Advertisement

‘Rebelle’ triumphant at Canadian Screen Awards

TORONTO – Rebelle ruled while Flashpoint continued to burn bright at the inaugural Canadian Screen Awards on Sunday, as the best in homegrown film and television gathered for a first-ever joint bash hosted by an off-the-wall Martin Short – who brought along his popular alter ego Ed Grimley.

The Oscar-nominated child soldier drama Rebelle dominated the film categories with a whopping 10 trophies, including wins for best film, best director, best screenplay and best actress for its teenage star, Rachel Mwanza. It had been up for 12 awards.

“I’m very touched,” said Montreal director Kim Nguyen as he collected the best director prize.

“I’d like to dedicate this to the women in the Congo, their strength, their courage and their resilience.”

Meg Tilly, star of Global’s Bomb Girls, won Best Actress in
a Drama Series. 

Story continues below advertisement

Tilly, who won a Golden Globe in 1986 for her role in Agnes
of God
– which also earned her an Oscar nomination – said she feels blessed to be back in front of the camera. 

“It represents Global TV taking a chance on someone who’s been out of the business for 17 years and believing I can do it,” she said after accepting her award.

The 53-year-old was born in California but raised in British
Columbia.
 

Bomb Girls really is about women becoming more than they
think they are and what I love about it is that all the women are fully-rounded
characters,” said Tilly. “They’re just all
human. I really, really appreciate that. I love the show.” 

Meanwhile, Flashpoint took the top prizes in the TV race, including best drama and best dramatic actor for star Enrico Colantoni. 

The inaugural awards gala celebrated the best in Canadian film and television together for the first time, and Short kicked things off with a musical opening that saw him hoisted by wires to soar over the star-studded audience.

“They had me so high up there I could see both of Mike Duffy’s houses,” quipped Short, keeping things topical for his Canuck audience.

He later lobbed affectionate barbs at Canadian celebrities Don Cherry, Rick Mercer and The Bachelor Canada winner Brad Smith, and took aim at recent Oscar winner Argo, which earned criticism for downplaying Canada’s role in rescuing six U.S. citizens caught up in the 1979 Iran hostage crisis.

Story continues below advertisement

“It’s always nice to be home,” Short said to a star-studded audience including James Cromwell, Jay Baruchel, Sandra Oh and Stephen Amell.

“I flew in on Air Canada. Or as Ben Affleck calls it, American Airlines.”

The film Rebelle – which lost last week at the Oscars to Austria’s Amour – also picked up trophies for best screenplay, editing, cinematography, sound editing, overall sound and art direction/production design.

While walking the red carpet before the bash, Nguyen said he was happy to shine the spotlight on his film crew, noting it was “a team effort.”

“What’s great about the Canadian Awards and the Jutras is that my staff, my crew, is getting that recognition that’s completely deserved,” he said.

“It’s a team effort and we were always in an improvisational kind of mode and we were always in-the-moment. For that to work, we had to have a team that was really on cue and that was the case.”

Xavier Dolan’s gender-bending feature Laurence Anyways collected prizes for best make-up and costume design.

The best comedy trophy went to The Movie Network’s Less Than Kind. 

“The series started with the unfortunate passing of Maury Chaykin, not a great place to start a comedy,” said showrunner Mark McKinney, going on to complain that the prestige category was not part of the later televised bash.

Story continues below advertisement

“This is Canadian comedy. We’ll see you on-air next year.”

Sarah Polley won the best documentary prize for her acclaimed confessional Stories We Tell. 

The revamped bash was part of sweeping changes the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television brought in to draw bigger audiences to “a bigger show with bigger impact.”

When the merged bash was announced last year, Academy chair Martin Katz pointed to the Golden Globes and British Academy of Film and Television Arts Awards as worthy role models.

In a bizarre twist, reality star Jody Claman of The Real Housewives of Vancouver accepted the best news anchor trophy on behalf of winner Peter Mansbridge when he wasn’t there to accept in person. Claman was there to present the award along with co-stars Ronnie Negus and Mary Zilba.

Bravo’s period saga The Borgias was named best international drama and Salman Rushdie won for best adapted screenplay, for adapting his novel for the sweeping feature Midnight’s Children.

with files by Global News 

Curator Recommendations

Sponsored content

AdChoices