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Tag: Tiff 2024

  • Toronto Awards Takeaways: Feinberg on an Off-Year for the Fest

    Toronto Awards Takeaways: Feinberg on an Off-Year for the Fest

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    The Toronto International Film Festival — which I have been attending since 2007, and from which I just returned — has long been an important launching pad for Oscar contenders, from 1981’s Chariots of Fire to 1999’s American Beauty to 2008’s Slumdog Millionaire to 2018’s Green Book. But a few years ago, that status was jeopardized when the fest grew resentful of the fact that a number of films that it was advertising as “world premieres” or “North American premieres” were, in fact, first sneak-screening at the Telluride Film Festival, which takes place a few days before it does.

    Even though virtually no TIFF attendee would have balked at seeing a film that had previously screened for a relatively small number of people in a remote town in the Rockies, TIFF decided to adopt a hard-line position: it told film makers and backers that if they showed their film somewhere else in North America before TIFF, that film would not be permitted to screen in any of the marquee venues at TIFF during the fest’s opening weekend — the Friday, Saturday and Sunday that follow Thursday’s opening night screening — which is the stretch of time when most media are on the ground to cover the fest.

    Over the years since this policy was adopted, we have not been able to get a real sense of its impact, partly because in several of those years the pandemic and the strikes were already making TIFF feel very different. But this year, with neither the pandemic nor the strikes an issue, we found out. As one top awards strategist put it to me, “Opening weekend just felt dead.” Indeed, there were chunks of empty seats throughout the major venues; there was little buzz on the streets and in the restaurants; and there were very few world premieres of films with any real awards potential.

    Amazon/MGM’s Unstoppable and The Fire Inside proved to be solid entertainments, but with very limited awards paths. A24’s We Live in Time is an effective tearjerker, but it’s more The Fault in Our Stars than A Star Is Born. Searchlight’s Nightbitch stars the great Amy Adams, and some liked it more than others, but it’s not going anywhere with the Academy. And I could go on. The only opening weekend world premiere of an awards hopeful that seemed to matter at all was the one for The Wild Robot, an animated feature which was produced by DreamWorks Animation (in its 30th year on the scene) and will be distributed by Universal.

    It wasn’t until Monday, though, that the fest began to roll out heavy-hitter contenders like Netflix’s Emilia Pérez and and Neon’s Anora (by way of Cannes and Telluride), Focus’ Conclave (via Telluride) and Vertical’s The Order, A24’s Babygirl and Queer and Sony Classics’ I’m Still Here and The Room Next Door (all directly from the Lido). And by that time, much of the press — and therefore much of the potential awards buzz — was gone.

    TIFF certainly caught some bad breaks this year. For one thing, it’s not a particularly deep awards season to begin with, which meant that the fest had limited options. Additionally, while a few big names showed up — among them, Elton John (on behalf of the Disney+ documentary feature Elton John: Never Too Late), Robbie Williams (Paramount’s Better Man), plus a bunch of Netflix talent including Angelina Jolie (Maria), Denzel Washington (The Piano Lesson), Will Ferrell (Will & Harper) and Selena Gomez and Zoe Saldaña (Emilia Pérez) — many others did not. Nicole Kidman (A24’s Babygirl) had to bow out after her mother passed away. None of the stars of Focus’ Conclave — Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci and John Lithgow — were able to get out of work obligations in Europe. Emilia Pérez helmer Jacques Audiard suffered a back injury that prevented him from traveling. And the list goes on.

    But for the most part, the humdrumness of this year’s fest feels like the result of self-inflicted injuries — and not just the silly festival-exclusivity policy.

    My understanding is that TIFF outright rejected September 5, which was the hottest sales title that played at the Venice and Telluride film fests — and, THR reported this morning, has landed at Paramount — ostensibly because it might generate controversy related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. So, fearing a backlash, the fest did not screen a film that is going to get a best picture Oscar nomination and maybe even win — it could have done so on opening night, which was, appropriately enough, Sept. 5 — but did screen Russians at War, a documentary thats sympathetic portrayal of Russians involved in the Ukraine conflict did result in protests of such a scale that the fest ended up pulling the film.

    The rest of the TIFF sales market was largely comatose. The only deals of real note were A24’s acquisition of the U.S. distribution rights for The Brutalist, a nearly four-hour VistaVision film with an intermission, after it generated a strong response at Venice; and Hulu’s surprising eight-figure purchase of the opening night film Nutcrackers, which stars Ben Stiller, but about which there was decidedly muted enthusiasm.

    A lot of other films, many with big-name talent, came to the fest hoping to find a buyer, but left without one, including The Last Showgirl (Pamela Anderson and Jamie Lee Curtis), On Swift Horses (Jacob Elordi and Daisy Edgar-Jones), The Friend (Naomi Watts and Bill Murray) and Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight (the feature directorial debut of Embeth Davidtz).

    Which brings us to the TIFF audience award, which has long been a harbinger of Oscar success — each of its last 13 winners went on to at least a best picture Oscar nomination, and three of them, 2013’s 12 Years a Slave, 2018’s Green Book and 2020’s Nomadland, took home that prize — but which this year, we learned this morning, went to Mike Flanagan’s The Life of Chuck.

    The Life of Chuck may be a lovely film, but it had virtually no profile coming in to the fest, generated virtually no discussion at the fest, and still does not even have a U.S. distributor. Passed over for it were Emilia Pérez (which finished second), Anora (which finished third) and The Wild Robot (which the fest apparently tried to boost a little by giving it twelve screenings).

    In other words, if TIFF’s relevance to this awards season was in doubt prior to the announcement of the audience award, the audience award announcement certainly did not help its standing.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘The Deb’ Review: Rebel Wilson’s Directorial Debut Is a Campy, Mixed-Bag Teen Musical

    ‘The Deb’ Review: Rebel Wilson’s Directorial Debut Is a Campy, Mixed-Bag Teen Musical

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    When Maeve (Charlotte MacInnes) gets suspended from school after a political demonstration backfires, her mother (Susan Prior), who also happens to be the institution’s principal, sends the Sydney teenager to live with her cousin Taylah (Natalie Abbott) in the Australian outback.

