Pubdate: Fri, 30 Nov 2007 Source: Province, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2007 The Province Contact: http://www.canada.com/theprovince/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/476 Author: Glen Schaefer, The Province Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Downtown+Eastside Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) MUST-SEE FOR ANYONE WHO LIVES HERE As raw and blunt as the Downtown Eastside Vancouver drug life it depicts, the tell-it-like-it-is documentary Tears for April: Beyond the Blue Lens isn't much for contrived dramatic flourish. But a moment of horrifying intimacy in the movie's chronicle of six addicts' lives could stand as a visual metaphor for this neighbourhood and what it represents for this city. We're in the squalid home of Carlee, a longtime addict in her mid-20s, who's left single after her boyfriend had fatally shot himself. In the throes of her own intravenous drug habit, Carlee displays a gaping wound on her forearm, where she can't stop tearing at the flesh to free the imagined insects under her skin. The Downtown Eastside streets, and the bleeding social wounds depicted there, are similarly resistant to healing. The plagues include heroin, cocaine and the various synthetic cocktails -- the specific drug varies, as desperation and availability means anything that can be injected will be. A group of Vancouver policemen have been taking video cameras to their streets for the past 10 years, and formed the non-profit Odd Squad to take their anti-drug message to schoolchildren. This feature stands as an expansion and sequel to their earlier documentary Through a Blue Lens. Co-directed by now-retired Vancouver Const. Al Arsenault and veteran TV director Ken Jubenvill, and written by The Province's Steve Berry, the new movie was crafted from 200 hours of footage covering a decade of street life and death. The night-time beat-cop scenes of people howling and writhing on the streets are interspersed with the sunny skyline views of downtown Vancouver that are usually seen in tourist brochures. The cop filmmakers force us to ask what is going wrong in this one tortured part of an otherwise pampered city. It's clear that Arsenault and his colleagues formed genuine friendships with the people they were trying to help. The four women and two men emerge with humour, dreams, delusions and flaws. There's Carlee, who wanted to work with marine animals, but evenutally died of her addictions. There's April, whom Arsenault first met as a teen in the mid-1990s and tried to warn away from the street life. She fought to overcome her addictions so that she could reconnect with the son she couldn't raise, but was murdered by a boyfriend. Smart, articulate Nicola goes through five years of being clean, even joining the Odd Squad's school lecture circuit, before succumbing again to the chemical pull. The Squad's one success story so far is Randy Miller. At last report he was still drug-free and working on the docks, fit and unrecognizable from his haggard street days. We have 10 years of these lives, recorded by people who cared about and liked them, which makes it impossible to turn away. It's must-see viewing for anyone who lives in this city. [sidebar] MOVIE REVIEW Tears for April: Beyond the Blue Lens Warning - 14A: Coarse language drug use. 92 minutes. Grade: B Theatres, showtimes, page B14-15 - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake