It’s the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation in Canada, and since writer-director Jules Koostachin‘s new film Angela’s Shadow is now streaming across the country on Hollywood Suite, it felt like a great time to have her on an episode of Someone Else’s Movie.
Jules wanted to talk about Flashdance, the 1983 blockbuster credited with bringing the aesthetics of MTV to American movies, though it’s equally possible Adrian Lyne, Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer gave their film a manic style that influenced every music video that followed its release. However it worked, Flashdance feels like the first movie of what we’d come to know as ’80s commercial cinema — though when I revisited it a couple of years ago I was pleasantly surprised to find it had a lot more character and texture than I remembered. And Jennifer Beals is wonderful, of course. So that gave us a lot to talk about.
Join us! Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, YouTube Podcasts or your podcatcher of choice, or just download the episode directly from the web and listen to it as you work your welder and think about how you’ll stage your next big dance number.
And then you should check out the newest edition of Shiny Things, which is going up later this afternoon and features a look at Canadian International Pictures’ excellent new Blu-ray of Cold Journey, Martin Defalco’s 1975 dramatization of the tragic story of Chanie Wenjack, which exposed the failures of the residential school system to a generation of Canadians. And if you’re wondering how that generation responded, I’ll remind you most Canadians were shocked by Chanie’s story all over again when Gord Downie and Jeff Lemire retold it in 2018 in their collaboration Secret Path, so … yeah. The work never ends.
I also wrote about Superman, M3GAN 2.0 and Sorry, Baby, and the 4K restorations of The Girl Who Leapt Through TIme and Tim Burton’s Corpse Bride. It’s good stuff! You should read it all! And you have, because you’ve got a subscription, right?
C’mon, subscribe. I write good!