Oppositions: Architecture On Film: Offering insights into the role of design in the built environment.
On September 5, 1962, Claude Jutra, Michel Brault, Don Owen and Arthur Lipsett roamed the streets of St-Henri with other emerging National Film Board filmmakers, cinematically capturing a day in the life of a working-class Montreal neighbourhood. Their innovative approach, now known as direct cinema, made their short film synonymous with the form. Nearly 50 years later, a new generation of 12 established and emerging Quebecois filmmakers takes to those same streets with cameras in hand. A colourful collection of characters illuminate the screen, resulting in an inspired and truly stunning portrait of a community that has undergone dramatic change yet retains its roots. With an original score by Polaris Prize-winning musician Patrick Watson, this dawn-'til-dusk collage provides a rare opportunity to see a community transform in front of one's eyes. Alex Rogalski, Hot Docs
Avi Friedman (Ph.D.
Professor of Architecture; Director, Affordable Homes Research Group; McGill University School of Architecture) will participate in post-screening Q&A.
Tickets: $11 per film ($8 for Bloor Members)
Double Bill with My Brooklyn: $15 ($12 for Bloor members) - BUY DOUBLE BILL
Presented with the Toronto Society of Architects.