WOODBRIDGE
32
min. 16mm, col. sd. 1985
Woodbridge
is a deeply personal expose of family life within the context of
first generation Italian-Canadians. The film revolves around the
journey of a boy from early childhood through adulthood. It highlights
the conflicts of growing up in the space between two cultures with
radically different customs and values. While this film documents
the particular experiences of one child, it is a reflection of a
sociological phenomenon common to many Canadian children. Woodbridge
is different from most other documentary work primarily because
the camera adopts the role of the protagonist. It presents the viewer
with a multitude of images/experiences from a purely subjective
point of view. The film's immediacy invites the audience to participate
in the events directly, as opposed to the usual documentary experience
of filmmaker as authority, audience as observer.
Woodbridge
is a coming-of-age film, turning from the law of the Father to establish
a poetics of self-expression which reconciles the rules of an old-
world culture with their new-found setting. The dominant Catholic
iconography is contrasted with the filmmaker's quest for release,
identity and escape. But this quest for individuation is also a
return home, a gesture of nostalgia refigured through the camera.
It is the apparatus that attempts to straddle these two worlds,
between a generation of Italian immigrants and their Canadian-bound
progeny. It is striking to witness how often this paradigm is repeated
in the Canadian fringe, its members subject to a displacement which
is everywhere felt but never seen. As their parents arrive in "the
new world", they are born and raised in a Canadian setting
which overlaps uneasily with past understandings. Haunted by images
of a place they have never seen, they internalize the displacement
of their immigrant parentage, never quite feeling "at home"
in Canada, but knowing little of the geography which continues to
sound through their parents. As a result, the present appears in
a double vision, overlaid with a borrowed understanding, its constituents
standing in a place between old world and new. This place "between"
functions to destroy the simple transparency of a place and its
representations even as they are drawn to make images in a documentary
register, these filmmakers' expectations are upset by the understanding
that something is missing. This distance between an object and its
representation has impelled much of the efforts of the Canadian
fringe.
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