
Brownstein: Fantasia film fest celebrates veteran Montreal director George Mihalka for blazing his own trail
The Fantasia International Film Festival will present Mihalka with its Canadian Trailblazer Award, Friday at 6 p.m. at Cinéma du Musée, followed by a screening of his film Hostile Takeover. The fest will also screen another of his more memorable movies, Pinball Summer, followed by a Q&A with the director, Sunday at 4:05 p.m. at the same venue. And earlier that afternoon, at 2 p.m., Mihalka will deliver a Fantasia master class at Reggies in Concordia's Hall Building.
While Fantasia may be renowned for delving into all aspects of genre film over the course of its 29 years, the festival, much to its credit, has also paid homage to unsung heroes on the local film scene. In recent years, it has given tributes to the likes of legendary Cinépix producers John Dunning and André Link, directors Larry Kent and Gerald Potterton, and the gonzo filmmaking gang of Allan (Bozo) Moyle, Stephen Lack, Frank Vitale and Peter Brawley.
Mihalka is, without question, a pioneer on the film front. He has tackled every genre imaginable, from horror to hockey, comedy to crime and then some — in both French and English. Pretty remarkable since he spoke neither language before immigrating here from Hungary when he was just eight.
The film for which Mihalka is probably best known is the slasher epic My Bloody Valentine, produced by Dunning and Link. That was 45 years ago, when Mihalka was but 27. Had Fantasia been in existence back then, its artistic director Mitch Davis would have certainly had the film kick off the fest. No less than Quentin Tarantino has acknowledged that My Bloody Valentine is his personal fave in the slasher field.
But don't let the film's content fool you about its maker. There is little foreboding about Mihalka, 72 — far more teddy bear than terrifying and one of the nicest people in the biz. He has been spending equal time in Montreal and Hamilton these days, the latter so he can be closer to his daughter and work in Toronto.
'There has been no real formula for me. I just love making films and I don't like making the same one over and over again,' says the ever-affable Mihalka over a few brews at Ziggy's. 'I don't think I have a film canon, per se.'
Not so sure. By his own estimate, Mihalka has directed over two dozen film and TV features and over 100 TV episodes, in nearly equal parts French and English. And talk about being all over the map. Apart from the aforementioned, there's Race to Mars, La Florida, Omertà, Les Boys IV, Dr. Lucille: The Lucille Teasdale Story, Scandale, Scoop, Bullet to Beijing, Eternal Evil.
And Mihalka has just completed one of his most ambitious and expensive productions yet: Rise of the Raven, a 10-part miniseries shot in Hungary for ex-Montreal producer Robert Lantos. The first two hour-long episodes will première at the Toronto International Film Festival in September, and the series will stream on CBC Gem soon after.
'It's the story about the guy who is responsible for why church bells ring at noon everywhere in the world,' elaborates Mihalka, who also co-created and executive-produced the project.
Mihalka laments that the local film scene, particularly on the anglo side, has suffered.
'Montreal was such a great place for making movies. It's so unfortunate that things have dried up here. I would love to come back here to make a movie in French and follow it up with one in English, the way I used to do like clockwork. I so miss that, straddling both worlds,' he says. 'But when tax credits became much more important, we became prisoners of our postal code here.'
In other words, far more work beckoned in Toronto.
On that note, Mihalka points out that he and his partner Susan Curran are in the midst of making a documentary on the Cinépix duo of Link and the late Dunning, who made hugely successful films the old-fashioned way — without being completely at the mercy of tax shelters for financing.
'I really have to thank those two for my career. They made movies to put bums in seats. We had a golden age of crowd-pleaser films back then which could not only entertain people, but also support an industry. As Link used to say: 'Not too many people in the industry liked us, because we made money and that wasn't the Canadian way,'' Mihalka laughs.
'The pendulum has swung, and I think it has swung a little too far toward the auteur cinema of personal films. As famed producer Samuel Goldwyn once put it: 'If you want to send a message, use Western Union.''
Which is not to say Mihalka hasn't tackled more provocative fare over the years, but he has always focused on keeping audiences captivated at the same time.
