It's positvely Springtime here in Canada these days! First that fine young lad, J.D. wins the INXS thingy; then Carl Newman is the Magnet cover hunk; and now, well let's just say "hump the drums" will soon be on every Canucks lips. I only hope the wonderful film The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico will soon hit screens across all of North America and beyond. I saw it today at the Vancouver Intl Film Fest viff.org and it's a smash! Matt Murphy (flashing lights, superfriend) is Guy Terrifico the early 70's drug-necked country-folk musician who goes missing (or does he?) Kris Kristofferson, Merle Haggard, and a whack of other Country toughies appear in extended cameos. I'm sure there's going to be a soundtrack released. Many thumbs up! It's too good! The Canadian flag guitar is to die for... Two online review below. Regards, Judith "The life and hard times of Guy Terrifico" is the funniest film I've seen all year. I checked it out at Austin's South by Southwest film fest and have been laughing ever since. This crazy little Canadian film is about a mad man country rock star in the 1970's who disappears at the height of his career. 30 years later, an album of duets called "Retribution Honkytonkus" is apparently about to be released with new Guy Terrifico recordings so this documentary crew interviews all his old buddies to see if they think he is alive or not. Did he die or didn't he? I won't spoil the ending but you won't be disappointed. I would describe this film as "This is Spinal Tap" in the country music world. It features Kris Kristofferson, Merle Haggard, Phil Kaufman, Levon Helm & Ronnie Hawkins along for the ride. Lots of funny moments but "Hump the Drum" is my favorite. GUY ROCKS! AND Alternative country and its booze-fuelled macho mythmaking get a well-deserved work-over in Michael Mabbott's raunchy mockumentary The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico. The film takes as its starting point the making of a contemporary tribute album for the notorious Guy (Matt Murphy), a hard-drinking, hard-living legend who never quite made it. Guy starts out as a small-town prairie boy who just wants to play music, until an improbable, unexpected windfall leaves him newly wealthy. He soon acquires the requisite shady entourage, who encourage him to indulge in enough intoxicants to fell a water buffalo. As he rapidly starts to unravel, his dreams go up in smoke - literally. A spectacularly disastrous appearance on a Christian TV show in Nashville seems like the last straw, but our spectator culture often confuses notoriety with fame and, soon enough, Guy's career is back on the rails. The portrait of Guy is fleshed out by his sketchy manager, real-life music biz heavyweight Phil "The Mangler" Kaufman; his childhood sweetheart Mary Lou (Natalie Radford), who has issues with bodily processes and alcohol; plus hangers-on including Mr. Stuff (Lyriq Bent), Guy's drug dealer and confidante, and Guy's horrifically foul-mouthed mistress (Jane Sowerby). Riffing off a host of outlaw-country myths - most notably the bizarre saga of Gram Parsons's death - Mabbott also includes hysterically funny testimonials to his hero from such legends as Kris Kristofferson, Levon Helm and Merle Haggard. All of them adore Guy's songs (the few they've heard) but can't seem to wrap their heads around his boorish, dickhead behaviour. Mixing in footage of notorious incidents in country music history - such as Kristofferson's infamous acceptance speech at the 1970 Country Music Awards - Mabbott creates a persistently witty portrait of the music industry and its need to cannibalize and glamorize its past. Countless experts and rock critics weigh in on the profound importance of Guy and his career, despite the fact he was never sober enough to actually record an album. This is a satire that's long overdue. As fabled country rocker Joe Ely might say, The Life and Hard Times of Guy Terrifico is high-larious.