
TIFF has reached its mid-point, and while I’ve been doing a few things here and there I’ve been pleasantly out of the loop on most of the happenings. It’s been relaxing!
But if you were worried, I still got my annual Festival moment of surrealism: Yesterday afternoon while dismounting from a bike in front of the Royal York hotel, I nearly kicked Bob Odenkirk in the leg. There was no hostility to it; he was doing his best to avoid a crowd of lookie-loos and walked right into the docking station. And before you ask: Yes, I know better than to attack Bob Odenkirk on the street. I’ve seen Nobody.
Speaking of surrealism and unexpected violence, let me introduce you to Todd Rohal, the guest on today’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie. He’s the guy who made the off-kilter indies The Guatemalan Handshake and The Catechism Cataclysm — the latter of which was tackled by Mel Eslyn on her SEMcast a couple of years back — and tomorrow he premieres his latest venture, the inglorious comedy Fuck My Son!, in TIFF’s Midnight Madness. (Tickets for that show, and Thursday’s repeat screening in the Scotiabank IMAX room, should still be available at the links here.)
Todd wanted to talk about the cinema of George Kuchar, using his 1966 short film Hold Me While I’m Naked as the entry point into the underground filmmaker’s lurid, obsessive universe of underdogs and freaks — perhaps best expressed in the 160-minute hardcore porn epic Thundercrack!, which also comes up in the conversation. It’s a lively and digressive episode, which is part of the fun; I’m honestly not sure how we swerved into an appreciation of the artistic legacy of “Weird Al” Yankovic, but there you go. I cast a wide net and it’s always fun to see what it pulls in.
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 while you have a miserable, lonely shower, because that’s all you believe you deserve.


But you deserve so much more! Todd’s episode isn’t the only one I released since last Tuesday; I also dropped a special Friday show with Redlights and Aberdeen director Eva Thomas, whose new feature Nika and Madison premiered at TIFF over the weekend, talking at length about her love of Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight.
I love it too, and our conversation was one of the most earnest and moving I’ve had with anybody all year. If you’ve already subscribed to the podcast it should be in your queue already, but browser listeners can stream it right here.
And that brings us to Shiny Things, where last week I wrote about Via Vision’s Impact edition of Hud and Canadian International Pictures’ exceptional restoration-cum-resurrection of David Secter’s groundbreaking queer drama Winter Kept Us Warm, and also had fun recounting my experience of the mobile Criterion Closet, which was the biggest draw on Festival Street last weekend. Subscribers already know which titles I picked; if you’re curious, there’s a really easy way to find out.

It’s TIFF time! And while this is the first festival in 36 years that I won’t be either covering or working for the festival, I’ve got a few things going on around it — so if you see me down around the Lightbox, say hi!
This week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie has been awaiting release for a while now — since early March, in fact, which feels like a lifetime ago for all sorts of reasons.
On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I welcome Liz Cairns, award-winning production designer of Never Steady, Never Still and The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open and now the writer-director of the unsettling new drama Inedia, which is now available on digital and on demand in Canada — just as star Amy Forsyth is on screens in Shook, which is also nice. Also, if you’ve been wondering what Susanne Wuest has been up to since Goodnight Mommy … well, you’ll see.
As if the world wasn’t already in the toilet, we’re in the middle of an absolutely epic internet outage over here. Our fiber feed went down on Sunday morning and won’t likely be restored until early tomorrow, so I’m using my phone as a hotspot and doing everything through mobile data. It turns out hotpost technology has gotten really good since the last time I tried to use it, and I’ve been able to post an edition of Shiny Things and this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie on schedule. So that’s nice.
One of my favorite discoveries at TIFF last year was 
It’s back-to-back Fantasia episodes on Someone Else’s Movie, as this week I welcome Ava Maria Safai, who’s bringing her first feature Foreigner to Montreal for its world premiere 
On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by writing and directing partners Ramsey Fendall and Deanna Milligan, whose first feature Lucid had its world premiere last night at the Fantasia film festival, and will be turning up at fests around the world over the next few months.
On this week’s episode of Someone Else’s Movie, I’m joined by Winnipeg filmmaker and artist Noam Gonick, whose latest documentary Pride: Queer Acts of Love and Resistance is now streaming free across Canada at the 
Last September, one of the highlights of my stint at TIFF was landing the world premiere of RT Thorne‘s 40 Acres, and watching his powerhouse dystopian allegory bring the house down for two straight nights. Today, with the movie in theaters across North America, I finally get RT onto Someone Else’s Movie — something I’ve been trying to do for years. He’s really busy, as you can imagine.