
/11
min. / Animation
/2004 / Canada
A gentle tale of love told
in halting words. A film about healing after profound loss.
John
and Michael pays homage to two men with Down syndrome
who shared an intimate and profoundly loving relationship
that deeply affected the filmmaker. Animated with clay backlit
on glass, the film shimmers like stained glass in motion.
Narrator Brian Davis, also intellectually challenged, brings
the men alive with great sensitivity. The audience shares
in the various emotions that infuse their everyday living.
John
and Michael, by its artistry, rises above society’s
traditional ideas around disability, sexuality and death.
When the heart is touched, differences melt. Love is what
defines humanity.
Technique: Clay backlit on glass
Shira Avni-
filmmaker
Born
in Petakh Tikvah, Israel in 1974, Shira Avni was raised
in Montreal. She graduated with a BFA in Animation from
Concordia University in 1998, and has worked as a director
and animator at the National Film Board of Canada from 1997
to the present. Her first film, From Far Away,
part of the Talespinners collection, has screened in over
thirty festivals worldwide and has won several prizes, including
the Golden Sheaf Award for Best Children’s Production
at the Yorkton Short Film and Video Festival.
Shira
received her MFA in Film/Video/New Media from the School
of the Art Institute of Chicago in May 2003, and returned
to Montreal to pursue her teaching and filmmaking career.
She is currently a part-time faculty member at Concordia
University’s Cinema program, and has taught numerous
animation workshops in Montreal, Chicago, and Seoul. Her
latest film, John and Michael, continues her passion
for creating innovative and challenging children’s
media.
Produced
by the National Film Board of Canada and Shira Avni.