Monthly Archives: October 2010

L’illusioniste

Last week, I made the excellent decision to see a movie at the Cameo. It truly is an excellent venue – it’s the first movie theatre I have been to that not only has its own bar, but permits you to take your drink into the movie.  A perk that suits me fine. Besides this, the main reason that people in Edinburgh know the Cameo is for the art house films they specialize in.

L’illusioniste was made by Sylvain Chomet, the same director who did belleville rendez-vous (aka les triplettes of belleville) and was set mostly in the Edinburgh of the 1950’s with briefer moments in Paris, London, and the Scottish islands.

Its about an ageing, struggling magician who is slowly being pushed aside in favour of more popular rock and roll acts. His search for work forces him to leave Paris for London, then the Scottish isles, and finally to Edinburgh. While performing at a small village on the Scottish isles, he meets a kind but poor young girl who is enchanted by his illusions. She follows him to Edinburgh where he tries to keep the illusion alive for her by secretly taking menial jobs to subsidize his failing career prospects and to provide her with gifts. Her kindness transforms him over the course of the story and she has almost a cinderella reaction to a few pair of shoes, coats, and dresses.  

The animation was amazing. The images they showed of Edinburgh and Scotland in the 1950’s were as good as anything I’ve seen in animation. Its always fun to see places you recognize appear on screen. There was even a scene where the magician accidentally wandered into the Cameo Theatre – when you see something that hits that close, you almost want to turn around to see if he is really there. There was also a scene where he had taken a job performing in a shop window at Jenners, and I’d been there only a couple days before (I actually pass it everyday on my way to work).

I didn’t really have any plans to see a movie that night, but was very happy that I did and also happy that it was a movie with such a local connection. Edinburgh is not really known for being a hot spot of film making, so L’illusioniste is a rare story.

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New photos from Scotland

I finally got around to posting some photos to my Flickr photostream. I’m not finished yet, but I thought a few people might be interested in checking out what’s there so far.

Starting a new job Monday

Its just part time to start, but the guy running the company seems decent so I believe him when he says the company is going to get much busier and that there will probably be more hours for me when it does.

Things are looking up.

Haunted Edinburgh…I finally got around to a ghost tour

Considering my morbid tendencies, its surprising that this wasn’t one of the first things I did in Edinburgh, but a few nights ago I was walking through Grassmarket and saw a sign for a free ghost tour outside the Last Drop pub. Haymarket used to be home to the city’s gallows.

William Burke/the actor playing William Burke was our tour guide. It would be hard for the real William Burke to lead the tour since he was hanged, disected and buried in 1829.  A black comedy is coming out later this year based on the story, with Simon Pegg playing Burke.

I was a little disappointed that the tour didn’t go down to the vaults, apparently haunted by a nasty poltergeist, but thoroughly everything else. The guide told some of the more gruesome stories about Edinburgh past. I’d even heard a few of them as there is a blog about Edinburgh’s Dark Side that I really enjoy.

I even met a Canadian on the tour (from Cape Breton) who was proudly sporting his Canadian flag on his backpack.

The guide told a story that I had to check out, and it was about Sawney Bean and his incestuous family of cannibals who were robbing, murdering and eating travellers that they came across over a number of years. According to that blog I mentioned the story is probably not true; it was most likely made up by the english newspapers trying to depict Scots as more barbaric than they actually were. I was happy to hear that one of the more gruesome stories was likely not true, but the guide spun a few more tales that were almost as disgusting and also true. Edinburgh has had a very violent history.

Overall, I really liked the tour and would definitely do another.

With Halloween coming in about a month, I have to plan something creepy for myself and for Dimitri’s visit.

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