Style: we heard about it

Paris Fashion Week has come to a close but here I share some thought provoking photos

Yves Saint Laurent
Yves Saint Laurent
A model presents a creation by British designer Vivienne Westwood. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
A model presents a creation by British designer Vivienne Westwood. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

 How these designs make it from runway into an everyday wardrobe is anybody’s guess.  

A model holding a dog painted in blue wears a creation for Manish Arora's Spring-Summer 2017 ready-to-wear fashion collection. AP Photo/Zacharie Scheurer
A model holding a dog painted in blue wears a creation for Manish Arora’s Spring-Summer 2017 ready-to-wear fashion collection. AP Photo/Zacharie Scheurer.  FYI: the blue dye is non-toxic

Still, it’s a fantasy world that’s fun to partake in and even more fun to eavesdrop on some of the casual conversation.

Models at the Haider Ackermann show. Richard Bord/Getty Images
Models at the Haider Ackermann show. Richard Bord/Getty Images

Overheard at Fashion Week

A true sign of the times, a girl mutters to her seatmate, “all this talk about buy now, wear now. I just want to be able to afford now.”

A backstage interaction:
Assistant: We have to get her into hair and make up!
Manager: No, that’s the look

A waif looking brunette sits next to a blogger:
Brunette: Oh my god, you are just so cute. Too cute. I’m obsessed with you.
Blogger: Have we met ?

In a question we all wonder, but seldom say out loud, a show-goer asks the person sitting next to them, “Have we met or do I just know you from Instagram??”

Givenchy
Givenchy
Lily-Rose Depp during a photocall before the Chanel show. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
Lily-Rose Depp (just look at her face and  you can see Johnny) during a photo call before the Chanel show. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
A model walks the runway during the Vivienne Westwood show. Antonio de Moraes Barros Filho/WireImage
A model walks the runway during the Vivienne Westwood show. Antonio de Moraes Barros Filho/WireImage
A model wears a creation for Giambattista Valli's Spring-Summer 2017 ready-to-wear fashion collection. AP Photo/Thibault Camus
A model wears a creation for Giambattista Valli’s Spring-Summer 2017 ready-to-wear fashion collection. AP Photo/Thibault Camus

Such is the fabulous, fun and flaky world of fashion.

 

Food: Thai Beet Soup

beetsoup3

I’m in a soup making mood and that explains my pure of heartiness.  Blame it on the weather, flu season or just craving a warm bowl of healthy goodness.   In any case in the last week alone I’ve made homemade Miso Soup, Sweet Potato & Lentil, Bone Broth and last night for the first time, Thai Beet Soup. What I look for is nutritional value, tastiness, uniqueness and lastly (it is soup) presentation.  I think this one falls into all those categories.  It was delicious.  The beets make this a colourful and liver supporting meal.  The beautiful Thai flavours are also full of antioxidants. See bottom for health benefits of select ingredients.  If you make it, I’d love your feedback.beetsoup1

THAI BEET SOUP

Ingredients

5 medium beets – peel if not organic and chop into bite size pieces

2 Tbsp. virgin coconut oil

4 shallots, chopped

3 garlic cloves, minced

4 cups (1 liter) vegetable stock (preferably homemade)

2 Tbsp. ginger, grated

1 stalk *lemongrass, discard outer dry leaves and mince the bottom (1/3 of stalk)

2 cups (500 ml) coconut milk

1 Tbsp. tamari (or low sodium soy sauce if you don’t have tamari)

1 tsp. raw honey

2 limes,  juiced

½ tsp. unrefined salt (try Himalayan)

¼ cup cilantro for garnish (or try fresh dill)

Directions

Preheat oven to 350F.  Place beets in baking dish and cover the bottom of the dish with ½ inch of water (to prevent from drying out).  Cover and bake until tender – approx. 45 minutes or until a fork can easily be inserted into middle.

Once beets are ready, melt coconut oil in large pot over medium heat.

Add shallots and garlic, cook for 3 minutes, stirring frequently.

For the remainder of the lemongrass that is inedible (outer leaves and upper portion), you can bruise/pound them with a mortar to release the oils and add to the soup whole for extra flavour.  Of course remove them when soup is done.

Add the beets and the rest of the ingredients, except for the cilantro or dill if using.  Simmer until heated through.

