New Calgary film festival explores life's third act - Action News
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CalgaryQ&A

New Calgary film festival explores life's third act

A new Calgary film festival seeks to start a conversation with viewers about aging and how to approach it.

'We are a youth-centric culture and its time for that to change,' says event's artistic director

Land Ho is a feature film that tells the story of a pair of mismatched men, former brother-in-laws, who embark upon a trip to Iceland. It's being screened as part of a film festival in Calgary. (Third Action Film Festival)

In Noatak: Return to the Arctic, a pair of70-somethingsrecreate a kayak trip they took through the Arctic as young men.

An 81-year-old man checks out ofeveryday life and into an experimental society filled with performance artin Charlie Goes to Burning Man.

In Edith and Eddie, apair of 90-somethingsface the challenge of life as America's oldest interracial newlyweds.

Those are snippets of three films screening at The Third Act(ion) Film Festival, which takes place June 8-10 at the GlenbowMuseum.

The festival's artistic director Mitzi Murray spoke to theCalgary Eyeopeneron Tuesday.

Q: What's the Third Act(ion) Film Festival?

A:It's all about discovering the possibilities of aging. We are a youth-centric culture andit's time for that to change.

Seniors have so much to offer andthere's so much possibility in that stage of life. And people need to know about it.

Calgary director Sandi Somers' documentary short, All the World's a Stage, which tells the story of three Calgary theatre pioneers, is being screened at the Third Act(ion) Film Festival, June 8-10 at the Glenbow Museum. The film explores the extraordinary contributions of Joyce Doolittle, Grant Reddick and playwright John Murrell to the evolution of Calgary's theatre scene. (Ellis Choe/CBC)

Q: What is the third act, anyway?

A:If you go by what Stats Canada says, it would be the seventies, eighties and ninetiesbecausewe're just living that long now.

Q:You're not in your third act yet. What got you interested?

A:About threeyears ago, I got a job in the seniors industry andit really hit home about ageismandhow people aren't prepared for the third act.

In fact, my family was dealing with the onset of dementia,and I just thoughtpeople need to be thinking about this. Not hard, but a little bit. And be prepared for it.

Edith and Eddie, a documentary film that tells the story America's oldest interracial newlyweds, is being screened at the Glenbow Museum in Calgary. (Third Action Film Festival)

I know the best way to educate is through entertainment. I love film. [So]let's do it. Let's put on a film festival!

Q: Hollywood seems to have given up on people in their second act, let alone the third. Was it hard to find films featuring characters in the third act of their lives?

A:No, exactly the opposite. We had170 submissionsto the festival and that's just submitted, let alone the ones we sought out. Jane Fonda is pushing hard for films in that age range. I actually think it's turning around.

Q: What's screening at Third Act(ion)?

A:We have [All the World's a Stage], a Calgary-born documentary a homage piece to Joyce Doolittle, GrantReddickandJohnMurrell, who are icons in the [Calgary] theatre industry.

We have an Academy Award-nominated documentary calledEdith and Eddie. It goes from awe-inspiring love story to a soul-crushing damnation of public guardianship in the U.S.

What's very scary is thepublic guardianship system is similar in Canada. It's important for people to see that.

[The British comedy]Finding Your Feetactually played in Calgaryabout a month ago. My husband andI went,and the theatre was full. They clapped afterwards.

Finding Your Feet, a British late-life comedy, is being screened as part of the film festival. (Third Act(ion) Film Festival)

Q: What time did it screen?

A: Early evening. [It] wasn't the middle of the day!

Q: It sounds like a cross between real life and entertainment. Is it?

A:We want togive a real mix. Life is full of possibilities. But the third act is the third act. We have to be cognizant of what is coming and beprepared for it.


With files from theCalgary Eyeopener.