Skip to main content
You Can Live Forever film image, co-directors Sarah Watts, Mark Slutsky

You Can Live Forever

This event has passed

This tender coming-of-age drama, set in a Jehovah’s Witness congregation in the 90s, explores the themes of first love, sexual awakenings, and the clash of personal desires with the sense of community. The film follows Jamie as she moves in with her aunt and uncle who are part of the group. Initially wary of their close-knit community, things start to shift when she meets Marike, a charming young Witness tasked with welcoming Jamie into the fold. The two instantly hit it off and develop a strong bond that ultimately results in widespread tension, challenging the young lovers’ own principles.

Marking the feature directing debut for Sarah Watts and Mark Slutsky, the film taps beautifully into the whirlwind of emotion caused by forbidden teenage infatuation within the rigid constraints of religious conditioning. Sharply written, shot, and acted, You Can Live Forever is ultimately carried by Anwen O’Driscoll, whose nuanced, naturalistic performance gives the film its heartbeat.

 

 Q&A Sept 30

 

Presented by

Media Partner

Global BC Logo

Director
Cast

Anwen O’Driscoll, June Laporte, Liane Balaban, Deragh Campbell, Antoine Yared, Hasani Freeman, Tim Campbell

Credits
Country of Origin

Canada

Year

2022

Language

English

Film Contact
18+
96 min
Drama LGBTQIA2S+ Women Directors

Book Tickets

This event has passed.

Missing VIFF? Check out what’s playing at the VIFF Centre

The Great Salish Heist

Created by Orca Cove Media and shot in Cowichan Valley, The Great Salish Heist is a scrappy indie Ocean's 11 with bags of charm and some authentic things to say about cultural colonialism.

VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre

A Difficult Year

The latest from the jackpot writing-directing team Olivier Nakache and Éric Toledano (Les Intouchables; The Specials) is a buddy comedy which finds a wryly original perspective on the serious theme of climate change denialism.

VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre

Humane

Caitlin Cronenberg's debut feature is a dystopian black comedy about a family gathering from which no one will emerge with much credit -- that is, if they emerge at all...

VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre

Ru

At ten, Tinh and her family are forced to flee Vietnam and eventually find refuge in wintery but welcoming Quebec. A lyrical, warm adaptation of the award-winning novel by Kim Thúy.

VIFF Centre - Vancity Theatre VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre

Perfect Days

Widely acclaimed as Wim Wenders' best (fiction) film since his glory days in the 1980s, Perfect Days is a humanist character study, steeped in the director's admiration for the cinema of Yasujiro Ozu.

VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre VIFF Centre - Vancity Theatre

The Taste of Things

Set in France in 1885, and photographed like an Impressionist painting, this sublime foodie film surveys the intuitive, intimate partnership between famed gourmand Dodin (Benoit Magimel) and his beloved cook Eugénie (Juliette Binoche).

VIFF Centre - Lochmaddy Studio Theatre

Credits

Executive Producer

John Christou

Producer

Robert Vroom

Screenwriter

Sarah Watts, Mark Slutsky

Cinematography

Gayle Ye

Editor

Amélie Labrèche

Production Design

André Chamberland

Original Music

CFCF

Directors

Mark Slutsky headshot, You Can Live Forever director

Photo by EK Bowell

Mark Slutsky

Mark Slutsky is an award-winning writer and director based in Montreal. His shorts Never Happened (2015) and Sorry, Rabbi (2011) both premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival. In 2013, he co-directed and produced the animated short I’m One, Too! for the 44th season of Sesame Street. He also writes for video games, winning the 2021 Canadian Screen Award for Best Video Game Narrative for his work on Compulsion Games’ We Happy Few. You Can Live Forever (2022), co-written and co-directed with Sarah Watts, is his first feature.

Sarah Watts headshot, You Can Live Forever director

Photo by Kayleigh Choiniere

Sarah Watts

Sarah Watts is a writer/director from Montreal. Her previous work has been shown at Slamdance. When not making films, she works as a sports writer and editor.