    Dunburn, the fictional locale in which Rebel Wilson’s uneven directorial debut The Deb is set, is a small town recovering from a years-long drought and dereliction of duty by national ministries. The local government desperately needs money to maintain their water supply and have resorted, in one of the film’s more humorous gags, to making a viral video to bring attention to their plight. Of course, none of these issues concern Maeve, who arrives in Dunburn already plotting her escape. 

    The Deb

    The Bottom Line

    Overstuffed with both good and bad.

    Venue: Toronto International Film Festival (Gala Presentations)
    Cast: Rebel Wilson, Shane Jacobson, Tara Morice, Natalie Abbott, Charlotte MacInnes, Julian McMahon
    Director: Rebel Wilson
    Screenwriters: Hannah Reilly, Meg Washington, Rebel Wilson

    2 hours 1 minute

    Premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival, The Deb chronicles Maeve’s fish-out-of-water adventures in Dunburn. Upon arrival, the cosmopolitan teen loudly rejects the town’s regressive traditions. In particular, Maeve bemoans the annual debutante ball, which Taylah dreams of attending. She can’t understand why her cousin would submit herself to such retrograde pomp and circumstance. Soon, of course, Maeve realizes that she can’t so easily write this small town or its people off.

    The Deb is based on the well-received stage musical of the same name by Hannah Reilly (who returns to write the screenplay) and Meg Washington (who serves as an executive producer). It’s a campy movie musical whose cultural self-awareness when it comes to teenage life might draw comparisons to this year’s Mean Girls musical adaptation but whose narrative owes much to Muriel’s Wedding. Taylah, like Muriel, is a big-hearted country girl who dreams of love and social acceptance — the kind of underdog screen protagonist who has become more common since P.J. Hogan’s 1994 film premiered at TIFF. 

    Whereas Muriel wanted to get married, Taylah wants to find a date to the debutante ball, a tradition that makes her feel closer to her deceased mother. Her transformation and friendship with Maeve drive most of the film’s action and offer a heartwarming, if predictable, relationship to root for. It helps that MacInnes (who played Maeve in the stage production) and Abbott fully embrace their characters and the exaggerations required of the movie musical. Their performances, as well as a handful of others including Shane Jacobson as Taylah’s father Rick and Tara Morice as a local tailor, soften the film’s more glaring contrivances. 

    Outside of the acting, which leans into the ridiculous and amplifies the campy nature of the film, The Deb struggles in its translation to the screen. The music is contemporary pastiche — riffing on different genres and arranged in ways that recall the Pitch Perfect covers — and although a handful are memorable, thoughts of many fade with the credits. Wilson’s direction is similarly uneven, especially toward the middle of the film, which packs in convenient plot points to distract from narrative thinness. The result is off-kilter pacing that threatens to undo the film’s more successful parts. 

    Like this year’s Mean Girls, The Deb does successfully play with the tools of the social media age, adjusting the aspect ratio to mimic iPhones and incorporating the use of platforms like TikTok or Instagram into its storytelling. The film opens with a bullish pop number (one of the movie’s strongest) introducing Maeve’s world at an elite private school in Sydney. The new teenage experience involves documenting every aspect of their lives and engaging in Plastics-like mocking and cruelty.

    The catch, of course, is that all of these students are hyper-attuned to injustice so they always punch up instead of down. Maeve’s popularity — both IRL and online — stems from her outspokenness on feminist issues. But she’s also a classic bully, and after one of her political acts goes awry, her classmates are more than eager to obliterate her reputation. In the spirit of the most high-profile cancellations of the 21st century, Maeve retreats from public life to reflect. 

    The country air doesn’t suit our chronically online city girl, so from the moment Maeve arrives in Dunburn, she begins plotting her departure. She plans to make her great return to Sydney with a podcast that chronicles her small-town life and begins recording all of her interactions. She ropes in Taylah, making her journey to the deb ball the main narrative, and interviews the resident mean girls, Danielle (Brianna Bishop), Chantelle (Karis Oka), Annabelle, (Stevie Jean) and Annabelle’s mother Janette (played by Wilson), a beautician who makes Regina George seem angelic. As Maeve zips around town investigating, she’s also pursued by a bad boy named Mitch (Hal Cumpston), whom we never learn all that much about. 

    A significant portion of The Deb’s plot revolves around Maeve keeping the true intentions of her podcast a secret while forming a genuine friendship with Taylah, but there are other narratives stuffed into this film. One involves the fate of Dunburn, which is in desperate need of government funds, and the other concerns a will-they-or-won’t-they romance between Rick and Shell (Morice), the town’s tailor. These threads are introduced with confident set pieces and catchy tunes that accompany decent choreography, but the balance is lost once the plot lines require more involvement. Despite its 2-hour runtime, parts of The Deb can feel frustratingly shallow. 

    That could be forgiven if the rest of the movie meaningfully cohered, but it doesn’t. The Deb, much like Maeve’s experience in Dunburn, is ultimately a mixed bag. 

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    Lovia Gyarkye

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  • TIFF suspends ‘Russians At War’ screenings due to ‘significant threats’  | Globalnews.ca

    TIFF suspends ‘Russians At War’ screenings due to ‘significant threats’ | Globalnews.ca

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    The Toronto International Film Festival said Thursday it is suspending upcoming screenings of the controversial documentary Russians At War due to “significant threats to festival operations and public safety.”

    The announcement came a day after TIFF stood by the film, which is helmed by a Russian-Canadian director and received Canadian public funding, amid growing backlash from the Ukrainian community and government officials for both Ukraine and Canada.

    A large protest was held outside Tuesday’s debut screening and another was planned for Friday.

    The protests were organized by Ukrainian-Canadian community leaders who have called the film “Russian propaganda” — a charge denied by the filmmaker and festival organizers — and called for government and criminal investigations and for TIFF to cancel screenings of the film.

