

The film ascends into a rattling montage tracing the sharp rise and lonely fall of film-maker Steven Penny (Paizs himself), a frenzied crescendo that fulfils the promise of the first two acts by adrenalising all their wit and invention. The Crime Wave that you may well know and love – the best-known version of the film is still, as far as we’re concerned, criminally underappreciated – has a very distinctive third act. Detail from the original, hand-typed Crime Wave screenplay, corresponding with the scene pictured above When the film resumed, the belly laughs of the preceding hour were gone, and the audience’s muted response convinced Paizs to do the unthinkable – return to Winnipeg to rewrite and re-shoot the entire final act of his debut feature, having long since exhausted its meagre budget (round about $67,000 Canadian). The “disaster” that night in Toronto was a sound problem that brought the film’s projection to a screeching halt, lighting up the auditorium, just as the third act began. Truthfully, the version of the film screened then, at Toronto’s Festival of Festivals (precursor to TIFF), is the same one that led critic Jay Scott to proclaim, “If the great Canadian comedy ever gets made, John Paizs might be the one to make it.”Īs far as distributor’s demands, John may ultimately have pre-empted them, but he didn’t even sign Crime Wave‘s ill-fated deal until the following year. After that “disastrous” first screening, the story often goes, distributors demanded Paizs reshoot the end of his debut feature, which he did, ensuring its status as the Great Canadian Cult Comedy. The story of Crime Wave‘s premiere – on Friday 13th September, 1985 – has taken on quasi-mythical status. And, crucially, this particular print contained Crime Wave‘s original ending. John Paizs allowed us to ship the original 16mm print of his film, unprojected since its fateful festival debut in 1985, from Winnipeg to New York. Thankfully, the stars aligned, spectacularly so (pun not intended). We’ve screened Crime Wave many, many times, and because of that and because we love Spectacle so much, we were keen to do something particularly special. Originally presented online in August 2020 (everywhere except North America), the headliners of our programme are three features – Guy Maddin’s Cowards Bend the Knee (with Ela Orleans’ re-score), Dave Barber and Kevin Nikkel’s documentary Tales from the Winnipeg Film Group and John Paizs’ seminal Crime Wave, in its 2K restoration. We went there at the invitation of Spectacle Theater, the legendary microcinema/”goth bodega” situated in Williamsburg (see the 2020 roundtable we hosted with Caroline Golum, Isaac Hoff & Garrett Linn of Spectacle here). Class will be held at the MONO NO AWARE home/office in downtown Brooklyn, NY.In December 2021, we took our Tales from Winnipeg programme to Brooklyn, NYC. Scheduling to be determined by awardee and Steve Cossman.

Then, your completed short film will premiere at Spectacle alongside other fantastic 16mm works by noted filmmakers, some in attendance, in a public screening followed by a reception!

Workshop includes 8 hours of instruction using the beloved Bolex Rex5 with POE zoom lens (17-108mm), 200 feet of Vision 3 color negative 16mm film, 4 hours of hand-processing instruction with developing tank and chemistry, and access to flat-bed editing equipment to finish with a projection ready print. Learn to shoot on color negative film and the necessary darkroom techniques that will allow you to cross-process the film to achieve a reversal image! Turn that negative into a positive, project-able print! PRIVATE 16MM FILMMAKING WORKSHOP with PREMIERE AT SPECTACLE THEATER! Mono No Aware Founder/Director Steve Cossman will work with you one on one in a very special two-part 16mm filmmaking workshop.
