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Edinburgh Screening in November

Thanks to our friends at the Trinidad and Tobago Film Festival, we’ll be screening in Edinburgh! Head over to the Screenings page for the details.

We should also have some news about the feature film coming up soon. Stay tuned!

More Screenings on PBS

Here’s a few more screenings on PBS in a few more markets!

 

New Orleans, WLAE on Thursday, May 22, 2014 at 9:30pm

New Jersey, NJTV on Sunday, May 25 at 11pm

Chicago, WTTW on Sunday, May 25 at 11pm

Kansas City, KCPT on Monday, May 26, 2014 at 10:30pm

Orlando, WDSC on Thursday, May 29 at 7:30pm

King of the County of Kings

We won the award for BEST SHORT FILM at the Bushwick Film Festival in Brooklyn! It’s amazing to have the film reach so many people and it’s all thanks to Festivals.

 

Congratulations to the cast and crew of the film!

Great News for the Feature

The feature adaptation of the short film was recently selected by IFP to take part in their Emerging Storytellers program! If you’re unfamiliar with the program here’s what they say:

 

The premier talent pool for new voices on the independent scene, RBC’s Emerging Storytellers presents 25 U.S. narrative features in early-stage development with little previous marketplace exposure. Writer/directors have a variety of experience, having previously established themselves through the festival circuit, as well as web, advertising and new media platforms.

 

As you can see – it’s a pretty big deal! I’ve loved the films that they’ve supported over the years and the other selections look pretty amazing. Needless to say, it’s going to be a really busy time in September. But, we’re looking forward to it.

 

You can read more about the program and the projects here!

Screening in Toronto for Caribana Week

We’ll be screening in Toronto on July 31st, 2013 at the Revue Cinema!

 

What makes this special is that we’ll be playing along with Janine Fung’s documentary La Gaita, which is about the Lara Brothers based out of Trinidad. If you don’t know who the Lara Brothers are, they are one of the few traditional Parang groups around. What’s Parang? It’s the Spanish language music that’s played in Trinidad around Christmas. Their music is featured in the trailer for Doubles With Slight Pepper and in key scenes in the film. It’s going to be a great night of music and film! Hope to see you there!

 

Revue Screening

Back in Paris!

We screened in Paris last year at UNESCO, but we’re back in the City of Light in a few weeks as part of the Champs-Elysees Film Festival, which has a great lineup!

 

Check out the Screenings page for all of the details, or just click here!

 

We’ll also be screening in Toronto in the coming months – details in a bit!

Screenings in Florida & Banff Next Week!

For our (and your!) friends in the Southern USA and Canadian Rocky Mountains.

 

We’ll be screening on April 7th & 9th at the Florida Film Festival and on April 8th in Banff, Alberta!

 

Check out the Screenings page for all of the information and for tickets!

A New Review

Thanks to Roslin A. Khan for the wonderful review of the film, from a Caribbean post-colonial perspective. Here’s the link to the original piece that appeared in CineCaribes:

http://cinecaribes.com/2013/01/25/doubles-with-slight-pepper-and-the-post-colonial-caribbean/

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While Ian Harnarine, the writer and director of this two-time award winning short film set in post-colonial Trinidad Tobago, describes it as capturing, in an authentic manner, his personal experience with his own father during the latter’s struggle with Alzheimer’s disease, a North American reviewer sees similarities with the work of the Brooklyn-born playwright and film director, Peter Sollet.

 

However, from a Caribbean perspective, this short feature may be described as exemplifying the estrangement,  alienation, and sense of hopelessness often experienced by colonial and post-colonial subjects, not only in Trinidad and Tobago, but also throughout the Caribbean as well as in other countries once subjected to the dominance of colonialism.

 

This negative perception of selfhood pervades and provides the circular framework of the story, evidenced by Dhani’s thoughts as a representative of his ethnic group at the beginning and his reiteration of these thoughts at the end.  Furthermore, as the plot develops, Caribbean and other colonial and post-colonial viewers can readily identify with the “double” dynamic of estrangement and alienation, accompanied by hopelessness that are skillfully transmitted through Dhani’s convincing and expressive body language, his conflicting emotions, his father’s recounting of his disappointing experience in Canada, and his sincere attempts to make amends, all enhanced by the marked absence of endearing terms such “son” or his name, “Dhani” and “Pa” until the signing over of the property and the realization of the serious nature of his father’s illness.

doubles with slight pepper

While the shared joy during the Parang celebration underscores the multicultural nature of Caribbean societies and the revelation of the secret ingredient for the family’s economic survival combine to effectively bring fleeting relief to existing tensions, this relief is soon followed by a return to the sense of hopelessness when Dhani’s blood is not the same type as his father’s.  He feels totally powerless and his reiteration of his thoughts at the start of the movie is understood.

 

Cinematographically, the lighting is excellent and the diction is clear.  However, the inclusion of sub-titles successfully makes it more marketable globally and sets the stage for the success of the feature-length film which is sure to be an excellent production.

 

For more information on Ian’s work and Doubles with Slight Pepper, visit the film’s website here.  You can also watch the film here.