    “As a cultural institution, we support civil discourse about and through films, including differences of opinion, and we fully support peaceful assembly,” the statement from the festival said Thursday. “However, we have received reports indicating potential activity in the coming days that pose significant risk; given the severity of these concerns, we cannot proceed as planned.

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    “This is an unprecedented move for TIFF.”

    The festival said it will pause screenings scheduled for Friday, Saturday and Sunday but is committed to showing the film “when it is safe to do so,” adding organizers “believe this film has earned a place in our festival’s lineup.”

    A spokesperson for the Toronto Police Service told Global News the decision to suspend the screenings were made by TIFF organizers “and was not based on any recommendation from Toronto Police,” who are not aware of any active threats.

    “We were aware of the potential for protests and had planned to have officers present to ensure public safety,” the spokesperson said.


    Click to play video: 'Ukraine strikes Moscow in biggest drone attack to date'


    Ukraine strikes Moscow in biggest drone attack to date


    The film’s director, Anastasia Trofimova, spent seven months embedded with a Russian army battalion in eastern Ukrainian territory occupied by Moscow’s forces to make the film, which she says was done without the Russian government’s knowledge. She and her financial backers have said the film shows the soldiers losing faith in the fight and seeks to humanize the ordinary men caught up in Russia’s invasion.

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    Ukrainian critics, as well as some Canadian MPs including Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, have denounced any attempts to portray the Russians in a sympathetic light and accused the filmmakers of “whitewashing” the Russian army’s crimes in Ukraine.

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    Two Canadian senators, Donna Dasko and Stan Kutcher, announced Thursday it had sent a letter to TIFF organizers calling for the film’s removal, suggesting TIFF “may not have known all the details related to how this film was made and the purpose for which it was made at the time of its selection.”

    None of the officials who have spoken out against the film have indicated whether they have seen it in full.


    The film’s producers, which includes Canadian Oscar nominee Cornelia Principe, called TIFF’s decision “heartbreaking” in a statement provided by the festival and condemned those who have spoken out publicly against Russians At War, including Freeland, Ukraine’s consul-general for Toronto Oleh Nikolenko and the Ukrainian Canadian Congress.

    “Their irresponsible, dishonest, and inflammatory public statements have incited the violent hate that has led to TIFF’s painful decision,” the producers wrote. “This temporary suppression is shockingly un-Canadian.”

    Nikolenko said in a brief statement on Facebook that he welcomed TIFF’s decision but did not address the alleged threats that led to it.

    “This project has already done significant damage to the festival’s reputation and given Russia a chance to further undermine democracy,” he wrote.

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    Earlier Thursday, the Ukrainian Canadian Congress issued a statement calling for TIFF’s board of directors to resign, the suspension of government funding to the festival and for authorities to investigate if federal laws against advocating genocide were violated.

    The group also didn’t address the alleged threats, telling Global News in a statement it will “continue to voice our protest” over TIFF’s intentions to show the film in the future. The protest planned for Friday will go ahead, it added.


    Click to play video: 'U.S. election 2024: Russia accused of trying to influence American voters'


    U.S. election 2024: Russia accused of trying to influence American voters


    Ukraine’s culture minister on Wednesday said he raised the possibility of “legal actions to combat propaganda” in a call with TIFF CEO Cameron Bailey.

    TVO, Ontario’s public broadcaster, announced Tuesday it was pulling its support for the film amid growing scrutiny over the use of public funding and government grants in its production. It had stood by the film a day earlier, calling it “at its core an anti-war film” “made in the tradition of independent war correspondence.”

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    TVO used its funding allocation from the Canada Media Fund for the documentary. The Canada Media Fund receives money from both the federal government and Canadian broadcasters, which is then allocated back to those broadcasters for the creation of Canadian content.

    The Canada Media Fund has stressed broadcasters make their own decisions on which projects to fund, without any input from the Canada Media Fund or the government, but said this week it was investigating the matter.

    A spokesperson for Canadian Heritage declined to say if it would investigate the funding, instead stressing the CMF’s independence.

    Trofimova has claimed she is at risk of criminal prosecution in Russia after filming its troops in occupied Ukrainian territory without Moscow’s approval, making claims her film is Russian propaganda “ludicrous.”

    Ukraine has questioned those claims, citing her past work with the Russian state media company RT, and said she also violated Ukrainian law by entering Ukrainian territory.

    Trofimova has said her work for RT was separate from the RT News division that has been banned from Canadian airwaves and whose employees have been indicted in the U.S. for allegedly spreading Russian propaganda and attempting to disrupt the upcoming American election.

    Curator Recommendations

    &copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Sean Boynton

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  • ‘Without Blood’ Review: Salma Hayek Pinault and Demián Bichir in Angelina Jolie’s Overly Cautious War Parable

    ‘Without Blood’ Review: Salma Hayek Pinault and Demián Bichir in Angelina Jolie’s Overly Cautious War Parable

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    A woman (Salma Hayek Pinault) walks into a plaza sparsely occupied by patrons enjoying an afternoon coffee and a magazine and lottery ticket kiosk. She approaches the booth and fingers a stack of newspapers before asking the attendant (Demián Bichir), an older man with rounded shoulders and reading glasses perched on his nose, a question. Her delivery is studied, as if a more natural cadence battles against an inherent severity. She begs the man to close up the shop and have a drink with her. Her mannered sweetness becomes more urgent with his refusal. This is a command, not a request. 

    Premiering at the Toronto Film Festival, Without Blood is Angelina Jolie’s latest foray into directing. The actress, who is making waves this festival season with her performance in Pablo Larrain’s Maria, adapted this thinly plotted parable from the novella of the same name by the Italian writer Alessandro Baricco. Without Blood obliquely investigates the psychological and generational toll of war. 

    Without Blood

    The Bottom Line

    Plays it safe.

