Martiniboys
Martiniboys Toronto Toronto Restaurants, Toronto Dining Guide Toronto Clubs and Nightlife Toronto Citystock Toronto Hotels Toronto Hot Tickets Toronto Galleries Toronto Theatre Toronto Movies Toronto Products
MBO Toronto :: Articles
  • Movie Review: Weirdsville

    Email This Page Printable Version of this Article Submit a Review Add to my Favourites RSS Syndication       Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Blog to Reddit Add this Blog to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google
    By Scott Tavener in Attractions
    Movie Review: Weirdsville
    Page 1 of 3
    A genre mishmash of food-court proportions, Allan Moyle’s latest cinematic venture, the Willem Wennekers-penned Weirdsville, mixes a heroin film, Satanist romp, stoner-buddy journey, and caper flick, thus creating a Frankenstein-style amalgam replete with overt flaws and surprising virtues. Attempting to circumvent genre trappings by creating a tapestry of familiar types, it manages to survive and, occasionally, thrive on its disparateness. However, when it fails, it does so blatantly and cloyingly.

    Moyle’s most successful films – both critically and economically - have focused on adolescent dissidence and maturation (Pump Up the Volume, Empire Records, and New Waterford Girl); Weirdsville fits into that section of his canon as an addendum; it’s an exploration of prolonged listlessness as it collides with the conclusion of youth. Of course, as with most films that prominently feature born-again Satanists battling an army of little people (is that a genre?), it’s thankfully neither overwrought nor particularly philosophical.

    That said, two motifs dominate Weirdsville’s symbolic landscape. First, a recurring drugged-fuelled hallucination finds a protagonist skating barefoot (i.e. floating) along rural roads. It is fitting in both its beauty and implausibility. Secondly, a doomed mouse struggles to claw out of a toilet, drowns (sorry, but it happens early on), and reappears in a speaking roll. Stripping away dense layering of genre set-pieces ironically leads to a film about the inescapability of reality and the listless’s capacity for redemption. Also, Matt Frewer gets a giant icicle lodged in his brain.

    Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | Next »
    If you enjoyed this article, you should also check out
    Festival Miami 2007 [Full Story]
    Sleepless Night Miami :: Sat. Nov. 3 [Full Story]
    Scotiabank Nuit Blanche 2007 [Full Story]
    Into the Wild [Full Story]
    TIFF's Oscar Buzz [Full Story]
    The Calgary International Film Festival: Best Bets [Full Story]

    Back to Martiniboys Articles

    Back to Articles

    Toronto Hotels, Toronto Restaurants, Toronto Clubs, Toronto Shopping, Toronto Parties, Toronto Galleries, Toronto Theatre, Toronto Club News