Ernest (film) explained

Ernest
Director:Keith Behrman
Producer:Natalie Hoban
Starring:David Reale
Frank Moore
Music:Colin Aguiar
Cinematography:Steve Cosens
Editing:Marlo Miazga
Studio:Canadian Film Centre
Distributor:Taxi Entertainment
Runtime:22 minutes
Country:Canada
Language:English

Ernest is a Canadian comedy short film, directed by Keith Behrman and released in 2000.[1] A satire of conservative rhetoric about "common sense", the film stars David Reale as Ernest, a young man who is forced by his father (Frank Moore) to keep financial statements detailing every penny he spends out of his allowance, and is driven to steal a basketball to balance the books when his father demands an audit.[1]

The cast also includes Holly Dennison, Dan Chameroy, John Dewey, Rick Braggins, Veronica Miles, Lauren Miles, Shimmy Silverman, Courtenay Betts, Andrea Burgie, Tim Dorsch and Nelson Moutinho in supporting roles.

The film premiered at the 2000 Toronto International Film Festival,[2] where it received an honorable mention from the Best Canadian Short Film jury.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Tom McSorley, "Ernest". Take One, Vol. 9, Iss. 29 (Fall 2000). p. 47.
  2. Scott Feschuk, "Short is beautiful: The brief films at this year's film festival all seem to be parental, phallic or funny -- and occasionally all three". National Post, September 13, 2000.
  3. Liam Lacey, "Ang Lee, Burns win top prizes". The Globe and Mail, September 18, 2000.