Screen Siren Pictures Inc.

Four Walls

Writer/Director: Brian Johnson
Producer(s): Trish Dolman, Yves Ma (NFB), Tracey Friesen (NFB)
Financing: National Film Board of Canada, BC Film

An Interactive multimedia and online installation by Brian Johnson

“Any city, however small, is in fact divided into two, one the city of the poor, the other of the rich.” – Plato

4 Walls will be an Altman-esque ensemble piece, four characters, four converging narrative threads, four acts, four simultaneously visible screens, and four collaborating users. Each user controls the narrative arch of one of the four principal characters, triggering the playback of individual shots or sequences while simultaneously creating/collaborating in the score of the greater narrative. They do this by interfacing with an online representation of one of a number of musical instruments. Each note that is selected on a given instrument is linked to a particular shot within each act. The challenge for users is to find a happy medium between musical and narrative coherence.

This story is about four people whose lives become increasingly intertwined as the geographic and social space of the city they live in collapses around them. Manjit, who has recently immigrated to Vancouver in order to attend grad school, struggles with a culture that seems cold and unwelcoming. Paul’s company has recently purchased Manjit’s run down apartment building, now he much evict him on the eve of his family’s arrival from India. Meanwhile Manjit has been helping Heather recover files she has lost on her computer – complex soundscapes charting neighborhoods within the city. One of the neighborhoods she frequents is the run down area where her sister has been of late sleeping on the street.

The psychic damage each character suffers begins to be redirected towards those around them. Like mice overpopulating in an enclosed space, the animosity between individuals intensifies as their proximity to one another becomes apparent. What could be a matrix of healthy relationships is denied due to issues of class, bigotry, and trust. The characters must recognize their complicity with the forces that cause other’s pain. Only then is there the hope of a more essential reconciliation, healing, and the creation of community.

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My Dangerous Loverboy

Producer(s): Trish Dolman, Grant Keir (Vita Nova Films), Steve Bowden (Vita Nova Films), Darren Bristow (Quba New Media)
Financing: National Film Board of Canada, New Media BC, UK Film Council

“I thought he loved me. He was exciting, gave me presents, alcohol, and had a wicked car. The one day I woke up naked in a strange town, with no mobile, no money, nothing….Life became a blur. I was passed from one man to another. I couldn’t see how the nightmare would ever end.” Jade, 13 years old.

My Dangerous Loverboy aims to raise awareness of global internal sex trafficking and engage with vulnerable young girls through an interactive website and ground breaking mobile site. Working closely with community outreach partners, we aim to empower our target audience of ‘at risk’ young girls and their wider peer group (12 – 18 year olds) to tell their stories, warn others of potential dangers, and gain the self esteem that will enable them to make choices about their lives.

Throughout the UK, Canada and many other countries around the world, thousands of young girls are being groomed into sex slavery. Initially acting as a “boyfriend”, older men introduce impressionable and vulnerable young girls (sometimes as young as 12 years old) into a world of clothes, drugs and fast cars. The attention given to the girls is intoxicating and they do not recognize the danger signs. They are usually unaware of what is happening to them until it’s too late and they are forced to have sex with groups of older men.

My Dangerous Loverboy aims to provide these marginalized girls with the tools to tell their stories. Using a combination of web based content, mobile, short film, documentary and user generated content, My Dangerous Loverboy will reach out and creatively engage with marginalized girls and their wider peer group in a way not possible before.

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Screen Siren Pictures Inc.

Suite 300, 291 East 2nd Avenue | Vancouver, BC, Canada | V5T 1B8
Phone: (604) 687-7591 | Fax: (604) 687-4937