Home Blog Page 1106

MFA Students show off their final projects at the Audain Gallery

0

Enjoy an evening of art, cheese, wine, and mingling with our MFA Graduate students during their opening reception of Lossless on September 10 in the Audain Gallery at the Woodward’s campus!

Lossless is an exhibition featuring final projects by the 2014 MFA graduating candidates at SFU’s School for the Contemporary Arts; the featured candidates are Deborah Edmeades, Jeffrey Langille, Avery Nabata, Nathaniel Wong, and Luciana D’Anunciacao. Video, sculpture, performance, and installation projects by this year’s graduates share a number of related themes, while formulating distinct frameworks for individual investigation.

This exhibition is truly a culmination of the candidates’ studies. After investing long hours of research and late evenings assembling the projects, the exhibition showcases their individual artistic expressions and their personal perceptions on the concept of Lossless.

The word “lossless” is based on the term “lossless compression.” “It is the idea that nothing is lost from an idea,” says Wong. For example, it is the act of articulating a perception of the world, where nothing is lost in the articulation, and the perception is identical to what was perceived.

With his work, “On the Validity of Illusion,” Edmeades explores the question of illusion through video, within which there are elements of object making, works on paper, performance, and elements of Walter Benjamin’s “theory of experience” and reverse method acting technique.

“How is it that there is always something new?” Lagille’s moving image landscape work, draws witness to a landscape that is not a surface — not topography — but a vital process.

With “Growth, Endlessness, Blocks,” Nabata observes buildings, as “precarious structures left on the edge of regrowth or destruction.” They are “blocks of time and type; structures on the edge of change;” simultaneously ending and beginning.

Within “Thus Spoke Death and Transfiguration,” Wong’s videos are embedded into sculptures, there is music and moving images, and within something quite humourous there is also something quite serious. “Of course, something is lost, but maybe things aren’t just lost, but other things are gained that we didn’t know,” Wong says of the idea of Lossless.

Lastly, D’Anunciacao explores the notion of displacement within the dual nature of installation and performance. “When will my hands become roots?” is in between a gallery piece and a performance piece. The room is left in the same configuration; as it shifts between one state and the other, the space becomes a place that belongs to neither one nor the other.

Lossless runs from September 4 to 27, with works from Edmaedes, Lagilles,Nabata, and Wong presented in the Audain Gallery, and D’Anunciacao’s work presented in Studio T. D’Anunciacao’s installation includes an evening performance from September 11 to 13. For more information visit: sfu.ca/galleries.html.

Album review: The New Pornographers – Brill Bruisers

0

Brill Bruisers, The New Pornographers’ sixth studio album and first in four years, is simultaneously an impressive return to form and a progression of the band’s sound. The album stands among the Vancouver collective’s best earlier works Twin Cinema and The Electric Version, as focused, intelligently written pop music.

Yet, rather than just existing as a retread of these past glories, Brill Bruisers manages to expand the band’s sound in unpredictable new directions. Chiefly, there is a newfound focus on synth textures that serves to enhance and distinguish their already impressive songwriting.

This progression seems like a necessary step for the band, after stalling slightly with their relatively mellow previous record Together. Brill Bruisers is all energy, it’s a fighter of an album that proves that the band has more than a little life in it.

The title track opens the proceedings, immediately pulling the listener in with its deceptively simple “ba-ba-ba” refrain and propulsive beat. It bores its way into your head like the best pop songs do and soon, without your knowledge or consent, you’ll find yourself humming along.

While the title track could easily fit on one of the band’s earlier, more traditional rock releases, much of the rest of the album serves to move the band forward into a more synth indebted direction. That is not to say that electronic instrumentation overwhelms the album, rather the tasteful synths of “Champions of Red Wine” or “Backstairs” subtly reinforce the celebratory mood of the songs.

Instead of feeling like a forced attempt to keep up with the times or a drastic makeover, this electronic progression of the band feels quite organic. The New Pornographers have existed as a group for fifteen years and are all accomplished musicians in their own right, so this comes as no surprise.

Although they work as a cohesive unit throughout the album, the eight member band’s greatest strength has always been the diversity of their sound. The New Pornographers’s three lead vocalists, alt country legend Neko Case, AC Newman, and Dan Bejar, all have distinct voices and often a lyrical focus. While Newman is the primary songwriter and sings lead most often, Case’s voice serves as his powerful, melancholy foil while Bejar’s spoken-word style musings further diversify the album.

