Pubdate: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2006, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Yuri Wuensch, Edmonton Sun Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) TRUE NORTH STRONG, FREE, COOL? Humour Sharpens Points About Politics, Pot, Gay Marriage Thinking of Canada as some hyper-libertarian bogeyman - a modern day Sodom and Gomorrah - is an intriguing and hilarious concept. Our fretted, feted warts and misunderstood ways are on display in Escape to Canada, a documentary charting the rise and fall of Canada's liberal permissiveness. The film runs today through Monday at the Metro Cinema in Zeidler Hall in the Citadel Theatre. Directed by Albert Nerenberg, Escape to Canada explores the story behind 2003's removal of the marijuana prohibition and the legalization of gay marriage, events that coincidentally and infamously happened on the same day. For better or worse, depending on your perspective, July 20, part of the "summer of legalization," was a watershed moment for freedom in Canada. However, within months, the Supreme Court of Canada put the pot prohibition back in place and Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservative government is currently taking steps to reinstate the traditional definition of marriage as a union between a man and a woman. So much for that, then. In this era of slanted, Michael Moore-styled documentary filmmaking, Nerenberg doesn't sit on the fence. Canada being only the third country in the world to legalize gay marriage is something he clearly thinks should be celebrated and, hey, a little weed never hurt anyone, eh? Heck no, says U.S. President George Dubya Bush. In the film, the demonization of Canada amongst America's religious right is profound. Up here, by not agreeing to go to war in Iraq, we became a haven for terrorists, who, for all their evils, might as well be gay, too. It's an anarchic state of affairs that we all sit around toasting with the gateway-drug joints we haven't shipped down to infect the U.S. That portrait of Canada is mostly tongue-in-cheek, however. Most Canadians interviewed in the film tout our inoffensiveness and trumpet our freedoms as to what makes Canada a great country. More often than not, though, we define our identity by virtue of how we're not Americans. Regardless, the film's a fascinating account of the effect Canada's had on U.S. policy. Canada's first gay marriage between Toronto's Michael Leshner and Michael Stark in 2003, for instance, is partly credited in the film for helping get Bush re-elected in 2004. It enabled the Republicans to make the sanctity of traditional marriage - not flawed intelligence on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq - more of an election hot button. Whoops! A 2002 declaration by then Vancouver mayor Larry Campbell to simply legalize marijuana was a high-profile slap in the face for America's ballyhooed war on drugs. In the States, anti-pot TV commercials abound. But in Canada, we've since moved on to the more pressing problem of meth. Serious questions about Canada and America's national priorities are raised often in Escape to Canada. But the documentary is also filled with a lot of laughs. One sequence in the film collects footage from a series of supposedly alcohol- induced riots from across Canada contrasted against a bunch of sedate peacenik pot rallies. It's a fairly manipulative moment, but one that still rings true and funny. Better still is watching revered Canadian author Pierre Berton - who revealed he was a pot smoker shortly before his death in 2004 - give instructions on how to properly roll a "coner." The tutorial is worth the price of admission. [SIDEBAR] ESCAPE TO CANADA STAR QUALITY: Bono, George W. Bush, Bill Maher, Marc Emery. BEHIND THE CAMERA: Albert Nerenberg (Stupidity, It's a Riot). NOW PLAYING: At Metro Cinema (Zeidler Hall, Citadel Theatre), tomorrow through Monday at 9 p.m. RATING: PG (nudity). SUN RATING: 4 SUNS (out of 5) - --- MAP posted-by: Jackl