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Hard Core Logo
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==Reception== ''Hard Core Logo'' screened at the [[Cannes Film Festival]]. McDonald remembers, "Cannes was very humbling. You're in the same arena as [[Bernardo Bertolucci]] and Czechoslovakian pornographers. It's such a bizarre spectrum". The film went on to be nominated for six [[Genie Awards]], including Best Picture and Director. [[Quentin Tarantino]] saw ''Logo'' at a film festival and liked it so much that he bought the U.S. distribution rights under his Rolling Thunder label and even toyed with casting Dillon in ''[[Jackie Brown (film)|Jackie Brown]]''. === Critical reception === ''Hard Core Logo'' was well received by Canadian film critics. In his review for the ''[[Toronto Sun]]'', Bruce Kirkland praised the cast: "They're all so convincing it is impossible to believe they're not all the real thing".<ref name="Kirkland">{{cite news | last = Kirkland | first = Bruce | title = ''Hard Core Logo'' is Pure Punk Poetry |newspaper=Toronto Sun | date = October 18, 1996}}</ref> John Griffin, in his review for the ''[[Montreal Gazette]]'', called it "a masterful exercise in edgy virtuoso film craft, subversive propaganda and exhilarating entertainment".<ref name="Griffin">{{cite news | last = Griffin | first = John | title = Solid Gold: ''Hard Core Logo'' is the Best Rock 'n' Roll Movie of All Time | work=[[Montreal Gazette]] | date = October 18, 1996}}</ref> In his review for the ''[[Toronto Star]]'', Peter Goddard praised Noel Baker's screenplay for providing "some of the funniest and deftest writing Canadian moviemaking has heard in years but it can't hide the bitter-sweetness just below the surface".<ref name="Goddard">{{cite news | last = Goddard | first = Peter | title = End-of-the-Road Movie for a Generation |work=Toronto Star | date = October 18, 1996}}</ref> Liam Lacey in his review for ''[[The Globe and Mail]]'' wrote: "Though the jumpy, parodic, disruptive style suits rock music, the same techniques prevent viewers from investing deeply in the characters and the story. The ride is fun, but it doesn't quite reach a destination".<ref name="Lacey">{{cite news | last = Lacey | first = Liam | title = ''Hard Core Logo'' | work=The Globe and Mail | location=Canada | date = October 19, 1996}}</ref> The film received general favorable review from American film critics. ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' gave it a "B−" rating and [[Owen Gleiberman]] wrote: "Most of the characters are too goofy to register. Still, there are times when Dillon's performance lays bare why, for sheer style, burning out will always have the edge over fading away".<ref name="Gleiberman">{{cite magazine | last = Gleiberman | first = Owen | title = ''Hard Core Logo'' | magazine=Entertainment Weekly | date = November 27, 1998 | url = http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,285891,00.html | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20081203222909/http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,285891,00.html | url-status = dead | archive-date = December 3, 2008 | access-date = 2010-03-04}}</ref> In his review for the ''[[San Francisco Chronicle]]'', Peter Stack wrote: "Director Bruce McDonald (''[[Dance Me Outside]]'') has turned out a tight, fascinating on-the-road rock movie, a delicious study in mean-spiritedness as well as the gut imperatives that make punk music the unsettling, hostile experience it is".<ref name="Stack">{{cite news | last = Stack | first = Peter | title = Punks Mix It Up in Razor-Sharp Comedy | work=San Francisco Chronicle | date = December 4, 1998 | url = http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/1998/12/04/DD77578.DTL | access-date = 2010-03-04}}</ref> Stephen Holden, in his review for ''[[The New York Times]]'' felt that "unlike ''[[This Is Spinal Tap|Spinal Tap]]'', which cast a comically jaundiced eye on every nuance of the heavy-metal life style, this clever mock documentary ... blends satire and sentiment in a way that keeps you emotionally off balance".<ref name="Holden">{{cite news | last = Holden | first = Stephen | title = Rockers Bullying and Squabbling Down Memory Lane | work=The New York Times | date = November 13, 1998 | url = https://www.nytimes.com/library/film/111398hardcore-film-review.html | access-date = 2010-03-04}}</ref> === Awards and nominations === The film won the [[Genie Award]] for [[Canadian Screen Award for Best Original Song|Best Original Song]] for the track "Who the Hell Do You Think You Are?", and was nominated for five other awards including [[Canadian Screen Award for Best Motion Picture|Best Picture]] and [[Canadian Screen Award for Best Director|Best Director]].<ref name="Howell">{{cite news | last = Howell | first = Peter | title = ''Crash'' Wins Genie Race but ''Lilies'' Grabs Prize for Best Movie | work=Toronto Star | date = November 28, 1996}}</ref> It took the Best Canadian Feature at the [[Sudbury Cinéfest]]. At the [[Vancouver International Film Festival]], it received the $10,000 [[CITY-TV]] award for Best Canadian Film and Noel Baker won the Rogers Prize for Best Canadian Screenplay.<ref name="Vancouver">{{cite news | title = McDonald Film Wins 2 Awards | work=The Globe and Mail | location=Canada | date = October 22, 1996}}</ref>
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