Somehow The New Pornographers have always made this eclectic mix work. While they have slipped into a formula in the past, Brill Bruisers succeeds in furthering their sound while being firmly grounded in their sophisticated pop songwriting.

While the album begins with the title track’s callback to the band’s power-pop roots, the finale of “You Tell Me Where” exists as something entirely new. Newman and Case trade lines over a minimal synth and bass line that eventually explodes into a cathartic, celebratory climax. It’s a perfect closer that couldn’t have existed on any of their previous records, a reminder that even after 15 years the New Pornographers are nowhere near complacency.

Cloudy, with a chance of face

0

Since his debut at Music Waste in 2011, Cloudface (aka David Reynolds) has become a figure of local music folklore. With only a handful of releases under the moniker and Vancouver shows a rarity these days, Cloudface’s set at the upcoming New Forms Festival is the perfect chance to remind people why the electronic producer is a Vancouver mainstay.

Though Cloudface is only a couple of years old, Reynolds has been making and experimenting with electronic music for nearly two decades. Originally under the name Eagleroad, Reynolds saw the name change as a chance for a clean slate.

“I was just feeling like it was time to change. I kind of intended to keep both [music projects] going but then never really did [. . .] I just wanted to have a fresh start. I’d been playing shows around town as Eagleroad for a couple years at that point and I wasn’t very proactive with it. Whereas I wanted to start something new and actually be more dedicated towards it.”

For one main difference between Eagleroad and Cloudface, look no further than their discographies. While Reynolds never officially released anything under Eagleroad, Cloudface has enjoyed multiple releases, including one earlier this year. Untitled, a 12-inch from UK sub-label Black Opal, came out in June and was Cloudface’s longest release — a project in the making since 2012.

The resulting seven tracks on Untitled are a fluid groove-train, with Reynolds seamlessly combining ambient sounds with infectious beats keeping time. A perfect soundtrack for any scenario, whether you’re at an after-hours party or in your room trying to finish a paper.

While previous years have found the festivities taking place across the city, 2014 finds all of New Forms Festival taking place under one roof — or should I say dome? “It’s definitely in line with the whole aesthetic of electronic music,” says Reynolds, about the decision to hold this year’s New Forms inside of Science World. “It’s this big geodesic dome, which looks so rad. It’s an icon of the Vancouver skyline, but it also looks super techno, like a spaceship. I’m excited to see how it turns out.”

Being able to read and react accordingly to a crowd is something Reynolds finds very important. With increased recognition and larger venues, Reynolds has found himself on stages almost completely removed from the crowd. One recent example had him 30 feet away from the closest person, something that doesn’t match well with Cloudface’s intimate beats.

“For the kind of music I make, it relies heavily on the connection with the crowd and just getting really deep into whatever vibe of the night is appropriate. You can’t do that if you’re in the middle of a big stage.”

If the music doesn’t speak for itself, consider this: Reynolds is playing his third New Forms Festival in four years — an uncommon feat considering the festival’s tendency to avoid repetition.

“As far as Vancouver music festivals go, [New Forms] is my favourite. They do such a good job and it’s just a good weekend — being a part of it is even more fun than just attending.”

Cloudface performs on September 19 at Science World as part of this year’s New Forms Festival which runs September 18 to 21.

The Terrors of terrorism

0

What do you think when you hear the word jihad? Is it a brown-skinned, long-bearded man screaming “allahu akbar” with a bomb strapped to his chest, out to kill the infidels? There is also another jihad: the struggle that burns inside Little Terrors’ young protagonist Sahmi as he wrestles to connect Islam’s teachings with the radical actions of the terrorist group that has drafted him. The genius of Canada’s Maninder Chana in his directorial debut brings these two jihads together.

Little Terrors attempts to bridge Western and Middle Eastern cultures with a message that is both an outcry to stop generalizing, and a sermon preaching against the reasoning of evil men who twist religion to brainwash and manipulate vulnerable, unstable minds. There are compassionate Muslims and radical ones, kind Americans and those who are rudely ignorant. These characters are judged as respectable or deplorable based on their actions, not their religions.

To demonstrate that the radical jihadist groups have manipulated the Koran, the director contrasts the terrorists’ actions with epigraphs quoting Mohamed between each episode of the movie. It’s an emotionally convincing approach, but one that doesn’t resonate intellectually — one must wonder if he is also taking these excerpts out of context, or if they conflict with other passages in the Koran.

