So you know how Project Runway always mentions the L'Oreal Make-Up Room? Well, there's one here too. And the access is restricted. I spent the morning running around finding the right dress for the actress I'm assisting, bringing the wrong one and then sitting feeling incompetent for the rest of the day. Everything is a learning experience though, so I'm trying to learn from this by thinking that I will never be a personal assistant. I had to work my magic to get into the L'Oreal Make-up Room twice, and then sat listening ti Japanese interviews for the rest of the day.
On the up side, Ryo Ishibashi is really nice. He is a Japanese actor of some report and we had a nice chat about Canada (ahh, the Canada card works wonders here in Italy) in between his interviews. Also, I found a bunch of co-interns and we went to see $e11.0u7 which starred my new crush, Peter Davis. Then we went to see Lonsj (Cold Lunch) which had great cinematography and acting, but the most Norwegian (read: weird, depressing) story line that I've seen in a while and that didn't really have an ending.
Tomorrow I'm planning on seeing the early screening of The Burning Plain. Will see how that goes.
Friday, August 29, 2008
Thursday, August 28, 2008
Day four - Tilda Swinton
So, I was this close to meeting Tilda Swinton today. Walter scheduled a round table with her for 3:30 pm, but I was picking up an actress (Lika Minamoto) from the airport at that time, so I missed it. Apparently she talks a lot (hmmm, reminds me of...me) and answered questions quite eloquently.
I traveled a lot today went to the Lido twice (total travel time c. 2 hours) went to the airport and back (total travel time 3 hours) and window shopped (read: went into the stores and touched the clothing) for another hour. Lika is very nice and luckily for me she speaks better English than I do French, so everything worked out well.
aside: The mosquitos are killer here. Not only are they huge, but the sting hurts for days. I have been bitten at least 12 times since I got here and it's taking all of my will-power to not scratch them. On the up side, Venice does not stink as much as people say it does. Certain canals, yes, but there is enough wind (and little enough rain) to dispel the smell from major ones.
I traveled a lot today went to the Lido twice (total travel time c. 2 hours) went to the airport and back (total travel time 3 hours) and window shopped (read: went into the stores and touched the clothing) for another hour. Lika is very nice and luckily for me she speaks better English than I do French, so everything worked out well.
aside: The mosquitos are killer here. Not only are they huge, but the sting hurts for days. I have been bitten at least 12 times since I got here and it's taking all of my will-power to not scratch them. On the up side, Venice does not stink as much as people say it does. Certain canals, yes, but there is enough wind (and little enough rain) to dispel the smell from major ones.
Labels:
"Lika Minamoto",
"Tilda Swinton",
mosquitos,
travel
Day three - Opening Ceremonies
Today was the red carpet. People started lining up before we got there at 9:30 am. Brad and George were not in appearance until 6:30 pm.
In my news, I showed up to work on the film Jerichow, but due to mishaps, I couldn't get into the daily press-only screening, so Richard bought Micah (the other intern) and me dinner and then took us to the press-only screening at 10:30 resulting in us getting back to the Ranch at 1 am.
By the way, the film is very good and I recommend seeing it. I'm not going to say anything else about it at the moment, except that it is a very quiet film, so you need to enjoy slower films and melancholy endings.
Got word that I might be able to work with a French-Japanese film called Inju, le bete dans l'ombre which pleases me. We shall see in the morning.
In my news, I showed up to work on the film Jerichow, but due to mishaps, I couldn't get into the daily press-only screening, so Richard bought Micah (the other intern) and me dinner and then took us to the press-only screening at 10:30 resulting in us getting back to the Ranch at 1 am.
By the way, the film is very good and I recommend seeing it. I'm not going to say anything else about it at the moment, except that it is a very quiet film, so you need to enjoy slower films and melancholy endings.
Got word that I might be able to work with a French-Japanese film called Inju, le bete dans l'ombre which pleases me. We shall see in the morning.
Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Day two – visit to the Lido
Last night four of us sat out in the courtyard for hours, drinking our wine and talking. Eventually we made dinner and then went out to find the Irish bar with free wi-fi (pronounced wee-fee) that we found earlier. The bar turned out to be closed on Mondays (go figure) but we went to the next one and had a good time.
