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Matthew Rankin
Matthew Rankin
from Wikipedia

Matthew Rankin is a Canadian experimental filmmaker.[1] His feature-length debut, The Twentieth Century, premiered in 2019 and was nominated for eight Canadian Screen Awards, winning three.[2]

Key Information

He has also received accolades for his 2014 film Mynarski Death Plummet, which was a shortlisted Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 4th Canadian Screen Awards[3] and a shortlisted Jutra Award nominee for Best Short Film at the 17th Jutra Awards,[4] and his 2017 film The Tesla World Light, which won the Canadian Screen Award for Best Animated Short at the 6th Canadian Screen Awards and received an Honourable Mention for the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian Short Film at the 2017 Toronto International Film Festival.[5]

His second feature film, Universal Language (Une langue universelle), premiered in the Directors' Fortnight section of the 2024 Cannes Film Festival,[6][7] The film was longlisted for the 2024 Jean-Marc Vallée DGC Discovery Award,[8] and was selected as the Canadian entry for the Academy Award for the Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards.[9][10]

Universal Language received 13 Canadian Screen Award nominations at the 13th Canadian Screen Awards in 2025,[11] and won six awards including Best Director.

Life

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Originally from Winnipeg, Manitoba, he was associated with the Winnipeg Film Group as a teenager,[12] and later studied history at McGill University, at Université Laval and at the Institut national de l'image et du son.

His father, Laird Rankin, was longtime executive director of Canada's National History Society and publisher of the history magazine The Beaver.[13]

He has also had occasional small acting roles in other directors' films, most recently the 2022 films This House (Cette maison) and Before I Change My Mind.

Filmography

[edit]

Short films

Feature-length films

References

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[edit]
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from Grokipedia
''Matthew Rankin'' is a Canadian filmmaker known for his experimental works that blend documentary, fiction, and animation in photochemical hybrid forms, often exploring historical and biographical themes with an eccentric, deadpan sensibility. Born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and now based in Montréal, he has directed approximately 40 short films and two feature films, drawing from local Winnipeg experimental traditions and international influences including Iranian meta-realist cinema. His debut feature, ''The Twentieth Century'' (2019), an anarchic political satire, received the FIPRESCI Prize at the Berlin International Film Festival. His second feature, ''Universal Language'' (2024), which imagines a surreal cultural interzone between Winnipeg and Tehran, premiered at Cannes Directors’ Fortnight, where it won the Chantal Akerman Prize, and later received the Bright Horizons Award at the Melbourne International Film Festival. Rankin's earlier shorts, including ''Mynarski Death Plummet'' (2015) and ''The Tesla World Light'' (2017), have screened at major festivals such as Sundance, SXSW, TIFF, Berlinale, and Cannes, establishing his reputation for genre-mixing mischief and affectionate portrayals of the strange in everyday and historical subjects. Rankin has been a MacDowell Fellow in Film/Video Arts, with residencies supporting the development of projects including ''Universal Language'' and ongoing work in archival documentary and Esperanto-language docufiction. His practice emphasizes creative collaboration with close collaborators and a deliberate play between realism and artifice, reflecting influences from Winnipeg filmmakers like Guy Maddin and John Paizs alongside global cinematic traditions.

Early life and education

Family background and upbringing

Matthew Rankin was born on August 5, 1980, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is the son of Laird Rankin (December 5, 1940 – June 19, 2017), who served as the founding executive director of Canada's National History Society and publisher of The Beaver magazine, later renamed Canada's History. His father was a lifelong promoter of Winnipeg's history and cultural life, remaining unrelentingly enthusiastic about the city despite its reputation as an improbable and often overlooked place in Canada. Rankin grew up in Winnipeg, where he developed an early association with the Winnipeg Film Group as a self-described “serious teenager.” He has expressed deep gratitude for the organization, stating that he owes much to it for shaping his early creative environment. Winnipeg formed the foundation of his personal universe, exerting what he describes as “great existential pressure” on his life, a sentiment he believes is shared by many from the city. The city has remained a profound influence, becoming a recurrent location and theme in his work. He has said that “the universe begins for me in Winnipeg,” underscoring the deep-rooted connection to his hometown that continues to inform his perspective.

Academic training

Matthew Rankin studied history at McGill University and Université Laval. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from McGill University in 2001. After completing his studies in history, he pursued filmmaking training, including time spent learning the craft in Iran. His academic background in Québec history provided a foundation for his later experimental and historical approaches to cinema.

Career

Early short films

Matthew Rankin began his filmmaking career as a teenager in Winnipeg, creating experimental short films that established his hands-on approach as director, writer, and editor. His debut short, Le facteur poulpe (2005), marked his entry into filmmaking, followed by Où est Maurice? (2006). In 2008, Rankin produced a prolific series of shorts, including I Dream of Driftwood, Cattle Call (co-directed), and Hydro-Lévesque, which reflected his early exploration of surrealism and handmade techniques. He continued this experimental output with Negativipeg (2010) and Tabula Rasa (2012), films that further honed his distinctive aesthetic. Some of his early credits appeared under alternative spellings such as Mathew or Matt Rankin. These initial works emerged from his involvement with the Winnipeg Film Group, where he participated in workshops and began connecting with local filmmakers. While these shorts received limited circulation, primarily through local screenings and small festivals, they laid the foundation for his later development as a filmmaker.

Breakthrough short films

Matthew Rankin's short films achieved wider recognition beginning in 2014 with Mynarski Death Plummet, which was shortlisted for both the Canadian Screen Awards and the Jutra Awards. This experimental work marked his emergence as a distinctive voice in Canadian animation and experimental cinema. In 2015, The Radical Expeditions of Walter Boudreau built on this momentum, showcasing his growing interest in blending historical figures with surreal narrative structures. The 2017 short The Tesla World Light represented a major breakthrough, winning the Canadian Screen Award for Best Animated Short and earning an Honourable Mention at the Toronto International Film Festival. The film, an animated exploration of Nikola Tesla's visions, received critical acclaim for its inventive style and innovative animation techniques. More recently, Municipal Relaxation Module (2022) continued Rankin's success in the short form, further demonstrating his ability to merge absurdist humor with philosophical themes. These breakthrough shorts established his reputation ahead of his feature-length work, highlighting his contributions to contemporary Canadian filmmaking.

Feature films

Matthew Rankin's feature directorial debut is The Twentieth Century (2019), which he also wrote and edited. The film premiered in 2019 and earned eight nominations at the Canadian Screen Awards, winning three. His second feature film, Universal Language (2024), which Rankin directed and co-wrote, premiered in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2024 Cannes Film Festival. It won the inaugural Audience Award in that section. The film was selected as Canada's official entry for Best International Feature Film at the 97th Academy Awards. At the 2025 Canadian Screen Awards, Universal Language received 13 nominations and won six awards, including Best Director for Rankin.

Filmmaking style and themes

Accolades

Personal life

Matthew Rankin was born on August 5, 1980, in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He is the son of Laird Rankin (1940–2017), who was the longtime executive director and publisher of Canada's History magazine (formerly known as The Beaver). Rankin studied history at McGill University, earning a BA in 2001 after switching from an initial major in English literature to Quebec history; he also took classes in Islamic Studies and learned to read and write Farsi. He later completed a master's degree in history at Université Laval. After his studies, he spent three years in Winnipeg pursuing artistic work before returning to Montréal, where he now lives and has embraced the city's culture, including learning French. He speaks Esperanto.

References

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