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Entries in TIFF (307)

Tuesday
Sep172024

TIFF '24: The Art of Dying in One's Own Terms

by Cláudio Alves

THE ROOM NEXT DOOR won the Golden Lion on the same day it first screened at TIFF.
Whether programmed with that intention or bonded by coincidence, one can often find films in conversation at festivals. Echoed themes and varied approaches to the same idea occur, often across sections, tying works together that were never meant to be considered in those terms. Some might disagree, but I find it to be a valuable experience, oft conducive to deeper thought, comparison and contrast. At this year's TIFF, for example, mortality was on many an artist's mind, from Godard, knowingly at the end of his rope, to the apocalyptic visions of Oppenheimer, Ostrikov, and Thibault Emin. From Cannes, there came meditations from Cronenberg and Schrader, films laden with grief, loss, and the need to take control. In documentary land, there are the recollections of an erstwhile death row inmate in The Freedom of Fierro.

Still, the most apparent conversation partners were two Spanish filmmakers, Pedro Almodóvar and Carlos Marques-Marcet, telling two euthanasia stories in The Room Next Door and They Will Be Dust

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Tuesday
Sep172024

TIFF: "Bonjour Tristesse"... but with cell phones

by Matt St Clair

Photo Credit: Giacomo Bernasconi

When the 1958 film adaptation of the novel Bonjour Tristesse by Françoise Sagan was released, it was both a beacon for the arrival of star Jean Seberg and a showcase for six-time Oscar-nominated legend Deborah Kerr to play with her star persona. Kerr’s interpretation of the high-strung Anne Larsen was a send-up of her “proper English ladies” casting niché that simultaneously allowed her to play into her sex appeal seen previously in From Here to Eternity and An Affair to Remember

The newest film adaptation from author-turned-director Durga Chew-Bose follows the same story beat-for-beat...

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Tuesday
Sep172024

TIFF '24: Produced by Ken Loach

by Cláudio Alves

Before Toronto, HARVEST premiered in Venice's official competition.

In 2023, Ken Loach premiered what the world assumes is his last film, The Old Oak, which earned a mixed reaction at Cannes and seems to have been quickly forgotten. Regardless of his swan song's reception, Loach's legacy is indisputable, and one year later, we can see that it extends beyond the films that bear his directing credit. Sixteen Films, a production company he co-founded with Rebecca O'Brien in 2002 that, until now, had been dedicated to Loach's directorial efforts, is now supporting the work of other filmmakers, a fair share of up-and-comers. As Loach recedes even further behind the scenes, Sixteen Films is reborn into a new life. Harvest and On Falling, two of their first productions, bowed at TIFF, though only the latter was a world premiere…

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Monday
Sep162024

TIFF: Ralph Fiennes carries the engaging and tense "Conclave

by Matt St Clair

Ralph Fiennes in "Conclave" © Focus Features

After taking audiences through the treacherous WWI battlefields in the Oscar-winning epic All Quiet on the Western Front, director Edward Berger crafts a different exercise in tension in the form of a Pope election with Conclave, a high-stakes thriller based on the 2016 novel by Robert Harris that is full of high-stakes political intrigue and stellar performances...

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Monday
Sep162024

"The Life of Chuck" wins Toronto

Oops. I apologize people. I wrote this in a timely fashion but something didn't click when I hit publish. You surely know this already but here goes!

image from Vanity Fair obviously!

TIFF doesn't have a headlining jury that give out several prizes like the other 'big five' festivals (Sundance, Berlinale, Cannes, and Venice). But they do have a smattering of prizes, the marquee one being the People's Choice Award. Oscar voters are not unlike TIFF festivalgoers... or so go the stats with this prize regularly helping films along on their journey to Oscar glory. But this year, the prize was a real surprise. It did not go to one of the perceived and much-discussed Oscar hopefuls. The People's Choice for 2024 instead went to The Life of Chuck, starring Tom Hiddleston, which is a Stephen King adaptation by Mike Flanagan...

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