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Tuesday
Sep192023

Norway's Oscar Submission Finalists

by Nathaniel R

Since we last discussed the Best International Feature Film four more official submissions have been announced from Egypt, Nepal, Slovakia, and Ukraine which you can read about on those charts (click on the country names) with several more to follow since oft-nominated countries like Spain, Italy, France, and Sweden are all announcing in the next few days. Tonight though, one of my favourite topics: Norway! As longtime readers know I once lived there and was once fluent in Norwegian. Those days are long long gone but I still like to watch Norwegian movies and television and try to turn off the subtitles on occassion.

Norway has announced three finalists for their submission: Let the River Flow, A Happy Day, and Songs of Earth...

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Tuesday
Sep192023

TIFF '23: Queer Way of Life

by Cláudio Alves

The 48th Annual Toronto Film Festival may have ended already, but my coverage here at The Film Experience is still going for a few more days. This time, let's talk about the program's queer offerings, highlighting three projects that range from an award-winning World Premiere to a beloved Spanish auteur's first foray into the Western genre. They are the dragged-up double feature of Sophie Dupuis' Solo, which took the Best Canadian Feature prize, and Unicorns, directed by Sally El Hosaini and James Krishna Floyd. Finally, there's Pedro Almodóvar's Strange Way of Life, bound to hit American theaters on October 4th, released by Sony Pictures Classics…

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Monday
Sep182023

TIFF ’23: Baby, It’s Cold Outside

by Cláudio Alves

In narrative constructs, intense emotions, especially romantic ones, tend to be associated with high temperatures. It’s as if the feverous feeling escaped the body into the atmosphere. Or, maybe it’s the other way around, hearts and libidos inspired by the surrounding heat to burn hotter than ever. And yet, there’s something deceptively powerful about the flame of attraction sparking alive within the bitter cold. In those cases, one almost desires human connection as a physical need. The body calls for the warmth of another person. The mind yearns for companionship, a panacea to the frozen solitude of every day.

At this year’s TIFF, two films explore this dynamic, allowing the frigid climate to become as strong a force as human arrogance or the heart’s most ardent desires. In both examples, a love triangle emerges from the snow. They’re Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s About Dry Grasses and Anthony Chen’s The Breaking Ice

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Sunday
Sep172023

"American Fiction" is the People's Choice Winner at TIFF. That's usually an Oscar omen. 

by Nathaniel R

American Fiction (coming from MGM)

Oscar-campaigning will probably look a lot different this season as Ben recently noted. With the strike ongoing and no resolution in sight there will be a glamour vacuum. Nature abhors a vaccuum so maybe the prestige of prizes from the Big Five festivals will gain yet more importance? Chronologically that's Sundance (A Thousand and One), Berlinale (On the Adamant -- a French documentary), Cannes (Anatomy of a Fall - France's Oscar submission finalist), and Venice (Yorgos Lanthimos' Poor Things), with Toronto as the capper.  TIFF '23 ends today (though if we know ever-prolific Cláudio, there's a few more posts coming). Toronto is not juried in the traditional way that it's predecessors on the calendar are so the People's Choice Winner is the big prize.

American Fiction, starring Jeffrey Wright, took that coveted honor for 2023. It will be released by MGM on November 3rd. The satire is about an author who writes an awful book in protest of the industries treatment of black authors that becomes a best-seller (to his horror). The majority of winners of this prize go on to Best Picture nominations. The full list of prizes is after the jump...

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Sunday
Sep172023

TIFF '23: "The New Boy" and "Kidnapped"

by Cláudio Alves 

A boy contemplates Jesus on the cross, the figure's perpetual suffering a striking sight. Because he's not been raised Christian, the youth relates more to the depicted pain than the iconography's meaning. In a show of naïve empathy that others would read as sacrilegious, he frees Christ, ripping the nails out of the cross. Whether the son of god's body tumbles a wooden fall or walks away reborn depends on the film, but the basic premise of these scenes ties Warwick Thornton's The New Boy and Marco Bellocchio's Kidnapped together. 

Both films consider historical atrocities done in the name of good, unmoored children at the center of a religious storm. Thornton sees a fictional aboriginal boy as a synecdoche for his colonized people, while the Italian master dramatizes the real-life episode of a Jewish boy taken from his family…

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