    Venue: Toronto International Film Festival (Special Presentations)
    Cast: Salma Hayek Pinault, Demián Bichir, Juan Minujin
    Director: Angelina Jolie
    Screenwriter: Angelina Jolie, Alessandro Baricco

    1 hour 31 minutes

    Jolie treads familiar ground here: A handful of her previous directorial efforts, including In the Land of Blood and Honey, Unbroken and First They Killed My Father, set their action against the distressing backdrop of war. Whereas these other films grounded themselves with the details of real conflicts like the Bosnian War or the Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia, Without Blood claims no land or era. This lack of specificity may have worked in the hands of a more risk-taking helmer, but Jolie’s approach to direction can be as stiff as the woman’s initial encounter with the kiosk attendant. Despite bursts of intelligence, especially when it comes to conveying the fractured quality of trauma narratives, Without Blood’s vagueness ends up blunting many of its lessons. 

    An uneasy tension hangs in the air as the man and woman settle into a nearby restaurant. She begins to tell her story, parts of which Jolie shows early in a confidently staged scene. Her name is Nina, and when she was a young girl, three men broke into her house and executed her father (Alfredo Herrera) and brother (Alessandro D’Antuono). While her father’s screams overwhelmed the bungalow and her brother’s blood dripped onto her ankle, Nina hid silently in a burrow beneath some floorboards. 

    Her fate became lore in this unnamed country where a years-long battle brewed between two factions. Whether that conflict is regional or political is never made clear and, in Jolie’s estimation, is not relevant. Without Blood is more concerned with how all war wounds people, from its youngest victims to its oldest perpetrators. Most of the film takes place in a cafe, where Nina and the man, whose name we later learn is Tito, exchange different versions of her fate. In Nina’s telling, she is adopted by a pharmacist (Pedro Hernández), who gambles her off to a count (Luis Alberti). She ends up married at 14 and bearing the wealthy baron three sons. As Tito tells it, Nina’s union was a botched assassination turned marital arrangement: The count fell in love instead of killing her. The truth lies somewhere between Nina’s scarred memories and Tito’s vague recollections. In between these exchanges, the pair offer platitudes about the dangers (but never the details) of war. 

    The conversation between Nina and Tito swings between gripping moments and duller ones that are helped along by Hayek Pinault and Bichir’s tense banter. Their chemistry is defined by mutual recognition and shared trauma. Hayek Pinault hones in on understated motions — tears welling up in the eyes, tightening the grip on her spoon or pursing her lips — to convey the depth of her character’s pain. Bichir nails the subtle shifts required from his character, whose innocence becomes less black-and-white over the film’s brisk 90-minute runtime. 

    Still, Jolie’s overly cautious visual language limits the impact of the drama. Flashbacks to the pair’s past offer some dynamic moments, like bird’s-eye-view shots that suggest Tito has been watching Nina over the years, gesturing at their linked fates. There’s beauty here, too, as Jolie captures the vividness of the ochre landscape. For the most part, though, she relies on close-ups, toggling between the two diners’ faces in straightforward edits by Xavier Box and Joel Cox. 

    That innocent people suffer from conflict is not a provocative stance. But it seems like the only point Without Blood can make when it’s not focused — more interestingly — on observing how trauma lives in the body and shapes the mind. Despite flashes of power, the story ultimately seems too thin to bear the weight of its themes.

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    Lovia Gyarkye

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  • Toronto: Actress-Centric ‘The Room Next Door’ and ‘Nightbitch’ Premiere, Face Different Awards Paths

    Toronto: Actress-Centric ‘The Room Next Door’ and ‘Nightbitch’ Premiere, Face Different Awards Paths

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    Pedro Almodóvar’s The Room Next Door and Marielle Heller’s Nightbitch, the two most highly-anticipated films that screened at the Toronto International Film Festival on Saturday night, are in some ways very similar: both are adaptations of novels by filmmakers who have been bringing quality films to TIFF for years, and both center on complex female protagonists played by first-rate actresses. But their receptions at the fest, and their awards prospects moving forward, couldn’t be more different.

    The Room Next Door, which is Spaniard Almodóvar’s English-language feature directorial debut, came to Toronto via the Venice Film Festival, and was unveiled here just hours after the Venice jury bestowed upon the film its highest honor, the Golden Lion — which is somehow the first top prize from a major film festival that the 74-year-old auteur has ever been awarded.

    Adapted from Sigrid Nunez’s 2020 novel What Are You Going Through?, the film stars two Oscar-winning heavyweights — Tilda Swinton, with whom Almodóvar previously collaborated on the 2020 short The Human Voice, and Julianne Moore, working with him for the first time — as old chums who grew apart but reconnect after Moore’s character, a bestselling author, learns that Swinton’s character, a veteran war correspondent, has received a bleak diagnosis. Their rekindled friendship is then tested by an unusual request by one of the other.

    There has always been something in Almodóvar’s writing and/or direction that has elicited from his actresses some of the best work of their careers, and this film — despite some overall shortcomings that may relate to the filmmaker’s decision to venture into the English language and American culture — is no exception.

    It will be interesting to see how Sony Classics — Almodóvar’s longtime U.S. distributor, which is set to release this film before the end of the year on a date still to be determined — ends up campaigning for the two women, who were — along with John Turturro, who plays a character who was a lover of both women — guests of honor at the company’s annual TIFF press dinner on Saturday night. Swinton has a particularly juicy part, or — spoiler alert — as it turns out, parts, so it’s hard for me to see her not going lead. Moore has at least as much screen time, but her character revolves around Swinton’s, so I think a case could be made for her to go lead or supporting.

    Elsewhere, you should look out for the film in the category of best picture; Almodóvar for best director and best adapted screenplay; Eddie Grau’s work for best cinematography; and Alberto Iglesias’ original score (the most recent of Iglesias’ four Oscar noms came for his score of Almodóvar’s 2021 film Parallel Mothers).