Serve in bowls and garnish with cilantro or dill.  You can add a dollop of yogurt if you like to make it more like a borscht.

If you prefer a pureed soup, you can use an immersion blender to blend until smooth.  Just remove the bruised lemongrass first.

*Lemongrass can be substituted for lemon zest (zest of ½ lemon = 1 stalk of lemongrass).beetsoup2

Nutritional Value of Select Ingredients

Beets: The beetroot is an excellent source of folic acid, and a great source of fibre, manganese and potassium.  It is an excellent tonic for the liver, has anti-cancer properties, increases bowel function and decreases cholesterol levels.  The greens are even higher in nutritional value than the roots; they are rich in calcium, iron, and vitamins A and C.

Garlic: Garlic is touted as a “cure-all” due to its many uses in medicine.  It has a beneficial effect on heart disease, cancer, and infectious diseases.  It decreases cholesterol levels, detoxifies the body, stimulates the immune system, and the list goes on and on.  It’s more beneficial if you smash it or at least chop it beforehand to let the oxygen get to it and let it sit for at least 10 minutes before using.

Ginger: This root is an excellent remedy for nausea, morning sickness, upset stomach, indigestion, vomiting, motion sickness, and cramps.  It helps to lower blood pressure, reduce fever, prevent internal blood clots, etc.  Who ever knew that something so medicinal could be so tasty!

Soup’s On!

Culture/Style : Did the 20’s really ROAR?

I don’t know. Being way before my time I couldn’t personally tell you but from all the photos and stories from others who were around then, it sure looked like everyone was having fun.  We all know that fun doesn’t last forever though.

But we try.  Saturday night we tried to re-create the era as best we could for the 16th annual 65 Roses Gala to raise money to help find a cure for a terrible disease called cystic fibrosis (CF).

With friends Brian and Colleen. Sister Lisa at right.
With friends Brian and Colleen.  My sister Lisa on the right.

My personal connection to the evening is my good friend and a true inspiration; Colleen Kohse.  Aside from sharing select photos from the evening here is what Colleen had to say:

Lisa and Colleen
Lisa and Colleen

gala12

On this day, 28 years ago, I had my heart double-lung transplant. It’s truly amazing to be here after such a long time, although it really doesn’t feel that long ago. I’m thankful for all the wonderful people who helped me survive and thrive.

Tonight, my friends are having a small, intimate party for just over 300 people, with formal dress, cocktails, a gourmet dinner and dancing at a high-end Vancouver hotel. In truth, it’s not actually a party for me, but I can pretend!! It’s the 65 Roses Gala for Cystic Fibrosis and I’m proud to be on the committee putting together this fabulous event. So I’ll be drinking, eating and dancing until midnight to celebrate my special day and a special day to help everyone with cystic fibrosis survive and thrive. Cheers 🍾🍸

With musician friend Doug Louie
With musician friend Doug Louie

“I like LARGE PARTIES. They’re so intimate.  At small parties there isn’t ANY privacy.” – Jordan Miller, The Great Gatsby

F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby immortalized the era – right down to its inclusion of a Lenglen-esque sportswoman in the character Jordan Baker (Credit: Warner Bros)
F Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby immortalized the era – right down to its inclusion of a Lenglen-esque sportswoman in the character Jordan Baker (Credit: Warner Bros)
The room at the Fairmont Waterfront Hotel
Tables set up at Fairmont Waterfront Hotel

And if you want to know more……….here is a great article

The rhythms and beats of jazz permeated the visual – Dennis Nothdruft

While getting ready I came across my mom's mink stole.
While getting ready I decided to wear my mom’s mink stole (the stuff you keep just in case…you get invited to a theme party) over my sequin dress, a gift from Colleen.

“It was an age of miracles,” F Scott Fitzgerald wrote in his essay Echoes  of the Jazz Age. “It was an age of art, it was an age of excess.” In his fiction, the author beguilingly captured the sybaritic Roaring 20s – hedonistic, glamorous, decadent, opulent. Photographs and illustrations from the era reflect this seductive, dazzling sense of wildness and fun – flapper girls smiling ecstatically and dancing with abandon in their swishing, tasseled dresses and bobbed hair, or posing in tumbling marabou boas and towering feathered head-dresses.

Lisa was made for the era
Lisa was made for the era

“There is a constant sense of rhythm and femininity and glamour,” says Dennis Nothdruft, who has curated an exhibition at London’s Fashion and Textile Museum called Jazz Age: Fashion and Photographs of the 1920s. “There’s a sense of society crashing into the modern age, with movement and speed and romanticism.” So how and why did the 1920s ‘roar’? And what made the Jazz Age so unique – and influential?

Kristen & Lisa
Kristen & Lisa

The speed of change during the 1920s was dizzying. Booming prosperity and social upheaval combined with a youthful, post-war euphoria and new female empowerment to make the 1920s paradigm-shifting, boundary-busting decade. “The generation before them had been slaughtered in the war, and there was a devil-may-care attitude,” Nothdruft says. And like the musical genre it was named after, the Jazz Age was full of unruly spontaneity, improvisation and edginess. “Jazz was the sound of the ‘20s, and the rhythms and beats of the music permeate the visual.”

Doug Louie & Amanda Wood play old tunes while guests arrive.
Doug Louie on piano & Amanda Wood play old tunes while guests arrive.

Sin and Spectacle

The 1920s was when “the modern woman’s wardrobe began,” Nothdruft says. Out went the tight corsets and bustles of the Edwardian era, as did the long, hugely impractical dresses, elaborate hair styles and hats of that time, and in came the shorter, drop-waisted dresses and easy-to-manage bobbed hairstyles. Silk pyjamas became popular for lounging, entertaining at home or for the beach, with chinoiserie and Egyptian styles particularly popular in clothing and jewellery – the latter due largely to the blockbuster exhibition of King Tut’s tomb in 1922. Coco Chanel even took to wearing trousers. What began as a niche, bohemian youthquake soon trickled down. The fashions became pervasive and the bobbed hairstyles de rigeur among the general female population, and with them a sense of liberation and confidence.

And now that the motion picture was emerging, the new trends could reach more people faster than ever before. Hollywood was bursting into the popular consciousness with an explosion of film palaces going up across the world, and massive stars coming into their own – like the glamorous Gloria Swanson in her elaborate head dresses and rebellious ‘it girl’ Clara Bow.

In the extravagantly ruffled robes de style by Lanvin and in the ubiquitous feathered boas, fringes and tassles, there was a new feeling of dynamism – perfectly captured by American illustrator Gordon Conway, herself a flapper career girl, whose work encapsulates the music, sensuality and glamour of the time. “These clothes were made to move and dance in, and the capes with huge collars and no structure literally fell off the wearer as she moved,” says Nothdruft.

A new sense of speed and movement pervaded culture – crucially the motorcar had arrived, and even tennis became racey. “There was an explosion of athleticism,” says Nothdruft, whose exhibition devotes a section to the sportswear of the era. Women’s tennis had previously been a genteel pastime, with ladies in long dresses and heavy petticoats drifting daintily around a lawn. But in the 1920s the first female star of tennis, French player Suzanne Lenglen, was transforming the women’s game with her tough, fast playing style (considered by some commentators ‘unladylike’) and her diva-ish ways. She always arrived courtside in a fur coat, whatever the weather, and played in modern flapper outfits – calf-length, slim-silhouetted silk dresses in red or orange. She also had a tendency to smoke and drink cognac on the court – to steady her nerves, she said. She shocked the crowd by serving overhead, and became known as ‘the Goddess’.

Breaking the mould

It was also the first time that mannish styles became fashionable. “There was a trend for women wearing tuxedos and tailored suits. Coco Chanel borrowed hers from her boyfriend along with fisherman’s sweaters and tweeds,” says Nothdruft.  “And lesbianism was also fashionable for the first time, certainly in café society in Paris, London and New York.” Among the stylish, talented lesbian stars of the era were painter Romaine Brooks and her partner, writer Natalie Barney, along with the poet and author of The Well of Loneliness, Radclyffe Hall. Women like these helped set the agenda for the decades that followed, and their chic, androgynous style has proved enduring – androgynous dressing and masculine tailoring for women have appeared at regular intervals over the subsequent decades, and now, nearly a century on, the look is once again enjoying a renaissance, at French label Céline in particular.

