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Totally By Yourself In This Vast Emptiness: Ted Kotcheff on "Wake in Fright"
TS: So the hyper-masculinity was a result of industry? TK: Maybe it sounds like a pathology. It’s not. There was nothing else to do. TS: Do you feel colonization played...
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Totally By Yourself In This Vast Emptiness: Ted Kotcheff on "Wake in Fright"
In D.H. Lawrence’s novel Kangaroo he describes it perfectly. He says you’re totally by yourself in this vast emptiness and you think the landscape is watching you. And that...
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Totally By Yourself In This Vast Emptiness: Ted Kotcheff on "Wake in Fright"
TS: Wake in Fright has been described as a horror film or a sort of horror-western. Was your approach to make it as a genre film? TK: No, I...
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Re-presentations, Adaptations, and VARIATIONS
Canadian artist Michael Snow once described his own experiments with moving images as an attempt “to make a definitive statement of pure Film space and time, a balancing of...
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Re-presentations, Adaptations, and VARIATIONS
For instance, in one of VARIATIONS’ most literal iterations of re-presentation, Stephen Broomer and Stuart Broomer re-create at least two (if not more) of Snow’s works including his 1960 Lac Clair[https://www.gallery.ca/en/see/collections/artwork.php?mkey=7267] painting with their...
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Re-presentations, Adaptations, and VARIATIONS
Snow’s works and methods are re-presented and re(-)ferenced both aesthetically and formally throughout VARIATIONS. Dan Browne and Steve Richman’s Poem riffs on Snow’s concerns for framing by transcribing some of his experiments with...
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Re-presentations, Adaptations, and VARIATIONS
Furthermore, the individual works also contain references to the lives and practices of their makers. The remainder of Belzile and Craig’s Untitled, for example, feels like a narrative depiction of...
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Who Can Save the Brides of Billy?: Horror and Gender in "Black Christmas" and "The Bloody Chamber"
The similarities begin in the depiction of our killers, the psychotic Billy in Black Christmas, and the blood-thirsty Duke in The Bloody Chamber. Before we get any visual details,...
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Who Can Save the Brides of Billy?: Horror and Gender in "Black Christmas" and "The Bloody Chamber"
The telephone—a device that reinforces the theme of seeing/not-seeing—is the focus of some of the most terrifying scenes in Black Christmas, turning the killer into a bodiless, transcendent voice,...
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Christopher McKinnon
*Christopher McKinnon* is a writer and community organizer who lives in Toronto.