Unimpressed by Celebrities

My father is covering the Montreal World Film Festival as a journalist for the newspaper of the Russian-speaking community of Montreal. He has been invited to be part of Catherine Deneuve’s press conference.

“Nah,” he said, “that’s boring.”

Instead, he went to interview a Russian film-maker and actor who can’t even begin to dream of Deneuve’s fame but who has managed to make a movie my father happens to appreciate.

29 thoughts on “Unimpressed by Celebrities

  1. Is she there because of the premier of Chicken and Plums in North America?
    I’ve had a crush on her since I first saw The Hunger as an impressionable young lass. Too bad my Russian is so elementary and I live far from Montreal, or I’d gladly take the job.

    Like

    1. I don’t even know what movie she brought with her this time.

      I covered this festival as a journalist 3 years ago and interviewed several really cool Spanish film-makers. The funny thing is that I’m really not into movies, and most of my questions were about how they made their films in terms of finances. 🙂

      Like

  2. bloggerclarissa :
    The funny thing is that I’m really not into movies, and most of my questions were about how they made their films in terms of finances.

    Years ago I worked with many people in the Hollywood scene. I found most of the actors to be incredibly shallow. How could you not be when you make your money pretending to be someone you aren’t. Although, I did hear an interesting interview with Javier Bardem a few weeks ago and he sounded reasonably intelligent. I found the producers and directors in Hollywood fairly interesting and normal. I love film as an art form and most of what I like these days comes from Spain, Argentina, Germany & the UK. I wish Gutierrez Alea was still alive, I really enjoyed his films.

    Like

  3. I saw Catherine Deneuve at a press conference at the Mar del Plata Film Festival in 1997 (I think). Pretty boring stuff. I worked for the Buenos Aires Film Festival once, and it was great. I was an “angel” (literally, that was the name of the job), so I was in charge of a number of guests and had to make sure they were where they were supposed to be at the right time. Everybody wanted to be with the actors and directors, I chose the Film critics, because I knew you put them in a movie theater at 10 am, come to pick them up 8 hours later, and your job is done. It went pretty much like that, although I have to say that the only asshole was the Canadian film critic.

    Like

      1. There is ample reason to be unimpressed with Canadian film. Too often, there is an attempt to make an “art” film, rather than an entertaining film.

        One of my favourite Canadian films is “One Week” about a man’s motorcycle journey across Canada as he tries to sort out his life after being diagnosed with cancer. The first 2/3 of the film is enjoyable – then descends into an art film for the last 1/3, which seems to never end.

        And that’s my favourite Canadian film. 😦

        Like

              1. This is why we need to educate people about the difference. Actually, one of my colleagues at my department teaches the culture, the history and the literature of Quebec. She also takes students on trips to Quebec City to show them how different the culture is from the English-speaking culture of this continent. So at least in our area students are getting educated about Quebec. 🙂

                Like

          1. There’s a reason I put art in quotations. It is a moving picture – that implies there ought to be a plot, characters, some sort of resolution. Seventeen minutes of a paper bag floating down the street is just effing boring. And doesn’t provide me any insight into my soul or being.

            Like

            1. “Seventeen minutes of a paper bag floating down the street is just effing boring. And doesn’t provide me any insight into my soul or being.”

              -I can’t tell you how much I agree with this! I think that people who say they enjoy this kind of thing and find it enlightening are just faking. That’s why I say it’s all pretentiousness and nothing more.

              Like

  4. Does Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World count as a Canadian film? Because that’s my favourite one of it is.
    I tried to watch My Winnipeg once, to appease my in-laws, and it was bloody unwatchable, and not just because I don’t really care for Winnipeg as a city.

    Like

  5. The individual who knows best about Québécois cinéma in the blogosphere is MFL. (Even if unfortunately for cinema lovers, she don’t write very much about it because she’s more interested by visual art and poetry than to become a cinema specialist, but she’s great in her Québécois’ cinéma knowledge):

    http://regardezlamusique.wordpress.com/

    She writes about general cinema here, also.

    http://www.dvdenfrancais.com/dvd/fr/blog/?s=marie-france+latreille

    Like

Leave a comment