In New York it was the era of the Harlem Renaissance, with a wave of creative energy from black artists, musicians and writers, notably writer and social activist Langston Hughes, one of the earliest innovators of jazz poetry.  Meanwhile in Europe racial boundaries were increasingly being challenged, with African-American jazz musicians widely feted, and the talented and flamboyant cabaret dancer Josephine Baker becoming an icon of the era.

It was a time of liberation and boundary breaking, says Nothdruft: “The career woman was born, and for the first time women could choose not to marry. Young women were working in the day, and were out un-chaperoned in Chinatown dens, jazz clubs and speakeasies.” The party lasted for 10 years and then, as Fitzgerald put it: “leaped to a spectacular death in October 1929”. Glittering but tragic, beautiful and damned, the emotionally bankrupt lost generation – this is how the Jazz Agers have often been depicted. But in its mood and its aesthetic, not to mention its sheer progressiveness, the Jazz Age remains arguably the most beguiling and culturally influential era of them all.

And fun while it lasted. As Fitzgerald wrote in Echoes of the Jazz Age, his essay for a 1931 issue of Scribner’s Magazine: “After two years the Jazz Age seems as far away as the days before the War. It was borrowed time anyhow – the whole upper tenth of a nation living with the insouciance of grand ducs and the casualness of chorus girls. But moralizing is easy now and it was pleasant to be in one’s twenties in such a certain and unworried time.”

Source: Lindsay Baker – BBC

Feel-good Friday: Global Warning

Oh those poor men – they often don’t know what hit them.

If women came with warning labels….. warninglabel4 I may or may not kill you.  If I don’t F….you then at least I’ll F…with your head!warninglabel6

Because I’m worth ALL the trouble
warninglabel5what would your warning label be?

Me? Sorry; someone tore mine off when I was born.

Men seem to like it when we’re being a little nasty.

HERE’S TO NASTY WOMEN EVERYWHERE!

Always read the fine print!

“The spider’s web: She finds an innocuous corner in which to spin her web. The longer the web takes, the more fabulous its construction. She has no need to chase. She sits quietly, her patience a consummate force; she waits for her prey to come to her on their own, and then she ensnares them, injects them with venom, rendering them unable to escape. Spiders – so needed and yet so misunderstood.” – Donna Lynn Hope

 

beauty: an apple a day

Going Green

juicebeauty4I’m striving to get my Vitamin C any way possible especially during the colder months. Luckily I love apples. Green Apples have multiple beauty benefits aside from being good for one’s overall health as they also help keep your teeth and gums healthy.  It wouldn’t be too much of a stretch to call it a natural beauty remedy.

  • If you’re a person focused on your beauty and skin health, then you’ll certainly reap the benefits of green apples. They contain vitamins A, B, C, as well as E. They also help keep your skin fresh and glowing.

juicebeauty1And even though we’re lucky to see a ray of sunshine now, we should still be applying a moisturizer with SPF daily.  At this time of the year I lower the amount to at least SPF 15.  This is the lowest SPF you should consider. In my opinion anything less is a waste of time and anything higher than 30 (unless you ski) may not be necessary either.

So I was really pleased to receive a full size Green Apple Brightening moisturizer with SPF from natural beauty company, Juice Beauty.  It was in my Spring Box of Style but I just only started using it.

I just received my Fall Box of Style which I’ll share with you next week….it’s amazing!juicebeauty3As it so happens the brand’s new creative director of makeup is Gwyneth Paltrow.  She should know a thing or two.  Apparently she benchmarked every item against conventional versions (mostly prestige), pushing the company’s chemist, Mimi, to match their efficacies. “It can’t be that the makeup is organic and that’s why you should use it,” she says.  “It has to be as good or better than anything else.  That’s how you’re going to move the needle in a real way.”

 So guess I’ll be trying some of the makeup next….

Have you tried any of their products?  If so, which ones and how do you like them?

