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Colossal Failure of the Modern Relationship at ICFF and NIFF

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by Allan Tong

In all my years of reviewing films, I've never come across one movie that played back-to-back festivals in the same region. The Colossal Failure of the Modern Relationship is previewing tonight at the Italian Contemporary Film Festivalthen screening tomorrow night at the Nigara Integrated Film Festival.

CFMR features an Italian-Canadian cast, and takes place in Niagara wine country, which justifies its appearance at these two very different fests.  [Disclosure: I know Sergio and he once recommended actress Lina Giornofelice for own of my films. Ms. Giornofelice appears in CFMR.]

CFMR is technically a romantic-comedy, but it's more like an Eric Rohmer film, an exploration of relationships and modern manners driven by dialogue with a touch of comedy. The story revolves around dull middle-aged wine writer, Freddy (Remedy's Enrico Colantoni), who takes his long-time lover Cat (Krista Bridges) on a weekend trip to a Niagara winery to revive their tired romance. Because he's on assignment, Freddy's self-absorbed boss, Richard (David Cubitt), and his young girlfriend, Amy (Brooke Palsson) join them. Problem is, Freddy and Amy have no idea that Cat has been sleeping with Richard.

The script is lean and Navarretta's direction is assured. Instead of going purely for laughs, Navarretta takes care to wring genuine dramatic reactions out of his actors which only strengthens the comedy. The four leads deliver, in particular Colantoni who plays Freddy as a nebbish, but likable everyman, and Bridges who adds dimension to his frustrated girlfriend which could have lapsed into cliche. Tony Nappo as a fellow winery visitor is another standout.

The film is well-paced and boasts sweeping shots of Niagara wine country, most likely shot by a drone camera. However, I'm not sure what the overall theme is to unite the fates of the four leads. To me, that's unclear. Overall, though, CFMR is a full-bodied film and goes down well.

Blonde Redhead kicks off NXNE in mesmerizing style

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Story & photos by Allan Tong






NXNE, Toronto's annual showcase of rock, opened last night with acts performing at club large and small across downtown, including New York trio, Blonde Redhead, who charmed the audience at the Opera House. The band's set skewed towards more recent material in a strong set that lasted over an hour. Pictured are Kazu Makino on vocals, keyboards and guitar, Simone Pace on drums and Amedeo Pace on vocals and guitar. NXNE continues through Sunday.

Films at NXNE: from Toronto to Texas

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by Allan Tong

This year's NXNE has scaled back its film program to a handful of intriguing choices. Last year, the film program expanded (or lost) its focus to include films that strayed from music, which I think was mistake, because Toronto already hosts 80+ film festivals covering any niche you can think of.

Amy, an excellent biodoc that I reviewed earlier this week, is the centerpiece, but a local indie film that Brendan Canning co-produced deserves a look, too. Diamond Tongues is about Edith (Leah Goldstein), an aspiring Toronto actress struggling to crack a very tough business as she wrestles with a messy personal life.
 

The first 15 minutes feel like a documentary of the lives of my own friends: actors, writers, film directors along Queen West raising Kickstarter funds for their next audition, praying for a callback or landing a writing gig on a (lame) TV series. No doubt that writer/directors Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson drew material from their own lives and their circle of friends.

I was worried that this was going to be an Insider's Film about The Business, but Diamond Tongues then settles into a portrait of a complex and sometimes unlikable character on the decline. Goldstein carries the film and it's remarkable knowing that she isn't an actress, but a rock musician. Worth seeing.

Like Diamond Tongues,Made in Texas has only a tangential conection to music, with some of the directors (Tom Huckabee, Brian Hansen) having played in Austin bands. Am I betraying my Toronto bias by preferring Diamond Tongues over Made in Texas, an anthology of of six short films made in Austin, Texas from the early-80s? I don't think so.


Presented by Jonathan Demme, a remarkable director, the shorts have a film student quality to them, suffering from murky storylines and inconsistent acting. I think if I grew up in Austin, I would enjoy this collection, but from this distance, I can't connect with these films which feel like exercises in filmmaking rather than gripping visual narratives with something to say.

Both films screen Saturday at NXNE. Details.

Directors Guild of Canada announces nominees for 2015 DGC Awards

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The DGC is delighted to announce the 2015 DGC Awards nominees. Selected from over 250 submissions, the nominees in 19 categories represent a cross section of the industry's outstanding talent working in the screen-based industry.

The Awards will be presented at the annual Gala on Saturday, October 24, 2015 at The Carlu in Toronto. Hosted by Arisa Cox and Seán Cullen with special guests soon to be announced, the 14th edition of the DGC Awards promises to be a big one. The evening will feature a special Nominees’ reception prior to the Gala.

“I am proud of the nominees and how their collective body of work speaks to Canadians and the world about Canada, about our outstanding Canadian screen creators and professionals," stated Tim Southam, National President, DGC. “It is a privilege for the Guild to have an opportunity to celebrate such outstanding talent every year through the DGC Awards, and this year looks more exciting than ever.”

The Directors Guild of Canada (DGC) is a national labour organization that represents over 3,800 key creative and logistical personnel in the screen-based industry covering all areas of direction, design, production and editing. The DGC negotiates and administers collective agreements and lobbies extensively on issues of concern for members including Canadian content conditions, CRTC regulations and ensuring that funding is maintained for Canadian screen-based programming.


List of nominees for the 2015 DGC Awards nominees

BEST DIRECTION – FEATURE FILM
Charles Binamé – Elephant Song
Terrance Odette – Fall
Jason Stone - The Calling
Jacob Tierney– Preggoland

BEST DIRECTION – TELEVISION MOVIE/MINI-SERIES
Tristan Dubois - Forget and Forgive
Philippe Gagnon - The Good Sister
Adam Kane - High Moon
Clement Virgo - The Book of Negroes, Episode 1

BEST DIRECTION – TELEVISION SERIES
John Fawcett - Orphan Black, 210, By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried
Podz - 19-2, 201, School
Helen Shaver - Orphan Black, 205, Ipsa Scientia Potestas Est
Kari Skogland - Vikings, 207, Blood Eagle

BEST FEATURE FILM
Corner Gas: The Movie
Elephant Song
Mommy
Relative Happiness

BEST TELEVISION MOVIE/MINI-SERIES
Bomb Girls: Facing The Enemy
Kept Woman
The Book of Negroes, Episode 1
Trigger Point

BEST TELEVISION SERIES – DRAMA
19-2, 201, School
Orphan Black, 210, By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried
The Pinkertons, 101, Kansas City
Vikings, 207, Blood Eagle

BEST TELEVISION SERIES – FAMILY
Degrassi, 1405 There's Your Trouble (Randal Thorne)
Degrassi, 1411 Firestarter, Part 1 (Stefan Brogren)
Degrassi, 1418 Give Me One Reason (Eleanore Lindo)
Open Heart, 101 Last Things First

BEST TELEVISION SERIES – COMEDY
Schitt's Creek, 101, Our Cup Runneth Over (Jerry Ciccoritti)
Schitt's Creek, 112, Surprise Party (Paul Fox)
Spun Out, 111 , This is Going To Take A While
Trailer Park Boys, 804, Orangie's Pretty F#@kin' Tough
Working The Engels, 103, Jenna's Friend

ALLAN KING AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN DOCUMENTARY
Monsoon
Shameless Propaganda
Super Duper Alice Cooper
The Boy From Geita

BEST SHORT FILM
Made in Bali
The Day Santa Didn't Come
The Underground
Vox

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – FEATURE FILM
Paul Austerberry – Pompeii
Craig Lathrop - The Witch
Oleg M. Savytski - The Calling
Carol Spier - Maps To The Stars

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – TELEVISION MOVIE/MINI-SERIES
Jean Bécotte - Kept Woman
Jason Clarke - The Book of Negroes, Episode 5
Aidan Leroux - Bomb Girls: Facing The Enemy
Zoe Sakellaropoulo - Northpole

BEST PRODUCTION DESIGN – TELEVISION SERIES
André Chamberland - Trauma 5, Rêve et réalité/ 1re partie
Ingrid Jurek - Working The Engels, 107, The Crazy Family
Doug McCullough - Beauty and The Beast, 222, Déjà vu
Armando Sgrignuoli - Murdoch Mysteries, 810, Murdoch and the Temple of Death
Brendan Smith - Schitt's Creek, 101, Our Cup Runneth Over

BEST PICTURE EDITING – FEATURE FILM
Michelle Conroy – Pompeii
Susan Shipton - The Captive
Ron Sanders - Maps To The Stars
Wiebke Von Carolsfeld - October Gale

BEST PICTURE EDITING – TELEVISION MOVIE/MINI-SERIES
Kye Meechan - The Book of Negroes, Episode 1
Tad Seaborn - Bomb Girls: Facing The Enemy
Susan Shipton - The Book of Negroes, Episode 6
Ron Wisman Sr. - En Vogue Christmas

BEST PICTURE EDITING – TELEVISION SERIES
Don Cassidy - Vikings, 210 The Lord's Prayer
Lisa Grootenboer - X-Company, 101 The Pilot
Aaron Marshall - Vikings, 207 Blood Eagle
Jay Prychidny - Orphan Black, 205 Ipsa Scientia Potestas Est

BEST SOUND EDITING – FEATURE FILM
Horns
Maps To The Stars
Pompeii
The Captive

BEST SOUND EDITING – TELEVISION MOVIE/MINI-SERIES
Best Christmas Party Ever
Bomb Girls: Facing The Enemy
The Book of Negroes, Episode 1
The Hazing Secret

BEST SOUND EDITING – TELEVISION SERIES
Good Witch, 101, Starting Over...Again
Murdoch Mysteries, 810, Murdoch and The Temple of Death
Vikings, 209, The Choice
X-Company, 101, The Pilot

2015 Much Music Video Awards – winners

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The 2015 Much Music Video Awards were handed out tonight in Toronto at the Much headquarters on Queen Street West. The host of the event was nominee and winner Ed Sheeran in his fourth appearance at the show. On receiving the prize foe Best International Artist, his first of two awards, he said "This is my fourth year and I've never won one — I feel like it's just because I'm presenting. So thank you very much for this."

The biggest winner of the night, however, was the hometown boy The Weeknd (a.k.a. Abel Tesfaye) who picked up four awards on the night, including video of the year. He tied the record for most MMVA wins in one night set by Swollen Members, k-os, and Hedley. He had led all nominees with six mentions. His acceptances were pithy, "I want to thank the fans of course — XO, wouldn't be here without you guys." His performance was medley of "Mood Music" and "Earned It"

Montreal's P Reign picked up the award for Best Hip Hop Video and he received a surprise visit from an unannounced guest. Toronto rapper and co-director of the winning video "DnF," Drake (a.k.a. Aubrey Graham) joined him onstage and received a roaring welcome from the audience. "My brother Drizzy Drake is in the building. That's my brother for life," said P Reign.

Other performers included Fall Out Boy, who opened the night with their single "Uma Thurman"; Carly Rae Jepsen "I Really Like You"; Walk Off the Earth performed "Rule the World"; Tori Kelly sang "Nobody Love"; Scott Helman performed "Bungalow"; Nick Jonas singing "Chains"; and Jason Derulo closed out the evening with a performance of "Want to Want Me."


Complete list of winners for the 2015 Much Music Video Awards

Video of the Year
The Weeknd - "Often"

Best Post-Production
Zeds Dead f. Twin Shadow & D'Angelo Lacy - "Lost You"

Best EDM/Dance
Grandtheft & Keys N Krates - "Keep It 100"

Best Director
The Weeknd - "Often" Director: Sam Pilling

Best Pop Video
The Weeknd - "Earned It"

Best Rock/Alternative Video
Arcade Fire - "We Exist"

Best Hip Hop Video
P Reign f. Drake & Future - "DnF"

Best MuchFact Video
Majid Jordan - "Her"

Best International Video – Artist
Ed Sheeran - "Thinking Out Loud"

Most Buzzworthy International Artist or Group
Ed Sheeran - "Thinking Out Loud"

Most Buzzworthy Canadian
The Weeknd - "Earned It"

Fan Fave Video
Shawn Mendes - "Something Big"

Fan Fave Artist or Group
Justin Bieber

Fan Fave International Artist or Group
One Direction




Nominees for the 2015 Much Music Video Awards

Video of the Year
Arcade Fire - "We Exist"
Grimes f. Blood Diamonds - "Go"
Majid Jordan - "Her"
Kiesza - "Giant in My Heart"
The Weeknd - "Often"

Best Post-Production
Grimes f. Blood Diamonds - "Go"
SonReal - "For the Town"
Walk off the Earth - "Rule the World"
Young Wolf Hatchlings - "You Lovely You"
Zeds Dead f. Twin Shadow & D'Angelo Lacy - "Lost You"

Best EDM/Dance
Grandtheft & Keys N Krates - "Keep It 100"
Kiesza - "Giant in My Heart"
Mia Martina f. Waka Flocka Flame - "Beast"
Torro Torro - "Ca$hville"
Zeds Dead f. Twin Shadow & D'Angelo Lacy - "Lost You"

Best Director
Arcade Fire - "We Exist" Director: David Wilson
Grandtheft & Keys N Krates - "Keep It 100" Director: Ohji
Grimes f. Blood Diamonds - "Go" Directors: Claire Boucher & Mac Boucher
Majid Jordan - "Her" Director: Common Good
The Weeknd - "Often" Director: Sam Pilling

Best Pop Video
Hedley - "Heaven in Our Headlights"
Scott Helman - "Bungalow"
Lights - "Running with the Boys"
Shawn Mendes - "Something Big"
The Weeknd - "Earned It"

Best Rock/Alternative Video
Arcade Fire - "We Exist"
Arkells - "Leather Jacket"
Death from Above 1979 - "Virgins"
July Talk - "Summer Dress"
Nickelback - "Edge of a Revolution"

Best Hip Hop Video
Tory Lanez - "Henny in Hand"
Naturally Born Strangers - "No One Knows My Struggle"
P Reign f. Drake & Future - "DnF"
John River - "Hope City II"
SonReal - "Preach"

Best MuchFact Video
Death from Above 1979 - "Virgins"
Grandtheft & Keys N Krates - "Keep It 100"
Majid Jordan - "Her"
Lights - "Running with the Boys"
Torro Torro - "Ca$hville"

Best International Video – Artist
Nick Jonas - "Jealous"
Rihanna - "FourFiveSeconds"
Sia - "Chandelier"
Sam Smith - "I'm Not the Only One"
Taylor Swift - "Blank Space"
Ariana Grande - "Break Free"
Calvin Harris - "Blame"
Ed Sheeran - "Thinking Out Loud"
Hozier - "Take Me To Church"
Kendrick Lamar - "I"

Most Buzzworthy International Artist or Group
Iggy Azalea - "Black Widow"
Jason Derulo - "Want to Want Me"
Fall Out Boy - "Centuries"
Ed Sheeran - "Thinking Out Loud"
Sia - "Chandelier"

Most Buzzworthy Canadian
Justin Bieber - "Confident"
Drake - "Worst Behavior"
Kiesza - "Sound of a Woman"
Shawn Mendes - "Life of the Party"
The Weeknd - "Earned It"

Fan Fave Video
Hedley - "Heaven in Our Headlights"
Marianas Trench - "Here's to the Zeros"
Shawn Mendes - "Something Big"
Nickelback - "Edge of a Revolution"
The Weeknd - "Earned It"

Fan Fave Artist or Group
Justin Bieber
Drake
Carly Rae Jepsen
Shawn Mendes
The Weeknd

Fan Fave International Artist or Group
Selena Gomez
One Direction
Ed Sheeran
Sam Smith
Taylor Swift

ICFF wrap-up: Edoardo Leo, awards and mocap

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Story & photos by Allan Tong

The fourth Italian Contemporary Film Festival wrapped on Friday evening with a lavish red-carpet gala party at the Ritz-Carlton. Italian comedy star Edoardo Leo picked up The People’s Choice Award for his film, Noi e la Giulia, that he both directed and starred in. Leo also appeared at ICFF in the comedy, I Can Quit Whenever I Want.

Mischa Barton (Hope Lost) received an Award of Honour from the festival. Sergio Navaretta, an Italian-Canadian director, captured the Castlepoint Numa Award for his romantic-comedy, The Colossal Failure of the Modern Relationship, at the gala. (Full review here.)



The Toronto Film Critics Association presented their award toThe Invisible Boy (Il Ragazzo Invisibile) prior to the closing night ceremonies. The Invisible Boy is a smart family film that puts a new spin on the invisible man genre.

Overall, the films at this year's ICFF were the strongest in its history, avoiding the inconsistency that plagued earlier editions. Ticketgoers agreed with over 20,000 entering the cinemas in Ontario and Quebec where the ICFF played for nine days. In partnership with TIFF, ICFF even brought Roberto Benigni to Toronto to launch a retrospective of his career.



The closing gala was another lavish affair full of deliciously Italian cuisine, wine, desserts and live models that resembled an Italian wedding.

The day before, ICFF hosted an Industry Day at the Pinewood Toronto Studios and co-presented with MyETVmedia, ETV Film Inc. and Sheridan College’s screen industry research and training center (SIRT). The focus was split between animation and motion-capture technology. Sheridan showcased some dazzling work by its animation students.



Animatrik Film Design and Zero Hour Industries provided a fascinating live demonstration of "mocap" where professional actors were  photographed before a green screen and were instantly transformed into larger-than-life heroes and monsters.

Every film festival boasts that it just closed a "successful" edition whether that's true or not, but in this case with ICFF 2015 the claim seems to be authentic. Again, the quality of films was strong, and the organization was good, especially with so many events taking place at once in Toronto, Montreal, Hamiltion, Vaughan and Quebec City. This augers well for next year's ICFF.

NIFF round-up: Chardonnay, movies & awards in Niagara

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The Henry of Pelham Family Estate Winery before the screening of How To Change The World
 Story and photos by Allan Tong

Away from the hurly-burly of Toronto last weekend was the second Niagara Integrated Film Festival which paired movies, Niagara vintages and gourmet food at wineries across the peninsula. From June 18-21, NIFF held wine tastings, five-course dinners and outdoor screenings as well as an Industry Day of film workshops headquartered at the posh White Oaks Resort and Spa in nearby St. Catharines. 
 
The weather has been fickle this spring. On Saturday night, you needed to wear a blanket to watch a movie, but on Sunday you needed a fan. At least the wine and food, made by the wineries Peller Estates, Southbrook and Redstone, were superb across the board.
 
Directors Lulu Wang (Posthumus) and Andrew Lancaster(The Lost Aviator)
 
And the films? Oh, yes.They weren't bad either, including premieres of The Lost Aviator, The Diary of a Teenage Girl and Colossal Failure of the Modern Relationship. NIFF attracted filmmakers across the globe, such as Lulu Wang who travelled from Los Angeles with Posthumus and Andrew Lancaster from London with The Lost Aviator.

