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fishing

Wharf Rats: Fishing, Fighting and Forgiveness

Wharf Rats may not be the finest vessel but don’t abandon ship yet.

Written and directed by Jason Arsenault,?Wharf Rats?tells the story of Hughie Hackett (Robbie Carruthers), a lifelong slacker who lives in a coastal fishing community. Spending his nights caring for his traumatized mother and his days avoiding responsibility elsewhere, Hughie has little interest in the hard work of the fishing community. With his family?s fishing business under the care of his corrupt Uncle Angus, Hughie?s life is going nowhere. However, when he discovers his father?s will, he believes that he should be the rightful heir of the business. Then, when a stranger named Hackett (Daniel Lillford) literally stumbles out of the water, Hughie concocts a plan to steal back the family business and its potential value for sale.

Set against a small fishing community in the Maritimes, Wharf Rats is an exploration of toxic masculinity set against a changing world. Director Arsenault has developed a story with some solid potential as a coming-of-age tale of sorts for two men, each with different motivations. Having emerged from the waters alone and confused, Hackett is simply learning what it means to be a man in a world he does not understand. At the same time, Hughie?s reliance on his own faulty views on masculinity has left him trying to survive as one. 

Unfortunately, while meant to be a comedy, the humour doesn?t always work. In other words, although Ratsabsolutely commits to its silliness, some over-the-top performances by Carruthers and Trainor keep the material from coming together. Having said this, the film?s strongest performance easily comes from Annie Briggs as the self-reliant fisherwoman, Crystal Dawn. Her confidence and simplicity helps buoy the film by providing the necessary counter-balance to the wild antics of Hughie and Hackett. As a result, Briggs is an absolutely delight and serves as the emotional bedrock of the film.

It?s worth noting that?Rats?definitely does have its strengths worth celebrating, especially as it undercuts stereotypes of toxic masculinity. As Hugh attempts to teach his friend what it means to be a man, he believes that carousing, drinking and cursing are the order of the day. (After all, a good fight makes one a man, right?) For Hughie, his understanding of ?being a man? seems stolen from a bygone era fueled by hyper-masculine stereotypes. However, his vision for manhood consistently falls short, often at the feet of the film?s female characters. Through characters such as Crystal Dawn and Hughie?s mother,?Rats?allows the woment to be the ones who exemplify hard work and honesty. With each female character,?Rats?highlights the strength of their character against the brutality and idiocy of the men. (Of course, the exception to this comes in the form of Hackett?s mother, yet even she is allowed her moment of truth.) There?s a purity and integrity to the women in this film that serves as its brightest star.

Furthermore, the film also shows the power of forgiveness against the damage of a lie. As Hughie constantly lies to his friends, he is one of many who play fast and loose with the truth. Focused only on himself, Hughie is willing to deceive anyone in his life as long as it benefits him in the end. Of course, this leaves a trail of wreckage in his wake and relationships are shattered. Even so, when forgiveness enters the picture, it covers over a multitude of sins. (?Really? I?ve done a lot of stuff,? he points out when offered grace.) This act of grace provides Hughie with the motivation to change his ways and chart a new path of truth and integrity in a corrupt world. No, he doesn?t deserve the hope he?s offered but he is still given the chance to change. In these moments, the film has some real power.

Where Rats is at its best though is as a love letter to the people of fishing communities who get up every day and work hard in order to support their families and themselves. Despite the fact that the humour is anchored in its setting, it never pokes fun at its people. In fact, the comedy stems primarily in the Hughie and Hackett?s inexperience and their inability to adapt. In this way, there?s an eye of respect embedded within Wharf Ratsthat highlights the challenges of maintaining a living in the midst of the ever-changing fishing industry.

Even though it?s not entirely sinking, Wharf Rats certainly does feel like it?s taking on water at times. Nevertheless, this may still be a ship worth saving. Anchored by a love for its culture and an interesting exploration of the toxicity of masculine power, there?s still a charm to these Rats that keeps the film afloat. 

To hear our interview with director/co-producer Jason Arsenualt and co-producer Jenna MacMillan, click here.

Wharf Rats is available on VOD on Tuesday, February 22, 2022.

Luzzu – Moderity vs. Tradition

?Without a boat you lose your way.?

Is it possible to live in a rapidly changing world and stay true to the past? If we start giving up bits of our heritage, will there be anything left of it? Traditional ways of life compete with modernity in Alex Camilleri?s Luzzu.

On Malta, Jesmark (Jesmark Scicluna) fishes in the ways of his family for generations in a brightly colored luzzu boat. The boat was his father?s, and his father?s, and his father?s. Jesmark?s baby footprint is painted on the inside of the boat. He goes out fishing each day, but it is hard work with little payback?especially when trawlers are catching far more, but destroying the ecosystem in the process. When his boat develops a leak, he brings it ashore until he can replace the bad piece of wood.

But Jesmark is also a family man. His wife (Michela Farrugia) and infant son depend on him, and medical bills for the baby are beginning to grow. Jesmark could take a payout from the EU that wants to decrease the number of fishermen, but that would mean giving up fishing forever and destroying the boat. But Jesmark has also discovered the shady side of the fish market, and has begun to attach himself to the black market, moving illegal catches and other goods on and off the island.

