





| by: | Sep 17, 2007 |
B.C.'s nonfiction filmmakers are center stage at VIFF with five world premieres about radically different subjects.
MR. BIG
Mr. Big marks Tiffany Burn's directorial debut with a film that could have been called: Unknown Filmmaker Takes on the RCMP.
After years working in front of the camera as a TV journalist in the U.S., Burns stepped behind the camera to expose the methods of RCMP sting operations used to convict her brother Sebastian of a Washington State triple murder in 2004.
"I realized that this story is bigger than Sebastian," says Burns. "It is about how the RCMP gets confessions that wouldn't be accepted anywhere else in the world." She set out "pitching the story all over the place. People were really interested, but wouldn't touch it, so I quit my job, sold my sports car, and bought a camera."
Burns is excited that her film screens first in Vancouver, where the case made headlines for years, but points out that "the documentary is not to prove my brother's innocence. The courts will deal with that. I want to get the story out, get it seen; make Canada aware of what the police are doing."
Without giving details, Burns hints that a distribution deal is on the near-horizon, and that the festival screening and audience response will help.
SHE'S A BOY I KNEW
Using archival family footage, interviews, phone messages, hand-drawn animation, and $80,000 of her own money ("I'm in debt"), Gwen Haworth began filming her transition from Steven to Gwen for her student thesis film at the University of B.C.'s film school in 2004.
"I didn't search for money so that I could keep complete artistic control," asserts Haworth. "But now that it is finished and my family are alright with it, my hope is to gain success in the festival circuit, and pick up a distribution deal so I can make this in higher quality, get it out there, and encourage people to pick up their cameras, and tell their own stories."
THE PRINCE OF POT: MARC EMERY
Producer Anne Pick and cowriter Digby Cook were developing a story for CBC's The Lens when Marc Emery, Canada's cannabis activist, was arrested in Halifax on a U.S. indictment charging him with selling millions of dollars worth of marijuana seeds to customers throughout the U.S.
"Right away, we knew this was the story to tell instead - it was more relevant," says Pick. CBC went for the pitch, contributing to the $260,000 film.
Pick is adamant that the film isn't about marijuana. "This isn't just a story about growing pot," she says. "Marc is touching on a fundamental issue. It's about the right to our own morals, values and sovereignty. He's sinking millions of dollars into this fight." The rumor mill indicates a later Sundance screening is possible.
CONFESSIONS OF AN INNOCENT MAN
"I've been wanting to make this film ever since I heard about William Sampson's imprisonment," says producer David Paperny of Vancouver-based Paperny Films.


