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Riceboy Sleeps and Brother are Canada's buzziest new movies. Will it mean anything at the box office?
CBC
Anthony Shim is riding high. The Vancouver-based actor turned-director is sitting on an awards-goldmine: in the year since his film Riceboy Sleeps hit the circuit, it has already won top prize at the Toronto International Film Festival, the Windsor International Film Festival, the Directors Guild of Canada's Discovery award and the Toronto Film Critics Association's $100,000 award — not to mention a few others.
He's not alone. As his movie hit theatres on Friday, so too did Clement Virgo's Brother — a retelling of David Chariandy's Scarborough-set novel. It's currently the leading nominee at this year's Canadian Screen Awards. And after a limited release last week, Chandler Levack's I Like Movies brought the story of a narcissistic Burlington teenager's Hollywood aspirations to more audiences across Canada on Friday as well.
With so much to celebrate, it may be a bit strange to hear how all three directors speak about both the future of their films and this country's film industry. Because, even as the cachet of Canadian productions continues to improve, a uniquely unrewarding system raises the question: What does success here even mean?
"Tár and The Fablemans — these by some of the great filmmakers of the world, the biggest movie stars of the world — are struggling in the box office," Shim told CBC News. "So I try and set my expectations accordingly to the realities of the current day."
The long-term survival of movies and the theatrical experience became an international question even before pandemic lockdowns. But the problem is especially prominent in Canada, where even with a wheelbarrow of festival prizes or an awards-show sweep, the glass ceiling for the most lauded of Canadian movies is still, to filmmakers, frighteningly low.
"It is a really dire time. You look at the box office of any Canadian movie and they're all huge flops, right?" I Like Movies director Chandler Levack told CBC. "A lot of these titles make $12,000 … it just doesn't seem to have that appetite, [that] staying power."
That Canada continues to struggle with a viable film industry might be surprising given that it's one of the busiest film locations on Earth, and the individual success of so many Canadians.
Just looking at the recent Academy Awards ceremony, Canadians seem to dominate film, from Brendan Fraser's best actor win for The Whale, to Sarah Polley's best original screenplay trophy for Women Talking. There was best documentary winner Navalny, directed by Toronto's Daniel Roher; Pixar's Toronto-centric Turning Red was nominated for best animated feature, written and directed by Domee Shi; and even The Sea Best from Kitchener's Chris Williams, also nominated in the same category.
But technically, none of those movies are Canadian. As Globe and Mail entertainment reporter Barry Hertz wrote in a recent column, what makes a film officially of this country comes down to guidelines written by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) and the Canadian Audio-Visual Certification Office (CAVCO). Among other things, that takes into account the creative team, but also the studio funding the film and who actually owns the intellectual property rights.
So in judging the health of the Canadian film industry, considering the individual successes of films that only borrow from the country isn't accurate. Looking at Shi's work under Disney, or Roher's under CNN, doesn't demonstrate how well Canada is fostering its talent.
"It simply isn't fair or accurate to call those movies Canadian," Hertz wrote. "Just as no one would consider Avatar: The Way of Water a Canadian film, despite it being helmed by James Cameron, the favourite son of Kapuskasing, Ont."
Focusing instead on in-country performance, achievements are more limited.
According to a report by Telefilm, Canadian-made films accounted for roughly 19 per cent of all films released in Canada in 2021. And according to a concurrent report by the Canadian Media Producers Association, those films earned about five per cent of total box office at theatres across the country in the same window — the highest proportion of the past decade.
Of those, the top earner was Paw Patrol: The Movie, which earned $5.66 million in the English-language market — over five times more than the rest of the top ten earners combined.