Will this be the answer to his family?s needs? Will this move into modernity be an abandonment of past generations? Will it be selling a bit of his soul?

There is certainly a bit of romantic nostalgia about Jesmark?s attempt to live as his father and grandfather had done. It is heartbreaking to think of the beautiful luzzu being destroyed?not just because of its beauty, but because of all that it means to Jesmark.

But the world of his father and grandfather is long gone. Things have changed. It really doesn?t matter if things are better or worse because of the change, it is the reality. Those changes aren?t sudden, but they accumulate year by year by year.

The film concludes with a paraphrase of ?the Ship of Theseus?, an ancient thought experiment that dates back to ancient Greece. If you replace the pieces of a boat one at a time, when everything has been replaced is it still the same boat? As we watch Jesmark working to replace the bad wood on his luzzu, we know that this is just the most recent of many repairs that he, his father, and grandfather must have made on that boat. Is that really the same boat as his ancestors fished in?

But even more, this is a story about life. As we see the world change piece by piece?as societies shift bit by bit?as families go through good and bad times?as individuals face new situations and needs?are they still the same person, family, society, or world as before?

These are questions and processes that we face often?it could be at work, in churches, in schools, in personal relationships. We may often feel the pain of loss about what once was. But perhaps we can also find a way to celebrate the continuity of things through the changes.

Luzzu is playing in select theaters.

Photos courtesy of Kino Lorber.

Blue Miracle – Fishing for the Lost

?My prayer worked! I can?t believe it!?

Based on a true story, Julio Quintana?s Blue Miracle is a story of answered prayers, but it is even more a story about finding rebirth in the people around us. It is the story of a washed up boat captain, a fishing tournament, and an orphanage facing eviction. It is billed as a story about saving an orphanage, but there is much more to be saved in this story.

Casa Hogar is a boys? home in Cabo San Lucas. The boys are cared for by Papa Omar (Jimmy Gonzales), who was himself orphaned as a child. But money is tight. The bank is threatening foreclosure. What will become of the boys? Will they have to go back out on to the streets? Omar is determined that will never happen.

Blue Miracle. Anthony Gonzalez as Geco, Dennis Quaid as Captain Wade Malloy, Miguel Angel Garcia as Moco, Jimmy Gonzales as Omar in Blue Miracle. Cr. Carlos Rodriguez/NETFLIX ? 2020

After a hurricane blows through, a prestigious fishing tournament which is usually for well-heeled fishermen, opens to local fishermen for no entrance fee. Wade Malloy (Dennis Quaid), a boat captain who has twice won the event (but in now broke and broken) tries to enter, but as an American doesn?t qualify as local. So he is paired with Casa Hogar who along with Omar, brings a few of the boys, who must actually do the fishing for a trophy marlin. They have three days to try to catch the biggest marlin and bring in enough money to save Casa Hogar and restore Malloy?s ego.

The theme of the film is established very early when Omar is awakened and told that one of the younger boys has gone out into the night. He knows just where to find him?sleeping at the port, wishing for his mother to come find him. Omar, who we see has a large cross tattooed on his back, heads off to gather the boy in. He carries the sleeping child back through the dangerous streets?even a minor gang war. The scene is much like paintings that depict the Parable of the Lost Sheep (Luke 15:3-6; Matthew18:12-13).

Blue Miracle. Jimmy Gonzales as Omar, Steve Gutierrez as Tweety in Blue Miracle. Cr. Carlos Rodriguez/NETFLIX ? 2020

The rest of the film is a series of lost sheep experiences. The two main lost sheep are Malloy, who has become so involved with what he calls ?a calling to greatness? that he has lost touch with all the things of value in his life. He only cares about the next marlin (and not getting that, stewing in his misery). In a twist, his son now lives away from him and barely knows him, while the orphans are fatherless.

The other main lost sheep is Moco, an older street-harden kid that Omar is trying to get to come into Casa Hogar. When Omar tells him he could use his help, Moco replies, ?I only look out for myself.? He stole Malloy?s watch, and to avoid jail returns it under Omar?s supervision. When he and Malloy are on the boat together, there?s friction.

Blue Miracle. Dennis Quaid as Captain Wade Malloy, Jimmy Gonzales as Omar in Blue Miracle. Cr. Carlos Rodriguez/NETFLIX ? 2020

Even Omar has a certain lostness, in spite of his confidence and maturity. He as much as Malloy or Moco needs to be rescued from the wolves around him and within him.

It isn?t so much a particular ?shepherd? that finds these lost sheep. It is the interactions between them all. Each in his own way discovers that he is lost when one of the others shows him the way to return to the safety of the fold.

Blue Miracle. Pablo Rodriguez as Young Omar in Blue Miracle. Cr. Carlos Rodriguez/NETFLIX ? 2020

The film provides the orphan boys with witty dialogue and allows them to be the main purveyors of wisdom (the wisest is the smallest of them). The film is a feel-good story without going overboard with sentimentality. It allows us to not only celebrate the good that comes, but also to consider the ways we and those around us are in need of someone to lead us back from time to time.

Blue Miracle streams on Netflix.

Photos courtesy of Netflix.

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