HTTP/1.0 200 OK Content-Type: text/html Cannabis Culture Lights Up the Festival
Pubdate: Sat, 29 Sep 2007
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2007, The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.globeandmail.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Marsha Lederman
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Marc+Emery
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/Cannabis+Culture

CANNABIS CULTURE LIGHTS UP THE FESTIVAL

Films About Marijuana Are Challenging Viewers' Thoughts About the 
Politics Behind the Drug

VANCOUVER -- Nick Wilson was 26, developing a documentary - his first 
- - about online infidelity, when he had a conversation with his 
68-year-old aunt that sent him in a new direction. Aunt Wendy had 
seen a news story on TV about the Vancouver marijuana activist Marc 
Emery and she was incensed. Why were U.S. authorities after him? And 
why would Canada even consider extraditing a Canadian to face up to 
life in prison, simply for selling marijuana seeds?

"She hates potheads, hates drugs, has no patience for any of it, 
calls them layabouts and bums," Wilson said at a Vancouver coffee 
shop this week, "but she saw that story ... and she was on Mark's side."

Wilson switched gears; this was a story he wanted to tell.

The result, The Prince of Pot: The US vs. Marc Emery, is one of three 
Canadian films at this year's Vancouver International Film Festival 
focusing on marijuana and asking audiences to rethink its illegality.

If it feels like a cliche to have films about pot at a film festival 
in Vancouver, so be it. Wilson, now 27, wanted his film to have its 
world premiere in Vancouver, because of what he calls the city's 
cannabis culture. "It's very visible," he says. "It's like being gay 
in San Francisco."

Besides, he says, "Vancouver is the town [Emery] picked to do battle 
in. It's kind of the front line."

Emery, 49, has been lobbying for the decriminalization of marijuana 
for years. He heads the B.C. Marijuana Party, runs a magazine called 
Cannabis Culture, has a website called pot-tv.net and operates a 
mail-order marijuana-seed distribution business.

In 2005, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration asked Canada to 
extradite Emery and two of his employees to face drug-trafficking 
charges for sending seeds south of the border. Vancouver Police moved 
in and arrested him.

And it was that fact - the co-operation of a Canadian police force 
with American anti-drug forces - that drew Wilson in. "Emery is a 
symptom of a much bigger issue, which is Canadian sovereignty," 
Wilson says. "Who's setting our priorities? Is it us or is it the Americans?"

Wilson was in no way motivated to make this film by a personal desire 
to decriminalize marijuana. He is a very occasional pot smoker, who, 
after following Emery's fight, now believes it should be 
decriminalized, but who gave the matter very little thought before 
making the film.

Burnaby, B.C., director Brett Harvey doesn't smoke much pot either. 
But audiences might be led to think otherwise after watching his 
first film The Union: The Business Behind Getting High. The 
feature-length documentary offers argument after argument in favour 
of decriminalizing marijuana. At its heart is the thesis that there 
are big business forces at work - ranging from pharmaceutical giants 
to prison-guard unions - fighting to keep pot illegal. The people who 
run grow-ops and sell pot in the vast underground market don't want 
it legalized either. Drug traffickers and Drug Enforcement 
Administration agents may make strange bedfellows, but this is the 
world, the film argues, that criminalizing pot creates.

The idea for the film started with its executive producer, Adam 
Scorgie. Three years ago, he returned to British Columbia from New 
York, where he had tried to make a go of it as an actor. Friends in 
Kelowna, B.C., suggested he could make some easy money by starting a 
grow operation. Rather than join the underground pot industry, 
though, Scorgie (who doesn't smoke pot at all) decided to make a film about it.

But when he and Harvey began their research, they discovered a much 
more compelling angle: that the enormous profitability of the 
industry is what's driving the continued criminalization of 
marijuana. "The point of the film is to wake people up," says Harvey. 
"The number-one reason that grow-ops are in communities is that [the 
laws] have created a situation that puts them there."

There are overlapping themes for sure, in The Prince of Pot and The 
Union, and you'll see some recurring characters. Emery, the Prince of 
Pot himself, appears in The Union. Senator Larry Campbell, 
Vancouver's former mayor, is also in both films, decrying the mess 
caused by pot's criminalization and ultimately predicting its 
legalization - although not, he believes, in his lifetime.

For a completely different pot-on-the-big-screen experience, there's 
Weirdsville. Unlike the two documentaries, this is a feature with a 
much subtler pro-pot message (in fact, you might mistake it for an 
anti-drug message). And unlike first-time directors Wilson and 
Harvey, veteran filmmaker Allan Moyle, 60, has a personal interest in 
the subject. He is very much a proud pothead. "The people who made 
the movie think pot is a sweet food," he says. "Pot ... makes you 
conscious and is inclusive and makes you more sensitive to the people 
around you."

The film stars Scott Speedman (Felicity) and Wes Bentley (American 
Beauty) as a couple of stoners in Hamilton, Ont., who have a run-in 
with a satanic cult. Zaniness ensues, but there is a serious message 
here: Hard drugs are bad, but pot has the power to bring people 
together and make them happy. Its illegality is what creates 
opportunities for shady characters to break legs and make fortunes.

Like Wilson, Moyle believes Vancouver's drug culture makes it a good 
spot to show his film. And the city has personal meaning for him. "I 
smoked my first pot in Vancouver," he says on the phone from London. 
In between screenings of Weirdsville, he plans to return to the spot 
in Stanley Park "where my mind was opened." He figures scoring pot in 
Vancouver won't be a problem. "I just know that it'll be coming out 
of the woodwork."

If there's a reason these films have all found their way onto the big 
screen at this time, it's as much about politics as it is pot. With 
the current U.S. administration and its war in Iraq, the distinctions 
between Canada and the United States have never been so obvious. 
These Canadian filmmakers would like to see Canada distance itself 
from America's war on drugs, too.

The Prince of Pot screens this Monday, Friday and Oct. 8 at VIFF and 
airs on CBC Newsworld on Oct. 23. The Union screens at VIFF on Oct. 
10 and 11. Weirdsville screens at VIFF tomorrow and Tuesday and opens 
in four Canadian cities on Oct. 12. 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake