Polytechnique tops Genie nominations
Polytechnique, the controversial Denis Villeneuve film about the 1989 Montreal massacre, has earned a leading 11 nominations for the Genie Awards, Canada's top honour for film.
Shot in black and white, the film recreates the tragedy in which Marc Lépine walked into a classroom at the city's prestigious École Polytechnique engineering school, told the men to leave, then shot 14 women.
The gritty drama earned nods in 11 of the 21 categories, including for best film, direction, original screenplay and for performances by Karine Vanasse (lead actress) and Maxim Gaudette (supporting actor).
Polytechnique will vie for the coveted best feature film honour against the films 3 Saisons, Before Tomorrow, Fifty Dead Men Walking and Nurse.Fighter.Boy.
'Emotional journey'
Nurse.Fighter.Boy, the feature debut of Toronto filmmaker Charles Officer, was another multiple nominee, picking up 10 nominations. After premiering at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival and released theatrically about a year ago, the $500,000 film — an urban love-and-family story revolving around a faded boxer, a devoted nurse and her son — has since been released on DVD.
Officer started the day just hoping that his actors would be nominated so they could garner some recognition for a film he called "an emotional journey."
"If I can come out of here with even one of those actors getting recognized, I [would be] so happy. Someone might have to bail me out of prison today because I'll go streak in the streets naked," he quipped to reporters shortly after the nominations were announced late Monday morning.
He was ecstatic about Nurse.Fighter.Boy's many nominations, which represents a piece of art from his community "getting out," said Officer, who personally earned a nod for his direction and shares an original screenplay nomination with his producer, Ingrid Veninger.
"It's not just a black community, but a community of artists, people who are working on similar projects," he said. "We're all working together. We're trying to make movies. It's hard. To get recognized for doing something personal and sticking true to your gut is the ultimate sort of [acknowledgement]."
Along with Officer and Polytechnique's Villeneuve, the other best director contenders include Bruce McDonald for his small-town Ontario zombie flick Pontypool, Kari Skogland for her gritty and frenetic IRA thriller Fifty Dead Men Walking and Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Madeline Ivalu for the intimate Inuit tale Before Tomorrow.
Selected Genie nominees include:
Lead actress: Madeline Piujuq Ivalu, Before Tomorrow; Karen LeBlanc, Nurse.Fighter.Boy; Carinne Leduc, 3 Saisons; Gabrielle Rose, Mothers & Daughters; Karine Vanasse, Polytechnique.
Lead actor: Jean-Carl Boucher, 1981; Paul Dylan Ivalu, Before Tomorrow; Joshua Jackson, One Week; Clark Johnson, Nurse.Fighter.Boy; Stephen McHattie, Pontypool.
Supporting actor: Patrick Drolet, Father and Guns; John Dunsworth, Trailer Park Boys: Countdown to Liquor Day; Maxim Gaudette, Polytechnique; Rémy Girard, Father and Guns; Scott Speedman, Adoration.
Supporting actress: Liane Balaban, One Week; Marie Brassard, Heat Wave; Martha Burns, Love & Savagery; Isabel Richer, Babine; Sonia Vachon, 5150 Elm's Way.
Original screenplay: Adoration; Father and Guns; Nurse.Fighter.Boy; Polytechnique; Victoria Day.
Adapted screenplay: Before Tomorrow; Fifty Dead Men Walking; Pontypool.
Feature documentary: A Hard Name; Ladies in Blue; Inside Hana's Suitcase; Prom Night in Mississippi; R.I.P: A Remix Manifesto.
Short documentary: The Delian Mode; Passages; Petropolis: Aerial Perspectives on the Alberta Tar Sands.
Live action short: Danse Macabre; Gilles; Princess Margaret Blvd.; Land of Men; Life Begins.
Animated short: Runaway; The Spine; Viva La Rose.
The Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, which organizes the Genie Awards, also announced the recipients of several special awards.
Montreal filmmaker Xavier Dolan, who captivated audiences on the festival circuit this past year with his debut feature I Killed My Mother, is the winner of the annual Claude Jutra Award, which recognizes the outstanding achievement of a first-time filmmaker.
The Academy Achievement Award will be presented to La Cité du Cinema soundstage founder Mel Hoppenheim.
The French-language film De père en flic (Father and Guns) has also been named the winner of the Golden Reel Award, which recognizes the Canadian film that earned the highest domestic box office. Released in the summer of 2009, it grossed nearly $11 million at the Canadian box office and set a new record as the highest domestic grossing French-language film ever released in Quebec and Canada.
The 30th annual Genie Awards gala will take place in Toronto on April 12.
Hall & Oates bassist T-Bone Wolk dies
Tom (T-Bone) Wolk, who played bass guitar for Daryl Hall and John Oates for 29 years, has died. He was 58.
Hall & Oates band manager Jonathan Wolfson says Wolk died Sunday of an apparent heart attack in Pawling, N.Y., where he had been recording a solo album with Daryl Hall.
He has been resident musical director and often co-producer for Hall & Oates, the pop-rock duo who first came to fame in the 1970s and continue to play together.
"His musical sensibility was peerless, any instrument that he touched resonated with a sensitivity and skill level that I have never experienced while playing with any other musician," John Oates said in a statement posted to his website Monday.
"He possessed an encyclopedic knowledge of styles and musical history which he referenced to support all the artists that he played with over the years. He became our band's musical director over time leading by example and by the deference and respect that everyone who played alongside him so rightfully accorded him. He made everyone he played with better. "
Wolk was a talented session musician, who also played acoustic guitar, accordion, mandolin, mandocello, hammered dulcimer and pump organ.
He was a member of the Saturday Night Live house band from 1986 to 1992, appearing on screen playing bass.
Born and raised in Yonkers, N.Y., Wolk studied art at Cooper Union Art School in New York, but spent most of his time playing in bars.
He played with various musicians in the 1970s, including Billy Vera, drummer Chris Parker and funk artist Lonnie Mack.
After winning a spot with Hall & Oates in 1981, he continued working with a range of other artists, including Carly Simon, Elvis Costello, Roseanne Cash, Amanda Marshall, Diane Ziegler, Charlie Musselwhite, Avril Lavigne and Billy Joel.
He owns 50 or 60 instruments, including the Gibson Ripper, which is one of his favourite bass guitars.
Wolfson says Wolk was preparing to appear Monday with Hall & Oates on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon.