Style: Lost in Transition

For fashion lovers, making the transition to a full-on Fall wardrobe can be FUN.fashionshow1falltrans1hats2

Just another excuse to wear leopard - for Fall
Just another excuse to wear faux leopard in Fall
Paris Fashion Week Fall 2016 Street Style. Photo by Adam Katz Sinding.
Starting with COATS: Paris Fashion Week Fall 2016 Street Style. Photo by Adam Katz Sinding.
The leather bomber jacket
The leather bomber jacket over a jean shirt.
Beanie and a Cape
Beanie and a Cape.  I love this guys jacket.
Higher waisted pants & blazer - perfect for work
Higher waisted pants, turtleneck & blazer – perfect for work
Show some Shearling
Show some Shearling

And for those of us living on the West Coast we must be prepared for this:falltrans8falltrans9 falltrans14For that in-between time we must be prepared. It can go from sunny one minute to wet and cold the next. We’ll need warm sweaters, trench coats and rain boots (by the way I’m loving my rain boots).  And for people like me who walk more than one dog at a time…

A RAINHAT
RAINHAT

falltrans15falltrans13

This shop in Vancouver has great hats. I just bought two.
This shop in Vancouver has great hats. I just bought two.  Goorin Bros. in Yaletown

katehatI bought this exact same wool hat.  I swear that I did not even see this photo until after. And I’m pretty sure that I’m the one who started the leopard trend.

But what does that tell you? Great style icons think alike!

The ART of FOOD – Alinea

As I mentioned before, the series Chef’s Table is not your run-of-the-mill cooking series.

A dish containing duck, huitlacoche, strawberry & white corn on an acrylic art piece designed to act as a plate.  Photo: Nathan Weber for the New York Times 
A dish containing duck, *huitlacoche, strawberry and white corn on an acrylic art piece designed to act as a plate.  Photo: Nathan Weber for the New York Times.

I just finished watching the series on NetFlix.  Many of the restaurants in the series are Michelin star or at the very least, way above average. Some are destinations in that they are in very remote locations. They all take food to a whole other level.  It’s a total experience for the senses. They are among the 50 best in the world.  If you love food then prepare to be inspired!

I loved all the shows but I think my favourite was the one which appeared the most artistic – that of Alinea Restaurant in Chicago.

Chef and Restaurateur Grant Achatz is more than another rock star chef; he’s a true artist.

Restaurateur Grant Achatz, left. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Restaurateur Grant Achatz, left.  Source: Alinea Restaurant
Plateless dessert. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Plateless dessert.
Source: Alinea Restaurant
Helium balloon dessert made with apple. Source: Alinea Restaurant
Helium balloon dessert made with apple.
Source: Alinea Restaurant

The opening scene shows him staring at an abstract art painting and appreciating what he sees.  He tries to incorporate art into his food while retaining the integrity of the taste and overall dining experience.  He offers something unique.  You’ve got to appreciate that.

Alinea is a three-Michelin-star restaurant.

If you’ve never eaten at Alinea – where diners must purchase a ticket in advance rather than pay on the day – you may have a long wait: every meal for the rest of the year (apart from New Year’s Eve) is sold out.

 Alinea’s tasting menu costs diners between $210 and $295 per person, depending upon availability and demand and excluding beverages.

There is a difference between dining and eating. Dining is an art. When you eat to get most out of your meal, to please the palate, just as well as to satiate the appetite, that,my friend, is dining.” – Yuan Mei

Website: http://alinearestaurant.com/

*What is Huitlacoche?. Pronounced whee-tla-KO-cheh, huitlacoche is also known as corn mushroom, corn smut or Mexican truffle. It is a fungus, which randomly grows on organic corn (not sprayed with any fungicide). It is rare, as it develops on the corn ears as they ripen after the rainy season or an errant rainstorm. Huitlacoche will consume the corn kernels and push itself out through the corn shucks, easily visible in a cornfield.

Your guide to Michelin Star Restaurants around the Globe:

https://www.viamichelin.com/web/Restaurants

Life at Large: the HUMAN condition

 Paraphrasing Janis Joplin: Happiness/Freedom are just two words for nothing left to lose.

Last week I watched a gripping, disturbing and captivating docudrama (with lightness at times) which was part of the VIFF screenings on….everyone…everywhere…everyday…appropriately entitled…human1

And guess what?

We’re pretty much all the same in the sense of what we all really long forsimple happiness.

I think that’s what first attracted me to the title of an Italian subtitled film that was on my list to see called “The Complexity Happiness.”  Without knowing a thing about the film I wanted to see it…because happiness is a complex thing and not so simple for many to attain after all, is it?

