Toronto International Film Festival 2006

Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Vancouver Plays Itself

The city gets a starring role in Paul Fox’s Everything’s Gone Green

Good-natured slacker Ryan (Paulo Costanzo, left) and money launderer Bryce (JR Bourne) fight over Ming (Steph Song) in the Paul Fox film Everything's Gone Green. (Katie Yu/ThinkFilm) Good-natured slacker Ryan (Paulo Costanzo, left) and money launderer Bryce (JR Bourne) fight over Ming (Steph Song) in the Paul Fox film Everything's Gone Green. (Katie Yu/ThinkFilm)

Lately, nothing in Vancouver is as it seems. Aliens roam the suburbs of North Van (they’re actually extras from an American TV series); a surrealist golf course twists like an Escher drawing (no one really plays there — it’s a money-laundering venture for Japanese yakuza); and a dream girlfriend turns out to be the gold-digging star of a website called slutcam.com.

This is the Vancouver of Ryan (Paulo Constanzo), the slacker conscience of Everything’s Gone Green, the sophomore film by Paul Fox (The Dark Hours). Written by novelist and first-time screenwriter Douglas Coupland (Generation X, Eleanor Rigby), it is full of familiar Coupland obsessions: soulless corporations, loneliness, pop culture and kitschy Canadiana. It’s also a cinematic love letter to a city that often masquerades as somewhere else.

“People [in Vancouver] are always feeling like they’re the backlot of someone else’s movie,” Fox says over the phone from his home in Toronto, as he prepares for the film’s premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. “So it was really important to be specific in the location, to get those wide shots of the water and mountains.

"In film, there’s this pervasive sense of Vancouver either dressed up as a U.S. city, like Seattle or Los Angeles, or in gritty stories of the downtown eastside. I wanted to give a different picture of the city. I really wanted to show how people co-exist with all that nature in their daily lives.”

Fox was brought on board after producer Chris Nanos of Toronto’s Radke Films optioned the screenplay. (The other producer is Salt Spring Island’s True West Films, which was behind the highly praised 2005 feature It’s All Gone Pete Tong.) With its laid-back soundtrack, mid-century modern set design and references to real-estate dealings and grow-ops — plot devices that also show up in Coupland’s latest book, JPod Everything’s Gone Green feels very much like a Coupland novel come to life. A few of the author’s detergent-bottle sculptures even appear in the film.

“Most of the collaboration happened in the early stage,” says Fox, who claims that the film gave him a better understanding of Coupland’s writing. “I wanted to capture Doug’s voice, which is very distinctive in his novels. His characters go off on tangents, or make some kind of social commentary. The trick was to convey that and make it work in a movie, which is a very different medium.”

Ryan contemplates his future in front of a photograph of his crush, Ming. (Katie Yu/ThinkFilm)
Ryan contemplates his future in front of a photograph of his crush, Ming. (Katie Yu/ThinkFilm)

Adrift and almost 30, Ryan is caught in a premature mid-life crisis. In quick succession, he is dumped by his ambitious girlfriend (“You’re not motivated to awake the warrior within,” she tells him) and fired from his corporate drone job for writing bad poetry on company time. Finally, his fantasy of early retirement is dashed when his family’s winning lottery ticket turns out to be a dud. Ryan ends up taking a job at the provincial lottery office, photographing jackpot winners for the company’s magazine. All around him, people are getting rich in dubious ways. Ryan is seduced by the promise of fast money, despite his ongoing quest for authenticity, like capturing the heart of his new crush, Ming (Steph Song), or finding someone content with simply being middle-class (Ryan’s young niece tells him that when she grows up, she wants to be a “trophy wife”).

As a filmmaker, Fox can relate to Ryan’s quest to find meaningful work. “It is a constant struggle in this business,” Fox says. But the film is as much about Vancouver’s growing pains as it is about Ryan’s. In Everything’s Gone Green, the city seems both multicultural and oddly provincial. Like the luxurious, empty condominiums in Ryan’s building (their Chinese owners have decamped for Hong Kong), Coupland and Fox’s Vancouver is a city that hasn’t found its true character. Tweaking the west coast tree-hugger cliché, there’s even a scene involving a dying whale beached near the Burrard Street Bridge. Office workers toting briefcases pour down to the sand to touch the beast and pay tribute. In a city of highrises and freeways, it’s an authentic experience of the wild. The film is full of wry jokes like this.

“I wanted to get the visual details right,” says Fox. “Not only is Doug a visual artist but Ryan is, too, although Ryan doesn’t yet realize what a good photographer he is. So the film needed to live up to that. I spent a lot of time plotting the geography and thinking about where everyone would live, like Ming’s granny. I asked around and people said Strathcona, where there’s a lot of Vancouver Specials [a style of house]. I also wanted to be sure that when Ryan turns off the Burrard Street Bridge to see the whale, that he would be where he should be in the city.”

Fox even hired noted Vancouver photographer Lincoln Clarkes to take Ryan’s pictures of lottery winners. “Usually, you just send out a production assistant or somebody for that kind of thing, but I wanted Lincoln for a consistency of vision. He sees the world with a kind of humanity. That was important for the film.”

Everything’s Gone Green screens at TIFF Sept. 10 and 12.

Rachel Giese writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.