    Nightbitch, meanwhile, was adapted from Rachel Yoder’s 2021 book of the same name, and was directed by Heller, who previously premiered at TIFF her 2018 film Can You Ever Forgive Me? and 2019 film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood (both of which went on to receive acting Oscar noms, with the former also picking up a screenplay nom). The film, which Heller says she worked on while experiencing postpartum depression after the birth of her second child, is essentially about how tough motherhood is and how resilient mothers are, as demonstrated by the experience of Amy Adams’ character, who loves her young son but increasingly — and justifiably — resents the sacrifices that she has been forced to make in order to parent him.

    Nightbitch is finally reaching audiences after a long and troubled gestation, during which its story and tone appear to have been impacted. (Its unusual title, in case you were wondering, refers to a metaphor that feels strained and then gets somewhat lost in the film.) Adams, needless to say, is a tremendously gifted actress, and she does her darndest in this film, on which she also served as a producer. But, in terms of awards season, I think that this film, across the board, is going to have a hard time finding traction. It’s just a bit all over the place.

    As a result, Searchlight, which is set to release it on Dec. 6, will probably focus more of its awards efforts on the two other contenders it has on its slate this season, A Real Pain and A Complete Unknown.

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    Scott Feinberg

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  • ‘Unstoppable’ Review: Jharrel Jerome and Jennifer Lopez Bring Grit and Determination to Conventional but Crowd-Pleasing Sports Bio

    ‘Unstoppable’ Review: Jharrel Jerome and Jennifer Lopez Bring Grit and Determination to Conventional but Crowd-Pleasing Sports Bio

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    Inspirational sports dramas usually share key elements — struggle, setbacks, perseverance and hard-fought triumph. Even more effective if the movie centers on a disadvantaged protagonist, either economically or physically, to inject that underdog spirit. Debuting director William Goldenberg has all of that in Unstoppable, the incredible true story of wrestler Anthony Robles, who was born with only one leg but never let that stop him from going after his dream. The special sauce here, however, is the bond of love and support through tough times between Anthony and his mother Judy, stirringly portrayed by Jharrel Jerome and Jennifer Lopez.

    Goldenberg is an Oscar-winning editor whose collaborations with lead producer Ben Affleck stretch from Gone Baby Gone through last year’s Air. The latter is an entertaining account of a pivotal moment in the evolution of Nike and there’s a pleasing continuum in the fact that Robles was the first sportsperson signed as a Nike Athlete after he had retired from competitive participation in his field. This moving portrait of him will open in select U.S. and U.K. theaters in December, streaming on Prime Video soon after.

    Unstoppable

    The Bottom Line

    Exerts a hold.

    Venue: Toronto International Film Festival (Gala Presentations)
    Cast: Jharrel Jerome, Bobby Cannavale, Michael Peña, Anthony Robles, Mykelti Williamson, Don Cheadle, Jennifer Lopez, Shawn Hatosy, Johnni DiJulius
    Director: William Goldenberg
    Screenwriters: Eric Champnella, Alex Harris, John Hindman

    Rated PG-13,
    1 hour 56 minutes

    Unstoppable makes winking acknowledgement that it’s not trying to reinvent the formula. A strategically placed Rocky poster on the wall of the garage at home where Anthony works out is one tipoff; another is having him run on crutches up the Philadelphia Museum of Art steps, placing his foot in the print of Rocky Balboa’s trainers, embedded in concrete at the top. It’s a potentially cheeseball moment that instead has an endearing effect, which is characteristic of a movie in which every tearjerking moment fully earns its emotions.

    Adapting Robles’ 2012 book, screenwriters Eric Champnella, Alex Harris and John Hindman trace the wrestler’s trajectory from his senior year at Mesa High School in Arizona, when he became a national champion, through his quest, in his final year of eligibility, to win the National Collegiate Athletics Association championship, competing for Arizona State University.

    It’s clear from the start that Anthony’s disability doesn’t earn him pity points and clearer still in the proud tenacity of Jerome’s performance that what he wants is exactly the opposite. He’s a young man with a firm goal in his head to become a champion as a way to make people see his achievements first, and not his missing right leg. He has staunch backup every step of the way from Lopez’s Judy, who never gives up on her son, even when she has her own volatile domestic life to manage.

    Despite his impressive record in high school wrestling and all the major college scouts having witnessed him in winning form, Anthony gets turned down by his top choices, led by the University of Iowa, whose fabled Hawkeyes are considered titans in the sport. Both Judy and Anthony’s high school coach Bobby Williams (Michael Peña) urge him to accept the full four-year scholarship being offered by Philly’s Drexel University, in fact the only school that wants him. But strong-willed Anthony is hesitant given Drexel’s complete lack of any NCAA wrestling profile.

    Out of respect for Williams, Coach Sean Charles (Don Cheadle) at Arizona State agrees to see Anthony. But he’s frank with the kid about ASU already having a full roster of recruits lined up to vie for the wrestling program’s 33 spots and says it’s highly unlikely Anthony would make the team as a walk on (a non-scholarship player). But Anthony is not easily deterred.

    At home, Anthony’s father has long been out of the picture. He’s something of a hero to his four younger half-siblings, born after Judy got together with prison guard Rick (Bobby Cannavale). Anthony adores the kids but has a more contentious relationship with his stepfather, a blowhard whose authoritarian streak comes out when he’s banging on about the necessity of making choices in life. All Rick’s blustery “real man” talk is exposed as a sham when it’s revealed that he’s let down the family in a way that could cost them their home. And his treatment of Judy increasingly sets off alarm bells with Anthony.

    Goldenberg and the writers deftly balance out the domestic drama with Anthony’s progress at ASU, where he works harder than anyone else in tryouts and shows formidable determination in an arduous three-mile mountain hike, his crutches slipping more than once on the uneven, rocky path. His endurance impresses Coach Charles, but it’s his strength of will on the mats that ultimately wins him a spot.

    Robles, who’s now in his 30s, serves as a stunt double for the wrestling scenes in wide and medium shots, with Jerome spliced into the latter and taking over entirely in tight shots. The sports action is visceral and looks painfully real, the violent force of slams and flips likely causing many in the audience to flinch. (OK, I did.)

    There are the requisite threats of the dream being snatched away from Anthony, notably when ASU cuts the wrestling program for a year and it’s reinstated thanks to alumni donations but with a reduced team. It’s at that point that the rousing support of Anthony’s teammates becomes evident and as he starts notching up wins, he becomes a favorite with the crowds.

    The movie could be accused of aggressively going for the tear ducts when Coach Williams delivers a box stuffed with fan mail from kids inspired by Anthony’s example, encouraging Judy to read them and giving her credit for raising an exceptional young man. Some of Coach Charles’ dialogue toward the end of the film, acknowledging his failure to see Anthony’s capabilities, also spells out in emphatic terms a realization already apparent in the warmth and profound decency of Cheadle’s performance.

    But any sense of emotional manipulation in the script is more than justified by the extraordinary human drama of Robles’ story. Alexandre Desplat’s lovely score — which ranges from Ry Cooder-esque guitars to soulful strings and surging piano passages — brings welcome restraint for this type of movie, perhaps knowing that Anthony’s authenticity can stand on its own, without the need for strenuous musical uplift.

    The contrast between Rick’s overbearing presence and the stalwart support of both coaches is poignant, and both Peña and Cheadle nail the ways in which their characters’ profession requires them to be as much motivational psychologists as sports strategists.

    The dominant relationship though is the mutually protective one between Anthony and his mother. After a couple of disposable Netflix movies in which she was basically playing JLo in the frozen wilderness and JLo in space, Lopez sinks into the character here with a layered performance as Judy, full of pain, pride, bitter disappointment in herself and then unexpected resilience and resourcefulness as she tackles the bank controlling their mortgage.

    Some might argue that Judy initially looks a bit glam for a mother of five who clips coupons in a household that’s barely getting by. But Lopez gives a tender and entirely convincing performance as a mother whose unshakeable belief in her son is a crucial part of his foundations.

    In his first lead role in a feature, Jerome — who memorably showed the conflicting sides of teenage Kevin, the love of Chiron’s life in Moonlight, and won an Emmy for Ava DuVernay’s When They See Us — is excellent. He gives the movie a fierce beating heart as a young man who remains vulnerable yet refuses to be defined by what others perceive as his weakness.

    Given the rules of this biographical subgenre and the fact that the title itself is pretty much a spoiler, there’s no doubt about where the story is headed. But as Anthony obsessively watches videos of the undefeated wrestler destined to be his championship opponent — and winces at the macho arrogance of his coach (Shawn Hatosy), who says, “At Iowa, we believe second is the same as last” — it’s impossible not to root for this guy imbued with such extraordinary fighting spirit or to be moved by his unyielding fortitude.

    Goldenberg fumbles a brief coda designed to show how Anthony’s achievements have been celebrated and continue to inspire, which seems both pedestrian and unnecessary. But that minor misstep takes nothing away from the rewards of Unstoppable.

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    David Rooney

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  • J.Lo Was an Unstoppable Force of Promo at TIFF

    J.Lo Was an Unstoppable Force of Promo at TIFF

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    Photo: Cindy Ord/Getty Images

    Love don’t cost a thing, but making a movie does. Even though it would’ve been understandable if Jennifer Lopez wanted to stay out of the spotlight after her latest heartbreak, she put in work to promote her based-on-a-true-story sports drama Unstoppable at its premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 6. It was her first public appearance since she filed for divorce from Ben Affleck, who produced the film but did not attend the premiere. (He was photographed in Los Angeles earlier that day, with People reporting that he appeared to be on his way to work.) Several outlets declared that J.Lo’s sparkly, side-slit TIFF attire was a “revenge dress.” But regardless of what motives she might’ve had when sharing pics of her outfit on Instagram, Lopez made sure to mention Unstoppable in the captions of both posts.

    She also posed on the red carpet for group photos, at one point standing just one Don Cheadle away from Affleck’s close friend and fellow Unstoppable producer Matt Damon. During part of a premiere conversation shared on social media by Peter Gray, she fielded questions about her character Judy, the mother of wrestler Anthony Robles — an NCAA champion who was born with one leg — and four other children. “When I read the script, I felt like so many women, including myself, could relate to the struggles she had gone through in life,” said Lopez, adding that the film is “a Latino story” and “so inspiring.” Judy was brought on stage during the event, and Lopez was filmed hugging her as the TIFF audience got to its feet and applauded after the screening. Who needs an ex when you’ve got a standing o?

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    Jennifer Zhan

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  • Toronto Kicks Off Battle of the Fall Film Markets

    Toronto Kicks Off Battle of the Fall Film Markets

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    With the start of the 2024 Toronto Film Festival, the first shot has been fired in a battle for supremacy in the fall film markets. Toronto will officially launch its new market in 2026, with the help of an eight-figure sum from the Canadian government, and the ground is being laid to make TIFF a contender, perhaps even a replacement, for the current reigning fall champ, the American Film Market.

    The AFM has looked wobbly and vulnerable since the closure of the Loews hotel in Santa Monica last year. The iconic Pacific-facing location had been home to the AFM since 1991, and AFM’s move up the hill to the Le Méridien Delfina for the 2023 market proved a disaster. Members of the hospitality workers union Unite Here Local 11 staged a noisy and disruptive protest outside the building, decrying what they said were unfair working conditions at the hotel. Inside, market attendees were frustrated by facilities not designed to accommodate hundreds of buyers and sellers moving in and out and through the building every day. AFM organizers, The Independent Film & Television Alliance (IFTA), quickly dropped the idea of returning there this year. Instead, the AFM has pulled up stakes and moved to the Palm Casino Resort in Las Vegas for its 45th edition, set to take place Nov. 5-10.

    “With the move to Vegas, AFM is in limbo a little bit, no one knows if it will work,” notes one international film sales exec, a 20-year film market veteran. “TIFF sees an opportunity to take AFM’s spot as the main film market for the fall.”

