4-28-2007
As the fest winds down, I find myself feeling more and more emotionally
exhausted. I hadn’t taken into account how psychologically draining it
can be when you see one heavy film after anotherso far, the only
"light-hearted" docs I’ve seen are Girls, Rock!, Yoga
Inc. and Forbidden Lie$. The rest have hardly been laughing
matters. Not surprisingly, as much as I love film festivalling, my mind
and body are ready for it to be over.
First up today was the Doc It! Showcase, a collection of
short documentaries made by youths between 14 and 18. There were nine
films shown, and they ranged from the benign (school uniforms: good or
bad?), to the poignant (Sent to the Right, about the after
effects of the Holocaust), to the self-indulgent (City of Names,
which felt very staged and tracked teenage graffiti artists in
Germany). The quality of the films also varied widely, with some
standing out for their skilled execution while others felt a little
sloppy, especially since all but one of the films were done as
assignments for school (spelling errors? really?).
My next film of the day had been hotly buzzed about (as great) earlier
in the week, and the screening I attended was sold out... with a rush
line so eager to get in that people were actually standing by the Bader
doors asking for extra tickets. The film was Lovable
(8/8), director Alan Zweig’s look at what it means to be singlemore
specifically, what it means to be a single womanonce you hit your
30s, 40s and beyond, and examines why it can be so hard to find love.
Based solely on its description, I (correctly) suspected I’d enjoy the
film before I even saw the first frame, but I didn’t expect to be so
moved by it. Alternately funny and poignant, the film exposes the
stigma often associated with being alone at a certain age, and how
singledom is viewed as some sort of deficiency in so many circles. As
one single woman in the film puts it (I’m paraphrasing because I can’t
remember her exact words), "If you’re still single in your 30s, that
immediately becomes your most unattractive quality." I thought the
documentary was exceptionally, but very subtly, powerful. And, on a
rather telling note, I also noticed more people checking each other out
as they exited the theater than I have at any other screening.
Folks in Ontario can catch Lovable when it airs on The View
From Here on TVO on Wednesday, May 2nd
at 10pm.
If you’re single, you should watch. If you’re coupled, you should
watch. And if you’ve ever said, "I can’t believe you’re STILL single!"
to anyone you’ve ever met, you should watch it AND tape it and then
watch it again.