PHOTO: Team Centigrade, which includes producer/actress Madison Graie (far right) and director/writer/actor Colin Cunningham (second from right), celebrate Cunnigham’s win as Best Director in a Short Drama at the Leo Awards. Also pictured are picture editor Jonathan Tyrell and Cunningham’s girlfriend Brianne McQuair. (Photos by Julia Pelish)
A whirlwind day for hot filmmakers Colin Cunningham and Madison Graie started with a television appearance in the morning and ended with a dominating awards-show performance at night.
The thriller “Centigrade”, the brainchild of the Vancouver duo, won three Leo Awards on Friday night, including for Best Direction in a Short Drama, which went to Cunningham. The movie, which has already qualified for Academy Awards consideration, will be up for two more Leos on Saturday night when the British Columbia film industry’s 10th annual awards show wraps up with a red-carpet celebration at the Westin Bayshore. Cunningham is nominated for Best Male Performance in a Short Drama and “Centigrade” is up for Best Short Drama.
Not bad for a flick whose script had been closeted for nearly two decades. Cunningham, who wrote the piece, said that it was his long-time collaborator who remembered the screenplay and convinced him to dust it off.
“It’s a script I wrote 17 years ago and it was last year when the Kickstart Awards came around and producer Madison Graie said, ‘Hey, do you want to do this?’ and I said, ‘What would we do?’ and she said, ‘Well, you’ve got a couple of different scripts’ and she mentioned a few and said, ‘How about Fahrenheit?’ That was the film’s original title,” Cunningham recalled prior to the ceremony.
Graie said she remembered the script in part because of the quality of the writing. “Colin is a really, really great writer,” she said. “It’s his style of writing that works. It clicks with me and I know if it clicks with me, it will click with a lot of other people.”
“Centigrade” is about a man stuck in a trailer and desperately searching for a means to get out before he burns inside the vehicle. It was made for $20,000 and shot mostly using a hand-held HD camera that “was about the size of a shoe,” Cunningham said.
After winning the Cinequest Film Festival honor for Best Narrative Short earlier this year, “Centigrade” qualified for the shortlist of films that can be nominated for the Oscars. Its strong showing earned Cunnigham and Graie, Elevation PR clients, a spot on Global Morning News in Vancouver Friday.
Then they prepared for the first night of the Leos and watched as the movie’s make-up artist, Jane Dancose, and its sound designer, Real Gauvreau (best overall sound), took home prizes before Cunningham collected his.
Cunningham is a veteran actor who has starred in such films and programs as “Da Vinci’s Inquest”, “jPod” and “Stargate”. With “Centigrade”, he made his directorial debut and the film is garnering so much attention it may be turned into a feature film, Cunningham said.







May 24th, 2008 at 4:49 am
Congratulations to Colin and to the cast and crew of Centigrade!
Morjana
May 27th, 2008 at 10:31 pm
I am happy to see the lovely Colin Cunningham doing well. His performances in Da Vinci’s, Stargate and The 4400 show him to be a versatile and talented actor, and it’s great to see him branching out so successfully.