The Filmalicious series paired a glass of wine with a feature film, including The Hotel Dieu, made by Niagara local Adrien Grenier, who took home the Niagara Rises Awards, and the Chinese-made family drama, Little Big Master.
 
Ontario's Lieutenant-Governor Elizabeth Dowdeswell (center) with NIFF organziers Sari Ruda (left) and Bill Marshall (right)
How To Change The World screened at the historic Henry of Pelham Family Winery that Ontario's Governor-General attended. The acclaimed documentary chonicles the history of Greeenpeace, driven by its conscientious, but charismatic leader, Bob Hunter. Director Jerry Rothwell avoids making a treehugging advocacy piece and instead focusses on the various personalities to created Greenpeace in Vancouver in the early-70s. The archival film footage of illegal Russian whaling and cruel baby-seal hunting in Newfoundland is shocking and bloody.  Rothwell deftly weaves contemporary interviews with this footage to produce a riveting tale that's honest and complex and doesn't sugercoat the environmental movement. There are internal politics everywhere you go and the green movement isn't immune to it. Hunter's daughter, Emily, was on hand to present the film Saturday, on the eve of Father's Day.
 
Emily Hunter, daughter of Greenpeace founder Bob Hunter (left) with Henry of Pelham co-owner Matt Speck
 
Without further adieu, the 2015 NIFF award winners:
 
 
NIFF Rising Star – Bel Powley – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl”
 
Best Feature  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” – Marielle Heller
 
Best Director – James Kent  – “The Testament of Youth” 

Best Documentary – “For Grace”  – Directors Kevin Pang and Mark Helenowski
 
Best Male Actor – Patrick Stewart  - “Match”
 
Best Female Actress –  Alicia Vikander  - “The Testament of Youth”
 
Best Family Film – “Little Big Master” - Director Adrian Kwan
  
 
Best Niagara Rises Feature – “The Hotel Dieu” – Director Adrian Thiessen (left, pictured with producer Kristen Nater)
 
RBC Emerging Artist Award ($2,500) –  Adrian Thiessen “The Hotel Dieu”
 
Best Niagara Rises Short – “Made In Bali” – Director Michael Pohorly 

Niagara Rises Special Jury Prize – “The Cocksure Lads Movie”
 
 
World Smallest Film Festival Director’s Choice ($1,000)  Director Andrea Conte – “Many More Rivers To Cross”

World Smallest Film Festival Audience Choice (Samsung Tablet) – “Many More Rivers To Cross” -  Director Andrea Conte

36th Annual Dora Mavor Moore Awards – winners

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Canadian Opera Company Leads the Field with 8 Wins: 5 for Falstaff including Outstanding Productionand 3 for Die Walküre including Outstanding Direction to Atom Egoyan

The 36th Annual Dora Mavor Moore Awards for the 2014/2015 season were handed out in a star-studded ceremony in Toronto on the evening of Monday, June 22 at Harbourfront Centre’s WestJet Stage, hosted by the hilarious Gavin Crawford, whose eight seasons on CBC-TV's This Hour Has 22 Minutes earned him numerous accolades and who recently won an ACTRA Award for his leading role in the filmTwo 4 One.

The Dora Mavor Moore Awards are produced and presented by the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts (TAPA) and celebrate excellence in Toronto theatre, dance and opera. For the 2014-2015 season, 117 producing companies registered 212 eligible productions. A total of 48 Dora Awards plus the Silver Ticket Award and the Audience Choice Award were given out.

The Canadian Opera Company led the pack, taking home 8 Dora Awards (5 forFalstaffand 3 for Die Walküre). Modern Times Stage Company / Aluna Theatre earned second spot with 6 Doras, all for their co-production of Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre). Soulpepper Theatre Company followed closely with 5 wins (2 for Accidental Death of an Anarchist, 2for Spoon River and1for Twelve Angry Men).David Mirvish tallies in with 4 hits: 3for the musicalOnceand1forThe Heart of Robin Hood. The details for each division are below:

In the General Theatre Division, Soulpepper Theatre leads the division with 3 Doras: Outstanding Production and Outstanding Performance-Male (Kawa Ada) for Accidental Death of an Anarchist, and Outstanding Performance-Ensemble for Twelve Angry Men. Outstanding New Play goes to Hannah Moscovitch for Infinity, a Tarragon Theatre / Volcano Theatre co-production. Volcano also wins Outstanding Sound Design/Composition for The Four Horsemen Projectoriginal sound poetry/composition: Rafael Barreto-Rivera, Paul Dutton, Steve McCaffery & bpNichol; additional sound design/ creation: Bill Brennan, Graham Hargrove, John Millard and the cast – presented with Crooked Figure Dances and Global Mechanic for a total of 2 for the company. Eda Holmes nabs Outstanding Direction for Buddies in Bad Times Theatre’sTom at the Farm.Nicky Guadagni hooks the Outstanding Performance-Female Dora for Theatre Passe Muraille’s Hooked. Börkur Jónsson snatches Outstanding Scenic Design for the David Mirvishproduction of The Heart of Robin Hood (co-presented with Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre, Barry and Fran Weissler) while Astrid Janson nets Outstanding Costume Design for VideoCabaret’sTrudeau and Lévesque and André Du Toit nabs Outstanding Lighting Design for Theatre Smith-Gilmour’s Take Me Back To Jefferson.

The inaugural Pat and Tony Adams Freedom Fund for the Arts provides a cash prize of $1,000 each to the recipients of the Outstanding Performance-Female and Outstanding Performance-Male in the General Theatre Division.

In the Musical Theatre Division, David Mirvish leads the division with 3 Dorasfor Once: Outstanding Production, Outstanding Performance-Female for Trish Lindström and Outstanding Performance-Ensemble. Outstanding Performance-Male goes to Daren A. Herbert for Acting Up Stage Company’sThe Wild Party (which also nabs Outstanding Choreography for Stephanie Graham in the shared Musical Theatre/Opera Division for a total of 2 wins). Outstanding Touring Production goes to Kiss & Cry from Charleroi Danses presented by Canadian Stage.

In the shared Musical Theatre/Opera Division and Opera Division proper, the Canadian Opera Company (COC) tops the Dora wins list with a total of 8 awards over these two divisions: Atom Egoyan wins Outstanding Direction for the COC’sDie Walküre which also nabs Outstanding Lighting Design for David Finn and Outstanding Performance-Female for Christine Goerke. The COC’s Falstaff (a co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam) scores 5 Doras in total: Outstanding Production, Outstanding Performance-Male for Gerald Finley, Outstanding Performance-Ensemble, Outstanding Scenic Design for Paul Steinberg and Outstanding Costume Design for Brigitte Reiffenstuel. The Dora for Outstanding New Musical/Opera goes to Mike Ross and Albert Schultz for Soulpepper Theatre’sSpoon River for which Mike Ross also earns the Dora for Outstanding Musical Direction, bringing Soulpepper’s overall haul to 5.

Continuing the tradition ofBluma’s Indies, the winners in the Independent Theatre Division each receive a $1,000 cheque from the Bluma Appel Community Trust in addition to Dora Awards. The Modern Times Stage Company / Aluna Theatre co-productionof Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre) leads the wins in this division with 6 Doras: Outstanding Production, Outstanding Direction to Soheil Parsa, Outstanding Performance-Female to Beatriz Pizano, Outstanding Costume Design to Angela Thomas and both Outstanding Scenic Design and Outstanding Lighting Design to Trevor Schwellnus. Quote Unquote Collectives’sMouthpiece snags 2 awards: Outstanding Performance-Ensemble and Outstanding Sound Design/Composition for composer Amy Nostbakken and sound designer James Bunton. Jordan Tannahill nets Outstanding New Play for Suburban Beast’s Concord Floral andSergio DiZio of Bob Kills Theatre’sThe Motherfucker With the Hat nabs Outstanding Performance-Male.

In the Theatre for Young Audience’s Division, Theatre Direct’sBeneath the Banyan Treeheads the division with 3 Doras: Outstanding Production, Outstanding Direction to Lynda Hill and Outstanding Performance-Ensemble. Firebrand Theatre’sBeneath Springhill: The Maurice Ruddick Story takes the remaining 2 categories: Outstanding New Play to Beau Dixon (created by) and Susan Newman / Rob Fortin (lyrics and music) and Outstanding Performance-Individual to Beau Dixon.

In the Dance Division, the Art of Time Ensemble leads with 2 Doras, both for #lovesexbrahms (from Intermezzi) with Outstanding Choreography to James Kudelka and Outstanding Lighting Design to Simon Rossiter. Outstanding Production goes to Luminato’s presentation of So Blue (produced by Fou Glorieux and co-produced by the Festival TransAmeriques, Tanzhaus nrw, Theatre de la Ville, Hellerau and National Arts Centre). Caroline Fraser snags Outstanding Performance-Female for Gadfly’sSkills & Soul Battles(TUDS) and Vincent Mantsoe nabs Outstanding Performance-Male for DanceWorks’NTU (DW 208). Outstanding Performance-Ensemble goes to This Is a Costume Drama (Harbourfront Centre's World Stage presents The Deitrich Group). And Outstanding Sound Design/Composition goes to Nicolás Hernández for his new arrangement of PuebloforEsmeralda Enrique Spanish Dance Company’sremount ofLetters to Spain, after Jose Luis Valle “Chuscales” and Hernández’s composition for the original presentation.

OTHER AWARDS:

The Silver Ticket Award is bestowed upon an individual who has excelled in their career while also nurturing the development of Canadian theatre. It was presented to master prop builder fina macDonell who has been making her magic for Toronto’s theatre community for over three decades, ranging from small fringe theatre works to multi-million dollar lavish musicals.

TAPA’s Audience Choice Award for Outstanding Production, co-sponsored by NOW Magazine and Yonge-Dundas Square, was also handed out. The public was invited to vote online from a list of Outstanding Production nominees in all divisions, or choose their own favourite. Presented with a commemorative plaque, the Audience Choice Award winner is Brantwood by Sheridan College’s Canadian Music Theatre Project.

The Dora Mavor Moore Awards are administered by the Toronto Alliance for the Performing Arts (TAPA). In addition to the Doras, other programs and services provided by TAPA include: T.O. TIX - Toronto's Official One Stop Ticket Shop at Yonge-Dundas Square and online at www.totix.ca; Toronto’s Official Theatre Guide; hipTIX, offering $5 tickets to students between the ages of 14 and 29; citySPECIAL; the Commercial Theatre Development Fund; and the Travel Retreat Initiatives Program – TRIP. For more information visit www.tapa.ca and www.totix.ca.


Complete list of winners for the 36th Annual Dora Mavor Moore Awards

GENERAL THEATRE DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
Accidental Death of an Anarchist; Soulpepper Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING NEW PLAY
Hannah Moscovitch; Infinity; Tarragon Theatre, a co-production with Volcano Theatre

OUTSTANDING DIRECTION
Eda Holmes; Tom at the Farm; Buddies In Bad Times Theatre

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – MALE
Kawa Ada; Accidental Death of an Anarchist; Soulpepper Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – FEMALE
Nicky Guadagni; Hooked; Theatre Passe Muraille

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of Twelve Angry Men; Soulpepper Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN
Börkur Jónsson; The Heart of Robin Hood; David Mirvish, Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre, Barry and Fran Weissler

OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN
Astrid Jansen; Trudeau and Lévesque; VideoCabaret in association with Soulpepper Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN
André Du Toit; Take Me Back To Jefferson; Theatre Smith-Gilmour in association with Factory Theatre

OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN/COMPOSITION
Original sound poetry/composition: Rafael Barreto-Rivera, Paul Dutton, Steve McCaffery & bpNichol. Additional sound design/ creation: Bill Brennan, Graham Hargrove, John Millard and the cast; The Four Horsemen Project; Volcano, Crooked Figure Dances, and Global Mechanic in partnership with Soulpepper Theatre Co.

INDEPENDENT THEATRE DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre) a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING NEW PLAY
Jordan Tannahill; Concord Floral; Suburban Beast in association with Why Not Theatre

OUTSTANDING DIRECTION
Soheil Parsa; Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre); a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – MALE
Sergio DiZio; The Motherfucker With the Hat; Bob Kills Theatre

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – FEMALE
Beatriz Pizano; Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre); a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of Mouthpiece; Quote Unquote Collective in association with Why Not Theatre

OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN
Trevor Schwellnus; Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre); a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN
Angela Thomas; Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre); a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN
Trevor Schwellnus; Blood Wedding (Bodas de Sangre); a Modern Times Stage Company/Aluna Theatre co-production

OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN/COMPOSITION
Composer: Amy Nostbakken; Sound Designer: James Bunton; Mouthpiece; Quote Unquote Collective in association with Why Not Theatre

MUSICAL THEATRE DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
Once; David Mirvish in association with Barbara Broccoli, John N. Hart Jr, Patrick Milling Smith, Frederick Zollo

OUTSTANDING TOURING PRODUCTION (open to General Theatre & Musical Theatre/ Opera)
Kiss & Cry; Charleroi Danses presented by Canadian Stage

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – MALE
Daren A. Herbert; The Wild Party; Acting Up Stage Company in association with Obsidian Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – FEMALE
Trish Lindström; Once; David Mirvish in association with Barbara Broccoli, John N. Hart Jr, Patrick Milling Smith, Frederick Zollo

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of Once; David Mirvish in association with Barbara Broccoli, John N. Hart Jr, Patrick Milling Smith, Frederick Zollo

MUSICAL THEATRE / OPERA DIVISION

OUTSTANDING NEW MUSICAL/OPERA
Mike Ross/ Albert Schultz; Spoon River; Soulpepper Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING DIRECTION
Atom Egoyan; Die Walküre; A Canadian Opera Company Production

OUTSTANDING SCENIC DESIGN
Paul Steinberg; Falstaff; COC co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam

OUTSTANDING COSTUME DESIGN
Brigitte Reiffenstuel; Falstaff; COC co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN
David Finn; Die Walküre; A Canadian Opera Company Production

OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY
Stephanie Graham; The Wild Party; Acting Up Stage Company in association with Obsidian Theatre Company

OUTSTANDING MUSICAL DIRECTION
Mike Ross; Spoon River; Soulpepper Theatre Company

OPERA DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
Falstaff; COC co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – MALE
Gerald Finley; Falstaff; COC co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – FEMALE
Christine Goerke; Die Walküre; A Canadian Opera Company Production

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of Falstaff; COC co-production with Royal Opera House, Covent Garden; Teatro alla Scala; Metropolitan Opera and Dutch National Opera, Amsterdam

THEATRE FOR YOUNG AUDIENCES DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
Beneath the Banyan Tree; Theatre Direct

OUTSTANDING NEW PLAY
Created by Beau Dixon, Lyrics and Music by Susan Newman and Rob Fortin; Beneath Springhill: The Maurice Ruddick Story; Firebrand Theatre

OUTSTANDING DIRECTION
Lynda Hill; Beneath the Banyan Tree; Theatre Direct

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – INDIVIDUAL
Beau Dixon; Beneath Springhill: The Maurice Ruddick Story; Firebrand Theatre

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of Beneath the Banyan Tree; Theatre Direct

DANCE DIVISION

OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION
So Blue; Luminato presents So Blue Produced by Fou Glorieux. Co-Produced by the Festival TransAmeriques, Tanzhaus nrw, Theatre de la Ville, Hellerau and National Arts Centre

OUTSTANDING CHOREOGRAPHY
James Kudelka; #lovesexbrahms (Intermezzi); Art of Time Ensemble in association with Coleman Lemieux & Compagnie

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – MALE
Vincent Mansoe; NTU (DW208); DanceWorks

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – FEMALE
Caroline Fraser; Skills & Soul Battles (TUDS); Gadfly

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE – ENSEMBLE
The Ensemble of This Is a Costume Drama; Harbourfront Centre’s World Stage presents The Deitrich Group

OUTSTANDING SOUND DESIGN/COMPOSITION
new arrangement Nicolás Hernádez after Nicolás Hernández and Jose Luis Valle “Chuscales”; Pueblo (Letters to Spain); Esmeralda Enrique Spanish Dance Company

OUTSTANDING LIGHTING DESIGN
Simon Rossiter; #lovesexbrahms (Intermezzi); Art of Time Ensemble in association with Coleman Lemieux & Compagnie

The 2015 Pauline McGibbon Award for excellence in an early arts career was given to Mumbi Tindyebwa, The George Luscombe Award for Mentorship went to Peggy Baker, and Sue Edworthy recieved the Leonard McHardy and John Harvey Award for administrative excellence.


26th Anniversary SOCAN Awards – winners

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A who's who of the Canadian music industry gathered last night in Toronto to honour Canada's most talented "Born to Be" songwriters, composers, lyricists and music publishers at the 26th SOCAN Awards.

Sponsored by Gowlings, KPMG, RBC and HMV, and hosted by CMT Canada's Paul McGuire, the SOCAN Awards recognize the lifetime and more recent achievements of Canada's music creators, honoured in a host of categories, including Pop/Rock, Dance, Urban, Country, Jazz, Folk/Roots, Classical, and Film & Television.

Recipients of SOCAN's major achievement awards this year were the legendary Randy Bachman (Lifetime Achievement), Dallas Green (National Achievement), MAGIC! (International Achievement), music industry pioneer Bernie Finkelstein (Special Achievement), and "Born to be Wild" songwriter Mars Bonfire, who accepted SOCAN's first-ever Cultural Impact Award. All accepted their honours in person, as did R&B chart-toppers The Weeknd and Belly, rising country stars Brett Kissel and Tim Hicks, and film and TV composers Keith Power and Andrew Lockington, among many others.

Performers included soulful young sensation Francesco Yates, who sang "Better to be Loved" heavy metal rockers Anvil, who honoured Mars Bonfire with a thundering rendition of "Born to be Wild" Kristian Alexandrov, Olena Kilchyk, Calvin Beale and Doan Pham, who played a medley of film and TV themes; "doom soul" singer-songwriter Cold Specks, who re-defined Warren Pash's SOCAN Classic Award-winning song "Private Eyes" and Randy Bachman, backed by Toronto rockers Big Sugar, who closed the show with a thrilling medley of "American Woman" and "Takin' Care of Business" - accompanied by the audience of more than 600 guests playing cowbells.

"Canadian-made music is essential to Canada's culture, pride and economy," said SOCAN CEO Eric Baptiste. "SOCAN's members are creating music that reaches millions of people at home, and touches hearts and minds worldwide. And our music publisher members are crucial to bringing those songs to the marketplace to expand the reach of great Canadian music around the country, the continent and the world."

SOCAN will also recognize outstanding Francophone music creators and publishers at an awards gala in October 2015 at Métropolis in the heart of Montreal.

