A Great Big Thing Explained

A Great Big Thing
Director:Eric Till
Producer:Pierre Patry
Martin Rosen
Starring:Reni Santoni
Louise Latraverse
Paul Sand
Music:Robert Prince
Cinematography:Jean-Claude Labrecque
Editing:Ralph Rosenblum
Studio:Argofilm
Runtime:80 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English

A Great Big Thing is a Canadian-American comedy-drama film, directed by Eric Till and released in 1968.[1] The film stars Reni Santoni as Vinny Shea, an aimless young man and aspiring writer who gets into various misadventures around Montreal while trying to write his first novel.[2]

The film's cast also included Louise Latraverse, Paul Sand, Marcy Plotnick, Gerard Parkes, François Yves Carpentier, Roberta Maxwell, Leon Pownall and Heath Lamberts.

Screenwriter Terence Heffernan had originally submitted the film's screenplay to the CBC Television drama anthology series Festival, but after Till signed on as director, he instead opted to make the film independently with the participation of the American Argo Films studio.[3]

The film premiered in 1968 at the 18th Berlin International Film Festival as part of Young Canadian Film, a non-competitive program highlighting recent films by new and emerging Canadian film directors.[4] It had its Canadian premiere in 1970 at Gerald Pratley's Ontario Film Institute.[2]

Notes and References

  1. [Gerald Pratley]
  2. Kaspars Dzeguze, "Canadian feature film overcomes an unfortunate title". The Globe and Mail, February 4, 1970.
  3. Wendy Michener, "How Canada lost a film and found a good writer". Maclean's, March 1, 1967.
  4. [Gerald Pratley]