So, next day, the boat to the Lido took about 30 minutes at which point Walter took us on a tour of the grounds (pictures available on Facebook at some point) and then let us go for lunch. The eight of us who went together got kicked out of a restaurant because we wanted food, but managed to find a nicer restaurant farther on. After lunch there was a lot of hanging around, waiting for publicists to come and give us jobs. Oh! We got our festival catalogues today, which detail all of the films showing here and also has a list of the producers/distributors attending the fest. Score! I’m going to helping out/observing publicity work on Jerichow, a German film, and Nuit de chien (Tonight) a French/German co-pro. Going to take it easy tonight, ‘cause the fun starts tomorrow with the opening screening of Burn After Reading.
So, next day, the boat to the Lido took about 30 minutes at which point Walter took us on a tour of the grounds (pictures available on Facebook at some point) and then let us go for lunch. The eight of us who went together got kicked out of a restaurant because we wanted food, but managed to find a nicer restaurant farther on. After lunch there was a lot of hanging around, waiting for publicists to come and give us jobs. Oh! We got our festival catalogues today, which detail all of the films showing here and also has a list of the producers/distributors attending the fest. Score! I’m going to helping out/observing publicity work on Jerichow, a German film, and Nuit de chien (Tonight) a French/German co-pro. Going to take it easy tonight, ‘cause the fun starts tomorrow with the opening screening of Burn After Reading.
Day one – the opening act
So I went to bed at 9 pm last night. Passed out actually. I woke up at 7 am and was one of the first up. We had an indoor breakfast because it’s cold in the morning. No cloud cover = no heat retention. Although by the time we sat down for lunch it was hot enough for people to be complaining about their long-sleeved shirts.
Walter sat us down in the courtyard and made us introduce ourselves (again), which turned out to be nice, turns out there are 5 Torontonians and one Quebecer (Armand). We were tourists today, we saw the place where the festival is showing certain features the day after they are screened at the festival. Then we saw San Marco, which waspacked . We spent a lot of time learning where we were in relation to our villas. Hopefully I will not get lost now.
Oh, I love Europe for one very good reason: we housemates and I just bought 3 litres of wine for…€5.55. I gave her a tip.
I took many pictures, which will appear on Facebook soon for those who wish to see them. Walter wasn’t very clear about our internships, so I still don’t know what I’ll be doing. Tomorrow we visit the Lido!
Walter sat us down in the courtyard and made us introduce ourselves (again), which turned out to be nice, turns out there are 5 Torontonians and one Quebecer (Armand). We were tourists today, we saw the place where the festival is showing certain features the day after they are screened at the festival. Then we saw San Marco, which was
Oh, I love Europe for one very good reason: we housemates and I just bought 3 litres of wine for…€5.55. I gave her a tip.
I took many pictures, which will appear on Facebook soon for those who wish to see them. Walter wasn’t very clear about our internships, so I still don’t know what I’ll be doing. Tomorrow we visit the Lido!
To Arrive in Venice
My journey started with a car ride to the airport, 30 minutes give or take. Upon entering Lester B. Pearson Airport, I boarded an airplane and flew to Venice. Landing in Marco Polo Airport, I was met by Walter Harris and Armand LaChance who took me to meet the other participants, we sat on chairs for 2 hours, give or take, until we rode a bus to get to Venice proper. A beautiful ride from the airport to the island resulted in boarding a vaporetto which took us to the other side of the island, the stop being Celestia. From there, the 7 girls (myself included) and Armand walked on our feet to our house.
Car, airplane, chair, bus, vaporetto, feet. Phew. Walter greeted everyone by saying that this is, “like a reality tv show. Remember America’s Next Top Model, well you’re all going to be in twin beds, with 3 or 4 to a room, randomly assigned.” Hopefully there won’t be any cat-fights, everyone seems friendly off the bat, if a little jet-lagged. I have so far met, in order of meeting, Aaron-David, Courtney, Margot, Katrina, Micah, José, Helen, Hannah, Ariela. We are representing Canada, the States, and Spain.
Our house looks like this:
Well actually, that’s the gate to our courtyard. And this is the courtyard:
Our front door is actually this:
And this is the common area:
Quite nice don’t you think? We eat breakfast together then commute via vaporetto to the Lido, where the festival takes place.
