in advance of the
festival at the Royal Cinema to perk up interest in the coming Caribbean festival. AS well, there were more community showings
of Caribbean films in 2018 in a variety of locations including Hamilton, Regent
Park and Harbourfront.
“Rockers was very successful! It's part of a partnership
we have started with The Royal Stompbox music series,” continued Ms. Bastian. “CTFF
is in talks to do more screenings like this and the sold-out dance hall
documentary Bruk Out screening we held in March.”
Last week a full house packed the Scotiabank Theatre for
the closing night of the Caribbean
Tales Film Festival and the screening of It Stays With
You directed by Cahal
McLaughlin and Siobhan Wills. The film was shot in Haiti’s
Cité Soleil, a severely economically depressed neighbourhood to examine
the impact of the 2005-2007 crackdown on criminals that left scores of
civilians dead or injured.
“As the
13th annual Caribbean Tales International Film Festival comes to a successful
close, I am proud to be a part of the continued celebration of our Caribbean
filmmakers “and our stories,” said Associate
Festival Director Diana Webley, “The winners of this year’s
awards encompass everything that our theme calls for by leading the way,
spreading their message and focusing their light on change.”
Winners in
the following film categories were announced:
BEST Feature - Unfinished Sentences directed
by Mariel BrownBEST Documentary - Incursion directed
by Sasha-Gay Lewis.BEST
Short Film: Kinto directed by Joshua PaulIntersect
Award: Passing directed by Lucah Rosenberg-Lee and J. Mitchel
ReedCaribbean
Spirit: Hearts of Steel directed by Gayle WilmotCineFam
Award: Sin Ayo directed by Elizabeth Francisco
.