SOCAN is a member-based organization that represents the Canadian performing rights of more than four-million Canadian and international music creators and publishers. SOCAN is proud to play a leading role in supporting the long-term success of its more than 130,000 Canadian members, and the Canadian music industry overall. SOCAN licenses more than 125,000 businesses in Canada, and distributes royalties to its members and music rights organizations around the world. SOCAN also distributes royalties to its members for the use of their music internationally in collaboration with its peer societies. www.socan.ca


26th Anniversary SOCAN Awards - Toronto - Winners List

LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Randy Bachman

INTERNATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
MAGIC!

NATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Dallas Green

SPECIAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Bernie Finkelstein

CUTURAL IMPACT AWARD
Mars Bonfire
Universal Music Publishing Canada

DANCE MUSIC AWARDS
"Goodbye"
Performed by Glenn Morrison/Islove
Jeremy Francis (Islove)
Glenn Morrison
Matthew Lange (BMI)
Sony/ATV Music Publishing Canada

"Hideaway"
Performed by Kiesza
Kiesza
Rami Samir Afuni (BMI)
Elephant Eye Publishing
EMI Blackwood Music Canada Ltd.

POP/ROCK MUSIC AWARDS
"Rude"
Performed by MAGIC!
Nasri Atweh
Adam Messinger
Mark Pellizzer
Ben Spivak
Alex Tanas
BMG Rights Management Canada
Kobalt Music Group
Sony/ATV Music Publishing Canada
Universal Music Publishing Canada

COUNTRY MUSIC AWARDS
"3-2-1"
Performed by Brett Kissel
Brett Kissel
Marvin Green (BMI)
Tim Nichols (BMI)
Bouncy Bear Music
O'Reilly International Inc.

"Got a Feeling"
Performed by Tim Hicks
Jeff Coplan
Tim Hicks
Noll Billings (BMI)
ole
Roots 3 Music Inc.

"Friends of Mine"
Performed by Jason Blaine
Jason Blaine
Philip O'Donnell (BMI)

URBAN MUSIC AWARDS
"Higher"
Performed by Classified
Classified (a.k.a. Luke Boyd)
William Lobban Bean (BMI)
Gary Jackson (BMI)
Renard Miner (BMI)
Bobby Simmons (BMI)
Carl Smith (BMI)

"Wanderlust"
Performed by The Weeknd
Belly (a.k.a. Ahmad Balshe)
Da Heala (a.k.a.) Jason Quenneville
The Weeknd (a.k.a. Abel Tesfaye)
Sylhouette Musmin (BUMA)
Danny Schofield (ASCAP)
Joseph Bostani (ASCAP)
Albert Tamaela (BUMA)
CP Music Group Inc.
SONGS Music Publishing
Universal Music Publishing Canada
Warner Chappell Music Canada Ltd.
"Crazy for You"
Performed by Hedley
Jacob Hoggard
Brian Howes
Jason Van Poederooyen
8 Pack of Lucky
EMI Blackwood Music Canada Ltd.
Universal Music Publishing Canada

"Heaven in Our Headlights"
Performed by Hedley
Jacob Hoggard
Brian Howes
Nolan Winfield (ASCAP)
EMI Blackwood Music Canada Ltd.
Universal Music Publishing Canada

"We Are Stars"
Performed by Virginia to Vegas feat. Alyssa Reid
Jamie Appleby
Derik Baker (Virginia to Vegas)
Nathan Ferraro
Kevin Figs
Teddy Pena
Alyssa Reid
Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd. Canada
Third Side Music Inc.
Wax On Wax Off Publishing

"Chills"
Performed by Down With Webster
Tyler Armes
Boi 1da
Emerson Brooks
Zale Epstein
Patrick Gillett
Cam Hunter
Brett Ryan Kruger
Andrew Martino
Alyssa Veniece Chin
Smashterpiece
Sony/ATV Music Publishing Canada
Warner Chappell Music Canada Ltd.

DOMESTIC TV MUSIC AWARD - FICTION
Murdoch Mysteries
Robert Carli
Shaftesbury
Sony/ATV Music Publishing Canada

DOMESTIC TV MUSIC AWARD - NON-FICTION
Dragons' Den
Andrew Cash
Josh Finlayson
Elmarush Songs

DOMESTIC TV MUSIC AWARD - ANIMATED
Johnny Test
Ian LeFeuvre
Ari Posner
Chris Tait
Cjar Music Publishing
ole

ACHIEVEMENT IN MADE-FOR-TV FILM MUSIC
The Riverbank
James Mark Stewart

ACHIEVEMENT IN FEATURE FILM MUSIC
The Expatriate
Jeff Danna
CEG Rights Canada

INTERNATIONAL FEATURE FILM MUSIC AWARD
Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters
Andrew Lockington

INTERNATIONAL TV SERIES MUSIC AWARD
Hawai Five-O
Keith Power
2015 SOCAN CLASSIC MUSIC AWARDS
"Burning in Love"
"New Girl Now"
"Wave Babies"
"What Does it Take?"
Performed by Honeymoon Suite
Derry Grehan
Don Valley Music Ltd.
peer International (Canada)

"Feel It Again"
Performed by Honeymoon Suite
Ray Coburn
Don Valley Music Ltd.
peer International (Canada)

"Private Eyes"
Performed by Hall & Oates
Warren Pash
Janna Allen (BMI)
Sara Allen (BMI)
Daryl Hall (BMI)
Almo Music of Canada

"Monday Morning"
"Wild Eyes"
Performed by The Stampeders
Rich Dodson
Open Wagon Music
Southern Music Publishing Company Canada Ltd.

INTERNATIONAL SONG AWARD
"Dark Horse"
Performed by Katy Perry
Henry "Cirkut" Russell
Lukasz Gottwald (ASCAP)
Jordan Houston (BMI)
Katheryn Hudson (ASCAP)
Sarah Hudson (ASCAP)
Martin Sandberg (STIM)
BMG Rights Management Canada
Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd. Canada

MOST PERFORMED FOREIGN SONG AWARD
"Happy"
Performed by Pharrell Williams
Pharrell Williams

FOLK / ROOTS MUSIC AWARD
The Strumbellas

2015 SOCAN LICENSED TO PLAY AWARD
The Calgary Stampede

2015 SOCAN BREAKOUT AWARD
DVVBS
Shawn Mendes

HAGOOD HARDY AWARD
Kirk MacDonald

JAN V. MATEJCEK NEW CLASSICAL MUSIC AWARD
Vivian Fung



The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences welcomes 322 new members

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is extending invitations to join the organization to 322 artists and executives who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to theatrical motion pictures. Those who accept the invitations will be the only additions to the Academy’s membership in 2015.

“It’s gratifying to acknowledge the extraordinary range of talent in our industry,” said Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs. “This year, our branches have recognized a more diverse and inclusive list of filmmakers and artists than ever before, and we look forward to adding their creativity, ideas and experience to our organization.”

Seven individuals (noted by an asterisk) have been invited to join the Academy by multiple branches. These individuals must select one branch upon accepting membership.

Each year, each Academy member may sponsor one candidate for membership within their branch. New member application reviews take place in the spring. Applications for the coming year must be received by March 24, 2016.

New members will be welcomed into the Academy at an invitation-only reception in September.


The 2015 invitees are:

Actors
Elizabeth Banks – Love & Mercy, The Hunger Games
Choi Min-sik– Lucy, Oldboy
Benedict Cumberbatch – The Imitation Game, Star Trek Into Darkness
Martin Freeman – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, Hot Fuzz
Heather Graham – The Hangover, Boogie Nights
Tom Hardy – Mad Max: Fury Road, Inception
Kevin Hart – The Wedding Ringer, Ride Along
Felicity Jones – The Theory of Everything, Like Crazy
Stephen Lang – Avatar, The Men Who Stare at Goats
Jodi Long – A Picture of You, Beginners
John Carroll Lynch – Shutter Island, Zodiac
Gugu Mbatha-Raw – Beyond the Lights, Belle
Denis O’Hare – Milk, Michael Clayton
Michael O’Neill – Dallas Buyers Club, Transformers
David Oyelowo – Selma, A Most Violent Year
Dev Patel – The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Slumdog Millionaire
Rosamund Pike – Gone Girl, Pride & Prejudice
Chris Pine – Into the Woods, Star Trek
Daniel Radcliffe – Kill Your Darlings, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2
Eddie Redmayne – The Theory of Everything, Les Misérables
Jason Segel – The Five-Year Engagement, The Muppets
J.K. Simmons – Whiplash, Juno
Sonny Skyhawk – Geronimo: An American Legend, Young Guns II
Song Kang-ho – Snowpiercer, The Host
Emma Stone – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), The Help

Casting Directors
Lucy Bevan – Cinderella, The Hundred-Foot Journey
Victoria Burrows – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, King Kong
Aisha Coley – Selma, Beyond the Lights
Patricia DiCerto – Blue Jasmine, Vicky Cristina Barcelona
Mary Hidalgo – The Lego Movie, The Incredibles
Roger Mussenden – X-Men: Days of Future Past, Get Smart
Lucie Robitaille – Incendies, The Barbarian Invasions
Luis San Narciso – The Skin I Live In, The Sea Inside
April Webster – Tomorrowland, Star Trek
Tricia Wood – Woman in Gold, The Lincoln Lawyer

Cinematographers
Christopher Blauvelt – The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby, The Bling Ring
Adriano Goldman – August: Osage County, Jane Eyre
Ben Kasulke – Laggies, Safety Not Guaranteed
Ryszard Lenczewski – Ida, Margaret
Jody Lee Lipes – Ballet 422, Martha Marcy May Marlene
Sharone Meir – Whiplash, Mean Creek
Rachel Morrison – Cake, Fruitvale Station
Tristan Oliver – ParaNorman, Fantastic Mr. Fox
Hoyte Van Hoytema – Interstellar, Her
Roman Vasyanov – Fury, End of Watch
Łukasz Żal – Ida, Joanna

Costume Designers
Kasia Walicka Maimone – Foxcatcher, Moonrise Kingdom
Francesca Livia Sartori – Piazza Fontana: The Italian Conspiracy, When the Night
Jany Temime – Gravity, Skyfall

Designers
Ramsey Avery – Tomorrowland, Star Trek Into Darkness
Gae Buckley – The Book of Eli, He’s Just Not That into You
Keith Brian Burns – The Best Man Holiday, 2 Fast 2 Furious
Lester W. Cohen – Fading Gigolo, Cop Land
Suzie Davies – Mr. Turner, The Children
John F. Fenner – The Phantom of the Opera, The Talented Mr. Ripley
Darren Gilford – Oblivion, Tron: Legacy
Derek R. Hill – Southpaw, Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Bryn Imagire – Cars 2, Up
Dina Lipton – Baggage Claim, Love Hurts
Tatiana Macdonald – The Imitation Game, The Invisible Woman
Dominic Masters – Woman in Gold, Casino Royale
Doug Meerdink – Jurassic World, Ocean’s Thirteen
Chris Spellman – Paper Towns, This Is the End
Patrick Tatopoulos – 300: Rise of an Empire, Total Recall
Charlotte Watts – Mr. Holmes, Mr. Turner

Directors
Michael Binder – Black or White, Reign over Me
Bong Joon-ho – Snowpiercer, Mother
Niki Caro – North Country, Whale Rider
Damien Chazelle* – Whiplash, Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench
Simon Curtis – Woman in Gold, My Week with Marilyn
François Girard – Silk, The Red Violin
F. Gary Gray – The Italian Job, Friday
James Gunn – Guardians of the Galaxy, Super
Im Kwon-taek – Chi-Hwa-Seon (Painted Fire), Chunhyang
Stan Lathan – Beat Street, Amazing Grace
Malcolm D. Lee* – The Best Man Holiday, The Best Man
Justin Lin – Fast & Furious 6, Better Luck Tomorrow
François Ozon – Young & Beautiful, Swimming Pool
Paweł Pawlikowski* – Ida, My Summer of Love
Kelly Reichardt – Meek’s Cutoff, Wendy and Lucy
Ira Sachs – Love Is Strange, Keep the Lights On
Lynn Shelton – Laggies, Your Sister’s Sister
Abderrahmane Sissako* – Timbuktu, Bamako
Damián Szifron* – Wild Tales, On Probation
Fernando Trueba – Chico & Rita, Belle Epoque
Morten Tyldum – The Imitation Game, Headhunters
Zaza Urushadze – Tangerines, The Guardian
Wayne Wang – Anywhere but Here, The Joy Luck Club
Edgar Wright – The World’s End, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World
Joe Wright – Anna Karenina, Atonement
Andrey Zvyagintsev* – Leviathan, Elena

Documentary
Richard Berge – The Island President, The Rape of Europa
Mathilde Bonnefoy* – CitizenFour, The Invisibles
Emad Burnat – 5 Broken Cameras
Guy Davidi – 5 Broken Cameras, Interrupted Streams
Geralyn Dreyfous – The Square, The Invisible War
Lewis Erskine – Free Angela: And All Political Prisoners, Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple
Shana Hagan – Misconception, This Film Is Not Yet Rated
Tony Hardmon – Detropia, Semper Fi: Always Faithful
Leonard Retel Helmrich – Position among the Stars, Shape of the Moon
Pirjo Honkasalo – The 3 Rooms of Melancholia, Atman
Judy Irving – Pelican Dreams, The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill
Robert Kenner – Merchants of Doubt, Food, Inc.
Marc Levin – Mr. Untouchable, The Last Party
Jesse Moss – The Overnighters, Full Battle Rattle
Pratibha Parmar – Alice Walker: Beauty in Truth, A Place of Rage
Paula DuPre’ Pesmen – Keep On Keepin’ On, The Cove
Gordon Quinn – Life Itself, Hoop Dreams
Kim Roberts – Waiting for ‘Superman’, Lost Boys of Sudan
Richard Rowley – Dirty Wars, The Fourth World War
João Moreira Salles – Santiago, Entreatos (Intermissions)
Ondi Timoner – We Live in Public, Dig!

Executives
Carolyn Blackwood
Robbie Brenner
Lia Buman
Steve Burke
David Fenkel
Mellody Hobson
Brian Keane
Steven Paul O’Dell
Jim Orr
Mark Rachesky
Ted Sarandos
Jeff Shell

Film Editors
Craig Alpert – Pitch Perfect 2, Pineapple Express
Mick Audsley – The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus, Dirty Pretty Things
Pablo Barbieri – Wild Tales, La Antena (The Aerial)
Nadia Ben Rachid – Timbuktu, Bamako
Kristina Boden – The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby, Cake
Mathilde Bonnefoy* – CitizenFour, Run Lola Run
Julian Clarke – Chappie, District 9
Douglas Crise – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), Babel
Tom Cross – Whiplash, Any Day Now
Jinx Godfrey – The Theory of Everything, Man on Wire
Robert Grahamjones – Brave, Ratatouille
Masahiro Hirakubo – Virunga, The Duchess
Jarosław Kamiński – Ida, Aftermath (Pokłosie)
William Kerr – Bridesmaids, I Love You, Man
Nico Leunen – Lost River, The Broken Circle Breakdown
Mike McCusker – Get On Up, 3:10 to Yuma
Tim Mertens – Big Hero 6, Wreck-It Ralph
Barney Pilling – The Grand Budapest Hotel, An Education
David Rennie – 22 Jump Street, Office Space
Gary D. Roach – American Sniper, Prisoners
Michael L. Sale – We’re the Millers, Bridesmaids
Stephen Schaffer – Cars 2, WALL-E
Job ter Burg – Borgman, Winter in Wartime
Peter Teschner – St. Vincent, Horrible Bosses
Tara Timpone – Friends with Kids, Bad Teacher

Makeup Artists and Hairstylists
Frida S. Aradottir – August: Osage County, A Serious Man
Victoria Down – Big Eyes, Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Frances Hannon – The Grand Budapest Hotel, The King’s Speech
Todd Kleitsch – Run All Night, Black Swan
Dennis Liddiard – Foxcatcher, Jobs
Jerry Popolis – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), Noah
Janine Rath-Thompson – Star Trek Into Darkness, Bridesmaids
Johnny Villanueva – The Gambler, The Fighter
David White – Guardians of the Galaxy, La Vie en Rose
Elizabeth Yianni-Georgiou – Guardians of the Galaxy, An Education

Members-at-Large
Andy Armstrong
Wayne Billheimer
Kevin Brownlow
Simon Crane
Debbie Denise
Jeff Habberstad
Andy Hendrickson
Elissa M. Rashkin Loparco
Guido Quaroni
Nicole Scalise
Steven J. Scott
Leon D. Silverman
Gregg Smrz
Lynda Ellenshaw Thompson
Steve Venezia

Music
Tyler Bates – John Wick, Guardians of the Galaxy
Alex Gibson – Interstellar, The Dark Knight
Jonny Greenwood – Inherent Vice, The Master
Dave Grusin – Skating to New York, The Firm
Alex Heffes – Love and Honor, Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom
Lisa Jaime – Annie, Rock of Ages
Jóhann Jóhannsson – The Theory of Everything, Prisoners
Laura Karpman – States of Grace, Black Nativity
Christopher Lennertz – The Wedding Ringer, Horrible Bosses
Lonnie Lynn – Selma, Freedom Writers
Chris McGeary – Jersey Boys, RoboCop
Sergio Mendes – Rio 2, Rio
Daniel Pinder – Big Hero 6, Captain Phillips
Trent Reznor – Gone Girl, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
Atticus Ross – Love & Mercy, The Social Network
John Stephens – Selma, Django Unchained
Marc Streitenfeld – Poltergeist, Prometheus
Erica Weis – Spy, The Heat
Gary Yershon – Mr. Turner, Another Year

Producers
Caroline Baron – Capote, Monsoon Wedding
Effie T. Brown – Dear White People, Real Women Have Curves
Terence Chang – Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale, Face/Off
Wyck Godfrey – The Fault in Our Stars, Twilight
Jeremy Kleiner – Selma, 12 Years a Slave
Pamela Koffler – Still Alice, Hedwig and the Angry Inch
Gina Kwon – Camp X-Ray, Me and You and Everyone We Know
Dan Lin – The Lego Movie, Sherlock Holmes
Eric Newman – RoboCop, Children of Men
Bruna Papandrea – Wild, All Good Things
Lydia Dean Pilcher – Cutie and the Boxer, The Darjeeling Limited
Rebecca Yeldham – On the Road, The Kite Runner

Public Relations
Jennifer Allen
Asad Ayaz
Dawn Baillie
Andrew Bernstein
Liz Biber
Mara Buxbaum
Lee Ginsberg
R. Jeff Hill
Michelle Hooper
Chris Libby
Susan Norget
Lewis Oberlander
Gordon Paddison
Elias Plishner
David Pollick
Weiman Seid
LeeAnne Stables
Ryan Stankevich
Bonnie Voland

Short Films and Feature Animation
Alan Barillaro – Brave, WALL-E
Kristine Belson – The Croods, How to Train Your Dragon
Darlie Brewster – Curious George, The Prince of Egypt
Roy Conli – Big Hero 6, Tangled
Ronnie Del Carmen – Up, Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron
Paul A. Felix – Big Hero 6, Lilo & Stitch
Michael Fukushima – Me and My Moulton, Dimanche/Sunday
Don Hall – Big Hero 6, Winnie the Pooh
Talkhon Hamzavi – Parvaneh, Taub
Hu Wei – Butter Lamp (La Lampe Au Beurre De Yak), Le Propriétaire
Jin Kim – Big Hero 6, Bolt
Mat Kirkby – The Phone Call, Hard to Swallow
David Kneupper – Alex and Sylvia, The Civil War in 4 Minutes
Michael Lennox – Boogaloo and Graham, The Back of Beyond
Fabio Lignini – How to Train Your Dragon 2, Puss in Boots
James Lucas – The Phone Call
Patrick Osborne – Feast, Paperman
Jerome Ranft – Toy Story 3, Ratatouille
Jim Reardon – Wreck-It Ralph, WALL-E
Kristina Reed – Feast, Paperman
Jason Reisig – Home, Shrek Forever After
Nicolas Schmerkin – Habana, Logorama
Anthony Stacchi – The Boxtrolls, Open Season
Isao Takahata – The Tale of the Princess Kaguya, Grave of the Fireflies
Michael Thurmeier – Ice Age: Continental Drift, No Time for Nuts
Marlon West – Frozen, The Princess and the Frog

Sound
Ray Beckett – Zero Dark Thirty, The Hurt Locker
Odin Benitez – Frozen, Silver Linings Playbook
Ron Bochar – Mortdecai, Moneyball
Jason Canovas – The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, World War Z
Thomas Curley – Whiplash, The Spectacular Now
Michael Dressel – American Sniper, Interstellar
Mary H. Ellis – Vacation, Prisoners
Stephanie Flack – Jupiter Ascending, Ender’s Game
Martín Hernández – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), Biutiful
Dean Humphreys – Taken 3, The Pianist
William Johnston – Vice President of Engineering, Formosa Group
Shawn Jones – Iron Man 3, Drive
Daniel Laurie – Inside Out, Big Hero 6
David Lee – Unbroken, The Matrix
Craig Mann – Dope, Whiplash
Kyrsten Mate – Tomorrowland, Guardians of the Galaxy
Shannon J. Mills – Inside Out, Big Hero 6
Bryan K. Pennington – Transformers: Age of Extinction, Promised Land
Juan P. Peralta – Tomorrowland, Captain America: The Winter Soldier
John Ross – Danny Collins, American Hustle
Peter Staubli – San Andreas, Skyfall
Mark Taylor – Edge of Tomorrow, Captain Phillips
Addison Teague – Big Hero 6, The Amazing Spider-Man
Jon Title – San Andreas, The Divergent Series: Insurgent
Thomas Varga – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), The Immigrant
Ben Wilkins – Whiplash, Star Trek

Visual Effects
Nicolas Aithadi – Guardians of the Galaxy, X-Men: First Class
Daniel Barrett – Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Stephane Ceretti – Guardians of the Galaxy, Cloud Atlas
Paul Corbould – Avengers: Age of Ultron, Guardians of the Galaxy
Tim Crosbie – X-Men: Days of Future Past, The Wolverine
Dan DeLeeuw – Captain America: The Winter Soldier, Iron Man 3
Sean Faden – Fast & Furious 6, Let Me In
Joe Farrell – The Wolf of Wall Street, Hereafter
Scott R. Fisher – Interstellar, The Dark Knight Rises
Chris Harvey – Chappie, Fast & Furious 6
Alex Jaeger – Tomorrowland, Marvel’s The Avengers
Matt Kutcher – Focus, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Andrew Lockley – Interstellar, Inception
Gray Marshall – Avengers: Age of Ultron, Captain America: The First Avenger
Carl Miller – Jurassic World, Elysium
David Nakabayashi – Tomorrowland, Avatar
Rocco Passionino – Avengers: Age of Ultron, Spider-Man 2
Lou Pecora – X-Men: Days of Future Past, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
Cary Phillips – Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Transformers: Dark of the Moon
Ellen Poon – Frozen, Inception
Edwin Rivera – 22 Jump Street, Moneyball
Cameron Waldbauer – X-Men: Days of Future Past, Elysium
Erik Winquist – Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, Avatar

Writers
Armando Bo – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), Biutiful
Damien Chazelle* – Whiplash, Guy and Madeline on a Park Bench
Álex de la Iglesia – El Crimen Perfecto, The Day of the Beast
Rick Famuyiwa – Dope, The Wood
Maya Forbes – Infinitely Polar Bear, Monsters vs Aliens
E. Max Frye – Foxcatcher, Something Wild
Nicolás Giacobone – Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), Biutiful
Dan Gilroy – Nightcrawler, The Bourne Legacy
Jorge Guerricaechevarría – Cell 211, The Day of the Beast
Rita Hsiao – Toy Story 2, Mulan
Simon Kinberg – X-Men: Days of Future Past, Sherlock Holmes
Malcolm D. Lee* – The Best Man Holiday, The Best Man
Christopher Markus – Thor: The Dark World, Captain America: The First Avenger
Stephen McFeely – Thor: The Dark World, Captain America: The First Avenger
Graham Moore – The Imitation Game
Paweł Pawlikowski* – Ida, My Summer of Love
Abderrahmane Sissako* – Timbuktu, Bamako
Damián Szifron* – Wild Tales, On Probation
Kessen Tall – Timbuktu
Tyger Williams – The Perfect Guy, Menace II Society
Andrey Zvyagintsev* – Leviathan, Elena

Associates
Victoria Belfrage
Josh Braun
Wayne Fitterman
Sharon Jackson
Patricia Keighley
Cliff Roberts
Elyse Scherz
James Toth
Bart Walker


RIDM announces lineup for 2015 en plein air summer screenings

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Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal (RIDM) or Montreal International Documentary Festival is pleased to announce its line-up of free outdoor screenings for the summer of 2015. Working with several organizations, the RIDM will present a series of excellent documentaries in Montreal parks and other uncommon venues. It’s a great way to enjoy the summer while discovering the best that documentary has to offer.

Quebec’s only film festival dedicated to documentaries, the Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal presents the best reality-based films, including the works of established directors and new talents.

All screenings will start at nightfall. Here is the program:


July 14, 9 p.m., Place de la paix
20 000 jours sur terre (20,000 Days on Earth) by Iain Forsyth | England, 2014, 97 min, in the original English with French subtitles
Presented in collaboration with the Society for Arts and Technology (SAT), the Quartier des Spectacles and the borough of Ville-Marie

-- 20,000 Days on Earth is an unusual blend of documentary and fiction that reconstructs 24 hours in the life of acclaimed writer and musician Nick Cave as he celebrates his 20,000th day on Earth.

July 21, 9 p.m., Parc Baile
La P’tite Bourgogne by Maurice Bulbulian | Quebec, 1968, 44 min, Griffintown by Michel Régnier | Quebec, 1972, 27 min, and Le beau dérangement by Suzanne Angel | Quebec, 1967, 10 min, in the original French
Presented in collaboration with the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)

-- Three short portraits of Montreal neighbourhoods and their unique residents. A trip back in time to a forgotten Montreal.

July 24, 9 p.m., Marché des possibles (park adjacent to Aréna Saint-Louis)
Stories We Tell (Les histoires qu’on raconte) by Sarah Polley | Canada, 2013, 113 min, in the original English with French subtitles
Presented in collaboration with Marché des possibles

-- Sarah Polley spent five years patiently creating this mosaic of family archival materials, dramatic reconstructions, narration and private moments, in search of truth in her family’s story.

July 25, 9 p.m., Parc Jean-Brillant
L'Empreinte by Yvan Dubuc and Carole Poliquin | Quebec, 2014, 88 min, in the original French
Presented in collaboration with Cinéma Notre-Dame-de-Grâce

-- Roy Dupuis is our guide on a rich, multifaceted voyage to the heart of the aboriginal influences that have shaped Quebec’s identity.

The screening will be preceded by a slam performance by Queen Ka and followed by a discussion with the directors.

July 28, 9 p.m., Parc Saint-Gabriel
Bidonville - architectures de la ville future by Jean-Nicolas Orhon | Quebec, 2013, 82 min, in the original French, English, Arabic, Hindi with French subtitles
A presentation of Cinéma sous les étoiles de Funambules Médias in collaboration with the RIDM

-- With the help of experts and the people who live there, Jean-Nicolas Orhon creates a richly detailed portrait of the planet’s shantytowns and what they reveal about our world.

The screening will be followed by a discussion with the director.

August 5, 8:45 p.m., Parc Laurier
De prisons en prisons by Steve Patry | Quebec, 2014, 85 min, in the original French
A presentation of Cinéma sous les étoiles de Funambules Médias in collaboration with the RIDM

-- Through the reintegration attempts of three ex-convicts, the film looks into the lives of scarred individuals struggling every day to escape the prison of the mind.

The screening will be followed by a discussion with the director.

August 11, 8:45 p.m., Parc Saint-Gabriel
Sol by Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Susan Avingaq | Quebec, 2014, 77 min, in the original English and Inuktitut with French subtitles
A presentation of Cinéma sous les étoiles de Funambules Médias in collaboration with RIDM

-- An investigation into the suspicious death of Solomon Tapatsiaq Uyarasuk, a young Inuk, becomes a sensitive, essential plea for justice for a people victimized by denial and neglect.

The screening will be followed by a discussion with co-director Marie-Hélène Cousineau.

August 16, 8:30 p.m., Parc Notre-Dame-de-Grâce
The Wandering Muse (La muse errante) by Tamás Wormser | Quebec, 2014, 94 min, in the original English, French, Spanish and Yiddish with French subtitles
Presented in collaboration with Cinéma Notre-Dame-de-Grâce

-- Music has no borders, and nor does the Wandering Jew. This film takes us on a global journey to meet today’s most inspired and influential musicians of the Jewish diaspora.

The screening will be followed by a discussion with the director.

September 1, 8:30 p.m., Parc Baile
Bidonville - architectures de la ville future by Jean-Nicolas Orhon | Quebec, 2013, 81 min, in the original French, English, Arabic, Hindi with French subtitles
Presented in collaboration with the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA)

-- With the help of experts and the people who live there, Jean-Nicolas Orhon creates a richly detailed portrait of the planet’s shantytowns and what they reveal about our world.

The screening will be followed by a discussion with the director and professor Nicolas Reeves of UQAM’s École de Design.


TIFF Celebrates its 40th Anniversary with Slate of Free Programming

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TIFF thanks audiences for 40 years of support with 40 free films including a screening of Vertigo with a live score co-presented with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, crowd-sourced screenings and a free exhibition celebrating film fans

Piers Handling, Director & CEO of TIFF, tonight announced special programming taking place during the 2015 summer and fall seasons in celebration of the organization’s 40th anniversary. The announcements were made at a free community party held in David Pecaut Square in downtown Toronto, prior to this season’s first TIFF in the Park event, a screening of the 1992 Toronto International Film Festival People's Choice Award–winner Strictly Ballroom.

“The free programming we’re offering will revisit and commemorate TIFF’s history, and allow us to thank our audiences for their dedication and support over the last four decades,” said Handling. “This is a milestone year for the organization. Not only are we looking back and celebrating 40 years of bringing the world to Toronto, but we’re looking ahead to the next 40 years, with a focus on taking our programming to cultural centres around the world.”

TIFF in the Park: TIFF 40 and the new TIFF in Your Park programme — a series of free pop-up screenings throughout the GTA all summer long, in partnership with Park People and local community partners — mark the first of 40 free public screenings. All of the films featured at both TIFF in the Park and TIFF in Your Park are highlights from TIFF's programming over the last 40 years. Other free films include TIFF 40:Your Favourites, a dozen crowd-sourced films screening during the fall season at TIFF Bell Lightbox on Tuesday evenings betweenOctober 6 and December 8 (the public can vote online at tiff.net/yourfavourites, now throughAugust 8, for a film from TIFF’s history that they’d most like to see again); seven restorations of past Festival and TIFF Cinematheque films from the organization’s 40-year history, screened in the TIFF Cinematheque programme at the Festival; and a free screening of Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo with a live performance of Bernard Herrmann’s brilliant film score by members of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, to take place on September 20 at Roy Thomson Hall, the final day of the Festival.

The free programming will also includeIn Love with the Stars, an art exhibition in the CIBC Canadian Film Gallery, located on the 4th floor of TIFF Bell Lightbox. Running from September 8, 2015 to April 3, 2016, the exhibition will feature three archival collections from the Film Reference Library: TIFF’s archival coverage of red carpets and parties from the first Festival in 1976 to the end of the nineties; and two collections comprised of the work of individuals who were deeply inspired by the stars they loved: scrapbook maven Edith Nadajewski, who made unique scrapbooks of celebrities spanning almost 70 years from the early 1920s to the 1990s, and amateur Hollywood photographer Jack Pashkovsky, who captured celebrities on studio lots and at events during the 1930s and 1940s. The Jack Pashkovsky Collection was generously donated to TIFF by producer, Barry Avrich and the family of Edith Nadajewski donated more than 1000 of her scrapbooks. In Love with the Stars opens just ahead of TIFF’s next major fall exhibition, Andy Warhol: Stars of the Silver Screen (October 30, 2015 toJanuary 24, 2016), which also explores audiences’ fascination with celebrity as we celebrate 40 years of stargazing in Toronto.

The selected TIFF 40: Your Favourites films and the TIFF Cinematheque programme will be announced in the coming months.

Free programming in celebration of TIFF’s 40th anniversary:
  • TIFF 40: Your Favourites — Voting open now until August 8 attiff.net/yourfavourites
  • TIFF in Your Park — July 3 to September 25 at venues across the GTA. More information available at tiff.net/tiffinyourpark
  • TIFF in the Park: TIFF 40 — July 8 to September 2 at David Pecaut Square. More information available at tiff.net/tiffinthepark
  • In Love With The Stars — September 8, 2015 to April 3, 2016 at TIFF Bell Lightbox
  • TIFF Cinematheque — September 10 to 20 at the Toronto International Film Festival
  • Vertigo with live score, co-presented with the TSO — September 20 at Roy Thomson Hall
TIFF is a charitable cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world, through film. An international leader in film culture, TIFF projects include the annual Toronto International Film Festival in September; TIFF Bell Lightbox, which features five cinemas, major exhibitions, and learning and entertainment facilities; and innovative national distribution program Film Circuit. The organization generates an annual economic impact of $189 million CAD. TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by contributors including Founding Sponsor Bell, the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada, the City of Toronto, the Reitman family (Ivan Reitman, Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels), The Daniels Corporation and RBC. For more information, visit tiff.net.

Saluting Vittorio De Sica

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The films of neo-realist pioneer, Vittorio De Sica, are being celebrated this summer at an exhibition taking place at Toronto's Italian Cultural Institute.  Last night marked the North American premiere of Tutti De Sica, presented in collaboration with TIFF Cinematheque and curated by Italian-Canadian artist Mimmo Baronello.

The 59 photographs, two video stations, a projection of De Sica's signature film, The Bicycle Thief, and the bicycle used in that film amount to a scaled-down version of an exhibit presented in Rome at Ara Pacis in 2013. (Actually, the bicycle was missing during last night's openeing, courtesy of Canada Customs which has held it up. It will be in the exhibit as of today.)


The exhibit is a limited, but affectionate tributbe to one of the world's most influential directors and an essential stop for cinema-lovers. It is free to the public and will run through September 17, 2015. Full information.

The Toronto International Film Festival Names Its Inaugural Platform Jury

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The Toronto International Film Festival today announced the inaugural jury for Platform, the new programme to champion directors’ cinema from around the world. This year, the three-person international jury is composed of acclaimed filmmakers Jia Zhang-ke, Claire Denis and Agnieszka Holland. Together, they will award a prize of $25,000 to the best film in the programme, to be announced at the Awards Ceremony on September 20, 2015.

“We have a long history with Zhang-ke, Claire and Agnieszka. They are master filmmakers with unique voices that we have championed throughout the years, both at the Festival and in our year-round programming,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “We are honoured to welcome them back to Toronto on our 40th anniversary as we celebrate our renewed commitment to artistically ambitious filmmaking with Platform.”

“Platform is our new home for original, personal filmmaking and this is our dream jury," said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. “We are thankful to these visionary filmmakers for making the time to join us this September. We can’t wait for the conversations they’ll have about the Platform films.”

Inspired by Jia Zhang-ke’s groundbreaking film, Platform will shine the spotlight on up to 12 films of high artistic merit that demonstrate a strong directorial vision. The film lineup will be announced in the coming weeks.

Jia Zhang-ke was born in Fenyang, Shanxi Province, China, and studied at the Beijing Film Academy. He made his directorial debut with the feature Xiao Wu (1997). His subsequent films have all screened at the Festival, including the documentaries Dong (2006), Wuyong (2007), and I Wish I Knew, (2010) and the features Platform (2000), Unknown Pleasures (2002), The World (2004), Still Life (2006), 24 City (2008), and A Touch of Sin (2013), which won the Best Screenplay Award at Cannes. Mountains May Depart (2015) is his latest film. In 2005, TIFF Cinematheque presented a retrospective of his work titled Unknown Pleasures: The Films of Jia Zhang-ke.

Claire Denis was born in Paris, raised primarily in West Africa, and graduated from France’s Institut des Hautes Études Cinématographiques (IDHEC). Many of her films have screened at the Festival, including her debut feature, Chocolat (1988), the documentary Man No Run (1989), the features No Fear, No Die (1990), I Can't Sleep (1994), Nenette et Boni (1996), Beau travail (1999), Trouble Every Day (2001), Friday Night (2002), L’intrus (04), 35 Shots of Rum (2008), White Material(2009) and Bastards (2013), and the short Voilà l'enchainement (2014). She is currently co-writing her next film, an English-language science-fiction feature, with Zadie Smith. In 2013, TIFF Cinematheque presented a retrospective of her work called Objects of Desire: The Cinema of Claire Denis.

Agnieszka Holland was born in Warsaw, Poland. Her first feature film, Provincial Actors (1979), won the FIPRESCI Prize at Cannes. Many of her films have played at the Festival, including A Woman Alone (1981), Europa Europa (1990), Olivier Olivier (1992), Total Eclipse (1995), Washington Square (1997), The Third Miracle (1999), Julie Walking Home (2002), Copying Beethoven (2006), In Darkness (2011), and the HBO miniseries Burning Bush (2013). Her other credits include the features Fever (1980), To Kill a Priest (1988), The Secret Garden (1993), and episodes of such acclaimed television series as The Wire and House of Cards. She is a frequent guest of TIFF, having recently participated in an In Conversation With… event and introduction and Q&A of Washington Square at TIFF Bell Lightbox in 2014.

