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AWAY 60 min. 16mm. col. sd. 1996 He's down and out in Toronto until the
rescue call comes -it's Francis Ford Coppola
inviting him down for the shoot of Apocalypse Now. Once there Steve begins
a nightmare search for his twin brother and confronts the terrible secret
that drove them apart.
Cameron Bailey NOW magazine
Geoff Pevere
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Marc Horton
And if the movie has a geographical and emotional sprawl, it remains touchingly intimate as we follow Steve (Earl Pastko) from his art-department job on Coppola's Apocalypse Now into the hinterlands of Southeast Asia in search of his brother. Intercut with scenes from the movie and Heart of Darkness, the documentary on its making, the film also manages a stop along the way at The Price is Right where Sanguedolce's father appeared as a charming and funny contestant. Part spoof and part saga, this is a film that's not without a unique sense of humor. And it proves Sanguedolce is one of the best young filmmakers in the country. It's a winner.
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HEARTS OF INNOVATION Gemma Files - Eye Magazine Showcased through the auspices of the Liaison Of Independent Filmmakers Of Toronto (LIFT), local director Steve Sanguedolce's latest short work AWAY, is built around one of those wonderful "mockumentary" conceits that its screenwriter, fellow filmmaker Mike Hoolboom, specializes in. It's an addictive mixture of fact, fiction and found footage, all whipped--through the twin magics of editing and dramatization--into a heady and hilarious brew that's half spoof, half epic. The movie stars Sanguedolce "himself," as portrayed by independent Canadian film staple Earl Pastko (best known as the devilish Mr. Skin in Bruce McDonald's Highway 61), and chronicles his pursuit of a mythical estranged twin brother through the historic ruin of Francis Ford Coppola's monumental Joseph Conrad adaptation, Apocalypse Now. This "plot twist" allows Sanguedolce
to access images from both Coppola's own masterpiece and Hearts of Darkness,
George Hickenlooper's documentary on its making--heavily intercut with
personal home movies, both accurate and augmented. The original sections,
which take place in a single room that stands in equally well for both
Toronto and Thailand, co-stars Babs Chula (Valentine's Day) as a sexy
female version of Dennis Hopper's drug-crazed Kurtz groupie; they play
like some rabid fan's version of 1970s Hollywood Babylon, all sex, drugs
and the disembodied off-camera voice of "Marlon Brando," philosophizing
about farts and the inherent homo-eroticism of kickboxing. But there's
also a long, amazing sequence built around an appearance by Sanguedolce's
actual father as a contestant on the Price Is Right--a familial curiosity
piece, automatically raised by its inclusion here to the level of cinematic
triumph and trauma. It's a masterful effort, and one well worth seeking
out--at a mere 60 minutes, one of the most original and amusing Canadian
films I've seen all year.
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