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Paying for It (film)

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Paying for It
Directed bySook-Yin Lee
Written bySook-Yin Lee
Joanne Sarazen
Based onPaying for It by Chester Brown
Produced byMatt Code
Sonya Di Rienzo
Aeschylus Poulos
StarringDan Beirne
Emily Lê
Andrea Werhun
CinematographyGayle Ye
Edited byAnna Catley
Music bySook-Yin Lee
Dylan Gamble
Production
companies
Wildling Pictures
Hawkeye Pictures
Distributed byLoco Films
Release date
  • September 6, 2024 (2024-09-06) (TIFF)
CountryCanada
LanguageEnglish

Paying for It is a Canadian drama film, directed by Sook-Yin Lee and released in 2024.[1] It is an adaptation of Chester Brown's graphic novel Paying for It, about his decision to start frequenting prostitutes after the breakup of his real-life relationship with Lee.

The film stars Dan Beirne as Brown and Emily Lê as Sonny, as well as Andrea Werhun, Kaitlyn Chalmers-Rizzato, Stephen Kalyn, Chris Sandiford, Kris Siddiqi, Scott Thompson, Sera-Lys McArthur and Rodrigo Fernandez-Stoll in supporting roles.

Production

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Production on the film was first announced in 2022.[2] In contrast to the original graphic novel, which used artistic techniques to obscure the faces of the prostitutes due to Brown's concern for the women's privacy rights but faced some criticism for seemingly dehumanizing them, Lee's film adaptation, through a "female gaze", more strongly centres the women's own perspectives.[3]

Although Lee herself is a character in the original graphic novel, for the film adaptation she chose to rename her character Sonny to give herself some creative distance from the material.[4]

Distribution

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The film premiered in the Platform Prize program at the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival.[5] In conjunction with the film premiere, Drawn & Quarterly is also reissuing a new "film edition" of the graphic novel, with a foreword by Lee and special bonus material about the film production.[3]

It has been picked up for international distribution by Loco Films.[6]

Critical response

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Alex Hudson of Exclaim! rated the film 8 out of 10, writing that "even though this story is being told by the people it happened to, it's not overly flattering to its subjects. Chester's transactional approach to sex brings out his superficiality, and when he tells his friends about how great it is, he rarely expresses much overt happiness, often seeming as much like he's trying to convince himself as anyone else. And Sonny is judgemental and fickle, steering their lives into one unsustainable situation after another. They're flawed while remaining likeable and relatable."[7]

References

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