About TIFF
TIFF is a charitable cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world, through film. An international leader in film culture, TIFF projects include the annual Toronto International Film Festival in September; TIFF Bell Lightbox, which features five cinemas, major exhibitions, and learning and entertainment facilities; and innovative national distribution program Film Circuit. The organization generates an annual economic impact of $189 million CAD. TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by contributors including Founding Sponsor Bell, the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada, the City of Toronto, the Reitman family (Ivan Reitman, Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels), The Daniels Corporation and RBC. For more information, visit tiff.net.

Call for submissions: Doc Circuit Montreal One-on-One Pitches for Emerging Filmmakers

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Doc Circuit Montreal is proud to announce the fifth edition of the One-on-One Pitches for Emerging Filmmakers on Wednesday, October 7, 2015. Ten up-and-coming filmmakers will have the opportunity to meet ten established producers during a full-day event dedicated to documentary pitches. Doc Circuit Montreal is committed to offering a new generation of directors the opportunity to enhance their pitching skills and directly present their projects to film and television producers.

A networking and proposal activity, One-on-One Pitches for Emerging Filmmakers is designed to encourage the formation of new business partnerships and spark intergenerational discussions about the challenges, issues and changes facing the documentary industry. Filmmakers interested in participating have until September 15, 2015 to submit a project.

For more information on eligibility, visit our website: http://www.ridm.qc.ca/en/doccircuitmontreal/activities2015/oooef

Past editions of the event have resulted in feature-length films getting funded, and a project from last year’s One-on-One Pitches for Emerging Filmmakers is now in production as a documentary series.

PRODUCTION HOUSES THAT WILL BE PRESENT:
Argus Films
- Carmen Garcia
Bunbury Films - Frederic Bohbot
Esperamos Films - Isabelle Couture
EyeSteelFilm - Bob Moore
Magasin Général Média - Patrick Fauquembergue
MC2 Communication Média - Jean-Simon Chartier
ONF/NFB - Denis McCready
Parabola Films - Sarah Spring
Peripheria Productions - Yanick Létourneau
Picbois Productions - Karine Dubois

About Doc Circuit Montreal
North America’s only bilingual documentary market, each year Doc Circuit Montreal organizes an intensive schedule of business meetings and professional-development workshops. The 11th edition of Doc Circuit Montreal will take place from November 14 to 18, 2015 at l’Ancienne École des Beaux-Arts, 3450 St-Urbain Street. Early bird registration opens on August 3rd. Register early to receive special benefits!

Polaris Music Prize announces 2015 short list

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The 2015 Polaris Music Prize Short List was revealed this morning at The Carlu in Toronto.

Caribou (2008, 2010, 2015) and Drake (2012, 2014, 2015) now join Metric (2006, 2009, 2013), Shad (2008, 2010, 2014) and Owen Pallett (2006, 2010, 2014) as the only acts to be nominated for the Short List on three separate occasions. This is second time Braids (2011, 2015) and The New Pornographers (2006, 2015) have made the Short List. Alvvays, BADBADNOTGOOD, Jennifer Castle, Tobias Jesso Jr., Buffy Sainte-Marie and Viet Cong are all first-time nominees.

The event streamed live on TFO’s BRBR and Periscope. Over 150 members of the media and music industry were in attendance.

It was also announced that singer-songwriter Fred Penner will be the host of this year’s Polaris Gala event to determine the winner taking place on September 21 at The Carlu.

The Polaris Music Prize will award $50,000 to the artist who creates the Canadian Album of the Year. Courtesy of Slaight Music, each of the nine other short listed artists will receive $3,000. Judged solely on artistic merit, without consideration of genre or record sales, the prize’s past winners have included Tanya Tagaq (2014), Godspeed You! Black Emperor (2013), Feist (2012), Arcade Fire (2011), Karkwa (2010), Fucked Up (2009), Caribou (2008), Patrick Watson (2007), and Final Fantasy / Owen Pallett (2006).

The Polaris Gala will be broadcast live September 21 by AUX TV.

Polaris Music Prize 2015 Long List


Complete Polaris Music Prize 2015 Short List

Alvvays – Alvvays
BADBADNOTGOOD & Ghostface Killah – Sour Soul
Braids – Deep In The Iris
Caribou – Our Love
Jennifer Castle – Pink City
Drake – If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late
Tobias Jesso Jr. – Goon
The New Pornographers – Brill Bruisers
Buffy Sainte-Marie – Power In The Blood
Viet Cong – Viet Cong

2015 MTV Video Music Awards – nominations

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The 2015 MTV Video Music Awards nominations are here — so get voting!

The list for the show, airing Sunday, August 30 at 9 p.m. ET/PT — and hosted by Miley Cyrus — is led by Taylor Swift, who is up for nine Moonmen. Following Taylor, pal Ed Sheeran has six noms and is competing against her for the coveted Video of the Year category. We doubt there will be any bad blood, though.

The nominations were announced on Apple’s Beats 1 radio show today. Check out the full list below and start voting now.

The 2015 MTV Video Music Awards will air live from L.A.’s Microsoft Theater at 9 p.m. ET, on Sunday, August 30.


Complete list of nominations for the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards

VIDEO OF THE YEAR
Beyoncé – “7/11″
Ed Sheeran – “Thinking Out Loud”
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood”
Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars – “Uptown Funk”
Kendrick Lamar – “Alright”

BEST MALE VIDEO
Ed Sheeran – “Thinking Out Loud”
Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars – “Uptown Funk”
Kendrick Lamar – “Alright”
The Weeknd – “Earned It”
Nick Jonas – “Chains”

BEST FEMALE VIDEO
Beyoncé – “7/11″
Taylor Swift – “Blank Space”
Nicki Minaj – “Anaconda”
Sia – “Elastic Heart”
Ellie Goulding – “Love Me Like You Do”

BEST HIP HOP VIDEO
Fetty Wap – “Trap Queen”
Nicki Minaj – “Anaconda”
Kendrick Lamar – “Alright”
Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth – “See You Again”
Big Sean ft. E-40 – “I Don’t F–k With You”

BEST POP VIDEO
Beyoncé – “7/11″
Ed Sheeran – “Thinking Out Loud”
Taylor Swift – “Blank Space”
Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars – “Uptown Funk”
Maroon 5 – “Sugar”

BEST ROCK VIDEO
Hozier – “Take Me To Church”
Fall Out Boy – “Uma Thurman”
Florence + the Machine – “Ship To Wreck”
Walk the Moon – “Shut Up and Dance”
Arctic Monkeys – “Why’d You Only Call Me When You’re High?”

ARTIST TO WATCH
Fetty Wap – “Trap Queen”
Vance Joy – “Riptide”
George Ezra – “Budapest”
James Bay – “Hold Back The River”
FKA Twigs – “Pendulum”

BEST COLLABORATION
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood”
Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars – “Uptown Funk”
Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth – “See You Again”
Ariana Grande & The Weeknd – “Love Me Harder”
Jessie J + Ariana Grande + Nicki Minaj – “Bang Bang”

VIDEO WITH A SOCIAL MESSAGE
Jennifer Hudson – “I Still Love You”
Colbie Caillat – “Try”
Big Sean ft. Kanye West and John Legend – “One Man Can Change the World”
Rihanna – “American Oxygen”
Wale – “The White Shoes”

PROFESSIONAL CATEGORIES

BEST ART DIRECTION
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood” (Charles Infante)
Snoop Dogg – “So Many Pros” (Jason Fijal)
Jack White – “Would You Fight For My Love” (Jeff Peterson)
The Chemical Brothers – “Go” (Michel Gondry)
Skrillex & Diplo – “Where Are U Now” with Justin Bieber (Brewer)

BEST CHOREOGRAPHY
Beyoncé – “7/11″ (Beyoncé, Chris Grant, Additional choreography: Gabriel Valenciano)
OK Go – “I Won’t Let You Down” (OK Go, air:man and Mori Harano)
Chet Faker – “Gold” (Ryan Heffington)
Ed Sheeran – “Don’t” (Nappy Tabs)
Flying Lotus ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Never Catch Me” (Keone and Mari Madrid)

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
Flying Lotus ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Never Catch Me” (Larkin Sieple)
Ed Sheeran – “Thinking Out Loud” (Daniel Pearl)
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood” (Christopher Probst)
FKA Twigs – “Two Weeks” (Justin Brown)
Alt-J – “Left Hand Free” (Mike Simpson)

BEST DIRECTION
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood” (Joseph Kahn)
Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars – “Uptown Funk” (Cameron Duddy)
Kendrick Lamar – “Alright” (Colin Tilley & The Little Homies)
Hozier – “Take Me To Church” (Brendan Canty, Conal Thomson)
Childish Gambino – “Sober” (Hiro Murai)

BEST EDITING
Beyoncé – “7/11″ (Beyoncé, Ed Burke, Jonathan Wing)
Ed Sheeran – “Don’t” (Jacquelyn London)
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood” (Chancler Haynes at Cosmo Street)
A$AP Rocky – “L$D” (Dexter Navy)
Skrillex & Diplo “Where Are U Now” with Justin Bieber (Brewer)

BEST VISUAL EFFECTS
Taylor Swift ft. Kendrick Lamar – “Bad Blood” (Ingenuity Studios)
FKA Twigs – “Two Weeks” (Gloria FX, Tomash Kuzmytskyi, and Max Chyzhevskyy)
Childish Gambino – “Telegraph Ave.” (Gloria FX)
Skrillex & Diplo “Where Are U Now” with Justin Bieber (Brewer)
Tyler, The Creator – “F****** Young/Death Camp” (Gloria FX)

2015 Toronto International Film Festival Reveals First Round of Galas, Special Presentations

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Featuring World Premieres from filmmakers including Michael Moore, Ridley Scott, Deepa Mehta, Meghna Gulzar, Stephen Frears, Rebecca Miller and many more

Piers Handling, CEO and Director of TIFF, and Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival, announced the first round of titles premiering in the Galas and Special Presentations programmes of the 40th Toronto International Film Festival®.

Of the 15 Galas and 34 Special Presentations announced, this initial lineup includes films from such acclaimed directors as Ridley Scott, Michael Moore, Deepa Mehta, Lenny Abrahamson, Brian Helgeland, Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson, Jason Bateman, Cary Fukunaga, Catherine Corsini, Stephen Frears, Tom Hooper, Hany Abu-Assad, Meghna Gulzar, Terence Davies, Jonás Cuarón, Julie Delpy, Rebecca Miller and Johnnie To.

“We are celebrating our 40th anniversary in 2015 and this first round of films offers a taste of the incredible lineup at this year’s Festival,” said Handling. “Made by both established and emerging filmmakers from around the world, these films offer a global snapshot of our times.”

“This year we are thrilled to share a diverse array of filmmakers from Australia, India, France, China, the United Kingdom and the USA,” said Bailey. “We look forward to sharing these fantastic films with Toronto audiences — the most engaged and enthusiastic in the world.”

The Toronto International Film Festival® today announced that Jean-Marc Vallée’s Demolition will open the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. Starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Naomi Watts, Chris Cooper and Judah Lewis, Demolition will have its world premiere on September 10 at Roy Thomson Hall.

“Over the years the Festival has been proud to present Jean-Marc Vallée’s feature films including Black List, C.R.A.Z.Y., Café de Flore, The Young Victoria, Dallas Buyers Club and Wild,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “Vallée is a proud Canadian with a distinct and powerful filmmaking voice and we can’t wait to share his latest film with Festival audiences on Opening Night.”

“Vallée has a tradition of presenting strong characters who are on journeys to self-discovery and redemption, and is the only filmmaker in our history to present both an opening and a closing night film at the Festival,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival. “This film tells the story of a man who deals with loss in unexpected ways, and is brought to life on screen through sensitive and commanding performances by Gyllenhaal, Watts, Cooper and newcomer Lewis.”

“I can't think of a better place to introduce Demolition to the world than at home. That's how I feel about TIFF,” said Vallée. “You make me feel at home, and I am grateful and honoured to have my film as the opener for the Festival's 40th anniversary."

The 40th Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 10 to 20, 2015.


GALAS

Beeba Boys dir. Deepa Mehta, Canada, World Premiere
An adrenaline-charged violent Indo-Canadian gang war mixes guns, bhangra beats, bespoke suits, cocaine, and betrayal. Gang boss Jeet Johar and his loyal, young crew are audaciously taking over the Vancouver drug and arms scene from an old-style crime syndicate. Hearts are broken and family bonds shattered when the Beeba Boys (known as the “nice boys”) do anything “to be seen and to be feared” — in a white world. .

Demolition dir. Jean-Marc Vallée, USA, World Premiere (Opening Night Film)
In Demolition, a successful investment banker, Davis (Jake Gyllenhaal), struggles after losing his wife in a tragic car crash. Despite pressure from his father-in-law (Chris Cooper) to pull it together, Davis continues to unravel. What starts as a complaint letter to a vending machine company turns into a series of letters revealing startling personal admissions. Davis’ letters catch the attention of customer service rep Karen (Naomi Watts) and, amidst emotional and financial burdens of her own, the two strangers form an unlikely connection. With the help of Karen and her son (Judah Lewis), Davis starts to rebuild, beginning with the demolition of the life he once knew.

The Dressmaker dir. Jocelyn Moorhouse, Australia, World Premiere
Based on the best-selling novel by Rosalie Ham, The Dressmaker is a bittersweet, comedy-drama set in early 1950s Australia. After many years working as a dressmaker in exclusive Parisian fashion houses, Tilly Dunnage, a beautiful and talented misfit, returns home to the tiny middle-of-nowhere town of Dungatar to right the wrongs of the past. Not only does she reconcile with her ailing, eccentric mother Molly, and unexpectedly falls in love with the pure-hearted Teddy, but armed with her sewing machine and incredible sense of style, Tilly sets out to right the wrongs of the past and transforms the women of the town but encounters unexpected romance along the way. Starring Kate Winslet, Liam Hemsworth, Judy Davis and Hugo Weaving.

Eye in the Sky dir. Gavin Hood, United Kingdom, World Premiere
London-based military intelligence officer Colonel Katherine Powell (Helen Mirren) is remotely commanding a top secret drone operation to capture a group of dangerous terrorists at their safe-house in Nairobi, Kenya. The mission suddenly escalates from a capture to a kill operation, when Powell realizes that the terrorists are about to embark on a deadly suicide mission. American drone pilot Steve Watts (Aaron Paul) is poised to destroy the safe-house when a nine-year-old-girl enters the kill zone just outside the walls of the house. With unforeseen collateral damage now entering the equation, the impossible decision of when to strike gets passed up the kill chain of politicians and lawyers as the seconds tick down. Also stars Alan Rickman, Barkhad Abdi and Iain Glen.

Forsaken dir. Jon Cassar, Canada, World Premiere
Tormented by a dark secret, an aging gunfighter abandons a life of killing and returns home, only to discover his mother has died. He’s forced to confront his estranged father and the life he left behind. Starring Donald Sutherland, Kiefer Sutherland and Demi Moore.

Freeheld dir. Peter Sollett, USA, World Premiere
Based on the Oscar-winning documentary and adapted by the writer of Philadelphia, Freeheld is the true love story of Laurel Hester and Stacie Andree and their fight for justice. A decorated New Jersey police detective, Laurel is diagnosed with cancer and wants to leave her hard-earned pension to her domestic partner, Stacie. However the county officials — the Freeholders — conspire to prevent Laurel from doing so. Hard-nosed detective Dane Wells and activist Steven Goldstein come together in Laurel and Stacie’s defense, rallying police officers and ordinary citizens to support their struggle for equality. Starring Julianne Moore, Ellen Page, Michael Shannon and Steve Carell.

Hyena Road (Hyena Road: Le Chemin du Combat) dir. Paul Gross, Canada, World Premiere
A sniper who has never allowed himself to think of his targets as humans becomes implicated in the life of one such target. An intelligence officer who has never contemplated killing becomes the engine of a plot to kill. And a legendary Mujahideen warrior who had put war behind him is now the centre of the battle zone. Three men, three worlds, three conflicts — all stand at the intersection of modern warfare, a murky world of fluid morality in which all is not as it seems.

LEGEND dir. Brian Helgeland, United Kingdom, International Premiere
The true story of the rise and fall of London’s most notorious gangsters, brothers Reggie and Ron Kray, both portrayed by Tom Hardy in an amazing double performance. LEGEND is a classic crime thriller that takes audiences into the secret history of the 1960s and the extraordinary events that secured the infamy of the Kray twins.

Lolo dir. Julie Delpy, France, North American Premiere
While on holiday in the south of France, Parisian sophisticate Violette falls in love with carefree geek Jean-René. As their relationship blossoms, Jean-René heads to Paris to spend more time with Violette but finds himself up against her possessive teenage son Lolo who is determined to sabotage their relationship by any means necessary. A razor-sharp comedy from Julie Delpy.

The Man Who Knew Infinity dir. Matthew Brown, United Kingdom, World Premiere
A true story of friendship that forever changed mathematics. In 1913, Ramanujan, a self-taught mathematics genius from India, travelled to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he forged a bond with his mentor, the eccentric professor GH Hardy, and fought to show the world the magic of his mind. Starring Dev Patel and Academy Award winner Jeremy Irons.

The Martian dir.Ridley Scott, USA, World Premiere
During a manned mission to Mars, astronaut Mark Watney is presumed dead after a fierce storm and left behind by his crew. But Watney has survived and finds himself stranded and alone on the hostile planet. With only meager supplies, he must draw upon his ingenuity, wit and spirit to subsist and find a way to signal to Earth that he is alive. Millions of miles away, NASA and a team of international scientists work tirelessly to bring “the Martian” home, while his crewmates concurrently plot a daring, if not impossible rescue mission. Based on a best-selling novel, and helmed by master director Ridley Scott, The Martian features a star-studded cast that includes Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig, Jeff Daniels, Michael Pena, Kate Mara, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Donald Glover.

The Program dir. Stephen Frears, United Kingdom, World Premiere
From Academy Award-nominated director Stephen Frears (The Queen, Philomena) and producers Working Title (The Theory of Everything), comes the true story of the meteoric rise and fall of one of the most celebrated and controversial men in recent history, Lance Armstrong. Starring Ben Foster, Dustin Hoffman, Chris O’Dowd and Guillaume Canet.

Remember dir. Atom Egoyan, Canada, North American Premiere
Remember is the contemporary story of Zev, who discovers that the Nazi guard who murdered his family some 70 years ago is living in America under an assumed identity. Despite the obvious challenges, Zev sets out on a mission to deliver long-delayed justice with his own trembling hand. What follows is a remarkable cross-continent road-trip with surprising consequences. Starring Academy Award winners Christopher Plummer and Martin Landau.

Septembers of Shiraz dir. Wayne Blair, USA, World Premiere
A thriller based on the New York Times bestseller, this is the true story of a secular Jewish family caught in the 1979 Iranian revolution and their heroic journey to overcome and ultimately escape from the deadly tyranny that swept their country and threatened to extinguish their lives at every turn. Starring Salma Hayek and Adrien Brody.

Stonewall dir. Roland Emmerich, USA, World Premiere
This fictional drama inspired by true events follows a young man caught up during the 1969 Stonewall Riots. Danny Winters (Jeremy Irvine) finds himself alone in Greenwich Village, homeless and destitute, until he befriends a group of street kids who introduce him to the local watering hole, The Stonewall Inn — however, this shady, mafia-run club is far from a safe haven. As Danny and his friends experience discrimination, endure atrocities and are repeatedly harassed by the police, the entire community of young gays, lesbians and drag queens who populate Stonewall erupts in a storm of anger. With the toss of a single brick, a riot ensues and a crusade for equality is born. Starring Jeremy Irvine, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Ron Perlman and Joey King.

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

Anomalisa dir. Charlie Kaufman and Duke Johnson, USA, Canadian Premiere
A man struggles with his inability to connect with other people. Starring Jennifer Jason Leigh, Tom Noonan and David Thewlis.

Beasts of No Nationdir. Cary Fukunaga, USA/Ghana, Canadian Premiere
Based on the highly acclaimed novel, director Cary Fukunaga’s Beasts of No Nation brings to life the gripping tale of Agu (newcomer Abraham Attah), a child soldier torn from his family to fight in the civil war of an African country. Idris Elba dominates the screen in the role of Commandant, a warlord who takes in Agu and instructs him in the ways of war.

Black Mass dir. Scott Cooper, USA, Canadian Premiere
In 1970s South Boston, FBI Agent John Connolly persuades Irish-American gangster Jimmy Bulger to act as an informant for the FBI in order to eliminate their common enemy: the Italian mob. The drama tells the story of this unholy alliance, which spiraled out of control, allowing Whitey to evade law enforcement while becoming one of the most ruthless and dangerous gangsters in Boston history. Starring Johnny Depp, Joel Edgerton, Benedict Cumberbatch, Rory Cochrane, Jesse Plemons, Kevin Bacon, Dakota Johnson, Julianne Nicholson, Corey Stoll and Peter Sarsgaard.

Brooklyn dir. John Crowley, United Kingdom/Ireland/Canada, Canadian Premiere
Set on opposite sides of the Atlantic, this drama tells the profoundly moving story of Eilis Lacey, a young Irish immigrant navigating her way through 1950s Brooklyn. Lured by the promise of America, Eilis departs Ireland and the comfort of her mother’s home for the shores of New York City. The initial shackles of homesickness quickly diminish as a fresh romance sweeps Eilis into the intoxicating charm of love. But soon, her new vivacity is disrupted by her past, and Eilis must choose between two countries and the lives that exist within. Starring Saoirse Ronan, Domhnall Gleeson, Emory Cohen, Jim Broadbent and Julie Walters.

The Club Pablo Larraín, Chile, North American Premiere
Four men live in a secluded house in a seaside town. Sent to purge sins of the past, they live under a strict regime and the watchful eye of a caretaker. Their fragile stability is disrupted by the arrival of a fifth man who brings with him their darkest secrets.

Colonia dir. Florian Gallenberger, Germany/Luxembourg/France, World Premiere
Colonia tells the story of Lena and Daniel, a young couple who become entangled in the Chilean military coup of 1973. Daniel is abducted by Pinochet’s secret police and Lena tracks him to a sealed off area in the south of the country called Colonia Dignidad. The Colonia presents itself as a charitable mission run by lay preacher Paul Schäfer but, in fact, is a place nobody ever escapes from. Lena decides to join the cult in order to find Daniel. Starring Emma Watson, Daniel Brühl and Michael Nyqvist.

The Danish Girldir. Tom Hooper, United Kingdom, North American Premiere
The Danish Girl is the remarkable love story inspired by the lives of artists Lili Elbe and Gerda Wegener (portrayed by Academy Award winner Eddie Redmayne and Alicia Vikander), directed by Academy Award winner Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech, Les Misérables). Lili and Gerda’s marriage and work evolve as they navigate Lili’s groundbreaking journey as a transgender pioneer.

The Daughter dir. Simon Stone, Australia, North American Premiere
A man returns to his hometown and unearths a long-buried family secret. As he tries to right the wrongs of the past, his actions threaten to shatter the lives of those he left behind years before. Starring Geoffrey Rush, Paul Schneider, Miranda Otto and Sam Neill.

Desierto dir. Jonás Cuarón, Mexico, World Premiere
Moises is traveling by foot with a group of undocumented workers across a desolate strip of the border between Mexico and the United States, seeking a new life in the north. They are discovered by a lone American vigilante, Sam, and a frantic chase begins. Set against the stunningly brutal landscape, Moises and Sam engage in a lethal match of wits, each desperate to survive and escape the desert that threatens to consume them. Starring Gael García Bernal and Jeffrey Dean Morgan.

Dheepan dir. Jacques Audiard, France, North American Premiere
To escape the civil war in Sri Lanka, a former Tamil Tiger soldier, a young woman and a little girl pose as a family. These strangers try to build a life together in a Parisian suburb.

Families (Belles Familles)dir. Jean-Paul Rappeneau, France, World Premiere
When Shanghai-based businessman Jérome Varenne learns that his childhood home in the village of Ambray is at the centre of a local conflict, he heads there to straighten things out and finds himself at the centre of familial and romantic complications. Starring Mathieu Amalric.

The Family Fang dir. Jason Bateman, USA, World Premiere
Annie and Baxter Fang have spent most of their adult lives trying to distance themselves from their famous artist parents. But when both siblings find themselves stalled in life, they return home for the first time in a decade where they become entangled in a dark mystery surrounding their parents’ disappearance. Jason Bateman directs and stars, along with co-stars Nicole Kidman and Christopher Walken, in this film based on the New York Times bestseller.

Guilty (Talvar)dir. Meghna Gulzar, India, World Premiere
Based on true events that set off a media frenzy all over the world, Guilty follows the 2008 Noida Double Murder Case of an investigation into the deaths of 14-year-old Aarushi Talwar and 45-year-old Hemraj Banjade, a domestic employed by Aarushi’s family, in Noida, India. The controversial case lives on in the mind of the public, despite a guilty verdict that sentenced the parents of the murdered girl to life in prison. Starring Irrfan Khan.

I Smile Backdir. Adam Salky, USA, Canadian Premiere
Adapted from the acclaimed novel by Amy Koppelman, I Smile Back explores the life of Laney (Sarah Silverman), a devoted wife and mother who seems to have it all — a perfect husband, pristine house and shiny SUV. However, beneath the façade lies depression and disillusionment that catapult her into a secret world of reckless compulsion. Only very real danger will force her to face the painful root of her destructiveness and its effect on those she loves.

The Idol (Ya Tayr El Tayer)dir. Hany Abu-Assad, United Kingdom/Palestine/Qatar, World Premiere
A young boy in Gaza, Mohammad Assaf, dreams of one day singing in the Cairo Opera House with his sister and best friend, Nour. One day, Nour collapses and is rushed to the hospital where it is discovered that she needs a kidney transplant. Nour leaves Mohammad with a dying wish that someday, he will become a famous singer in Cairo. Escaping from Gaza to Egypt against unbelievable odds, Mohammad makes the journey of a lifetime. From two-time Academy Award nominee Hany Abu-Assad comes this inspirational drama inspired by the incredibly true story of Mohammed Assaf, winner of Arab Idol 2013.

The Lady in the Vandir. Nicholas Hytner, USA/United Kingdom, World Premiere
Based on the true story of Miss Shepherd, a woman of uncertain origins who “temporarily” parked her van in writer Alan Bennett’s London driveway and proceeded to live there for 15 years. What begins as a begrudged favour becomes a relationship that will change both their lives. Filmed on the street and in the house where Bennett and Miss Shepherd lived all those years, acclaimed director Nicholas Hytner reunites with iconic writer Alan Bennett (The Madness of King George, The History Boys) to bring this rare and touching portrait to the screen. Starring Maggie Smith, Dominic Cooper and James Corden.

Len and Companydir. Tim Godsall, USA, North American Premiere
A successful music producer (Rhys Ifans) quits the industry and exiles himself in upstate New York, but the solitude he seeks is shattered when both his estranged son (Jack Kilmer) and the pop-star (Juno Temple) he’s created come looking for answers.

The Lobster dir. Yorgos Lanthimos, Ireland/United Kingdom/Greece/France/Netherlands, North American Premiere
In a dystopian near future, single people are obliged to find a matching mate in 45 days or are transformed into animals and released into the woods. Starring Colin Farrell, Academy Award winner Rachel Weisz, John C. Reilly, Léa Seydoux and Ben Whishaw.

Louder than Bombs dir. Joachim Trier, Norway/France/Denmark, North American Premiere
An upcoming exhibition celebrating photographer Isabelle Reed three years after her untimely death brings her eldest son Jonah back to the family house, forcing him to spend more time with his father Gene and withdrawn younger brother Conrad than he has in years. With the three men under the same roof, Gene tries desperately to connect with his two sons, but they struggle to reconcile their feelings about the woman they remember so differently. Starring Isabelle Huppert, Gabriel Byrne and Jesse Eisenberg.

Maggie’s Plandir.Rebecca Miller, USA, World Premiere
Maggie’s plan to have a baby on her own is derailed when she falls in love with John, a married man, destroying his volatile marriage to the brilliant Georgette. But one daughter and three years later, Maggie is out of love and in a quandary: what do you do when you suspect your man and his ex-wife are actually perfect for each other? Starring Julianne Moore, Greta Gerwig, Ethan Hawke, Bill Hader and Maya Rudolph.

Mountains May Depart (Shan He Gu Ren)dir. Jia Zhang-ke, China/France/Japan, North American Premiere
The new film from master filmmaker Jia Zhang-ke (A Touch of Sin) jumps from the recent past to the speculative near-future as it examines how China’s economic boom has affected the bonds of family, tradition, and love.

Office dir. Johnnie To, China/Hong Kong, International Premiere
Billion-dollar company Jones & Sunn is going public. Chairman Ho Chung-ping has promised CEO Chang, who has been his mistress for more than 20 years, to become a major shareholder of the company. As the IPO team enters the company to audit its accounts, a series of inside stories start to be revealed. Starring Chow Yun Fat, Sylvia Chang, Tang Wei and Wang Ziyi.

Parcheddir. Leena Yadav, India/USA, World Premiere
Three ordinary women dare to break free from the century old patriarchal ways of their village in the desert heartland of rural India. Starring Tannishtha Chaterjee, Radhika Apte and Surveen Chawla, this unforgettable tale of friendship and triumph is called Parched.

Roomdir. Lenny Abrahamson, Ireland/Canada, Canadian Premiere
Told through the eyes of five-year-old-Jack, Room is a thrilling and emotional tale that celebrates the resilience and power of the human spirit. To Jack, the Room is the world… it’s where he was born, where he and his Ma eat and sleep and play and learn. But while it’s home to Jack, to Ma it’s a prison. Through her fierce love for her son, Ma has managed to create a childhood for him in their 10-by-10-foot space. But as Jack’s curiosity is building alongside Ma’s own desperation — she knows that Room cannot contain either indefinitely. Starring Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay, Joan Allen, Sean Bridgers and William H. Macy.

Sicario dir. Denis Villeneuve, USA, North American Premiere
In the lawless border area stretching between the U.S. and Mexico, an idealistic FBI agent (Emily Blunt) is enlisted by an elite government task force official (Josh Brolin) to aid in the escalating war against drugs. Led by an enigmatic consultant with a questionable past (Benicio Del Toro), the team sets out on a clandestine journey that forces Kate to question everything that she believes.

Son of Saul (Saul Fia)dir. László Nemes, Hungary, Canadian Premiere
October 1944, Auschwitz-Birkenau. Saul Ausländer is a Hungarian member of the Sonderkommando, the group of Jewish prisoners isolated from the camp and forced to assist the Nazis in the machinery of large-scale extermination. While working in one of the crematoriums, Saul discovers the body of a boy he takes for his son. As the Sonderkommando plans a rebellion, Saul decides to carry out an impossible task: save the child’s body from the flames, find a rabbi to recite the mourner’s Kaddish and offer the boy a proper burial.

Spotlight dir. Tom McCarthy, USA, International Premiere
Spotlight tells the true story of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Boston Globe investigation that would rock the city and cause a crisis in one of the world’s oldest and most trusted institutions. When the newspaper’s tenacious “Spotlight” team of reporters delves into allegations of abuse in the Catholic Church, their year-long investigation uncovers a decades-long cover-up at the highest levels of Boston’s religious, legal, and government establishment, touching off a wave of revelations around the world. Starring Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Liev Schreiber, Stanley Tucci, Brian d’Arcy James and Billy Crudup.

Summertime (La Belle Saison)dir. Catherine Corsini, France, North American Premiere
Delphine, the daughter of farmers, moves to Paris in 1971 to break free from the shackles of her family and to gain her financial independence. Carole is a Parisian, living with Manuel, actively involved in the stirrings of the feminist movement. The meeting of the two women changes their lives forever. Starring Cécile De France, Izia Higelin, Noémie Lvovsky and Kévin Azaïs.

Sunset Songdir.Terence Davies, United Kingdom/Luxembourg, World Premiere
Terence Davies’ epic of hope, tragedy and love at the dawning of the Great War follows a young woman’s tale of endurance against the hardships of rural Scottish life. Based on the novel by Lewis Grassic Gibbon and told with gritty poetic realism by Britain’s greatest living auteur, Sunset Song stars Peter Mullan and Agyness Deyn.

Trumbo dir. Jay Roach, USA, World Premiere
The successful career of 1940s screenwriter Dalton Trumbo (Bryan Cranston) comes to a crushing end when he and other Hollywood figures are blacklisted for their political beliefs. Trumbo tells the story of his fight against the U.S. government and studio bosses in a war over words and freedom, which entangled everyone in Hollywood from Hedda Hopper (Helen Mirren) and John Wayne to Kirk Douglas and Otto Preminger.

Un plus une dir. Claude Lelouch, France, World Premiere
Charming, successful, Antoine (Jean Dujardin) could be the hero of one of those films he composes the music for. When he leaves for a job in India, he meets Anna (Elsa Zylberstein), a woman who isn’t like him at all, but who attracts him more than anything. Together, they are going to experience an incredible journey.

Victoria dir. Sebastian Schipper, Germany, Canadian Premiere
On a night out in Berlin, Victoria meets four young local guys. After joining their group, she becomes their driver when they rob a bank. Finally, as dawn breaks, everyone meets their destiny.

Where to Invade Nextdir. Michael Moore, USA, World Premiere
Oscar-winning director Michael Moore returns with what may be his most provocative and hilarious movie yet. Moore tells the Pentagon to “stand down”— he will do the invading for America from now on. Discretely shot in several countries and under the radar of the global media, Moore has made a searing cinematic work that is both up-to-the-minute and timeless.

Youth dir. Paolo Sorrentino, Italy/France/United Kingdom/Switzerland, North American Premiere
Youth explores the lifelong bond between two friends vacationing in a luxury Swiss Alps lodge as they ponder retirement. While Fred (Michael Caine) has no plans to resume his musical career despite the urging of his daughter Lena (Rachel Weisz), Mick (Harvey Keitel) is intent on finishing the screenplay for what may be his last film for his muse Brenda (Jane Fonda). And where will inspiration lead their younger friend Jimmy (Paul Dano), an actor grasping to make sense of his next performance? From Italy’s Oscar-winning foreign language film writer and director Paolo Sorrentino, Youth asks if our most important and life-changing experiences can come at any time — even late — in life.








Toronto International Film Festival announces Canadian Selections for 2015

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CANADIAN PERSPECTIVES PACK A POWERFUL PUNCH AT THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

The Toronto International Film Festival revealed a lineup of bold Canadian works by filmmakers including Patricia Rozema, Andre Turpin, Anne Emond, Kazik Radwanski and Guy Édoin, documentarians Mina Shum and Avi Lewis, trailblazers Bruce McDonald, Guy Maddin and Philippe Falardeau, promising new work from Andrew Cividino, Adam Garnet Jones and Stephen Dunn, and an impressive first feature by renowned visual contemporary artist Mark Lewis. From hardcore horror and political comedy to intense dramas and true tales of bravery, Canadians continue to carve their own place in filmmaking.

“The Festival is excited to showcase these distinctively Canadian voices,” said Steve Gravestock, Senior Programmer, TIFF. “From compelling documentaries on pressing social issues and complex, affecting dramas to political satires, we are proud to share the impressive range and talent of Canada’s directors.”

“This year’s filmmakers represent the depth and diversity of Canadian storytelling,” said Magali Simard, Film Programmes Manager, TIFF. “By presenting the strong perspectives of the best and brightest in the film industry from across the country, we share with audiences the unique ways Canadians view the world.”

The Canada Goose Award for Best Canadian Feature Film will be given to one of many outstanding Canadian filmmakers, with the City of Toronto Award for Best Canadian First Feature Film being presented to the Canadian filmmaker with the most impressive debut feature film at the Festival. This year’s Canadian awards jury is composed of filmmaker Don McKellar (The Grand Seduction), Jacqueline Lyanga (Director of AFI Fest), and Ilda Santiago (Programming and Executive Director of Rio de Janeiro International Film Festival).


SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

Born to be Blue, director Robert Budreau, Canada/United Kingdom (World Premiere)
Born to be Blue is a reimagining of jazz trumpeter Chet Baker’s life in the 1960s. When Chet is cast to star in a film about himself, a romance heats up with his female co-star, the enigmatic Jane. But his comeback bid is derailed when his past returns to haunt him and it appears he may never play music again. Starring Ethan Hawke and Carmen Ejogo.

Into the Forest, Patricia Rozema, Canada (World Premiere)
In a not-too-distant future, sisters Nell and Eva find themselves shuttered in their home. Surrounded by nothing but miles of dense forest, the sisters must fend for themselves using the supplies and food reserves they have before turning to the forest to discover what it will provide. They are faced with a world where rumour is the only guide, trust is a scarce commodity, gas is king and loneliness is excruciating. And yet somehow miraculously, love still grows. Starring Ellen Page and Evan Rachel Wood.

Ville-Marie, Guy Edoin, Canada (World Premiere)
An actress shooting a movie hopes to reconcile with her son. A paramedic haunted by his past tries to stay the course, while a caring nurse keeps an eye on him from afar as she tries, at the same time, to keep an emergency room running. It is at the Ville-Marie Hospital that these four lives will take an unexpected turn. Starring Monica Bellucci, Patrick Hivon, Pascale Bussieres and 2015 TIFF Rising Star Aliocha Schneider.


TIFF DOCS

Al Purdy Was Here, Brian D. Johnson, Canada (World Premiere)
Al Purdy was Canada’s unofficial poet laureate, though he admits he didn’t write a good poem until he was 40. He found his voice in an A-Frame cabin he built in Ontario’s Prince Edward County. Canada’s leading musicians and artists from Bruce Cockburn and Sarah Harmer to Margaret Atwood and Michael Ondaatje come together to tell his story and celebrate his poetry.

Guantanamo’s Child: Omar Khadr, Patrick Reed and Michelle Shephard, Canada (World Premiere)
Omar Khadr — child soldier or unrepentant terrorist? The 28-year-old Canadian has been a polarizing figure since he was 15. In 2002, Khadr was captured by American forces in Afghanistan and charged with war crimes, including murder. After spending half his life behind bars, including a decade at Guantanamo, Khadr is released. This is his story, in his own words.

Ninth Floor, Mina Shum, Canada (World Premiere)
It started quietly when six Caribbean students, strangers in a cold new land, began to suspect their professor of racism. It ended in the most explosive student uprising Canada had even known. Over four decades later, Ninth Floor reopens the file on the infamous Sir George Williams Riot: a watershed moment in Canadian race relations and one of the most contested episodes in the nation’s history. Director Shum (Double Happiness) locates the protagonists in clandestine locations throughout Trinidad and Montreal — the wintry city where it all went down. In a cinematic gesture of reckoning and redemption, she listens as they set the record straight.

This Changes Everything, Avi Lewis, Canada/USA (World Premiere)
Seven powerful portraits of community resistance around the world lead to one big question: what if confronting the climate crisis is the best chance we’ll ever get to build a better world? Inspired by Naomi Klein’s international bestseller and directed by her partner Avi Lewis, This Changes Everything is an affecting and hopeful call to action.

Welcome to F.L., Genevieve Dulude-De Celles, Canada (World Premiere)
Welcome to F.L. portrays a community of teenagers navigating their environment, identity and other questions of youth within their high-school world in a small town in Quebec. Learning to define themselves inside and outside school boundaries as they transition into the challenges of adulthood, they expose refreshing points of view filled with humour, philosophy and courage.


DISCOVERY

Closet Monster, Stephen Dunn, Canada (World Premiere)
Oscar Madly hovers on the brink of adulthood — destabilized by his dysfunctional parents, unsure of his sexuality, and haunted by horrific images of a tragic gay bashing he witnessed as a child. A talking hamster, imagination and the prospect of love help him confront his surreal demons and discover himself. Starring 2015 TIFF Rising Star Aliocha Schneider and 2014 Rising Star Connor Jessup.

Fire Song, Adam Garnet Jones, Canada (World Premiere)
When a teenage girl commits suicide in a remote Northern Ontario Aboriginal community, it’s up to her brother Shane to take care of their family. Shane was supposed to move to the city for university in the fall, and has been trying to convince his secret boyfriend to come with him, but now everything is uncertain. Torn between his responsibilities at home and the promise of freedom calling him to the city, circumstances take a turn for the worse and Shane has to choose between his family and his future.

The Rainbow Kid, Kire Paputts, Canada (World Premiere)
Part gritty coming-of-age story, part episodic road film filled with magic realism, The Rainbow Kid follows Eugene, a young man with Down syndrome as he embarks on a life-changing adventure to find the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

River, Jamie M. Dagg, Canada/Laos (World Premiere)
In the south of Laos, an American volunteer doctor becomes a fugitive after he intervenes in the sexual assault of a young woman. When the assailant’s body is pulled from the Mekong River, things quickly spiral out of control. Starring Rossif Sutherland.

Sleeping Giant, Andrew Cividino, Canada (North American Premiere)
Spending his summer vacation on rugged Lake Superior, teenager Adam befriends Riley and Nate, smart aleck cousins who pass their ample free time with pranks, vandalism and reckless cliff jumping. The revelation of a hurtful secret sets in motion a series of irreversible events that test the bonds of friendship and change the boys forever.



CONTEMPORARY WORLD CINEMA

How Heavy This Hammer, Kazik Radwanski, Canada (World Premiere)
Erwin, a 47-year-old father of two, spends his time idly procrastinating between work and family, and is seemingly more engaged by playing a crude Viking computer game. His listless energy is contrasted on weekends by throwing himself into “old boys” rugby matches. As Erwin’s marriage with his wife becomes increasingly compromised, something stirs inside him, or maybe something has stopped stirring.

My Internship in Canada, Philippe Falardeau, Canada (North American Premiere)
Guibord is an independent Member of Parliament representing a vast county in Northern Quebec who unwillingly finds himself in the awkward position of determining whether Canada will go to war. Accompanied by his wife, daughter and Souverain (Sovereign) Pascal, an idealistic intern from Haiti, Guibord travels across his district in order to consult his constituents and face his own conscience. This film is a sharp political satire in which politicians, citizens and lobbyists go head-to-head tearing democracy to shreds.

Our Loved Ones (Les etres chers), Anne Emond, Canada (North American Premiere)
The story begins in 1978 in a small town on the Lower St. Lawrence, where the Leblanc family is rocked by the tragic death of Guy, found dead in the basement of the family home. For many years, the real cause of his death is hidden from certain members of the family, his son David among them. David starts his own family with his wife Marie and lovingly raises his children, Laurence and Frederic, but deep down he still carries with him a kind of unhappiness. Our Loved Ones is a film of filial love, family secrets, redemption and inherited fate. Featuring 2015 TIFF Rising Star Karelle Tremblay.

The Waiting Room, Igor Drljaca, Canada (North American Premiere)
Jasmin, once a successful actor in former Yugoslavia, now lives in Toronto with his second wife and young son. While juggling a construction job and a busy audition schedule, he dreams of re-launching an old televised stage show that made him famous in his homeland. When he is cast in a role that triggers recollections of the civil war, he is forced to reconcile his current reality with memories of his past success. From the team behind Krivina and In Her Place.


VANGUARD

Endorphine, Andre Turpin, Canada (World Premiere)
Thirteen-year-old Simone is trying to feel emotion again as a trauma survivor. Twenty-five-year-old Simone is a solitary woman trying to control panic attacks. Sixty-year-old Simone is an accomplished physician who gives a conference on the nature of time. The new film from celebrated director and cinematographer Andre Turpin intertwines the lives of three women in an intoxicating cinematic puzzle.

Hellions, Bruce McDonald, Canada (Canadian Premiere)
Strange trick-or-treaters plague conflicted teenager Dora Vogel at her isolated home on Halloween. Under siege by forces she can’t understand, Dora must defend both body and soul from relentless hellions, dead set on possessing something Dora will not give them. Set in a visually haunting landscape, Hellions redefines the boundaries of horror with its potent brew of Halloween iconography, teenage angst and desperate survival. Starring Chloe Rose.

No Men Beyond This Point, Mark Sawers, Canada (North American Premiere)
Sixty years ago, women began reproducing asexually, and now are no longer able to give birth to male babies. This deadpan mockumentary follows 37-year -old Andrew Myers — the youngest man alive —who is at the centre of a battle to save men from extinction. No Men Beyond This Point asks what would happen if only women ran the world.


WAVELENGTHS

The following feature films will screen as part of the Wavelengths programme:

88:88, Isiah Medina, Canada (North American Premiere)
A digital cinema incendiary, Isiah Medina’s anticipated feature debut explodes with ideas about time, love, knowledge, poverty, and poetry, all erupting within a densely layered montage that is formally rigorous and emotionally raw. 88:88 (or —:—) is what appears when bills are paid after the electricity has been abruptly cut off, demonstrating that people who live in poverty live in suspended time. To be preceded by Denis Cote’s short film, May We Sleep Soundly.

The Forbidden Room, Evan Johnson and Guy Maddin, Canada (Canadian Premiere)
Honouring classic cinema while electrocuting it with energy, Evan Johnson and Guy Maddin’s grand ode to lost cinema begins (after a prologue on how to take a bath) with the crew of a doomed submarine chewing flapjacks in a desperate attempt to breathe the oxygen within. Suddenly, a lost woodsman wanders into their company to tell his tale of escape from a fearsome clan of cave dwellers, and we are taken high into the air, around the world, and into dreamscapes, spinning tales of amnesia, captivity, deception and murder, skeleton women and vampire bananas. Like a glorious meeting between Italo Calvino, Sergei Eisenstein and a perverted six-year-old child, created with the help of master poet John Ashberry, Mathieu Amalric, Udo Kier, Charlotte Rampling, Geraldine Chaplin, Roy Dupuis, Clara Furey, Louis Negin, Maria de Medeiros, Jacques Nolot, Adèle Haenel,Amira Casar and Elina Lowensohn make up a cavalcade of misfits, thieves and lovers.

Invention, Mark Lewis, United Kingdom/Canada (World Premiere)
Shot in Paris, Sao Paulo and Toronto, Mark Lewis’ anthology of films captures the ever-changing textures of these cities through moving images of glass, light, shadows and reflections, offering homage to the City Symphony films of the 1920s, while also juxtaposing modernist architecture with the compositional structures of old master paintings.

Minotaur, Nicolas Pereda, Mexico/Canada (World Premiere)
Acclaimed Mexican-Canadian auteur Nicolas Pereda (Greatest Hits) returns to the Festival with this lovely, wraithlike fantasy that observes three thirty-somethings as they sleep, dream, read and receive visitors in a Mexico City apartment. Free and open to the public during the Festival, the following Wavelengths Installations will be showcased at various venues throughout downtown Toronto:

Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton, Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson (World Premiere)
Guided by the spirit of Maddin’s “Cuadecec Manifesto” (which calls for makings-of en masse), Bring Me the Head of Tim Horton is a strange and stirring behind-the-scenes look at Paul Gross’s new feature, Hyena Road. Shot on location at CFB Shilo near Brandon, Manitoba and in Aqaba, Jordan, the film summons psychedelic energy from the main event. Presented at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West.

The Forbidden Room — A Living Poster, Galen Johnson (World Premiere)
Initially designed to promote Evan Johnson and Guy Maddin’s The Forbidden Room, A Living Poster employs the same digital techniques used to create the text-based intertitles and treat the footage within the film. A looping collection of living, moving, morphing posters, it blurs the boundaries between poster and trailer and suggests an anachronistic collision between digitally corrupted video files and a damaged film print from the silent era forming a beguiling hybrid aesthetic of digital data loss and decaying analogue emulsion. Presented at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West.

La Giubba, Tony Romano and Corin Sworn, Canada/United Kingdom (World Premiere)
The first major collaboration between Canadian artist Tony Romano and English-born, Toronto-raised Corin Sworn, La Giubba follows the intersections of five drifters over the course of two summer days in southern Italy. This installation is presented in partnership with Clint Roenisch Gallery (190 St Helens Ave, Toronto).

Stories are Meaning-Making Machines, Annie MacDonnell and Maider Fortune, France/Canada (International Premiere)
A live in-cinema reading at TIFF Bell Lightbox performed by Canadian artist Annie MacDonnell and French artist Maider Fortune which explores a new form of cinematic memory. Originally commissioned by Le Centre Pompidou’s Hors Pistes Festival, Paris.


Deepa Mehta’s Beeba Boys, Jon Cassar’s Forsaken, Paul Gross’ Hyena Road (Hyena Road: Le Chemin du Combat), and Atom Egoyan’s Remember are Canadian features previously announced in the Galas Programme.



SHORT IN LENGTH, LONG ON IMPRESSION: TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL PACKS CANADIAN SHORT FILM LINEUP WITH EXTRAORDINARY AND DIVERSE WORKS

The Toronto International Film Festival® unveils a slate of 44 world-class homegrown short films packed with strong emerging voices and uniquely Canadian perspectives. Boasting a lineup as diverse in themes and cultures as the country itself, this year’s roster is highlighted by a record number of Canadian works in the Wavelengths programme. From smart satire to savvy social commentary, twists on genre to gut-punching powerful dramas, quirky documentaries to delightfully deranged animation and daring, formal experiments, these works showcase fascinating, provocative stories in short form.

Films in the Short Cuts programme are eligible for the Award for Best Canadian Short Film. This year's jury includes the head of the shorts program and creations unit at Canal+ France, Pascale Faure, film writer John Anderson (The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times), and actor Rizwan Manji (Outsourced, The Wolf of Wall Street).

The 40th Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 10 to 20, 2015.


SHORT CUTS

4 Quarters Ashley McKenzie, Canada (Toronto Premiere)
Willy and Jane just want to feel happy in one another’s company. He’s a sleep-deprived student living close to the bone. She’s a troubled drug addict in constant need of $20. Nursing their fledgling friendship on the margins of society proves to be a wicked problem.

A New Year (Nouvel an) Marie-Ève Juste, Canada (World Premiere)
Florence is having a New Year’s Eve party, but at 37 weeks pregnant she feels somewhat ambivalent about the festivities and frolics of her friends.

Bacon & God’s Wrath Sol Friedman, Canada (World Premiere)
In this short documentary, a 90-year-old Jewish woman reflects on her life’s experiences as she prepares to try bacon for the first time.

The Ballad of Immortal Joe Hector Herrera, Canada (World Premiere)
Written with a nod to traditional cowboy songs and to the northern ballads of Robert W. Service, this film puts a supernatural twist on a tragically romantic Western. Voiced by Canadian actor Kenneth Welsh (Twin Peaks, The Aviator, The Day After Tomorrow) and scored by Toronto greats The Sadies, this is the third chapter in the silly rhyme collection Beastly Bards.

BAM Howie Shia, Canada (World Premiere)
In a dense inner city haunted by primordial gods, a young boxer struggles to understand the disturbing consequences of his explosive rage — both inside and outside the ring. Presenting the young boxer’s battles in terms both heroic and tortured, BAM combines a biting urban soundtrack with a hand-drawn, comic-book style, mashing up cacophonous drums and grinding electronics with soft brushwork and swift action.

Benjamin Sherren Lee, Canada (World Premiere)
When a dually-pregnant lesbian couple loses one of the babies in utero, the grieving mothers break their surrogacy arrangement with their closest friends in order to keep the remaining baby.

Beyond The Horizon Ryan J. Noth, Canada (World Premiere)
In 1845 Sir John Franklin led 128 men on the ships HMS Erebus and HMS Terror on a search for the Northwest Passage. The fate of the crew and ships has been slowly uncovered since September 2014, when Parks Canada archaeologists discovered the resting place of the HMS Erebus in the remote Arctic Ocean. Reflecting on the ship and story from the perspective of the sailors and the archaeologists, the film paints a crushing visual portrait of a place where time can lose all meaning.

Boxing Grayson Moore and Aidan Shipley, Canada (World Premiere)
Sheila returns to her weekly boxing class after a traumatic event, and tensions mount when one of the other women refuses to stop showering her with sympathy.

Boy Connor Jessup, Canada (World Premiere)
After a fatal bicycle accident, 12-year-old Jacob moves through the world as a ghost. Unseen and unheard, he trails his classmate home from school. As the ghost boy watches, an image of a grief-stricken family slowly begins to take shape.

Casualties of Modernity Kent Monkman, Canada (World Premiere)
Celebrity artist and humanitarian Miss Chief Eagle Testickle tours a hospital specializing in the treatment of conditions afflicting modern and contemporary art. Led by the doctor of fine arts and closely supervised by the no-nonsense head nurse, Miss Chief encounters romance, tragedy and triumph.

Clouds of Autumn Trevor Mack and Matthew Taylor Blais, Canada (North American Premiere)
Set on the Tsilhqot’in plateau in the 1970s, this film focuses on two siblings, and explores the impact that Canadian residential schools had on the relationships of First Nations children with each other, their heritage, and nature itself.

Dogs Don’t Breed Cats (Les chiens ne font pas des chats) Cristina Martins, Canada (Canadian Premiere)
Pregnant and homeless, Joëlle shows up at the home of her father Jeff. Even though this solitary non-conformist and former punk rocker is reluctant to the idea, she decides to stay and Jeff is overwhelmed by his new interactions with the daughter he barely knows.

Dredger Phillip Barker, Canada (World Premiere)
The crew of a salvage ship is tossed into turmoil when the young captain’s wife becomes infatuated with an older shipmate. She casts herself ashore but can’t break free from the seabed of secrets the old man brought to the surface.

The Guy From Work (Les gars d’la shop) Jean-François Leblanc, Canada (World Premiere)
Raynald is a family man who has been working in the same tire plant for over 30 years. This week, there is nothing unusual in his daily life: work, hockey games with the guys, and family night. However, Raynald will make the biggest move of his life.

It’s Not You Don McKellar, Canada (World Premiere)
It’s not you…or is it? Whether dumper or dump-ee, being in that situation brings out feelings you didn’t know you had. Under the direction of the talented Don McKellar, the graduating class of the National Theatre School of Canada takes audiences through the perpetuity of break ups.

KOKOM Kevin Papatie, Canada (Toronto Premiere)
Kevin Papatie, participant of the Wapikoni Mobile for 10 years, presents a beautiful experimental film that pays tribute to his grandmother — his kokom — and to the Anishnabe people who have survived the trials of history and remained strong.

The Magnificent Life Underwater (La vie magnifique sous l’eau) Joël Vaudreuil, Canada (World Premiere)
In this absurd animated parody of a classic undersea adventure show, an authoritative narrator reveals the wonders and mysteries of the sea — although the banal habits of these homely aquatic creatures have an odd familiarity.

The Man Who Shot Hollywood Barry Avrich, Canada (World Premiere)
In a town lit up by a thousand stars, Jack Pashkovsky practiced his art anonymously. By the time he was finished, he had brilliantly photographed hundreds of the biggest Hollywood icons from Garbo to Swanson. His collection of photographs have never been seen. Until now.

Mia’ Amanda Strong and Bracken Hanuse Corlett, Canada (World Premiere)
A young Indigenous female street artist walks through the city streets painting scenes rooted in the supernatural history of her people. As the alleyways become her sanctuary and secret gallery, her art comes to life, pulling Mia’ into her own transformation via the vessel of a salmon. This hybrid documentary uses animation and sound as a vehicle to tell the story of transformation and re-connection.

Mobilize Caroline Monnet, Canada (World Premiere)
Guided expertly by those who live on the land and driven by the pulse of the natural world, this film takes audiences on an exhilarating journey from the far north to the urban south. The fearless polar punk rhythms of Tanya Tagaq’s “Uja” underscore the perpetual negotiation between the modern and traditional by a people always moving forward. The National Film Board of Canada (NFB) invited four talented and renowned Aboriginal artists to create a program of works addressing Aboriginal identity and representation by reworking material in the NFB’s archives.

Never Happened Mark Slutsky, Canada (World Premiere)
When colleagues Grady and Laura have an affair on a business trip, they decide it might be easier if it just never happened.

Never Steady, Never Still Kathleen Hepburn, Canada (World Premiere)
Distressed and overwhelmed by the mistakes of his past, a young lease-hand returns from Alberta’s oil fields to his childhood home on Lillooet Lake, where he finds solace in the strength of his recently widowed mother.

NINA Halima Elkhatabi, Canada (World Premiere)
At 16 years old, Nina is helpless to her 4-month-old baby’s incessant crying. Without any escape from the cries and from this new presence in her life, she ventures out from her tiny apartment into a working-class neighbourhood of Montréal for a brief escapade.

o negative Steven McCarthy, Canada (World Premiere)
A young woman and the man who takes care of her find shelter in a roadside motel and take the necessary steps to feed her addiction.

Our Remaining Lives (Les vies qui nous restent) Luiza Cocora, Canada (World Premiere)
Having recently moved to Quebec, Sofia, a 10-year-old Romanian girl, lives with her mother in a small flat in Montreal. In a world where technology imposes human isolation, Sofia is trying to understand her new life.

Overpass (Viaduc) Patrice Laliberté, Canada (World Premiere)
A 17-year-old named Mathieu goes out one night to write graffiti on an overpass. But whereas his actions require a swift escape from the scene of the crime, their true meaning is far more unexpected.

Portal to Hell!!! Vivieno Caldinelli, Canada (World Premiere)
The late and great “Rowdy” Roddy Piper plays a crusty superintendent who is thrust into the ultimate fight against evil when a pair of cultists opens a multidimensional portal in his basement.

Quiet Zone (Ondes et silence) David Bryant and Karl Lemieux, Canada (Canadian Premiere)
This film takes audiences deep into the world of those who suffer from electromagnetic hypersensitivity. Combining elements of documentary, film essay and experimental film, David Bryant and Karl Lemieux — known for their work in the musical group Godspeed You! Black Emperor — weave together an unusual story in which sound and image distort reality to convey the suffering of these “wave refugees.”

Rock the Box Katherine Monk, Canada (World Premiere)
Electronic dance music (EDM) is now the most lucrative sector of the music industry but it’s dominated by men. To break that glass ceiling, a Vancouver-raised deejay named Rhiannon Rozier did something she never thought she’d do: pose for Playboy. Thanks to its impressionistic images, exhilarating montage and Rozier’s remarkable candour, this film tells the story of one woman who rocked conventions by owning her own image, her own voice, and her own box.

She Stoops To Conquer Zachary Russell, Canada (World Premiere)
An aspiring performer struggles to breathe life into a new character she’s created. Suddenly, she sees him: the real-life version of the man she’s been playing. Where’s the line between inspiration and theft? A gender-bending romantic comedy about a man and her double.

The Sleepwalker (Sonámbulo) Theodore Ushev, Canada (North American Premiere)
A surrealist journey through colours and shapes inspired by the poem Romance Sonámbulo by Federico García Lorca. It’s visual poetry in the rhythm of fantastic dreams and passionate nights.

The Swimming Lesson (Le cours de natation) Olivia Boudreau, Canada (North American Premiere)
Brought by her mother to her first swimming lesson, a 7-year-old girl must find, on her own, her place in the unfamiliar world of the pool.

Wolkaan Bahar Noorizadeh, Canada/Iran/USA (World Premiere)
Insightful and enigmatic, this multi-layered mediation on the experience of exile begins with the streets of Tehran gradually filling with enigmatic streams of lava. In Michigan, a boy and his father’s fateful journey ends up amid dinosaurs and a plastic volcano.

World Famous Gopher Hole Museum Chelsea McMullan and Douglas Nayler, Canada (World Premiere)
A portrait of Torrington, a fading Albertan farm town with a secret wish to be frozen in time like the taxidermied gophers that populate its world-famous tourist attraction.


MIDNIGHT MADNESS

The Chickening Nick DenBoer and Davy Force, Canada (World Premiere)
How can a boy not get excited when his dad gets a new job as senior chief night manager at Charbay’s Chicken World and Restaurant Resort, the world’s largest fast food entertainment complex in North America? However, in this short film things quickly get very, very clucked.

The Chickening will screen preceding the Opening Night Film in the Midnight Madness programme.


WAVELENGTHS

Bunte Kuh Ryan Ferko, Parastoo Anoushahpour and Faraz Anoushahpour, Canada/Germany (Toronto Premiere)
Through a flood of images, a narrator attempts to recall a family holiday. Bunte Kuh combines a found postcard, family photo album, and original footage to weave together the temporal realities of two separate vacations.

Engram of Returning Daïchi Saïto, Canada (World Premiere)
The figure of the jig-saw / that is of picture, / the representation of a world as ours / in a complex patterning of color in light and shadows, / masses with hints of densities and distances, / cut across by a second, discrete pattern / in which we perceive on qualities of fitting and not fitting / and suggestions of rhyme / in ways of fitting and not fitting – / this jig-saw conformation of patterns / of different orders, / of a pattern of apparent reality / in which the picture we are working to bring out appears / and of a pattern of loss and of finding / that so compels us that we are entirely engrossed in working it out, / this picture that must be put together / takes over mere seeing. — Robert Duncan, poet

Fugue Kerstin Schrödinger, Canada/Germany (North American Premiere)
Fugue is a formal and physical experiment in order to understand the relationship between image, sound and movement. Movements are also printed on the part of the film strip that is read as optical sound by the light sensitive sensor of the projector. What you hear is what you see.

May We Sleep Soundly Denis Côté, Canada (World Premiere)
Winter persists. Something happened. At the heart of the woods, on the slopes of mountains, in the streets and even inside homes, a strange silence took up residence. Will there remain a soul to witness the recent event?

May We Sleep Soundly will screen preceding the feature 88.88.

Office Space Modulation Terrarea (Janis Demkiw, Emily Hogg and Olia Mishchenko), Canada (World Premiere)
The Office Space Modulator is an improvised animation device employing an outsized Lazy Susan as the central mechanism to produce looped analogue projections of light and shadow. The resulting single-take field recordings document a subtle gymnastic interplay of scale, transparency, reflection, rotation, puppetry, and general field-ground tomfoolery.

Palms Mary-Helena Clark Canada/USA (World Premiere)
Musical and mysterious, this is a sphinx-like, modular film in four parts, with two hands animating stillness, the repeated approach of headlights, a < — > tennis match, and thoughts that emerge like objects.

Something Horizontal Blake Williams, Canada/USA (World Premiere)
Three-dimensional flashes of Victorian domestic surfaces and geometric shadows transform the physical world into a somber, impressionistic abstraction, while elsewhere a spectre emerging from the depths of German Expressionism reminds us that what goes up always comes down.

Théodolitique David K. Ross, Canada (World Premiere)
Théodolitique merges the geodetic and the filmic, linking the very long history of land surveying with the comparatively new technologies of filmmaking. Connecting these two methods of visual observation and recording, the film documents student surveyors from the École des Métiers du Sud-Ouest-de-Montréal as they take an outdoor exam over the course of a single day.

UNcirCling John Creson and Adam Rosen, Canada (World Premiere)
Elegant and enigmatic, UNcirCling is a visual music miniature composed of a bokeh of lights and digital chirping.



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Toronto International Film Festival announces Talent Lab, Pitch This! and Rising Star participants

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TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2015 TALENT LAB AND TELEFILM CANADA PITCH THIS! PARTICIPANTS
Wim Wenders and Jim Stark to act as Governors for 12th annual Talent Lab

The Toronto International Film Festival® today announced the participants for the 2015 editions of Talent Lab™ and Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! Produced by TIFF’s Industry Office, these essential development programmes provide valuable opportunity and exposure for emerging filmmakers at a crucial point in their careers.

Now in its 12th year, the Talent Lab is a comprehensive five-day artistic development programme led by esteemed governors who will guide 20 emerging filmmakers in group discussions that focus on creativity, the artistic process and independent voices. The programme provides emerging talent with an unparalleled education experience and an introduction to the global community of filmmaking. This year’s governors include Wim Wenders (The Salt of the Earth, Pina) and Jim Stark (Coffee and Cigarettes).

Additional guests will be announced in the coming weeks. Open to both Canadian and international filmmakers, Talent Lab is designed to connect homegrown filmmakers with emerging talent from other countries at a time when the film industry is becoming increasingly international. Talent Lab runs from September 8 to 12, 2015.

Now in its 16th year, Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! provides six teams with six minutes each to pitch their dramatic or documentary feature film idea to a jury of experts in front of a live audience of over 250 industry professionals, in the hopes of winning a coveted $15,000 development award for their project.


TALENT LAB TORONTO

The 2015 Talent Lab participants:

Canadian Participants
Anna Fahr
Joshua Huculiak
Ali Jaberansari
Marie-Ève Juste
Joey Klein
Dusty Mancinelli
Stéphane Moukarzel
Celeste Parr
Madeleine Sims-Fewer
Timothy Yeung

International Participants
María Alché (Argentina)
Amin Dora (Lebanon)
Derya Durmaz (Turkey)
Hiwot Admasu Getaneh (Ethiopia)
Carolina Markowicz (Brazil)
Tommy Oliver (USA)
Marina Person (Brazil)
Ricky Rijenke (Holland)
Eva Riley (United Kingdom)
Alexis van Stratum (Belgium)

The 2015 Talent Lab Governors:

Wim Wenders
Wim Wenders came to international prominence as one of the pioneers of the New German Cinema in the 1970s and is one of the most important figures in contemporary German film. In addition to his many prize-winning feature films, his work as a scriptwriter, director, producer, photographer and author also encompasses an abundance of innovative documentary films, international photo exhibitions and numerous monographs, film books and prose collections. He lives and works in Berlin, together with his wife Donata Wenders.

Jim Stark
Jim Stark is an independent American producer who has been involved in writing, developing, financing, producing, selling, distributing and marketing low budget fiction feature films since 1983. His films have won numerous prizes and have been selected to premiere in major festivals such as Cannes, Berlin, Venice, Sundance and Toronto, and have been exhibited theatrically and broadcast on television in countries around the world.

Congratulations to Talent Lab participant Marie-Ève Juste (A New Year) on the selection of her film in the 2015 Short Cuts programme and to the following Talent Lab alumni with films in the Festival’s 2015 selection:

Feature Films:
  • Stephen Dunn, Director, Closet Monster
  • Kazik Radwanski, Director, How Heavy This Hammer
  • Jamie M. Dagg, Director, River
  • Andrew Cividino, Director, Sleeping Giant
  • Igor Drljaca, Director, The Waiting Room

Short Cuts Canada:
  • Ashley McKenzie, Director, 4 Quarters
  • Sol Friedman, Director, Bacon & God's Wrath
  • Mark Slutsky, Director, Never Happened
  • Vivieno Caldinelli, Director, Portal to Hell!!!
  • Chelsea McMullan, Director, World Famous Gopher Hole Museum

TELEFILM CANADA PITCH THIS!
Telefilm Canada’s PITCH THIS! challenge takes place on Sunday, September 13 at 4:30 p.m. and is open to all Festival Industry and Press delegates.

The 2015 Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! finalists are:

Brown Girl In The Ring: The Prequel Sharon Lewis and Jenn Paul
It’s 2048 in the Burn. Toronto has been abandoned by the wealthy, and the poor have been walled in and left to fend for themselves. This coming-of-age story focuses on young Ti-Jeanne who rebels against her grandmother’s Caribbean mystical teachings to run off with Tony. When a tragedy strikes Ti-Jeanne’s guardian spirit demands she obey or someone will die.

Claire, from the Bus Andrew Nicholas McCann Smith, Kjartan Hewitt and Jordan Canning
Ralph’s 31st birthday has turned into 24 hours of devilishly orchestrated sexual blackmail that calls into question his grasp of morality, fidelity and the actual age of his coquettish aggressor.

Demonolatry Laura Perlmutter and Daniel Perlmutter
A couple go on a prescribed weekend getaway to figure out their relationship but instead they are forced to face off against demons and each other when they discover a woman frozen in the woods.

E.V.E. A.J. Bond
While attempting to cure his infertility, a rogue scientist discovers a new facet of procreation, the ability to encode his memories into the DNA of his offspring, causing a kind of pseudo-reincarnation. He succeeds in conceiving a female child who has his memories and consciousness, creating the most unusual father/daughter relationship in history.

Mohammed VI Matthew Hannam and Kaveh Nabatian
A neurotic celebrity chef disappears while filming a cooking show in Morocco. When presented with the opportunity to take over the shoot and advance their own careers, his embattled crew struggles to continue the search for their acerbic host.

Passover Daniel Schachter and Constance Malpel
A family reunion goes haywire over the course of a long, wine-soaked night, as dark secrets from the past come bubbling to the surface.



TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ANNOUNCES 2015 TIFF RISING STARS:
Deragh Campbell, Stephan James, Aliocha Schneider and Karelle Tremblay

The Toronto International Film Festival® today revealed the four actors selected to participate in the 2015 TIFF Rising Stars programme: Deragh Campbell, Stephan James, Aliocha Schneider, and Karelle Tremblay. Now in its fifth year, the intensive professional development programme immerses participants in a series of public events and industry meetings during the Festival.

“TIFF is dedicated to shining a spotlight on Canadian talent, and we’re thrilled to offer Deragh, Stephan, Aliocha, and Karelle — the 2015 TIFF Rising Stars — a global stage during the Festival,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival.

The four Rising Stars will take part in a series of specialized programming organized by the TIFF Industry Office that includes seminars with international casting directors, media training, one-on-one meetings with filmmakers, as well as a series of unique networking opportunities.

Deragh Campbell
Though a relative newcomer, Deragh Campbell has already made a name for herself as an accomplished actor and writer. The Toronto-based artist established herself as a promising new talent with her starring role as a teenage runaway in Matthew Potterfield’s I Used to Be Darker, which premiered at Sundance and made The New Yorker’s list of Top 25 Films of 2013. Deragh went on to star in Dustin Guy Defa’s acclaimed short film Person to Person, which won the DAAD Short Film Prize at the 2014 Berlinale. She took on the largely improvised role of Lucy in Nathan Silver’s 2015 black comedy Stinking Heaven, for which she shares a writing credit. A versatile talent, Deragh has recently been awarded a prestigious MacDowell Fellowship to create her first feature with co-writer Alexandra Napier. She next stars in Alexander Carson’s directorial debut, O Brazen Age, Sofia Bohdanowicz’s Never Eat Alone and Julian Radlmaier’s The Pursuit of Happiness, and has a supporting role opposite Tatiana Maslany in Joey Klein’s The Other Half.

Stephan James
Just 21 years old, Stephan James has already landed significant supporting roles in Ava DuVernay’s Oscar winner Selma and the CBC miniseries The Book of Negroes, as well as a starring role in the forthcoming Universal/Focus Features biopic Race, playing Olympic gold medalist Jesse Owens. Born and raised in Toronto, Stephan began his professional career in the Emmy-nominated series Degrassi: The Next Generation, playing the role of Julian for three seasons. He later guest-starred in the series The Listener, The L.A. Complex, and Cracked. His major break came in 2012 with a leading role in the Toronto International Film Festival selection Home Again: Stephen received tremendous critical acclaim and a Canadian Screen Award nomination for his performance as Everton St. Clair, a British teenager deported to Jamaica for drug possession. He followed this with a supporting role in the Miramax sports drama When the Game Stands Tall. Stephan’s impressive resume has not gone unnoticed; The Globe and Mail profiled the rising actor as one to watch for in 2015. It’s no wonder that shortly after moving to Los Angeles this year, he was cast as a series regular in NBC’s upcoming drama, Unveiled, produced by Mark Burnett and Roma Downey, as well as a leading role in Director X’s Undone.

Aliocha Schneider
Born in Paris and raised in Quebec, Aliocha Schneider spent his adolescence training to be a performer. A gifted actor and singer, he began his career on the stage at Montreal’s Théâtre du Rideau Vert, where he played the role of Momo in the stage adaptation of La Vie devant soi. Television proved a natural fit for the versatile young actor. From 2009 to 2013, he starred as Carl Bresson in the Télé-Québec dramatic series Tactik, and has since made appearances on Vrak’s Horrorarium, TVA’s Les Jeunes loups and Yamaska, and Radio-Canada’s Belle-Baie and Les Parent, starring Anne Dorval. He made his big-screen debut in Erik Canuel’s box-office hit Bon Cop, Bad Cop before playing opposite some of the biggest names in Quebec cinema in Lea Pool’s Ma mère est chez le coiffeur and La dernière fugue, Christian Laurence’s Le journal d’Aurélie Laflamme and Robert Morin’s Les 4 soldats. Fluent in both English and French, Aliocha made his English-language debut in the 2013 comedy Three Night Stand, playing the “ultrasmooth and boyishly handsome art-house movie actor Anatolii” (Toronto Star). Other recent credits include a supporting role in Elodie Namar’s chessdrama The Tournament. Watch for him this year in the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival features Closet Monster, which stars Rising Stars alumnus Connor Jessup and Isabella Rossellini, and Guy Édoin’s Ville-Marie, opposite Monica Bellucci.

Karelle Tremblay
Montreal-born Karelle Tremblay has been acting since she was 12, when she was cast as a series regular in Radio-Canada’s Le Club des doigts croisés. Since then, she has developed an impressive and fast-growing roster of television credits, guest starring in TVA’s Toute la vérité and Yamaska, and Radio-Canada’s hit Montreal police drama 19-2. In 2015, she was nominated for a Prix Gémeaux for Best Actress in a Web Series for her starring role as Elizabeth in Vrak’s Les Stagiaires. Karelle transitioned to film with supporting roles in Stephan Miljevic’s Amsterdam and Podz’s Miraculum, starring Xavier Dolan. Her first major film break came when she was cast as the radical young activist Julie in Mathieu Denis’ FLQ drama Corbo, an Official Selection of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival and Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival. She can next be seen in Podz’s urban crime drama King Dave and in the titular role in Vrak’s Jérémie, premiering this fall. Watch for her at this year’s Festival in Les êtres chers, from acclaimed director Anne Émond (Nuit #1).

Rising Stars alumni include household names like Sarah Gadon (Maps to the Stars, Belle and the upcoming The 9th Life of Louis Drax), Tatiana Maslany (two-time Critic's Choice Award-winner for Best Actress in a Drama Series for Orphan Black), Cara Gee (Strange Empire), Julia Sarah Stone (Every Thing Will Be Fine), and Shannon Kook (Dark Places).

The 2015 jury who helped select the 2015 Rising Stars include filmmakers Ingrid Veninger and Clement Virgo; filmmaker, journalist and author Peter Knegt; casting director Deirdre Bowen; and Larissa Giroux, Executive in Charge of Acting & Music Programs, CFC ACTORS & MUSIC.

Purchase Festival ticket packages online 24 hours a day at tiff.net/festival, by phone from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. ET daily at 416.599.TIFF or 1.888.599.8433, or visit the Gupta Box Office at TIFF Bell Lightbox in person from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. ET daily at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, until August 26 while quantities last.

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About TIFF
TIFF is a charitable cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world through film. An international leader in film culture, TIFF projects include the annual Toronto International Film Festival in September; TIFF Bell Lightbox, which features five cinemas, major exhibitions, and learning and entertainment facilities; and innovative national distribution program Film Circuit. The organization generates an annual economic impact of $189 million CAD. TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by contributors including Founding Sponsor Bell, the Government of Canada, the Government of Ontario, the City of Toronto, the Reitman family (Ivan Reitman, Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels), The Daniels Corporation and RBC. For more information, visit tiff.net.
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