Pubdate: Wed, 04 Jun 2003 Source: StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2003 The StarPhoenix Contact: http://www.canada.com/saskatoon/starphoenix/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/400 Author: Cam Fuller FIX SMASHES STEREOTYPES Film Takes Hard Look At The Drug Problems That Plague Vancouver Fix is a movie about drug addiction and politics. But it's also about stereotypes. Director Nettie Wild (A Place Called Chiapas) smashes your preconceived notions in this film about east Vancouver's horrendous drug problem. The prejudices start crumbling in the first minute when you meet Dean Wilson, an articulate and charismatic speaker who was once a top salesperson for IBM. He's also, you're surprised to learn, a heroin addict. Then there's Vancouver Mayor Philip Owen, a business-suited poster boy for right wing capitalism. (In an early scene he's seen showing off his vintage Mercedes.) Instinctively, you assume Owen is the type of person who solves social problems by ignoring them. But it turns out he's in favour of a strategy so radical -- safe injection sites -- that it will cost him his political career. Surprises like these ensure Fix: The Story of an Addicted City isn't just an "important'' documentary but a thoroughly watchable one. Wild covered her subjects for two years as the issue of a publicly-funded injection centre was debated on the streets and in council chambers. Opinions are diverse and strongly held: from a pro-business group's assertion that only strict law enforcement will clean up the streets to activist Ann Livingston's love-thy-neighbour approach. The interview subjects are uniformly great talkers; a cop describes his job as "shovelling water.'' A crack smoker takes a puff for the camera just as two cops walk by and with mock innocence says "I can't do this very often -- it's addicting.'' The sights, however, are alarming. The streets are filled with boarded-up storefronts. Drug use is rampant and open. Seriously damaged people stumble and twitch through the frame. To drive the point home, the camera unflinching observes several needle-users shooting up. The most disturbing is a young woman, sans front teeth, who gets a friend to jab her in the neck while she lies on a piece of cardboard in a back alley. The injection takes several attempts before providing the desired relief. More than anything Fix takes the mask of anonymity off its subjects. The expression referred to several times -- "drug addicts are people too'' -- isn't just a catch-phrase. (To that you can add "politicians are people, too.'') The film forces you to look where you'd rather not. And it makes you realize that real people need real help. - ------------------------------------- Fix: The Story of an Addicted City DIRECTOR: Nettie Wild THEATRE: Broadway WHEN: Friday to Sunday, 7 p.m., weekend matinees 4 p.m. All shows followed by a community forum. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens