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All bike roads in Canada lead to Marinoni

Documentary to be shown in Ƶapptells story of bike master
Marinoni: The Fire in the Frame
The documentary Marinoni: The Fire in the Frame, comes to Ƶappthis Friday.

Montreal filmmaker Tony Girardin always loved to tinker around with old collectible bikes. Little did he know that he lived in the same city as world-class bike-maker and record-holding rider Giuseppe Marinoni.

This discovery planted the seed for a project, and he knew he needed to let his camera roll. “When I first met him, I saw the fire is his eyes and thought it had to be captured on film,” Girardin told The Ƶapp.

The result is Marinoni: The Fire in the Frame, a documentary that has been attracting rave reviews on the festival circuit and winning over audiences. This Friday, Oct. 30, Girardin will bring the film to Squamish, as a part of a tour of B.C. cities; it will play at the ƵappAdventure Centre at 7 p.m.

Girardin admits it wasn’t an easy project to get going due to the reticence of Marinoni and his family. It took three years to convince his subject to take part.

Marinoni, now 78, holds the cycling record for the 75-79 age group, and he initially thought the documentary would focus on his record ride. Instead, the ride only takes up a few minutes of the feature-length film.

For the director, Marinoni’s life story is more than just a race. In part, it’s the story of an immigrant from Italy, a passionate man that had to reinvent himself in his 30s. “He went from tailoring suits to tailoring bikes,” Girardin said.

This new life did come at a cost: Marinoni became ill as a result of his obsessively working over his bikes because of exposure to toxic materials. 

“For two years he sweat red from basically purging his body…. All his undershirts were red.”

The solution, according to a doctor, was for Marinoni to spend some of his time riding bikes rather than making them. And so the master bike maker became a champion rider. Girardin said that his subject now likes to pedal his age, and at the Subaru Centurion in the Blue Mountains near Ontario’s Georgian Bay, he rode his age and then some, as he braved the approximately 165 kilometres (100 miles) of the event, tackling tough climbs and tough weather.

For the first-time filmmaker, Marinoni’s whole story is important, especially all those years in the shop. The man learned his craft in his native Italy. Before Marinoni, no one in Canada was really building racing bikes, Girardin said. “There’s definitely a lot of care and a lot of love put into his bikes,” he said. “He’s just fully devoted to his craft…. All roads in Canada lead to Marinoni.”

An early cut of Marinoni: The Fire in the Frame showed at Toronto’s acclaimed Hot Docs festival last fall, but it only officially opened this March. It has been shown approximately 400 times across the country, attracting huge runs in Montreal, placing second for an audience award in Vancouver and selling out the Vancouver Playhouse. A Ѳ𲹲’s article by Martin Patriquin from October 2014 called it a “quirky and uplifting character study of a cycling legend.”

In Ottawa, the documentary even had to compete with a Senators-Canadiens playoff game this spring. Girardin had expected maybe 40 or 50 people to show, but the theatre was packed with 550 people. 

There’s even a bit of an area connection to the subject, as Marinoni once sponsored Whistler rider Ross Chafe, who died in a cycling accident last year. Friday’s showing will raise funds through a raffle for a special bicycle that Marinoni made to raise money for cycling safety in memory of Chafe and Kelly Blunden, who died in the same accident. For more information or advance tickets, go to the ƵappAdventure Centre’s page on Facebook.

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