Because everyone wants something…else. We’re different in the sense of what we own, the clothing on our backs, our environment which of course encompasses our living conditions, language, family and our bank accounts. But other than that we only really want happiness.  And we all know by now that happiness does not come from having more money.  Money minus love equals emptiness.  End of story.  There’s only so much pleasure you can attain by buying more….things.  Having said that, there are more people in the world who have nada, but many are happy with what little they have if they have a strong family connection or for many, faith (in whatever they believe in).  And we would be stupid to assume having no money at all is a good thing even if your family situation is balanced.

Balance in life is important for everyone and how can you be truly happy if you’re always fighting to find a way to feed your family, find a job, look after yourself and those around you?

It’s a BIG WORLD out there and for the most part…it’s out of whack and completely and unfairly UNBALANCED.human2

WHAT I’VE LEARNED FROM THIS POWERFUL FILM overall is… the world we live in can be a pretty sad place!  I mean even checking out what’s going on with the U.S. election campaign…who would have ever thought it would come to this for the most powerful position in one of the most powerful countries?  It’s a bit of a joke like a Jerry Springer gong show. And just before this film I saw “American Honey” which deals with misfit millennials looking to find work and fit into society and have some fun. The list goes on.

So yes, it was depressing to see more than enough faces from all over the world talk about their personal living conditions and socio-economic situation.  It was meant to inform and upset from where we were sitting, in comfortable seats in a warm movie theatre with our popcorn & sodas.  On a more uplifting note, there are some feel-good parts to the film as well. And we find out that some of the monetarily poorest people on the planet are the happiest.

But even happy people are not constantly happy…life gets in the way.  How many people have you heard about in the past couple of years alone who are/were famous with lots of money who died from drug overdose, committed suicide, are or were severely depressed? How many are in rehab?

Maybe the secret to happiness lies in being contented. I think contentment counts for a lot.  It’s a good balance of being mostly happy with a few disruptions along the way.  We are, after all only human.

And unfortunately, unfairness is a way of life…for most.

Human trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0-Retnj3TsA

This is my last VIFF review until next year but I want to let you know that my friend Ann Marie Fleming WON for her feature length “Window Horses” – in the best Canadian Film Category. I am so happy for her.  The wonderfully animated movie about poetry has an encouraging message.  I highly recommend seeing it.

We must take happiness in doses…BIG or small!

Shaking things up – prose and cons

Bob Dylan was just awarded the Nobel prize for Literature “for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.”

Ill: N. Elmehed. © Nobel Media 2016
Ill: N. Elmehed. © Nobel Media 2016

What’s so wrong with that?

To the person who asked “does this mean that I can win a Grammy?” No!  It just means that people are taking more notice of great songwriting and poetry which have their place (or prose) in the writing world.  If so, then in my opinion Rodriguez (of searching for Sugarman fame) & Leonard Cohen should be next in line.

Maybe they should open it up to noteworthy artists who paint for a living.  They are like literature for the soul.  Open up a new category?  Something to think about?  I think so!

CHECK THIS OUT:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_sh05PyTURs&list=PLlOu5-_qNR9BYLoZCLPfAkejwn1EP7Ee_

Film: Seduction/Secrets – The Handmaiden

The Handmaiden was my chosen last film to see from VIFF.  It was an intriguing change from all the other selections.handmaiden5It’s an erotic thriller with many a twist and turn.  I can only imagine what the men in the audience must have been thinking in a few of the scenes….given what I believe men like to envision.  But it was much more than that.  Beautifully directed from acclaimed writer-director Park Chan-Wook who is considered the King of Korean cinema.  His first English language film was Stoker starring Nicole Kidman.handmaiden3

Synopsis: with help from an orphaned pickpocket (Kim Tae-ri), a Korean con man (Ha Jung-woo) devises an intricate plot to seduce and bamboozle a wealthy, innocuous young Japanese woman (Kim Min-hee) out of her inheritance.  The woman lives on a large secluded estate and the Korean pickpocket is hired to serve as her new handmaiden.  But who is really fooling who here?

This movie was inspired by Welsh author Sarah Waters’ novel Fingersmith; with the setting changed from Victorian era to Korea under Japanese colonial rule.handmaiden2

It was a captivating piece of work.

Trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkvHtfRAKNk

The film festival has formally ended but extra screenings of some of the more popular films will play in select theatres over the next several days.  To find out more please visit: https://www.viff.org/