Cinifest to host mini-festival
Northern Life - July 27 2006
By Tamara Belkov
Northern Life
Canadian
writer and producer Michael Sparaga financed his low-budget
feature-length movie Sidekick with his credit cards.
Sparaga has since sold the option
for Sidekick, which cost $35,000 to produce, to Focus
Features, the producer of the acclaimed Breakback Mountain.
Sidekick, a dark-comedy, tells the
story of Norman, a mild-mannered computer consultant
obsessed with heroes of the comic book variety. One
fateful day, he discovers his swaggering co-worker,
a salesman named Victor, is slightly telekinetic.Norman
decides to train Victor to become a superhero with the
help of his friend and comic bookstore owner Chuck.
Norman envisions himself as Victory
Man’s faithful sidekick battling the city’s
criminal element. Of course, the story takes a turn
and Norman is forced to realize not everyone is cut
out to wear tights and a cape.
Sidekick will be showing for one night
only at SilverCity Aug. 3, at 7 pm, as part of Cinéfest
Sudbury’s Canadian Spotlight. It is rated for
14-year-olds and over. The mini-film-fest is a two day
event showcasing four of Canada’s most innovative
films of the year.
The rookie Toronto filmmaker’s
unconventional financing was not the only creative approach
he deployed to bring his laugh-out-loud script to the
screen.
Sparaga shot Sidekick on weekends over
a period of four years while he supported himself working
as a waiter at the Keg in Toronto. No one told Sparaga
it is usually the actors who wait tables in the film
biz, not the producers.
Made up
of mostly family and friends, the crew worked for free
on the production while his mother fed them home-made
lasagna.
Co-star Daniel Baldwin, known for playing
cops and tough guys, was an unusual pick for the role
of Chuck. Baldwin is reported to have heard about the
role while working on another film in Toronto and jumped
at the chance to play the nerdy comic book store owner.
Baldwin also enjoyed Mrs. Sparaga’s lasagna along
with the crew.
When the movie was finished, the ever
imaginative Sparaga, jumped in a car with the director
and main actors and toured the country giving talks
and screening his film in eight cities. Like all the
other unusual moves the novice producer made, the coast-to-coast
road trip paid off and Sidekick became the buzz of the
biz.
Sidekick recently won the Cineplex
Odeon People’s Pick for Best Flick awarded at
the 2006 Canadian Filmmakers Festival.
Sparaga is currently developing another
original screenplay and is considering a sequel to Sidekick.
He expects to have his credit cards
paid off in six months.
Other films being screened at this
mini-festival are: Bon Cop, Bad Cop (Aug. 2, 7 pm),
Kamataki (Aug. 2 at 9:30 pm) and L’Audition (Aug.
3 at 9:30 pm).
Tickets are $7.50 each or four films
for $25. For more information, phone 688-1234.
This year’s festival will be
held from Sept. 16 to 24. A news conference will be
held this Thursday and organizers will discuss some
of the highlights of the 18th annual festival.
The deadline for the festival’s
CTV Amateur Videomakers’ Competition is Aug. 11.
This is an annual event to encourage the film and videomakers
of Northern Ontario.The competion is only open to amateurs
and $10,000 in cash prizes are at stake. More information
is available at Cinéfest’s website.