Cinequest: FLIN FLON: A HOCKEY TOWN

FLIN FLON: A HOCKEY TOWN

Dustin Cohen’s gentle documentary Flin Flon: A Hockey Town, without even a hint of condescension, paints a meticulous and revealing portrait of a remote Canadian hamlet and its beloved junior hockey team.

Flin Flon is a town of five thousand on the Manitoba-Saskatchewan border.  The closest place that most of us have heard of is Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, and that’s a six-and-a-half hour drive from Flin Flon.  There’s a mine in Flin Flon and a junior hockey team, and that’s about it.

As the movie opens, the morning radio station announces a high temperature of minus 19.  Proud locals call their home “a great place to raise kids”, which is what locals say about every place that nobody else even wants to visit.  For decades, the residents have bonded with their beloved hockey team, the Bombers.

18-20 year old hockey players come to Flin Flon, live in the homes of local families (“billeting”) and work hard, physical day jobs off-season.  They are here to concentrate on hockey, although only 1-2 from each Bomber team are likely to significantly advance in the sport.   However, over 40 NHL players have been Flin Flon Bombers, including Hall of Famers Bobby Clarke and Reggie Leach.  Writer-director Dustin Cohen grew up in San Jose as a Sharks Fan.  He stumbled on Flin Flon as he researched Canadian hockey.  He needed more than just a small town for his subject, and he chose Flin Flon because of its hockey heritage.

Flin Flon is “the only city in the world named after a science fiction character (Josiah Flintabbatey Flonatin in J.E. Preston Muddock’s The Sunless City).  At Bomber games, the fans like to throw moose legs on to the ice.     This could have been one of those documentaries that make us laugh at the quirky subjects.  Or it could have been about unhealthily obsessed sports fans.

Instead, Flin Flon: A Hockey Town is an insightful and sympathetic study of the town and the kids on the team.  Cohen is very observant, and he shows us seemingly mundane details – driving the bus, prepping the ice, cutting wood – that reveal much about the internal lives of the people in the film.

Cohen only lets us directly watch the hockey in snippets.  Most of the time, we see it reflected through the reactions of teammates and the crowd.  The photography (Soren Nielsen, Christine Ng) and the editing (Kathy Gatto) are superb.

The more I think about Flin Flon: A Hockey Town, the more I admire it.  This is a very humane film.

FLIN FLON: A HOCKEY TOWN

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