
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Only When I Dance
The International Diaspora Film Festival, featuring movies from filmmakers living and working outside their countries of origin, brought us the Canadian premiere of this documentary about two young ballet dancers living in the Brazilian favelas on the verge of becoming international stars.
Documentarist Beadie Finzi, director of the excellent Unknown White Male, handles race and class issues within the dance world context with an expert verve and weaves a powerful narrative out of the lives of these innately talented but impoverished kids and their selflessly helpful families. A touching movie for anyone who's ever had to leave home and a rare glimpse into the lives of honest people who live in the favelas.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Scary pumpkins
Hundreds of jack-o'-lanterns invaded Sorauren Park on All Souls' Night.










And the scariest of them all...












Labels:
Art,
Photography,
Toronto
Monday, November 1, 2010
Museum of Modern Art

Ultimate Pet Shop Boys

Sunday, October 31, 2010
Wicked
What a perfect combination: Halloween and Wicked.
The show about wicked witches, flying monkeys and the lasting consequences of bad PR comes to Toronto for the third time in five years. And it's easy to understand why the prequel to Wizard of Oz is such a crowd-pleaser. Like Harry Potter, Wicked captured a magic zeitgeist that put audiences under an unbreakable spell. There are currently eight productions of the show worldwide.

Saturday, October 30, 2010
Biological Exuberance
Some fascinating facts from Biological Exuberance, a book by Canadian biologist and linguist Dr. Bruce Bagemihl about the variety of sexual behaviours in different species and how animals engage in an "assortment of non-procreative sexual activities."
Female grizzly bears, for instance, form couples and help raise each other's cubs.
Most male orcas, dolphins, Amazon botos, whales and other cetaceans masturbate each other.
Pretty much all female langurs are bisexual.
Male flamingo couples incubate, hatch and successfully raise foster chicks.
Coupled male Humboldt penguins on the other hand never acquire eggs to hatch together.
Male giraffes love "necking" with each other.
Transgendered deer are called "velvet horns."
Male bighorns are so into each other that females needs to pretend to be male to attract a mate.
Some elephant seals are transvestites, trying to act and look like females.
And of course female hyenas can mount each other.
Not to mention what all that waterfowl, shore birds, perching birds and songbirds get up to.













Nature has "heterosexual animals that never reproduce, homosexual animals that regularly procreate -- breeding and sexual orientation often combine in unexpected and paradoxical ways." Dr. Bagemihl's book points to a different way of seeing the natural world, and "perceiving broader patterns in nature and human society."
Friday, October 29, 2010
Only in Brazil
A fast-food manager in Porto Alegre sued McDonald's and won for having become fat over the 13 years he worked for the company. He claims he was forced to taste highly sweet and salty foods and that the meals provided to him were highly caloric. His name and picture were not released.
Tibet In Song

Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Museum of digital media
Adobe just inaugurated the first virtual museum dedicated to art created in the digital dimension: The Adobe Museum of Digital Media.
The virtual building, designed by Italian architect Filippo Innocenti, could actually be built and would span 50 stories in the real world.


The visuals are very slick and a tour of the building is a must. The tour guides are like flying jellyfish with a mechanical eye. Kinda creepy, but efficient.
Even though the Museum only has one exhibit so far, the intro video tour is really cool and what Adobe proposes is very promising. Since the Digital Revolution started, there has been no depository of art created for the medium. Besides, you can visit a museum without taking your butt off your chair.





Tuesday, October 26, 2010
The Trotsky

This Québécois production just got released on DVD and it might be the best high school comedy since Election. A super smart script and Jay Baruchel is excellent as always, playing the kid who thinks he's Leon Trotsky reincarnated.
Monday, October 25, 2010
Zélia Duncan
The Brazil Film Fest ended Sunday night with an intimate performance by Brazilian pop star Zélia Duncan. It ended a musical day at the Fest, which screened documetaries on Brazilian Music earlier in the day.


I had already watched Beyond Ipanema, but it was a great chance to enjoy once again this well-cut and energetic primer on Brazilian Music. The other doc, A Night in 67, was almost a re-broadcast of the Brazilian Music Festival of 1967, when some of the classics of Brazilian Music were being born. Brazil had a tradition of having very popular and heated music competitions like this in the 60s and 70s. Here you can see icons like Caetano Veloso, Chico Buarque, Gilberto Gil, Roberto Carlos and Os Mutantes in their early 20s and already producing amazing music. And everybody smoked in the set.
Zélia took the stage accompanied by two musicians and a diverse repertoire that went from samba to rap, a mix that is typical of her mixed-up career, as she likes to say. Her sound is more folksy than pop (her greatest idol is Canadian Joni Mitchell) but with enough hooks and melodic sensibility to make you sing along. And then there are the lyrics. Zélia is not only an accomplished composer, but also a very smart poet who bends Portuguese at her will.
Here's her performance of a hit from the Mutantes, a band she became part of in 2006 during their comeback sans Rita Lee.
She was very approachable at the end of the show and seemed genuinely interested in meeting her fans abroad. Zélia is also involved with a variety of cultural projects and it seems only natural that she would expand her reach overseas with her brand of Brazilian sound.

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