I’m quite lively right now, partially from excitement and partially from homeopathic meds, which allowed me to have no jet lag at all, even though I only got about 1 hour’s worth of sleep and another 2-3 hours of resting.
Temperature today is gorgeous, not to hot or humid, the canals don’t stink (well, the big ones don’t), it’s sunny, and it’s Sunday, so there are very few people about which is nice for exploring.
p.s. Blogger won't allow me to upload photos. But you get the picture.
Car, airplane, chair, bus, vaporetto, feet. Phew. Walter greeted everyone by saying that this is, “like a reality tv show. Remember America’s Next Top Model, well you’re all going to be in twin beds, with 3 or 4 to a room, randomly assigned.” Hopefully there won’t be any cat-fights, everyone seems friendly off the bat, if a little jet-lagged. I have so far met, in order of meeting, Aaron-David, Courtney, Margot, Katrina, Micah, José, Helen, Hannah, Ariela. We are representing Canada, the States, and Spain.
Our house looks like this:
Well actually, that’s the gate to our courtyard. And this is the courtyard:
Our front door is actually this:
And this is the common area:
Quite nice don’t you think? We eat breakfast together then commute via vaporetto to the Lido, where the festival takes place.
I’m quite lively right now, partially from excitement and partially from homeopathic meds, which allowed me to have no jet lag at all, even though I only got about 1 hour’s worth of sleep and another 2-3 hours of resting.
Temperature today is gorgeous, not to hot or humid, the canals don’t stink (well, the big ones don’t), it’s sunny, and it’s Sunday, so there are very few people about which is nice for exploring.
p.s. Blogger won't allow me to upload photos. But you get the picture.
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Go Time
Leaving for the airport in about 2 hours. Had to make sure that I have all my stuff in the right place, i.e. the tweezers and scissors in the checked baggage, the sunscreen and water bottle (empty) in the carry-on, etc. Nothing new to report really, except that I don't think it's possible for me to be more excited than I am now.
I got all my packing done despite thinking that I would be chasing things around at the last minute, and I even remembered to get some Euros. This looks like it'll be a smooth take-off from my end, now it's all up to the pilot.
Ciao!
I got all my packing done despite thinking that I would be chasing things around at the last minute, and I even remembered to get some Euros. This looks like it'll be a smooth take-off from my end, now it's all up to the pilot.
Ciao!
Thursday, August 21, 2008
Almost there
I am looking forward to Venice for a number of reasons, one of them being that I will get away from all the construction! Currently in a my neighbourhood, my entire street is ripped up to do something with the gas pipes (they ripped up everyone's driveways too - but don't worry, they gave us plywood to cover the holes), Bathurst St is closed for TTC construction - not sure exactly what, but probably something to do with streetcars, My back-neighbours decided to add an extension or do something equally exciting that involved a jackhammer, and to top it off, my roof was leaking so it had to be replaced too. AAAHHHHHH this is why I left Kingston in the first place!!!
Ok, back to business. Venice may be sinking, but at least it's doing it quietly. There are no cars in Venice. None. just boats, probably loud boats, but I'll deal. Also, Venice looks to be the same temperature as Toronto (well, maybe 4 or 5 degrees warmer) but it's actually much hotter than that because of the 50%-90% humidity on a daily basis. Yes, you read that right, on any given day it feels 10 degrees hotter because of the wetness of the city.
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Venetian Books
There are many, many books written about Venice, set in Venice, or that have a scene in Venice. I found a website (Fictional Cities) that has a list of many of them. From this list I realized there are two genres for stories set in Venice: Romances and Murder Mysteries. I decided that I've seen enough of Casanova for a while - the last time being the Heath Ledger film - I focused on the mysteries.
David Hewson's The Lizard's Bite
My favourite of the ones I read because I got a sense of the city both in terms of the people and the geography. The themes apparent in every book are the strong familial ties, an ingrained loathing-yet-needing of foreigners (read: tourists), and a laid-back attitude to everything.
Mary Hoffman's City of Masks
This was a childhood favourite of mine (read: high school) but I decided to go back to it because it is set in Venice. It still holds up pretty well, and sets the scene fairly decently.
Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities
This is a beautiful book, but I don't really like poetry all that much, so I found it a bit of a hard read. The premise is a good one: Marco Polo reporting back to Kublai Khan about all the cities he has visited so that Khan may know his empire. Others liked it better than I did.
Donna Leon's Death in a Strange Country
Yeah, not so much. I found the writing to be too...American. That might not mean anything, but to people who read as many mysteries as I do, it makes a big difference what country the writer is from. Also, the protagonist doesn't actually end up solving the crime, he just accepts the story given to him by someone else. Hmmm.
Ok, so I spent more time looking for Venetian novels than actually reading them. There is always time when I get back, and as my cousin has just told me about The Passion, I can see that there are many more for me to find.
David Hewson's The Lizard's Bite
My favourite of the ones I read because I got a sense of the city both in terms of the people and the geography. The themes apparent in every book are the strong familial ties, an ingrained loathing-yet-needing of foreigners (read: tourists), and a laid-back attitude to everything.
Mary Hoffman's City of Masks
This was a childhood favourite of mine (read: high school) but I decided to go back to it because it is set in Venice. It still holds up pretty well, and sets the scene fairly decently.
Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities
This is a beautiful book, but I don't really like poetry all that much, so I found it a bit of a hard read. The premise is a good one: Marco Polo reporting back to Kublai Khan about all the cities he has visited so that Khan may know his empire. Others liked it better than I did.
Donna Leon's Death in a Strange Country
Yeah, not so much. I found the writing to be too...American. That might not mean anything, but to people who read as many mysteries as I do, it makes a big difference what country the writer is from. Also, the protagonist doesn't actually end up solving the crime, he just accepts the story given to him by someone else. Hmmm.
Ok, so I spent more time looking for Venetian novels than actually reading them. There is always time when I get back, and as my cousin has just told me about The Passion, I can see that there are many more for me to find.
Saturday, August 16, 2008
7 things to know about Venice
Many of you will know that I have been preparing all summer for my glorious excursion to Venice, Italy, as an intern for the American Pavilion. Preparations have included reading every novel I can get my hands on which is set in Venice (mostly mysteries and a few romances, with a few childhood favourites thrown in). I have also been asking around to various relatives and family friends for advice on festival going. And a few things have come up in regards to my internship and Venice which I would like to clear up.
a) I'm going to Venice, not Vienna. I have added a map for clarification. Vienna is, I'm sure a lovely place, and is the capital of Austria. I'm am headed to Italy, a mere 436 km to the SW of Vienna.
b) I have no idea what I will be doing when I get to Venice. Katryna (a fellow Queen's filmie) did the same program as me, but in Cannes, did PR which involved making sure the right people went to the right parties. Maybe I'll get to do that too? Updates on that when I get them.
Ok, so now down to business. 7 things to know about Venice, since I will be leaving in 7 days to go there.
1) Venice is an island. Well, several islands. Including the Lido di Venezia (the Beach of Venice) which is where the festival actually takes place.
2) Venice is a mercantile city. It has existed for thousands of years and has made lots of money from foreigners. During the Crusades, the Venetians built ships and sailed the French and German crusaders over to Constantinople and when the kings couldn't afford to pay up, the Venetians got land instead, land that made them rich for several hundred years after they gave it back to the Byznatines.
3) Venice is female and goes by several names including Venezia (Italian), Venezsia (Venetian), and La Serenissima.
4) Venice's heyday was in the late 13th century, when they traded heavily the Byzantines and Europe.
5) Venice is shrinking. The city is disappearing into the sea as water erodes the sides of the canals (did I mention the canals yet?) and the population is getting smaller too, only ~ 62 000 people live in Venice-proper.
6) Venice's head of state is traditionally a Doge, or Duke. The full title (in English) was Duke of the Most Serene Republic of Venice.
7) Venice once belonged to Austria, which might explain the confusion. Napoleon Bonaparte signed a treaty in 1797 giving Venice to Austria, but only until 1805, when he then gave it to the Republic of Italy, but when Napolean was defeated in 1814 (Waterloo anyone?) the Austrians took it back. Venice wasn't part of Italy again until 1866!
That's all for today.
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