Daniel Garber talks with Sean Garrity and Jonas Chernick about The End of Sex at #TIFF22
Hi, this is Daniel Garber at the Movies for culturalmining.comand CIUT 89.5 FM.
Photos by Jeff Harris.
Josh and Emma (Emily Hampshire) are a happily-married couple with two daughters they adore. They are sending them off to winter camp for a week, which means this will be their first time alone in a decade, free to do whatever they want. What do they want? Sex of course. But after their first try they realize they’ve both forgotten how to do anything sexual other than faking orgasms.
So they decide to spice things up a bit. But this puts them both under a lot of
pressure… what if it doesnt work? Could the end of sex mean the end of marriage?
The End of Sex is a comic romp about men, women; thruples, swingers and kink, along with love, fidelity, and possible adultery. It lays bare the worst sexual insecurities and anxieties of suburban life .
The film is directed by the prolific, award winning filmmaker Sean Garrity and written by and starring his frequent collaborator the equally formidable and prize-winning Jonas Chernick (The Last Mark, James vs His Future Self, A Swingers’ Weekend).
I spoke with Sean and Jonas on site at TIFF22.
The End of Sex had its World Premiere at TIFF, and will be released later this year.
I previously interviewed Sean Garrity in 2012, and again, with Jonas Chernick, in 2016.
Daniel Garber talks with Sean Garrity and Jonas Chernick about their new film Borealis
Hi, this is Daniel Garber at the Movies for culturalmining.com and CIUT 89.5 FM.
Trouble is brewing in Winnipeg. Jonah (Jonas Chernick) is a compulsive gambler – he can’t pass a card table without placing a bet. He’s in debt up to his neck to a bookie named Tubbie. Jonah is also a relentless liar — even his girlfriend doesn’t know why he needs 10,000 bucks, stat. And when the doctor tells him his estranged, teenaged daughter Aurora (Joey King) is about to go blind he keeps his cards close to his chest and doesn’t tell her. He packs up his car and vows to show
Aurora the northern lights in far-off Churchill, Manitoba. But will she see Aurora Borealis before she goes blind… or before the bookies catch up to them?
Borealis is a new feature now playing at the Canadian Film Fest and opening next Friday in Toronto. It’s a buddy pic, a road movie, a coming-of-age drama and a new look at the far edges of
Manitoba. It’s funny, surprising and calmly beautiful. It’s made by two long-time Winnipeg collaborators: award-winning director Sean Garrity and the equally notable actor/writer Jonas Chernick. I spoke to Sean in studio at CIUT, and to Jason (on set) by phone. We talk about road movies, gambling, romance, Sean’s hometown, travelling, card games, Churchill, cold weather, polar bears, Joey King, Bruce McDonald, Paper Moon… and more!
Sean Garrity won the DGC Ontario Best Director award for Borealis at the Canadian Film Fest.
Daniel Garber talks with director Sean Garrity about his new film BLOOD PRESSURE
What would you do if you lived in house with your husband and two kids… and you suddenly started getting letters from a secret admirer?
Letters from someone who seems to know you better than your own family… And what would you do if they could almost read your mind? If they cared about you? And what if they asked you to do something that might be taboo, or maybe immoral, or possibly… illegal?
Would you be thrilled? Intrigued? Scared? Indifferent?
An unusual new movie, a dramatic, psychological thriller asks just these questions. It’s called Blood Pressure, and it’s directed by a well-known Canadian filmmaker from Winnipeg. (The movie opens today in Toronto.)
Director Sean Garrity talks about how the film’s story developed, whether it’s a thriller or a family drama, an identifiable Winnipeg style, his run-in with government censorship… and more!
If you’re looking for a fun night out, check out a beautifully renovated movie palace known as
The Burning Season
romance set in Algonquin Park. The very first scene shows the teenaged couple taking vows of secrecy in front of a big fire, but from there it jumps forward to the faulty marriage many years later. The rest of the movie fills in the blanks, summer by summer, going back in time in reverse chronological order. Winnipeg director Sean Garrity has a history of making identifiably Canadian movies — including location, story, actors and music — but often with a dark, twisted theme. This one is co-written by Garrity’s long-time collaborator Jonas Chernick (
We Grown Now
games they play, the comic books they read, the TV shows, the video games, the music they listen to? What are their favourite sports teams? Not in this movie. When they play hooky it’s to go to an art museum but back home do they start drawing and painting their own art? No.
Evil Does Not Exist
ruin their idyllic, back-to-nature lifestyle and contaminate their water with a leaking septic tank upstream. Can the two sides find common ground?
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