'Nothing wrong with making movies about your own or someone else's trauma. We need Mike Leigh movies as much as we need Tarantino movies. I have never thought entertaining was the opposite of intelligent. You can have a smart movie that entertains. That's been my goal all my working life. Just because I don't furrow my brow while directing doesn't mean I can't be deep,' he muses before adding:
'I'm not at all interested in retiring, either. I'm still ready to rumble for this craft.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
15 hours ago
- CTV News
Exchange students from Japan visit Regina's QCX, youth participate in mutton busting
A group of exchange students travelling from Yokohama, Japan to Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan stopped in Regina to visit the Queen City Ex (QCX). (Sierra D'Souza Butts/CTV News) A student exchange group from Japan is experiencing Canada for the first time through Regina's Queen City Ex (QCX). Travelling from Yokohama to Moose Jaw, the 11 students made a stop in Regina on Sunday during the exhibition's final day of rides, entertainment and food. 'We were able to take them to host families, take them around the city [of Moose Jaw], bring them here to Regina, experience living with a Canadian family, eating Canadian food and experiencing the culture,' shared Jamie Dupuis, head teacher of Spike and Ai English. The group of students are taking part in a homestay for 10 days in Moose Jaw – home to the owner of Spike and Ai English Arron Dobrescu. During their visit in the area, organizers thought bringing the group to the QCX would benefit them to experience the Canadian culture. 'The kids are having a wonderful time. They can't get enough of the rides and they have enjoyed all the food,' Dupuis said. Other youth also enjoyed this year's exhibition, specifically through a mutton busting activity. QCX 2025 (Sierra D'Souza Butts / CTV News) 'They come out a lot more brave. I find that some of them are leaving the arena crying, but a lot of them leave the arena with a big smile on their face, and it's wonderful to see it,' shared Abbey Harty of Canadian Western Agribition. Harty added the friendly competition aims to connect youth to agriculture in a fun environment. 'We've actually been able to host the rodeo, the Pile O'Bones Rodeo, that has come to Regina every year that QCX has been on,' she explained. 'Unfortunately, this year we didn't get the rodeo so Agribition wanted to bring Ag to QCX. We just wanted to have a little bit fun for the kids and then bring in some horsemanship demonstrations that I'm teaching every day as well.'


Toronto Sun
2 days ago
- Toronto Sun
OPINION: The CBC is a bloated and unaccountable blob
The CBC/Radio Canada sign on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporations building in Vancouver is pictured on May 28, 2013. Photo by Gerry Kahrmann / Postmedia Network files Remember the classic sci-fi movie The Blob, and how the blob keeps getting bigger and bigger, while oozing over everything, heedless of the screams around it? This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account That's what's happening at the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. In 2023, the CBC said it was issuing layoffs and cutting costs. 'CBC/Radio-Canada … will reduce its English and French programming budgets for the next fiscal year and cut about $40 million,' CBC wrote about itself in December 2023. But its taxpayer costs went up anyway. The CBC cost taxpayers $1.3 billion in 2022-23. The CBC cost taxpayers $1.4 billion in 2023-24. Despite claims it's shrinking, the CBC's blob is getting bigger. Documents obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation show the CBC handed out huge pay raises while doing away with bonuses. Its layers of management have also swollen to monstrous proportions. The CBC caught heat for handing out bonuses last year. It paid $18.4 million in bonuses, including $3.3 million to 45 executives for 2023-24. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Former CBC CEO Catherine Tait was grilled about the bonuses by the House Heritage Committee and on the CBC's own news program. The CBC fan group, Friends of Canadian Media, said the bonuses were 'deeply out of touch and unbefitting of our national public broadcaster.' The CBC caved and did away with the bonuses, earning praise in headlines. Not so fast. After cancelling bonuses, CBC handed out record-high pay raises of $38 million in 2024-25. The raises went to 6,295 employees for an average raise of about $6,000 each. No employees received a pay cut, according to records. These raises are much higher than raises in previous years, as the CBC spent $11.5 million on raises in 2023-24. The CBC blob is also growing bigger. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Currently, 1,831 CBC employees take a six-figure salary, costing taxpayers about $240 million, for an average salary of $131,060 for those employees. In 2015, 438 CBC employees took home six-figure salaries, costing taxpayers about $60 million. That's a 318% increase since 2015. The CBC quadrupling the size of its top payroll blob is scary enough for taxpayers, but the roles these employees play will also raise eyebrows. There's a journalist anecdote that says for every reporter working in a regular newsroom, there are about a dozen CBC managers. Documents obtained by the CTF show that the narrative checks out. The CTF asked the CBC for a list of employees paid more than $100,000 per year. The list is 65 pages long, depicting offices full of managers and support staff. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The CBC has more than 250 directors, 450 managers and 780 producers who are paid more than $100,000 per year. The CBC also employed 130 advisers, 81 analysts, 120 hosts, 80 project leads, 30 lead architects, 25 supervisors, among other positions, who were paid more than $100,000 last year, according to the access-to-information records. The CBC redacted the roles for more than 200 employees. Let's tally the CBC blob's body count so far. The state broadcaster is costing taxpayers more than $1.4 billion this year. Its new CEO, Marie-Philippe Bouchard, is paid at the same level as Tait, at about $500,000 per year. The CBC said it would cancel its bonuses but jacked up salaries. The CBC has swelled its ranks of highly paid employees by 318% since 2015. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. The CBC is blacking out data on documents and refusing to tell Canadians how much it's spending on advertising. Plot twist finale: Next to nobody is watching the CBC. CBC News Network's share of prime time is 1.8%, meaning 98% of TV-viewing Canadians choose not to watch it. No CBC entertainment show cracked the Top 10 in the latest Canadian ratings. The Murdoch Mysteries, which isn't produced by the CBC, has the CBC's biggest audience with about 734,000 viewers — about 1.7% of the population. In the movie, The Blob was stopped by freezing it and dropping it in the Arctic. The CBC blob can be stopped from eating taxpayers' wallets by defunding it. Franco Terrazzano is the federal director and Kris Sims the Alberta director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation Toronto Blue Jays Toronto & GTA Columnists Toronto & GTA Canada


Winnipeg Free Press
2 days ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Popular teacher's death darkens halls of U.K. high school
Dark Like Under is the first novel by British author Alice Chadwick, a graduate of Cambridge University and of the selective City Lit fiction masterclass. Tabbed as an editor's choice by The Bookseller, the novel has received praise in the U.K. from the Independent and British Vogue, among others. While the book is a coming-of-age story of sorts, rather than filter events through one protagonist, the novel follows multiple characters as they journey from adolescent innocence to a new understanding of the adult world. The book is set in the late 1980s in a small unnamed town in Margaret Thatcher's England, a time of austerity and class warfare. Mr. Ardennes, a popular teacher at an elite high school, has unexpectedly died, and students and staff are left to grapple with the loss. The entire story unfolds over a period of 24 hours on a hot day in late spring. Supplied Alice Chadwick Dark Like Under is a quiet book. The conflicts are understated: much is said about class in just a few words. There are several references to 'the other school' that is nearby but off limits for unstated reasons; when two characters pay it an illicit visit, the reader sees its male students playing football and shouting 'Good work in the box' and its female students wearing short, tight uniform skirts and the distinctions become clear. The divisions of race have not yet reached this community, where the outsiders are Irish and/or Roman Catholic. While there are brief mentions of apartheid, the aftermath of the Falklands War and the famine in Ethiopia, the teenaged characters are largely preoccupied with the same things that concern today's adolescents: crushes, romantic relationships, the betrayal of friends, the arbitrariness and tyranny of parental and school rules, whether to try to fit in or to rebel. These are big feelings aired within the smaller confines of the novel. A student and a teacher stand off over the wearing of nail polish. A boy sends a note to a girl and her classmates long to know what it contains. A student worries about his strict parents' reaction to his music lesson being cancelled. The school schedule ingeniously forms much of the structure of the book. The students attend art, math, chemistry, French and English classes, and in each of those, Chadwick juxtaposes the lessons being ostensibly taught with the ones being learned below the surface. Weekly A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene. In English class, a discussion of a John Donne sonnet, and its imagery suggesting commitment and desire, ends with the eternal question 'Is this even on our syllabus?' The teacher's response illustrates the impact of his colleague's death upon him: 'If you mean will you be examined on this? No. You will not. But should you read it? Should you engage with these ideas? As a human being, as a young man or young woman, wading, more or less innocent, more or less defenceless, into the great boiling sea of language, of literature, history, ideology, human experience and other effluents and intoxicants, yes, I think you should read it. I think you should. Because one day, even you, Nicholas, might need it. Even you one day might find yourself grabbing at a poem like a man going under.' The students experience the teachers as overbearing authority figures who nevertheless cannot give them as simple a direction as removing their blazers in the extreme heat without the say-so of the head teacher. But in their chapters, these teachers come to life as colleagues and friends of the deceased, struggling with the politics of school administration as well as their own grief and unfulfilled desires. The art teacher, who has sidelined her creative dreams for a steady paycheque, reflects that 'Conviction is a sort of energy, she can see, a force of life in itself. You can't get far without it. Things diminish, shrinking to the size of a square foot of board and painting by numbers.' Dark Like Under Dark Like Under is a wholly engrossing, multi-layered story told with a slow burn. The author's decision to take the last chapter back 24 hours (rather than the linear progression that has unfolded up until that point) in order to end the novel with a chapter from the perspective of the newly deceased Mr. Ardennes is a rare false note. Zilla Jones is a Winnipeg-based writer of short and long fiction. Her debut novel The World So Wide was published in April.