4-27-2007
I started the day with the film that, inexplicably (to me, anyway), was
later announced as the winner of the fest’s best international
documentary award. I say "inexplicably" because I found the film to be
mind-numbingly dull. It was called Losers and Winners
(3/8), and it documents German and Chinese workers dismantling a coking
plant in Germany for reassembly in China. Admittedly, I know nothing
about coking plants, or what’s involved in taking one apart, or what
history there exists of this process with the countries involved in the
film... but I know I was bored throughout. For me, and I stress for
me, it was like watching an industrial training video. Plus, I
watched the whole film and still don’t really know what a coking plant
does beyond the fact that it converts coal into... something.
I was bored enough that I started to wonder if I should even bother
seeing any other films today. Maybe I should cut my losses and just
head home to relax. But something told me that I should, at the very
least, give my second film a shot... and I’m SO glad I did. I should
also preface this next bit with the fact that I get really skeptical
whenever a fest programmer raves and raves about a film during its
introduction. Experience at TIFF has taught me that, sometimes, that’s
a signal that I may hate the film I’m about to watch. So, when
programmer Angie Driscoll stepped onstage at the Bader and
enthusiastically said, "This is my absolute favorite film at this
year’s festival!" (I’m paraphrasing), I immediately thought, "Oh no."
But I was wrong. The film was riveting!
Forbidden Lie$ (7/8) tells the story of Norma Khouri, a
writer whose memoir, Forbidden Love, purportedly tells the story
of her former best friend, who was murdered by her family in an honor
killing in Jordan. The book became an international bestseller, and
Khouri was featured on countless television programs condemning the
Jordanian government and championing the rights of that country’s
oppressed women. Thing is, the bookand Normaquickly came under
scrutiny by numerous people who claimed it was a fake. Director Anna
Broinowski trains her lens on Khouri and paints a wickedly fascinating
picture of a woman who may be a con artist, may be a pathological liar
or maybe a teller of half-truths. She’s run scams, that’s for sure. The
FBI have had her (and may still have her) under investigation for
numerous frauds. The film itself is very cleverly put together; it
builds Khouri up for its first half, and then, one by one, exposes her
doublespeak, blatant lies and repeated deceptions (to the publishing
world and Broinkowski) for its second act. The audience loved it, and
Broinkowski revealed that she and her producer would be screening the
film for Khouri tomorrow (Saturday)she said she was very
nervous about what Norma’s reaction would be, but nonetheless has a
very clear affection for her controversial subject.
Tonight, as mentioned earlier, the fest also handed out a bunch of
awards (the audience award will be announced at the close of the fest),
and the winners are as follows:
Best Canadian Feature: The Bodybuilder and I
Special Jury Prize (Canadian Feature): Driven by Dreams
Best International Feature: Losers and Winners
Special Jury Prize (International Feature): Without the King
Best Mid-Length Doc: Forgiveness: Stories for Our Time
Best Short Doc: Man Up