    Toronto has long been a place to do business, with buyers and sellers setting up shop in the city’s downtown hotels and negotiating deals. Sony Pictures Classics kicked off the deal-making on the eve of TIFF 2024, with SPC nabbing key world rights to Laura Piani’s debut feature Jane Austen Wrecked My Life. Lionsgate’s Grindstone Entertainment Group and Roadside Attractions took U.S. rights to Dito Montiel-directed Riff Raff, and Amazon Prime Video snatched up all international rights, excluding Germany, for the sci-fi feature The Assessment, starring Alicia Vikander, Elizabeth Olsen, and Himesh Patel, all ahead of their respective festival premieres.

    In 2022, TIFF tested the waters for a formal market with its Industry Selects program, a series of screenings for films outside the festival’s official lineup where worldwide rights were available. While TIFF CEO Cameron Bailey insists the new Toronto market will not be in competition with the AFM — “I think the AFM leans toward a more purely commercial product; we have the sort of festival grade,” he told THR, adding there’s enough time “between Cannes and Toronto and between Toronto and the AFM” to allow companies to attend all three markets with new projects.

    Sales companies are not so sure the expense of attending yet another film market is worth it.
    Domestic summer theatrical revenue, at $3.67 billion according to Comscore estimates, was off 10 percent from last year, and independent hits have been few and far between, Neon’s Longlegs ($74 million domestic) and A24’s Civil War ($68 million) notwithstanding.

    “The market for indie films is tough,” notes a London-based seller attending TIFF this year. “The streamers are pulling back, there are only a handful of independent distributors who can put up a real MG [minimum guarantee], so there’s not much wiggle room when it comes to costs.”

    As TIFF moves toward a formal market, cost-conscious indie buyers and sellers are finding more casual ways to do business. The Venice Film Festival, which does not have a film market, saw several high-profile U.S. deals, with A24 picking up rights to Luca Guadagnino’s new film Queer, starring Daniel Craig, from CAA Media Finance, Netflix nabbing Angelina Jolie-starring Maria Callas biopic Maria from FilmNation and Metrograph Pictures acquiring Neo Sora’s narrative feature debut Happyend from Magnify.

    “For us, Venice has become more like Toronto used to be,” says one European seller. “We’re taking meetings in our hotel, talking informally with our buyers and doing deals. All without spending money on a booth or a trans-Atlantic flight.”

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    Scott Roxborough

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  • Celebrities coming to the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival  | Globalnews.ca

    Celebrities coming to the 2024 Toronto International Film Festival | Globalnews.ca

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    As the city gears up for the annual Toronto International Film Festival, locals and visitors alike are already buzzing about the stars they may encounter in town.

    It’s no secret that one of the most popular activities during the 10-day festival is star spotting. From A-list actors to musicians and film directors, TIFF brings all kinds of industry professionals to Toronto, and with them, hordes of fans eager for a peek.

    This year, the festival’s guests, including Cate Blanchett, Bruce Springsteen and Selena Gomez, will serve glitz and glamour in The Six — and hopefully stop for a few selfies with their admirers.

    Angelina Jolie


    Angelina Jolie attends the Tony Awards on June 16, 2024, in New York City.


    Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

    Superstar Angelina Jolie is scheduled to attend the festival this year, where she will be honoured with the TIFF Tribute Award in Impact Media. The award, given to a professional who connects their social activism with cinema, will be presented to Jolie at the festival’s fundraising gala on Sept. 8.

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    The 49-year-old filmmaker’s latest project, a war movie called Without Blood, will make its debut at the festival. The film, about a woman seeking revenge for the deaths of her father and brother, stars Salma Hayek Pinault and was directed by Jolie.

    Bruce Springsteen


    Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band perform in Pittsburgh on Aug. 15, 2024.


    Justin Berl/Getty Images

    Movie lovers and rock music fans are in for a treat with the world premiere of Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street BandThe film, which is expected to see Springsteen himself walk the red carpet at the premiere, is a reflection of the Dancing in the Dark singer’s long-standing career.

    Narrated by Springsteen, Road Diary is filled with rare glimpses of the band members in their youth, as well as behind-the-scenes footage from their latest world tour.

    Selena Gomez


    Selena Gomez at the Season 4 premiere of ‘Only Murders in the Building’ on Aug. 22, 2024, in Los Angeles.


    Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

    TIFF 2024 is expected to bring Selena Gomez to town for the Canadian premiere of her new film Emilia Pérez. Described as a combination of “pop opera, narco thriller, and gender affirmation drama,” the film also stars Zoe Saldaña.

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    In Emilia Pérez, Mexican criminal lawyer Rita Moro Castro (Saldaña) helps notorious kingpin Manitas Del Monte (Karla Sofía Gascón) stage their own murder and secretly undergo a gender transition. Castro must also make plans for Monte’s wife (Gomez) and their children — all the while the film parades through musical detours.

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    Cate Blanchett


    Cate Blanchett at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on Sept. 1, 2024, in Venice, Italy.


    Stefania D’Alessandro/WireImage

    Oscar winner Cate Blanchett is set to show TIFF audiences a new side of herself in the quirky drama-comedy Rumours. In this Canadian-made film, Blanchett plays German chancellor Hilda, who is hosting an annual G7 summit that inevitably — and bizarrely — goes awry.

    The film has already been selected as Canada’s official entry for best international feature film consideration at the Oscars.

    Blanchett will also receive the TIFF Share Her Journey Groundbreaker Award during the festival, which honours a woman in film who has championed the careers of others and paved the way for the next generation.

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    Elton John


    Elton John onstage during the Library of Congress 2024 Gershwin Prize for Popular Song recipient ceremony on March 20, 2024, in Washington, D.C.


    Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

    Springsteen isn’t the only musician scheduled to show their face at TIFF this year. Elton John is slated to attend the world premiere of the documentary, Elton John: Never Too Late.

    The film, which features candid interviews and newly revealed archival footage, was co-directed by R.J. Cutler and John’s husband, David Furnish. Music lovers aren’t going to want to miss this flick.

    Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield

     


    Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh attend the Valentino Womenswear Spring/Summer 2024 show during Paris Fashion Week on Oct. 1, 2023, in Paris, France.


    Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

    One of the most anticipated films at TIFF this year is We Live in Time, starring Andrew Garfield and Florence Pugh.

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    The Oscar-nominated duo will make audience hearts flutter and break with this film about a couple looking to make the most of the time they have together amid a sobering medical diagnosis. Pugh and Garfield are both scheduled to attend the world premiere in Toronto, where they’ll surely be greeted by their many, many fans.

    Pamela Anderson


    Pamela Anderson at the 2024 Met Gala on May 6, 2024, in New York City.


    Aliah Anderson/Getty Images

    Pamela Anderson stars in Gia Coppola’s The Last Showgirl, which will make its world premiere at TIFF.

    Anderson plays Shelley, a 30-year veteran in Las Vegas’s showgirl industry, as she deals with the closing of the city’s last-standing, feather and crystal-adorned floor show. Shelly, a dancer in her 50s, must try to find her place in the world amid an uncertain future.

    The film also features performances from several other Hollywood stars, including Jamie Lee Curtis, Dave Bautista and Brenda Song.

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    Will Ferrell and Harper Steele


    Will Ferrell and Harper Steele attend a screening of ‘Will & Harper’ on Sept. 1, 2024, in Telluride, Colo.


    Vivien Killilea/Getty Images

    Will Ferrell is stepping out of his usual funnyman-type roles in this heartfelt documentary about his real-life friend Harper Steele.

    In Will & Harper, the Saturday Night Live alums traverse the U.S. on a road trip filmed after Steele publicly announced they are transgender. The duo’s 16-day trip is fulsome and sees lighthearted reunions with Seth Meyers and Tina Fey before Ferrell and Steele visit states with recently placed restrictions on gender-affirming care.

    The story of the friendship between Ferrell and Steele, who will both attend the festival, will hopefully warm hearts and empower change at TIFF.

    Nicole Kidman


    Nicole Kidman attends a red carpet for ‘Babygirl’ during the 81st Venice International Film Festival on Aug. 30, 2024, in Venice, Italy.


    Andreas Rentz/Getty Images

    Nicole Kidman is bringing sex to TIFF with the North American premiere of the erotic drama Babygirl.

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    Also starring Harris Dickinson and Antonio Banderas, the film shows Kidman as a high-powered executive who risks it all for a sexual relationship with her intern (Dickinson). Will Romy (Kidman) be able to hide her affair from her husband (Banderas), or will her intern’s threats to ruin her life with a single phone call really come to fruition? Audiences at TIFF will have to attend a screening to find out.

    ___

    Other celebrities slated to attend TIFF include Daniel Craig, Tilda Swinton, Tom Hiddleston, Ben Stiller, Sandra Oh, Amy Adams, Hugh Grant, David Cronenberg, Pharrell Williams, Andrea Bocelli and many more.


    Click to play video: 'TIFF lineup featuring stars Daniel Craig, Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton'


    TIFF lineup featuring stars Daniel Craig, Julianne Moore and Tilda Swinton


    The Toronto International Film Festival will take place from Sept. 5 to Sept. 15, 2024.

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    (The roster of celebrities scheduled to attend the festival can change at any time.)


    &copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Toronto Film Fest Adds Wang Bing, Roberto Minervini, Miguel Gomes Films to Wavelengths

    Toronto Film Fest Adds Wang Bing, Roberto Minervini, Miguel Gomes Films to Wavelengths

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    The Toronto Film Festival has unveiled its Wavelengths program for artist-driven experimental work that includes films by avant garde directors Wang Bing, Roberto Minervini and Miguel Gomes.

    With 11 features on offer, the Wavelengths section includes a 14-hour documentary, exergue – on documenta 14, from director Dimitris Athiridi set to be presented over three screenings.

    The section will also feature North American premieres for the remaining chapters of Wang Bing’s Youth trilogy: Youth (Hard Times) and Youth (Homecoming); Miguel Gomes’ Grand Tour, which won best director at Cannes; The Damned by Roberto Minervini, an American Civil War drama that won best director in the Un Certain Regard section in Cannes; and Pepe, by director Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias, about the life and death reflections of a hippo with connections to Pablo Escobar.

    Wavelengths last year in Toronto screened Wang’s Youth (Spring), the Cannes competition title about Chinese garment workers.

    Other North American premieres for the 2024 edition of Wavelengths include Jessica Sarah Rinland’s Collective Monologue, set in a community of zoos and animal rescue centers across Argentina; the queer romancer Viêt and Nam by filmmaker Trương Minh Quý, which bowed in Cannes; and Lázaro at Night by filmmaker Nicolás Pereda, a drama about a love triangle in Mexico City.

    The Wavelengths strand also booked North American bows for the Venice title Perfumed With Mint, from director Muhammed Hamdy, about a doctor treating a patient with mint plants sprouting from his body; and The Ballad of Suzanne Césaire, a biopic by Madeleine Hunt-Ehrlich about an anti-colonialist writer and Afro-surrealist pioneer.

    There’s also a Wavelengths special presentation for Drama 1882, Wael Shawky’s opera for the Egyptian pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2024.

    Short film highlights for TIFF‘s Wavelengths selection include world premieres of Archipelago of Earthen Bones — To Bunya, by Malena Szlam; A Black Screen Too, by director Rhayne Vermette; and the North American premiere of Lawrence Abu Hamdan’s The Diary of a Sky.

    Toronto also announced Thursday that the TIFF Classics strand will feature restored 4K movies like Shahid Sohrab Saless’ Time of Maturity, Lino Brocka’s Bona, Atom Egoyan’s The Sweet Hereafter and Raj Kapoor’s Awāra, which he also starred in.

    The Toronto Film Festival is set to run from Sept. 5 to 15.

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    Etan Vlessing

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