A 20th Century Chocolate Cake
A 20th Century Chocolate Cake | |
---|---|
Directed by | Lois Siegel |
Written by | Greg Van Riel |
Produced by | Lois Siegel |
Starring | Greg Van Riel Charles Fisch, Jr. |
Cinematography | Georges Archambault Peter Benison Ken Decker Donald Delorme Raymond Gravel Serge Ladouceur Glen MacPherson Mike Rixon Lois Siegel Daniel Villeneuve Werner Volkmer François Warot |
Edited by | Lois Siegel |
Music by | André Vincelli |
Production company | Chocolate Cake Productions |
Release date |
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Running time | 70 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
A 20th Century Chocolate Cake is a Canadian comedy docufiction film, directed by and released in 1983.[1] The film stars Greg Van Riel and Charles Fisch Jr. as Greg and Charles, two young men in Montreal who are trying to find creative fulfillment in their professional lives; Greg pursues work as a freelance writer of human interest journalism, while the openly gay Charles takes a job as a dancer in a gay bar.[2]
The film was an expansion of an earlier short film, Recipe to Cook a Clown, which Siegel, Van Riel and Fisch had made together in the 1970s.[3] Due to budgetary limitations, the film took over three years to make, went through a dozen different cinematographers, and was shot predominantly on stray ends of donated film from other film projects.[3]
André Vincelli received Genie Award nominations for Best Original Score and Best Original Song at the 5th Genie Awards in 1984.[4]
References[]
- ^ "A slice of life served with fiction". The Globe and Mail, July 16, 1983.
- ^ "Lois Siegel's A 20th Century Chocolate Cake". Cinema Canada, July/August 1983.
- ^ a b "The baking of a chocolate cake". Cinema Canada, June 1983.
- ^ "11 nominations for Chapdelaine in Genie race". The Globe and Mail, February 10, 1984.
External links[]
- 1983 films
- English-language films
- Canadian films
- Canadian comedy films
- Canadian docufiction films
- Canadian LGBT-related films
- LGBT-related comedy films
- 1983 LGBT-related films
- Films set in Montreal
- Films shot in Montreal
- 1980s English-language films