Luckily Chana isn’t making a documentary on the subject; his ambitions lay elsewhere — to tell the plausible and raw story of a boy chosen by Islamic fundamentalists to join a terrorist cell with plans to bomb an American embassy in Delhi. He is taken to a training camp where he is brainwashed and trained to fight a holy war against a people that sadistically kill and control their brothers in Palestine and Iraq. These half-truths and one-sided stories manipulate the vulnerable boy.

As Sahmi’s training progresses you see his worldview shift from natural compassion to deep hatred and a closing of the mind to everyone around him. When an American journalist enters the story he ignites an inner jihad in Sahmi, for he brings a new perspective.

This man isn’t the evil monster that the leaders of the terrorist group have made him out to be. The journalist has done nothing deserving of torture, except to be American and not Muslim. In a touching and poignant scene, the broken and bruised journalist pleads with Sahmi to recognize the evils of what they have done to him by explaining the allegorical elements in Star Wars. In this elucidating scene, the journalist treats the boy like a boy in contrast to the jihadists who brutally dehumanized the boy.

What a genuinely moving and affecting movie this is! If it weren’t all so relevant, so true, so convincingly acted, so beautifully realized from a production standpoint, so restrained in its depiction of brutality, so meticulous in the developments of Sahmi as a character, and in the end so resolute and haunting in the bitter simplicity and profundity of the concluding sacrifice, then we could dismiss it as some twisted form of manipulation where brutal acts are shown for the sake of showing brutal acts. Instead there is a piercing authenticity that breaks our hearts and infuriates our consciences.

Little Terrors isn’t based on a true story, but it contains more truth than most fact based films out there.

Life After Beth: a zom-rom-com that lacks depth

0

Life After Beth`s overblown tone is as forced and unbearable as trying to urinate kidney stones. The movie’s central pitfall is analogical to an uncoordinated idiot who attempts to spin plates on sticks while riding a unicycle, and juggling chainsaws.

This is an aggravating experience because the film attempts to juggle far too many things at once while not doing any of them well: a romantic comedy with an uninteresting relationship, a dark drama that studies a cipher, and a zombie movie that brings nothing original to the well-explored lore. It makes the mistake of having too many dark moments coincide with unfunny running gags.

None of the one-dimensional characters are interesting and the storytelling merely plods along to the predictable and inevitable conclusion. Yet all of the performances are played at an exasperatingly exaggerated tone.

Jeff Baena’s directorial debut follows Zach Orfman (Dane Dehaan in his typecast role of a disturbed teenager) as he grieves the tragic death of his girlfriend, Beth Slocum. When Beth miraculously returns in an odd alternate form where her appearance is intact while gaps exist in her short term memory, Zach is overjoyed but slowly realizes that this is not the girl with whom he fell in love.

The characters are all tedious caricatures designed to brew as many laughs as possible; yet, these poorly conceived personae are the same ones for whom we are to empathize. Caricatures work for comedy not tragedy: or in this case, neither.

Beth’s parents are overbearing and like to yell at the same time, so we can`t understand what they are saying; Zach’s brother is a security guard who has a power complex; and Beth is a nymphomaniacal zombie chasing Zach.

Zach is meant to ground the film and offer it heart as he learns to let go and not live in the lie that is his new relationship with zombie Beth; however, this depth is neglected in order to exploit the ensemble of the surrounding caricatures.

If you don`t leave decapitated by the chainsaws, finally passing the kidney stone will kill you.

Life After Beth’s run at the Rio theatre from September 5 to 8 coincides with the 2014 Vancouver Zombie Walk on September 6. For more information, visit riotheatre.ca.

 

Five films to help you find your silver lining

2

As we all know, the right kind of movie can give us feelings of hope that rekindle the strength to reach our highest potential in life; it can encourage us to create, inspire, and dream about what we are able to do with the power we possess as human beings.

The following films are among many masterpieces that push us toward a positive outlook, helping us to reach a state of optimism and to find our own silver lining.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower

A high school student named Charlie experiences the highs and lows of his young life as he starts to discover friendships he’s never known and changes in life that he could never have anticipated. Even though Charlie is going through these new challenges, the support he receives from his new-found friends encourages him to look to the future with the highest positive mentality and find hope.

Begin Again

An aspiring singer named Gretta goes through her own journey after a producer named Dan makes it a point to help her create an album that will be accepted, not only by Dan’s music company, but also by the general public. Like any other artist, Gretta experiences personal difficulty (such as her strained relationship with her ex-boyfriend), but she is able to move past this, see the break in the clouds, and reach success with Dan’s support.

Warm Bodies

A zombie simply named R falls for a young woman named Julie who is still living as a human being. As a zombie, R lives a life that has no direction; in meeting Julie, he discovers a sense of humanity that is still left inside him, allowing him to strive for a more positive sense of purpose and see the light at the end of the tunnel.

(500) Days of Summer

An aspiring architect named Tom is in a relationship with a girl named Summer which spans over 500 days and is presented over the course of the film. Like in many movies centering on a relationship, the two eventually part ways. Despite this circumstance, I strongly regard this movie as one that can lead us to find the bright side in our lives, as Tom is eventually able to find the strength and positive mentality to move forward in his life.

Silver Linings Playbook

A man named Pat struggles with his own mental health as he attempts to live the rest of his life in a more positive light. This film carries its own significance, not only in capturing the common theme of these five films so directly, but also due to how Pat’s mental struggle influences his encouragement to view the aspects of his life with a positive perception rather than a negative one.

 

Writer gets article published in The Peak

0

Max Hill, a communications student currently studying at Simon Fraser University, recently had this very article published in the humour section of The Peak, the school’s student newspaper. Hundreds of students have since read this article, and reception has been uniformly positive.

“I can’t even express how grateful I am,” Hill told The Peak. “I mean, I’ve thought about writing for the humour section forever, but I just never had the confidence [. . .] I’m glad I did. I’m on top of the world right now.” Hill thanked his mother for always encouraging him, as well as the many students who help to make The Peak one of Canada’s student newspapers.

According to Hill, he has been considering ideas for his first humour article for several semesters, but none of those panned out. “I had an idea for a story where SFU became infested by rabid grizzly bears, but — I mean, it’s been done before, right?” Hill also noted he wanted to write a story about a writer for The Peak interviewing himself, but dismissed this idea as “too meta.”

Recently hired humour editor Jacey Gibb similarly expressed elation at Hill’s first contribution to the paper’s section. “It’s just a really strong article,” Gibb told The Peak. “I mean, I get a lot of submissions for this section, so I have to be picky when I’m choosing what to put in the paper. But Max’s article just blew me away.” Gibb declined to comment on whether this article would be Hill’s last, but noted, “I sure hope not — I don’t want to have to write the whole section myself!”

After surveying a group of Peak readers across SFU’s Burnaby campus, the consensus seems to be that Hill’s piece was definitely “an article” and “published in this week’s issue.” Some students were even seen giggling politely while reading this piece, and others still were heard remarking to themselves that the central idea was “clever.”

Hill seemed unsurprised by these reactions. “I’m a pretty clever person,” he said. “I mean, that’s what my mom always says.” When contacted by The Peak, Hill’s mother declined to comment.

So, what’s next for Hill? When asked, he seemed hesitant to submit more articles like this one to the humour section. “I’ve been thinking about doing a follow-up story, but I’m not sure what it would be,” he said. “I mean, I don’t want to overdo the joke, right? That would just be annoying.”

For those looking to read this article, you already have.

Burger King seizes Tim Hortons through Red Wedding-style acquisition

0
At the now infamous Bread Wedding, the cups runneth over with Double Doubles.

On August 26, in a move that no one could have possibly predicted — except maybe economists who have already read the books — the House of American fast-food giant Burger King announced their acquisition of Tim Hortons through a bloodied massacre.

The acquisition, which is being referred to as the Bread Wedding, reportedly cost $11.5 billion and will secure the company as the third-largest quick-service restaurant chain in all of Westeros.

“We’re very excited to announce the almost complete eradication of Tim Hortons, who I think we can all agree had it coming,” a spokesperson for Burger King told the press after the deed had been done. 

The merger thus far has garnered mixed responses, with some economists praising it for being a satisfying twist that brings Tim Hortons’ story to an ironic close; others are responding more critically, disappointed because Tim Hortons was one of their favourite fast-food restaurants.

Speculation is already running rampant on why Burger King, a subsidiary of investment firm 3G Capital, would maim and execute Tim Hortons’ employees and loved ones in cold blood instead of  following more traditional corporate merger protocol. Rumours that Burger King massacred the company to enjoy tax breaks in Canada have largely taken over nerd chatrooms across the internet.

“This arrangement isn’t about seeking out tax exemptions in a Canadian market,” said Burger King CEO Daniel Schwartz, as he wiped the blood from his trusty broadsword. “The merger is an opportunity for both companies to build off of each other’s target consumer bases and grow together.”