More from this Author

Rachel Giese

Mad refuge
André Alexis's new novel Asylum finds sex and scandal in 1980s Ottawa
Eternal youth
Novelist Meg Rosoff explores her inner child
Talking back
Persepolis takes a brat's-eye view of Iran
Jumping off the page
2007: The year in books
Whoa, baby
Ellen Page and Diablo Cody deliver big laughs in Juno
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

live UN meets to discuss Syria as shelling continues video
The Arab League has called for the UN Security Council to create a joint peacekeeping force for Syria and urged Arab states to sever all diplomatic contact with President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
new Obama unveils $3.8T budget proposal
U.S. President Barack Obama unveiled a $3.8 trillion spending plan on Monday for 2013 that seeks to achieve $4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next decade.
updated Greece cleans up after anti-austerity riots video
Firefighters douse smouldering buildings and cleanup crews sweep rubble from the streets of central Athens after a night of rioting during which lawmakers approved harsh new austerity measures.
more »

Canada »

'Disgusting' court backlog may free hit and run accused
The family of a young mother killed in a hit and run is outraged that the case against the alleged driver is among thousands in B.C. at risk of being thrown out because of a huge court backlog.
Manitoba wants ER death lawsuit thrown out video
The Manitoba government is making a court bid Monday to quash a lawsuit by the family of Brian Sinclair, a homeless man who died after waiting 34 hours in a hospital emergency room in 2008.
new Accused in Quebec triple murder set for court
A 35-year-old man accused of killing his mother and two nieces in Saint-Romain, Que., is set to make his first court appearance.
more »

Politics »

new Duceppe to explain Bloc Québécois expenses
Former Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe is back on Parliament Hill on Monday to defend himself against allegations he misused public funds.
analysis Canada shows two faces of 'disappointment' over Syria
Two permanent security council members stand in the way of UN action on Syria: Russia and China. But while Canada went public with its diplomatic protest against Moscow, Stephen Harper kept any messages delivered to Beijing private.
Multicultural media ask governments for training funds
Canada's increasingly influential ethnic-press industry will seek a financial boost from the upper levels of government to better its business and journalistic know-how.
more »

Health »

Chronic fatigue may be reversed with exercise
Taking it easy is not the best treatment for chronic fatigue syndrome, rather exercise and behaviour therapy are, a large study finds.
AT&T buys T-Mobile USA for $39B US
AT&T Inc. said Sunday it will buy T-Mobile USA from Deutsche Telekom AG in a cash-and-stock deal valued at $39 billion US, becoming the largest cellphone company in the U.S.
Milky Way home to 50 billion planets: NASA
Scientists have compiled the first cosmic census of planets in our galaxy: at least 50 billion planets are estimated to call the Milky Way home.
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Adele wins best album, best record Grammys audio
Adele capped off a "life-changing" year by winning six Grammys Sunday night, including record of the year and album of the year for 21
Whitney Houston death shows no signs of trauma video
Whitney Houston's life of glorious song and unnerving self-destruction apparently ended on Grammy weekend, but it could be weeks before investigators know exactly why she died.
Britain's BAFTAs honours The Artist
Silent movie The Artist dominated the British Academy Film awards, the U.K. equivalent of the Oscars, winning seven awards, including best picture.
more »

Technology & Science »

FBI seeks social media data mining tool audio
The U.S. government is seeking software that can mine social media to predict everything from future terrorist attacks to foreign uprisings, according to requests posted online by federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Chinese iPhone, iPad factories audited
Chinese factories where Apple devices are assembled are undergoing voluntary audits of their working conditions by an independent workers' rights watchdog that the company recently joined.
video Teen's Facebook post prompts dad to shoot computer
A North Carolina father responded to his daughter's disrespectful Facebook post by shooting her laptop and putting the video on Youtube.
more »

Money »

Housing market to stay stable, says CMHC
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. is predicting the Canadian housing market will remain fairly stable this year and next, with little change from 2011 in prices, new home construction and sales of existing homes.
Chinese iPhone, iPad factories audited
Chinese factories where Apple devices are assembled are undergoing voluntary audits of their working conditions by an independent workers' rights watchdog that the company recently joined.
new Obama unveils $3.8T budget proposal
U.S. President Barack Obama unveiled a $3.8 trillion spending plan on Monday for 2013 that seeks to achieve $4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next decade.
more »

Consumer Life »

Honda recalls Fit subcompacts
Honda Canada says it will recall 14,640 of its 2009 and 2010 Fit subcompact cars to replace lost motion springs.
U.S. travel fee proposal criticized by Harper
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says he doesn't think much of a new border tax that's being proposed by the United States, calling it a cash grab designed to help a budget crisis.
Bell class action suit approved by Que. court
A Quebec Superior Court judge has authorized a class action lawsuit to go ahead against Bell Mobility.
more »

Sports »

Scores: NHL NBA

preview Canucks wary of resurgent Coyotes
The Vancouver Canucks play host Monday night at the Rogers Arena to the resurgent Phoenix Coyotes, who are currently riding a season-high, five-game winning streak.
Oilers, Sutton agree to 1-year contract extension
The Edmonton Oilers and defenceman Andy Sutton have agreed to terms on a one-year contract extension, the team announced Monday.
Virtue, Moir outduel Davis, White to win Four Continents video
For the first time in nearly two years, Canada's Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir beat the American team of Meryl Davis and Charlie White in ice dancing. The reigning Olympic champions won gold at the Four Continents Championships on Sunday in Colorado after outduelling Davis and White in the free skate.
more »

Diversions »

[an error occurred while processing this directive]
more »