Login
Toronto International Film Festival
For the Love of Film
Films & Schedules
  • Crackie

  • Sherry White

Country: Canada
Year:
2009
Language:
English
Runtime:
94 minutes
Format:
Colour/35mm
Rating:
14A

Films in this Short Programme:

Vive la Rose - Bruce Alcock
PUBLIC SCREENINGS
Tuesday September 1509:30PM SCOTIABANK THEATRE 3 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Wednesday September 1605:30PM AMC 5 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now
Thursday September 1702:30PM VARSITY 1 Add Film to MyTIFF Filmlist Buy Now

Description

Life on the Rock never seemed easy, but for Mitsy (Meghan Greeley) it is especially rough. The teenager has been abandoned by her mother, a particularly unfit parent prone to both the bottle and the sex trade. She is left to be brought up by her mercurial grandmother Bride (Mary Walsh), who is well-meaning but oppressively suffocating.

Mitsy's dreams for the future hinge on her desire to be a hairdresser, but her current emotional well-being revolves around a wee dog named Sparky, an unwanted canine misfit to whom she becomes hopelessly attached. After Bride agrees to let Mitsy take the dog in as a pet, the teen tries desperately to create a happy, safe place for Sparky to thrive – basically, she wants to offer the dog the kinds of comforts she has never known. But Mitsy's life is shaken once more when her mother returns to Newfoundland. Even though Mitsy is thrilled, Bride wants nothing to do with her ne'er-do-well deadbeat daughter. It's a family made up of three wildly dysfunctional generations, always poised to clash. And in the midst of it all, Mitsy is learning about her emerging sexuality and developing a crush on a local bad boy who works in a rather grim fast food joint.

Sherry White's feature directorial debut is a delicate balancing act, a sharply observed character study of two women who struggle to do their best despite being handed a pretty rotten lot in life. Greeley is a revelation as Mitsy, turning in a performance so sympathetic it is often heart-wrenching to behold. And as her grandmother, Walsh offers us yet another multi-dimensional character, proving she can deliver much more than the comedy that made her famous. Mitsy's story is never sentimentalized, and while the times are indeed as harsh as one can imagine, White offers us some cautious optimism as well. Crackie is a refined film, full of evocative moments and raw human emotion. n Matthew Hays


Sherry WhiteSherry White attended the fine arts programme at Sir Wilfred Grenfell College in Corner Brook, Newfoundland. In addition to writing and acting for a number of television programmes, she also co-wrote and performed in Down to the Dirt, which screened at the Festival in 2008. Her short films Diamonds in a Bucket (07) and Spoiled (08) were also shown at the Festival. Crackie (09) is her first feature film.

Cadillac People's Choice Award