Dying for movies: Suicide highlights labour issues in Canada’s visual effects sector
MONTREAL — Last April, Malcolm Angell, a 41-year-old New Zealander who moved to Montreal to work in the city’s famed visual effects industry, was taken to hospital after attempting suicide.
He was back at work two days later at Montreal-based visual effects studio Mill Film, according to his brother, Ivan. A month later — shortly after learning his mother had a brain tumour and didn’t have long to live — Angell tried to kill himself again. This time he died.
Angell’s former colleagues allege the work environment at Mill Film was toxic. They say 80-hour workweeks were common, and that Angell was regularly humiliated by his bosses. Ivan says he’s certain his brother would have quit — were it not for a clause in Angell’s contract requiring he pay a $35,000 penalty.
The story told by Angell’s colleagues is not uncommon in Canada’s visual effects and animation sectors, according to industry insiders. Long overtime hours, often unpaid, are seen as normal, they say. And employees in these industries are vulnerable — particularly foreign workers — who toil on short-term contracts and are afraid to speak up out of fear of not getting hired again.