Despite the somewhat radical acquisition methods, Schwartz dispelled concerns that this will impact the quality of Tim Hortons products Canadians have grown to love.

“Anyone worried about how the merger will affect the watered-down, cream-overdosed coffee they’re so fond of doesn’t have anything to worry about. As long as they swear allegiance to the House of Burger King, there probably won’t be anymore bloodshed in this feud. Maybe.”

Nuclear missile codes leaked in botched nude celebrity photo hack attempt

0

Inspired by last week’s infamous leaked photos of dozens of Hollywood’s top actresses, a new hack attempt of Google Drive almost caused further damage; fortunately, all that was compromised were the US’ top-secret nuclear launch codes.

The unknown Google Drive hacker initially reported on Saturday that he would be selling naked pictures of all sorts of big-time celebrities — from the likes of Angelina Jolie to Emma Watson — a ploy which ultimately failed, thanks to speedy action from the US Department of Defense (DoD).

“We sprang into action as soon as we heard about a potential hacking,” explained Dan Hendricks, a spokesperson for the DoD. “We didn’t manage to protect everything they were going after, including some government documents — a couple military secrets, launch codes, or whatever — but thankfully we stopped the world from getting a look at any more naked celebrities.”

While the Department of Defense say they understand the situation’s gravity, they believe a much bigger tragedy was avoided.

“We just couldn’t sit by and let our perfect image of Hermione be ruined like that,” Hendricks told The Peak. “They already got J-Law, those hacker bastards. Enough was enough.”

As for the nuclear launch codes, which are now available for anyone to download on popular torrent website The Pirate Bay, Hendricks says he’s not too concerned. “That part of the story has really just fallen by the wayside,” he explained nonchalantly. “Most people don’t read past the part that says there are no new naked pictures.

“You’d think somebody would’ve asked why the government put these codes in a Google document in the first place, but no one has,” Hendricks continued. “In fact, every person I’ve heard ask about the codes just wants to know if it spells ‘BOOBS’ upside-down.”

Hendricks did say that the entire affair has really opened his eyes about online privacy and the risks of putting information online: “It’s scary how easily private documents can get into the wrong hands, and we’re going to work our hardest to make sure everyone is protected. So, whether it’s secret military codes that put the lives of all Americans in jeopardy or naked pictures of yourself, we’re going to make sure they’re only seen by those who really need to: you and the government.”

Male teen confused by girl who actually came over to just watch a movie

1
An action-less blockbuster

A Coquitlam teen has been left frustrated and confused after his crush agreed to watch a movie at his place, then proceeded to not make out with him.

“It doesn’t make any sense,” Derek Tanner told The Peak, immediately following the occurrence, which took place last Friday night. “I asked if she wanted to come over and watch The Amazing Spider-Man 2 and she said ‘yes.’ I don’t know how I could have made my intentions any clearer.”

The accused, Brandy Cram, reportedly came over at the time they agreed upon and brought microwave popcorn, which Tanner took as a sign that she was interested in going to second base with him. The teens then proceeded to watch all 142 minutes of the superhero action-blockbuster, completely uninterrupted by any sort of sexual advance from Cram.

“I even suggested we go to the downstairs TV room so we could be away from the rest of my family,” Tanner explained. Though Cram had never expressed any romantic interest in him prior to the hangout, Tanner claims he can’t think of any other reason why she would have agreed to come over and enjoy friendly conversation.

“Do I think she just wanted to watch The Amazing Spider-Man 2? Of course not. No one wants to watch The Amazing Spider-Man 2.”

This isn’t the first time that Cram, who’s in the same Grade 11 English class as Tanner, has been reported to hang out with guys in a platonic setting and not instigate coitus. Last September, Cram walked home with a senior from her school and laughed at some of his jokes but then continued to not invite him in afterwards for some quick intercourse. A similar incident also occurred just last month when classmate Brody Steeves invited her to the beach, where they made sand castles, swam in the water, and “didn’t even hook up once.”

At press time, Cram had not confirmed the exact details of either occurrence, but did refer to the two victims of the previous incidents as “a really funny guy” and “super nice,” respectively.

While the investigation in to Tanner’s claims is ongoing, police are urging males of all ages to not get hung up on whether or not a girl is sexually interested in them and are recommending they just enjoy platonic friendship for the rewarding experience it can be.