Pubdate: Thu, 26 Apr 2007 Source: See Magazine (Edmonton, CN AB) Copyright: 2007 SEE Magazine Contact: http://www.greatwest.ca/see/Intro/letters.htm Website: http://www.seemagazine.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2367 Author: Scott Lingley Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) On Screen: Preview DID YOU KNOW GANDHI WAS IRISH? And Other Pothead Revelations The Naked Queen Apr 27-28, Metro Cinema, Zeidler Hall, Citadel Theatre (9828-101A Ave) It's hard not to like The Naked Queen, Daryl Verville's shoestring ode to cannabis, not in and of itself so much, but because it seems like the kind of movie that a pot smoker from Nelson, B.C. might make-sincere, gentle and deeply in love with weed, but also freighted with heady cosmic concerns, hippie self-righteousness, and the inescapable hoserish-ness of rural Canada. Verville seems like a do-it-yourself kind of guy. He wrote, directed and produced The Naked Queen, as well as adding soundtrack music and performing on screen. Not content to merely play himself in the movie-even though he also plays a dream self who sits down to chat with Gandhi and Jung-Verville also casts himself as Beethoven. First and foremost, The Naked Queen is sincere-sincere in its pro-cannabis message, sincere in its slightly campy evocation of the B.C. neo-hippy vibe, and sincere in espousing the notion that pot has sacramental virtues. The Naked Queen is at its best in delivering the contemporary rationale for pot legalization, running through its environmental and economic potential, pointing out that it's not as consistently deadly as drugs like nicotine and alcohol, and noting how our culture has been influenced all over the place by pot use and pot users. There's also a reasonable nod to the political side of the pot discussion, with doctors, lawyers and pro-pot activists chiming in on the yea side for legalization, especially for medicinal marijuana. Verville does a nice job of profiling Vancouver's Compassion Club, a provider of medical marijuana, and even gets past their pro-pot stance to show the more holistic view of the health care they provide to their patrons, which extends well beyond pain control. It would have been nice to see a more detailed examination of the case in which the U.S. government tried to extradite pot activist Mark Emery for selling pot seeds out of his Vancouver store, but at least it gets mentioned. Verville also captures some nice moments among the anonymous guerilla pot farmers and their secret gardens deep in the southern B.C. interior, who seem to be in it mostly for the dreadlocked, ecologically sound agrarian lifestyle it affords them. As elsewhere in the movie, a restless editing style, which produces some jarring visual non sequiturs, tends to detract from something inherently interesting. This is a minor quibble compared to the half-baked (pun intended) spiritual and philosophical self-indulgence Verville strews throughout The Naked Queen, accompanied by some of the cheesiest "cosmic" visual effects you can achieve with FinalCut Pro. A stoned Verville crashes in front of the TV and dreams he is Beethoven, dictating a letter to Wordsworth. In what might be another dream, he discusses his Beethoven dream with Carl Jung. And for some reason he goes and visits Gandhi who, mysteriously, seems to be sporting an Irish accent. It's one thing for the execution of these sequences to be thoroughly amateurish, but for Verville to think that he should be putting words in the mouths of great thinkers, particularly to back him up on the innate value of reefer, I can't decide if that's hubris or chutzpah. Maybe it's both. Whatever the case, it's all pretty ridiculous, especially when topped up with Verville's pseudo-profound voiceover about the nature of inspiration. In the end, The Naked Queen's most effective sequences seem to be leveled at people who are already inclined to agree that the criminalization of cannabis and the persecution of its users is hysterical and unfounded. As for the voyage inside Daryl Verville's psyche, I'm not sure there's enough pot in all the Kootenays to make that trip seem worthwhile. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman