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TIFF Soiree Features On-Stage Conversation With Natalie Portman


TIFF announced today that Academy Award®-winning actor Natalie Portman will grace the stage for a look back at her career to date at the first annual TIFF Soirée, a special charity event and cocktail party which will kick off the 40th Toronto International Film Festival®. The intimate on-stage conversation with Portman will be followed by musical performances and a cocktail. The event takes place at TIFF Bell Lightbox on Wednesday, September 9 at 6 p.m.

“Audiences are sure to experience an unforgettable evening with Natalie Portman as our special guest at the first annual TIFF Soirée,” said maxine bailey, VP of Advancement at TIFF. “This inspirational and entertaining event will help TIFF raise much-needed funds that allow us to continue our charitable year-round activities. TIFF provides vital mentorship, guidance and tools to people of all ages, circumstances and backgrounds so that they can express themselves creatively. Audiences who share our passion for film are encouraged to join us and show their support for TIFF.”

An Academy Award-winning actor, filmmaker and philanthropist, Natalie Portman first charmed audiences at the age of eleven in Luc Besson's 1994 film, The Professional. Since then she has starred in over twenty-five films, including Beautiful Girls, Anywhere But Here, Where The Heart Is, Cold Mountain, Garden State, Closer, V for Vendetta, Thor, and George Lucas’ Star Wars prequel trilogy. In 2011, she received her second Academy Award nomination and first Best Actress win for her performance in Darren Aronofsky's critically acclaimed film, Black Swan. She recently appeared in Terrence Malick’s two upcoming films, including Knight of Cups, which made its world premiere at the 2015 Berlin Film Festival. She will next be seen in Gavin O'Connor's Jane Got a Gun. Portman has also taken on a variety of roles behind the lens. She wrote, directed, produced, and starred in the upcoming A Tale of Love and Darkness, which made its world premiere at the 2015 Cannes Film Festival. Portman is attached to star in several upcoming feature films, including a biopic of Ruth Bader Ginsburg entitled On the Basis of Sex, as Jacqueline Kennedy in Jackie, the French film Planetarium, and Alex Garland’s Annihilation.

Tickets to the TIFF Soirée are $300 to $650. Limited quantities are available. To purchase tickets, please visit tiff.net/soiree. Proceeds from the Soirée enable TIFF to continue to showcase world-renowned film programming and innovative exhibitions, provide enriching workshops and diverse educational initiatives for youth and aspiring filmmakers, and to support the community through outreach.

TIFF is a charitable cultural organization, with a mission to transform the way people see the world, through film. TIFF initiatives and programming harness the power of film, to make profound impact across four key areas: Community Outreach & Education; History and Preservation; Experimentation; and Filmmaker Discovery and Development. Other fundraising initiatives at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival include a campaign to support emerging filmmakers. Be the Spark. Help Us Ignite a Filmmaker’s Career runs until September 30 and includes a one-of-a-kind Festival Programmer auction. All donations will be doubled by an anonymous matching donor. For more information, visit tiff.net/ignite.

The 40th Toronto International Film Festival runs September 10 to 20, 2015. TIFF prefers Visa.

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.



Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 Midnight Madness and Vanguard programmes


WALK ON THE WILD SIDE WITH MIDNIGHT MADNESS AT THE 2015 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

Midnight Madness returns to the Toronto International Film Festival® to satiate late night audiences’ appetites for wild sensory stimulation. The programme will present the best in action, horror, shock and fantasy films from the rabble-rousers of cinema, opening with Jeremy Saulnier’s tense siege shocker Green Room.

“Midnight Madness winds up Festival audiences as the days are winding down and they are hungry for more,” says Colin Geddes, International Programmer for the Festival. “From adrenaline-filled action and untamed horror to twisted comedy and darkly blurred lines of reality, this year’s lineup welcomes back celebrated masters and fresh visionaries of renegade genre cinema.”

Among this year’s returning Midnight Madness directors are Joe Begos and Sean Byrne, who both debuted in the programme and are back with their much anticipated follow-up features, and Japanese bad boy auteur Takashi Miike with his high-octane Yakuza Apocalypse. Closing out the selection is the raucously reverent homage to classic slasher movies The Final Girls. Films screening as part of the Midnight Madness programme include:

Baskin Can Evrenol, Turkey (World Premiere)
A squad of unsuspecting cops goes through a trapdoor to Hell when they stumble upon a Black Mass in an abandoned building. The nightmarish feature debut Baskin is the first-ever Midnight Madness film from Turkey.

The Devil’s Candy Sean Byrne, USA (World Premiere)
The director of the 2009 Midnight Madness People’s Choice Award winner The Loved Ones is back with an equally fresh twist on the supernatural genre. A struggling artist (Ethan Embry) and his family buy the house of their dreams only to discover the property's mysterious dark past and a former tenant who wants more than to simply come back home. From the producers of Midnight Madness hits You’re Next and The Guest.

Midnight Madness Closing Night Film
The Final Girls Todd Strauss-Schulson, USA (International Premiere)
Max (American Horror Story’s Taissa Farmiga) is a high school senior whose mom (Malin Akerman) was a celebrated ’80s scream queen. At a screening, Max and her friends are mysteriously transported inside her mom’s most infamous movie, where they must fend off the camp counselors’ raging hormones, battle a deranged machete-wielding killer and find a way to escape the movie and get back home.

The Girl in the Photographs Nick Simon, USA (World Premiere)
Big-city glamour clashes with small-town values and a killer’s knife, in this bloody cocktail of terror from director Nick Simon and executive producer Wes Craven. Colleen’s life in the sleepy town of Spearfish is disrupted when she starts receiving photographs of brutally murdered women. Things get even crazier for Colleen when L.A. based celeb-photographer Peter Hemmings (Kal Penn) returns to his hometown of Spearfish to investigate.

Midnight Madness Opening Night Film
Green Room Jeremy Saulnier, USA (North American Premiere)
Broke, tired and at each other’s throats after a cancelled gig, a young punk rock band accepts a sketchy matinee show to get themselves home. When they stumble upon something they weren’t supposed to witness, the quartet is trapped in a terrifying siege. Directed by Jeremy Saulnier (of 2013 Cannes Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize winner Blue Ruin), the film stars Anton Yelchin, Imogen Poots, Alia Shawkat, and Patrick Stewart.
Green Room is preceded by the previously announced short film The Chickening from directors Nick DenBoer and Davy Force.

Hardcore Ilya Naishuller, Russia/USA (World Premiere)
Resurrected with no recollection of his past, a cyborg named Henry (the audience’s POV) and his ally, Jimmy (Sharlto Copley, District 9) must fight through the streets of Moscow in pursuit of Henry’s kidnapped wife in the world’s first action-adventure film to be entirely shot from the first person perspective.

The Mind’s Eye Joe Begos, USA (World Premiere)
Joe Begos returns with a psychokinetic thriller about Zack Connors (Graham Skipper), whose abilities have kept him off the grid for years until he’s recruited by the mysterious Dr. Slovak. The snowy New England landscape turns into a whirlwind of psychic rage, flying axes, and brutal revenge as Zack does everything in his power to stop Dr. Slovak's deadly descent into synthetically engineered telekinetic madness.

Southbound Roxanne Benjamin, David Bruckner, Patrick Horvath and Radio Silence, USA (World Premiere)
Five intertwining tales of terror unfold along an endless desert highway. On a desolate stretch of road, weary travellers — two men on the run from their past, a band on their way to the next gig, a man struggling to get home, a brother in search of his long-lost sister and a family on vacation — are forced to confront their worst fears and darkest secrets in these interwoven tales of terror and remorse on the open road.

SPL 2 - A Time For Consequences Soi Cheang, Hong Kong (International Premiere)
The anticipated follow-up to the bone-cracking martial arts brawler SPL (also known as Sha Po Lung and Kill Zone) that debuted in the programme in 2005 stars Midnight Madness discovery Tony Jaa (Ong Bak). When an undercover cop (Wu Jing) has his cover blown and is thrown into a prison in Thailand run by a crime syndicate, he must team up with a prison guard (Jaa) to bust out and get revenge on those who wronged him. Filled with gun battles, prison riots and frenetic fight choreography, SPL 2 might knock the wind out of you — and possibly a few teeth.

Yakuza Apocalypse (Gokudo Daisenso) Takashi Miike, Japan (North American Premiere)
Japanese cinematic extremist Takashi Miike returns to his gonzo roots with this mind-melter that finds room for vampires, gangsters, monsters, martial arts and even a yakuza knitting circle. A true master and MVP of the programme, Miike wowed previous Midnight Madness audiences with such hits as Fudoh: The New Generation, Audition, The City of Lost Souls, Ichi the Killer, Zebraman, The Great Yokai War and Sukiyaki Western Django. He returns with a film too wild to be described and too fun to be missed!

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

Tickets to screenings for this programme will be available for individual purchase as well as through the Midnight Madness Pack, which includes all 10 screenings for $185 or $120 for students and seniors. 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.


VANGUARD PROGRAMME UNLEASHES DARK, DANGEROUS AND SEDUCTIVE CINEMATIC STUNNERS
With latest from Lucile Hadžihalilović, Álex de la Iglesia, Gaspar Noé and Anders Thomas Jensen

The Toronto International Film Festival® revealed today its Vanguard programme featuring new work from 14 daring filmmakers who are transcending the boundaries of creative vision where art house and genre films will spectacularly collide.

“Delving into the dark side of humanity and dangerously sexy, this year’s Vanguard lineup has something unique for everyone,” says International Programmer Colin Geddes. “We’re leading audiences into a wild world of emotional sensations, demons and strange sea creatures — delivered with Vanguard’s distinctive twist on storytelling.”

The 2015 selection includes a mysterious fantasy from French director Lucile Hadžihalilović; an eccentric comedy from Spanish cult favourite Álex de la Iglesia; an erotic 3D epic from Gaspar Noé; a twisted family tale from Danish filmmaker Anders Thomas Jensen and South Korea’s Ryoo Seung-wan busts out with action and thrills.

Films screening as part of the Vanguard programme include:

Collective Invention (Dolyeon Byeoni) Kwon Oh-kwang, South Korea (World Premiere)
Young and unemployed Gu is desperate to make some money and participates in a clinical trial for a pharmaceutical company’s new drug. As an unknown side effect, he slowly transforms into a fish. This bizarre situation becomes Korea’s hottest news and fish man Gu is catapulted into the spotlight and becomes a superstar, only to fall from grace just as quickly.

Demon Marcin Wrona, Poland/Israel (World Premiere)
Peter is a stranger in the hometown of his future wife Janet. As a wedding gift from the bride's grandfather, he receives a piece of land where the two can build a house and raise a happy family. While preparing the land for construction, Peter finds hidden bones of human bodies in the ground beneath his new property. Then very strange things begin to happen.

Der Nachtmahr AKIZ, Germany (North American Premiere)
When 17-year -old Tina passes out at a party, she assumes it was just the side-effect of her wild lifestyle on the decadent Berlin-party scene. Soon she becomes unsettled and nervously manic as a mysterious ugly creature starts to haunt her, in both her dreams and waking hours, and nobody believes her.

Evolution Lucile Hadžihalilović, France (World Premiere)
A 10-year-old boy discovers a dead body in the sea just before he is brought to the hospital for a mysterious injection. Before long, something appears to be growing inside of him.

February Osgood Perkins, USA/Canada (World Premiere)
In February, beautiful and haunted Joan makes a bloody and determined pilgrimage across a frozen landscape toward a prestigious all girls prep school, where Rose and Kat find themselves stranded after their parents mysteriously fail to retrieve them for winter break. As Joan gets closer, terrifying visions begin plaguing Kat while Rose watches in horror as she becomes possessed by an unseen evil force.

Lace Crater Harrison Atkins, USA (World Premiere)
On a weekend trip to the Hamptons with friends, Ruth (Lindsay Burdge) encounters a mysterious ghost (Peter Vack) haunting the guest house. One thing leads to another and they find themselves in the throes of an unexpected one-night stand. Soon, Ruth begins suffering from a bizarre sexually-transmitted disease that leaves doctors and friends confused and frightened. As her body and social connections begin to disintegrate, she must find a way to reconcile her condition with the world around her, or risk losing herself to a void from which she may never emerge.

Love Gaspar Noé, France (North American Premiere)
January 1, early morning. The telephone rings. Murphy wakes up next to his young wife and two-year-old child. He listens to his voicemail: Electra’s mother, sick with worry, wants to know whether he has heard from her daughter. Electra’s been missing for a long time. She's afraid something really bad has happened to her. Over the course of a long rainy day, Murphy finds himself alone in his apartment, reminiscing about the greatest love affair of his life: his two years with Electra. A burning passion full of promises, games, excess and mistakes.

Men & Chicken (Mænd og Høns) Anders Thomas Jensen, Denmark (North American Premiere)
Men & Chicken revolves around two special-natured brothers, Elias and Gabriel (Mads Mikkelsen and David Dencik). Upon their father’s passing, they find out through their father’s will that they are adopted. Elias and Gabriel decide to seek out their natural father and set out for the island Ork, where their biological father lives. Here they discover a most paralyzing, yet liberating truth about themselves and their family.

My Big Night (Mi Gran Noche)Álex de la Iglesia, Spain (World Premiere)
The story unfolds amidst a frenzied and lavish New Year's Eve television special, taped during a sweltering hot August in Madrid. An unemployed Jose is sent to join hundreds of extras cooped up on set, day and night, as they hysterically celebrate the fake coming of the New Year — over and over again. The star of the show, Alphonso, is a charismatic ratings-chasing diva; and Adán, a young Latino singer, is being hounded by fans that are trying to blackmail him.

The Missing Girl A.D. Calvo, USA (World Premiere)
The Missing Girl tells the story of Mort, the lonely and disillusioned owner of a comic book shop, and Ellen, the emotionally disruptive, aspiring graphic novelist he's hired. The story involves the search for a girl who isn’t missing and the discovery that it's never too late for late bloomers.

Veteran Ryoo Seung-wan, South Korea (North American Premiere)
A tough cop targets the tyrannical heir to a mega-corporation in this hard-hitting thriller from South Korean cult auteur Ryoo Seung-wan (Crying Fist, City of Violence).

Previously announced Canadian titles in the Vanguard programme include André Turpin’s Endorphine, Bruce McDonald’s Hellions, and Mark Sawers’ No Men Beyond This Point.


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

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
@TIFF_NET
#TIFF15
Facebook.com/TIFF

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.

Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 Masters and Classics programmes


2015 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS LATEST WORKS FROM MASTERS OF CINEMA
Including Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Wim Wenders, Jafar Panahi, Philippe Garrel, Hirokazu Kore-eda, Hong Sang-soo, Hou Hsiao-hsien and Patricio Guzmán

The Toronto International Film Festival® today announced the selections for the 2015 Masters programme. This year’s lineup features the latest bold, exciting and moving works from masters of contemporary cinema, including Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Wim Wenders, Jafar Panahi, Philippe Garrel, Hirokazu Kore-eda, Hong Sang-soo, Hou Hsiao-hsien and Patricio Guzmán.

Films screening as part of the Masters programme include:

11 Minutes (11 Minut) Jerzy Skolimowski, Poland/Ireland (North American Premiere)
A jealous husband out of control, his sexy actress wife, a sleazy Hollywood director, a reckless drug messenger, a disoriented young woman, an ex-con hot dog vendor, a troubled student on a mysterious mission, a high-rise window cleaner on an illicit break, an elderly sketch artist, a hectic paramedics team and a group of hungry nuns: a cross-section of contemporary urbanites whose lives and loves intertwine. They live in an unsure world where anything could happen at any time. An unexpected chain of events can seal many fates in a mere 11 minutes.

The Assassin (Nie Yinniang) Hou Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan (North American Premiere)
Ninth century China. A general’s ten-year-old daughter Nie Yinniang is abducted by a nun who transforms her into an exceptional assassin. Years later, she is sent back to the land of her birth with orders to kill the man to whom she was promised. Nie Yinniang must now choose between the man she loves and the sacred way of the righteous assassins.

Bleak Street (La calle de la amargura) Arturo Ripstein, Mexico/Spain (North American Premiere)
Mexican maestro Arturo Ripstein (Deep Crimson) directs this true-crime story about the bizarre 2009 murders of midget-wrestling brothers Alberto and Alejandro Jiménez. Starring Patricia Reyes Spíndola, Nora Velázquez and Sylvia Pasquel.

Blood Of My Blood (Sangue Del Mil Sangue) Marco Bellocchio, Italy (International Premiere)
Italian master Marco Bellocchio (Fists in the Pocket, Vincere) returns with this haunting, enigmatic tale that takes us from the 17th century to the present day as it traces the dark history of a cursed monastery.

Cemetery of Splendour (Rak Ti Khon Kaen) Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand/United Kingdom/France/Germany/Malaysia (North American Premiere)
A young medium and a middle-aged hospital volunteer investigate a case of mass sleeping sickness that may have supernatural roots in the gorgeous, mysterious, and gently humourous new film from Palme d’Or winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives).

Every Thing Will Be Fine Wim Wenders, Germany/Canada/France/Sweden/Norway (North American Premiere)
A winter evening. A car on a country road. It’s snowing, visibility is poor. Out of nowhere, a sled comes sliding down a hill. The car comes to a grinding halt. The driver is Tomas, a writer. He cannot be blamed for the tragic accident. It's also not young Christopher’s fault, who should have taken better care of his brother. Tomas falls into a depression. The film follows Tomas and his efforts to give meaning to his life again. Starring James Franco, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Rachel McAdams.

Francofonia Alexander Sokurov, Germany/France/Netherlands (North American Premiere)
Master filmmaker Alexander Sokurov (Russian Ark) transforms a portrait of the Louvre museum into a magisterial, centuries-spanning reflection on the relation between art, culture and power.

In the Shadow of Women Philippe Garrel, France (North American Premiere)
A Parisian documentary filmmaker becomes embroiled in a romantic triangle in this luminous love story from the great director Philippe Garrel (Frontier of Dawn, Regular Lovers).

Jafar Panahi's Taxi Jafar Panahi, Iran (Canadian Premiere)
Internationally acclaimed director Jafar Panahi (This is Not a Film) drives a yellow cab through the vibrant streets of Tehran, picking up a diverse (and yet representative) group of passengers in a single day. Each man, woman, and child candidly expresses his or her own view of the world, while being interviewed by the curious and gracious driver/director. His camera, placed on the dashboard of his mobile film studio, captures a spirited slice of Iranian society while also brilliantly redefining the borders of comedy, drama and cinema.

Our Little Sister (Umimachi Diary) Hirokazu Kore-eda, Japan (North American Premiere)
Three sisters — Sachi, Yoshino and Chika — live together in a large house in the city of Kamakura. When their father — absent from the family home for the last 15 years — dies, they travel to the countryside for his funeral, and meet their shy teenage half-sister. Bonding quickly with the orphaned Suzu, they invite her to live with them. Suzu eagerly agrees, and a new life of joyful discovery begins for the four siblings. Starring Haruka Ayase, Masami Nagasawa, Kaho and Suzu Hirose.

The Pearl Button (El Botón de Nácar) Patricio Guzmán, Chile/France/Spain (North American Premiere)
The great Chilean filmmaker Patricio Guzmán (The Battle of Chile, Nostalgia for the Light) chronicles the history of the indigenous peoples of Chilean Patagonia, whose decimation by colonial conquest prefigured the brutality of the Pinochet regime.

Rabin, The Last Day Amos Gitaï, Israel/France (North American Premiere)
Lauded director Amos Gitaï (Kippur) delves into the prelude and aftermath of the 1995 assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin in this gripping docudrama.

Right Now, Wrong Then Hong Sang-soo, South Korea (North American Premiere)
The delightful new film from Festival favourite Hong Sang-soo (In Another Country) presents two variations on a potentially fateful romantic encounter between a filmmaker and a painter, tracing each to its own very distinct outcome.


OPHÜLS, REICHARDT AND VISCONTI FEATURE IN THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL'S PROGRAMME OF CLASSICS

The Toronto International Film Festival® announces the lineup for its TIFF Cinematheque programme, featuring both 35mm prints as well as new digital restorations of classic films from around the world including Marcel Ophüls’ The Memory of Justice, Luchino Visconti’s Rocco and His Brothers and Kelly Reichardt’s River of Grass.

“We believe that cinema has a rich heritage that must be protected, celebrated and preserved for current and future generations. This year’s TIFF Cinematheque lineup highlights our commitment to both preservation and restoration,” said TIFF programmer Brad Deane. “We’re thrilled to present some of the best new digital restorations along with some beautiful new 35mm prints, embracing both the future of the medium as well as the past.”

A new digital restoration of Julian Roffman’s The Mask (Eyes of Hell), the first feature-length Canadian horror film and first 3-D film made in Canada, makes its world premiere at the Festival. The digital restoration of The Mask (Eyes of Hell) was commissioned by TIFF using elements from the best remaining 35mm prints. One of Canadian cinema’s long buried treasures, The Mask (Eyes of Hell) creates an atmosphere of pervasive dread with its use of inventive visuals and prominent Toronto landmarks.

Other works include Harlan County, USA— the debut documentaries from Barbara Kopple which also screened at the very first Toronto International Film Festival in 1976 — and Frederick Wiseman’s searing Titicut Follies, which returns to the big screen with a newly restored 35mm print. Both Wiseman and Kopple have their latest films in the 2015 TIFF Docs programme.

Also screening is another TIFF-commissioned 35mm print of Jacques Rozier’s Adieu Philippine, an oft-overlooked French New Wave gem; and a digital restoration of The Round-Up (Szegénylegények), a landmark of post-war cinema from Hungarian master Miklós Jancsó.

The lineup features selections by the TIFF Cinematheque programming team led by Brad Deane, Senior Manager of Film Programmes, and including James Quandt, Thom Powers and Jesse Wente. TIFF Cinematheque is now in its 25th year.

As part of TIFF's ongoing commitment to accessible film education, tickets to all TIFF Cinematheque screenings during the Festival are free and will be distributed at the Steve & Rashmi Gupta Box Office at TIFF Bell Lightbox on a first-come, first-served basis two hours before each film screening.

Films screening as part of the TIFF Cinematheque programme include:

Adieu Philippine Jacques Rozier, France/Italy
Set under the looming shadow of the Algerian war, Adieu Philippine follows a young television cameraman who meets and attempts to seduce two beautiful, inseparable young women. The trio’s frolicking fun takes them from the streets of Paris to a Corsican holiday tinged with melancholy.

Harlan County, USA Barbara Kopple, USA
Harlan County, USA chronicles a fiercely contested labour battle in Kentucky during the early 1970s. The strike began when the miners working for the Eastover Mining Co. joined the UMW, and its corporate parent, Duke Power, refused to sign the standard union contract. By living with the 180-odd families involved in the strike, Kopple shows the backbreaking burdens of the miners’ life in the best of times and the looming fear of destitution in the worst. While the film is unabashedly partisan, it’s worth remembering that the company’s refusal to sign a contract was condemned by the National Labor Relations Board and that the corporation agreed to sign only under heavy pressure from federal mediators.

The Mask (Eyes of Hell) Julian Roffman, Canada
Newly restored by TIFF and the 3-D Film Archive, director Julian Roffman’s deliciously creepy tale about a haunted tribal mask was the first feature-length horror movie and first feature-length 3-D film produced in Canada.
Using elements from the best remaining 35mm prints, TIFF and the 3-D Film Archive have digitally restored the film’s original cut in both anaglyph and polarized 2K 3D. The Mask was restored with the support of TIFF's donors and members, who contributed to a crowd-sourced fundraising campaign to launch the project.

The Memory of Justice Marcel Ophüls, United Kingdom/USA/Germany
This epic documentary by Marcel Ophüls (The Sorrow and the Pity) meditates on Western society's concepts of justice through comparisons of war crimes in Vietnam, Algeria, and Nazi Germany.
Restoration by the Academy Film Archive in association with Paramount Pictures and The Film Foundation. Restoration funding provided by The Material World Charitable Foundation, Righteous Persons Foundation, and The Film Foundation.

River of Grass Kelly Reichardt, USA
Shot on 16mm, the story follows the misadventures of disaffected housewife Cozy, played by Lisa Bowman, and the aimless layabout Lee, played by indie legend Larry Fessenden, who also acted as a producer and the film's editor. Described by Reichardt as “a road movie without the road, a love story without the love, and a crime story without the crime,” River of Grass introduces viewers to a director already in command of her craft and defining her signature themes.
Preserved by UCLA Film & Television Archive in conjunction with Oscilloscope Laboratories and Sundance Institute. Preservation Funding provided by Oscilloscope Laboratories, Sundance Institute, TIFF, and a number of very generous Kickstarter backers.

Rocco and His Brothers (Rocco e i Suoi Fratelli) Luchino Visconti, Italy
Luchino Visconti's magisterial family saga — about an impoverished Sicilian clan who arrive in Milan in search of a better life — returns in this glorious new restoration, featuring two previously censored scenes.
Restored by Cineteca di Bologna at L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory in association with Titanus, TF1 Droits Audiovisuels and The Film Foundation. Restoration funding provided by Gucci and The Film Foundation.

The Round-Up (Szegénylegények) Miklós Jancsó, Hungary
The first of Hungarian master Miklós Jancsó's historical epics is set in an isolated concentration camp in the 1860s, where imperial authorities use brutal methods to discover the nationalist rebels hiding within the ragtag group of prisoners.
A presentation of the Hungarian National Film Fund and the Hungarian National Digital Film Archive and Film Institute (MaNDA). Restoration 2K image and sound by the Hungarian Filmlab from 35mm negative.

Titicut Follies Frederick Wiseman, USA
Titicut Follies is a stark and graphic portrayal of the conditions that existed at the State Prison for the Criminally Insane at Bridgewater, Massachusetts. The film documents the various ways the inmates are treated by the guards, social workers and psychiatrists. Preserved by Library of Congress National Audio Visual Conservation Center.

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

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
@TIFF_NET
#TIFF15
Facebook.com/TIFF

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.


Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 documentary lineup


TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL DOCUMENTARY LINEUP POINTS TO A BIG YEAR FOR MUSICIANS AND GLOBAL STORIES
Slate includes films from Barbara Kopple, Morgan Neville, Laurie Anderson, Amy Berg, Frederick Wiseman, Davis Guggenheim and a posthumous revelation by Sydney Pollack

The Toronto International Film Festival’s 2015 documentary programme presents a diverse mix of international works featuring a wide array of award-winning directors. The TIFF Docs line-up includes revelatory looks at celebrated performers like Yo-Yo Ma, Arcade Fire and Sharon Jones; fresh global perspectives on Ukraine, Haiti, China, and the Middle East; films about film; and loving attention to horses and dogs.

“Emotions run high in this year’s documentaries from passionate performers to angry protestors,” said TIFF Docs programmer Thom Powers. “These films truly command the big screen with their artistry across many forms of documentary — observational, essayistic, historical and investigative.”

Several films focus on music: Miss Sharon Jones! follows R&B queen Sharon Jones during her battle with cancer; The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble profiles the legendary cellist and his international musical collective; Amazing Grace captures the recording of Aretha Franklin’s best-selling album of the same name; The Reflektor Tapes provides insight into the making of the Arcade Fire international #1 album Reflektor and Janis: Little Girl Blue delves into the life of late rock legend Janis Joplin.

The worlds of art, dance, and performance are explored in films such as Bolshoi Babylon which looks at upheavals in Russia’s world-famous company; Our Last Tango chronicles the stormy career of Argentine tango legends Juan Carlos Copes and María Nieves; Horizon is a portrait of influential Icelandic landscape painter Georg Gudni; and Thru You Princess documents the composer Kutiman creating a viral sensation on YouTube.

The lineup includes a trio of films in which animals feature, including Heart of a Dog, a personal essay film by Laurie Anderson that explores themes of love, death, and language; Being AP, a portrait of legendary British horse-racing jockey AP McCoy; and Dark Horse, about a small town group of friends who take on the elite 'sport of kings' and breed themselves a racehorse.

Global current events make hot topics in several films. In P.S. Jerusalem, filmmaker Danae Elon confronts the tensions of living in Jerusalem after the death of her father, the writer Amos Elon. A Journey of a Thousand Miles: Peacekeepers, focuses on three Muslim women who join a UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti. Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom takes a closer look at the Ukrainian Revolution and the ousting of President Viktor Yanukovych. Je Suis Charlie offers an account of the brutal attacks on the French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, while He Named Me Malala profiles Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenager who survived a Taliban assassination attempt to become an outspoken, globally recognized advocate for girls’ rights.

The programme’s global outlook can also be seen in Sherpa, exploring the uneasy relationship on Mount Everest between foreign expeditions and their local guides; Nasser, providing an in-depth history of Egypt’s pivotal and controversial leader Gamal Abdel Nasser; A Young Patriot, examining modern China through the eyes of a nationalistic university student; In Jackson Heights, offering a closer look at the diverse immigrant neighbourhood of Jackson Heights in Queens, New York; and Return of the Atom, taking a closer look at the remote ‘nuclear town’ in Finland.

Four films intersect with the art and legacy of filmmaking. Hitchcock/Truffaut examines the importance of the epochal book that transcribed the 1962 interview between Alfred Hitchcock and François Truffaut. A Flickering Truth follows a group of dedicated Afghan cinephiles who are literally excavating their country’s cinematic past. Women He’s Undressed pays tribute to legendary Hollywood costume designer Orry-Kelly. It All Started At The End recounts the history of El Grupo de Cali, the prolific bohemian artistic collective that revolutionized Colombian film and literature in the 1970s and ’80s.

Films screening as part of the TIFF Docs programme include:

Amazing Grace Sydney Pollack, USA (International Premiere)
Sydney Pollack’s film of Aretha Franklin’s ‘Amazing Grace.’ Filmed during church services in Los Angeles on January 13 and 14, 1972, the footage was never seen until now. Featuring Reverend James Cleveland, the Southern California Community Choir and the Atlantic Records rhythm section.

A Flickering Truth Pietra Brettkelly, New Zealand/Afghanistan (North American Premiere)
As Afghanistan teeters on an unpredictable future, A Flickering Truth uncovers the world of three dreamers and cinephiles, the dust of 100 years of war and the restoration of 8,000 hours of film archive that they risked their lives to conceal. What surprises will emerge from the cloak of time?

A Journey of a Thousand Miles: Peacekeepers Geeta Gandbhir and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, USA/Pakistan (World Premiere)
A unit of Bangladeshi female police officers leave their families to join a United Nations peacekeeping mission in Haiti and challenge stereotypes about the capabilities of Muslim women. The film focuses on three of the women as they grapple with the harsh realities of becoming foot soldiers in a UN Peacekeeping Mission, and the pressures on their families left behind.

A Young Patriot (Shao Nian * Xiao Zhao) Du Haibin, China/USA/France (Canadian Premiere)
This intimate documentary chronicles five years in the life of a young Chinese student, whose fervent idealism and dedication to Mao’s legacy stands in stark contrast to contemporary China’s turn towards state capitalism.

Being AP Anthony Wonke, United Kingdom/Ireland (World Premiere)
Being AP is an intimate documentary portrait of AP McCoy – the greatest jump jockey of all time. As he passes his 40th birthday, an age beyond which most jockeys are unable to continue, AP contemplates his obsession with winning, the years of sacrifice that he has endured to become a champion, the chase for a 20th successive title, and then a future without racing.

Bolshoi Babylon Nick Read, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
For the first time, Russia’s Bolshoi Theatre allows filmmakers full and uncensored access backstage. After a brutal acid attack on the ballet company’s director Sergei Filin in January 2013, Bolshoi Babylon follows the dancers and managers through a new season as they try to regain their status as the world’s leading dance company.

Dark Horse Louise Osmond, United Kingdom (Canadian Premiere)
Set in a former mining village in Wales, Dark Horse is the inspirational true story of Jan Vokes and her group of local friends who decide to take on the elite 'sport of kings' and breed themselves a racehorse. Raised on a slagheap allotment, their foal becomes a source of inspiration and hope.

He Named Me Malala Davis Guggenheim, USA (International Premiere)
Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim shows us how Malala Yousafzai, who was targeted by the Taliban and severely wounded by a gunshot when returning home on her school bus, remains committed to fighting for education for all girls worldwide. Providing an inside glimpse into her extraordinary life — from her close relationship with her father who inspired her love for education, to her impassioned speeches at the UN, to her everyday life at home.

Heart of a Dog Laurie Anderson, USA (Canadian Premiere)
Heart of a Dog is a personal essay film that explores themes of love, death, and language. The director’s voice is a constant presence as stories of her dog Lolabelle, her mother, childhood fantasies and political, and philosophical theories unfurl in a seamless song-like stream.

Hitchcock/Truffaut Kent Jones, USA/France (Canadian Premiere)
In 1962, two of the greatest minds in cinema sat down for an intimate and expansive conversation. Based on the original recordings of this meeting — used to produce the influential book Hitchcock/Truffaut— this film illustrates the greatest cinema lesson of all time and plummets us into the world of the creator of Psycho, The Birds, and Vertigo. David Fincher, Richard Linklater, Martin Scorsese and other legendary filmmakers add to the discussion of Hitchcock's enduring legacy and influence on cinema.

Horizon Bergur Bernburg and Fridrik Thor Fridriksson, Iceland/Denmark (World Premiere)
A documentary about the late Icelandic painter Georg Gudni Hauksson, whose innovative interpretations of forms and ideas paved the way for a renaissance in Icelandic landscape painting.

In Jackson Heights Frederick Wiseman, USA (North American Premiere)
Frederick Wiseman's latest documentary is about the diverse neighborhood of Jackson Heights in Queens, New York where 167 languages are spoken among immigrants from every continent, and half the population is foreign-born. The community is an example of America as a ‘melting pot’ settled and made strong by people committed to making their neighborhood work despite cultural and religious differences.

It All Started At The End (Todo comenzó por el fin) Luis Ospina, Colombia (World Premiere)
Filmmaker Luis Ospina recounts the history of El Grupo de Cali, the prolific bohemian artistic collective that revolutionized Colombian film and literature in the 1970s and ’80s.

Janis: Little Girl Blue Amy Berg, USA (North American Premiere)
Academy Award-nominated director Amy Berg reveals the raw, sensitive and powerful woman behind the legend in Janis: Little Girl Blue; the quintessential story of the short, turbulent, epic existence that changed music forever. Chan Marshall (aka Cat Power) lends her raspy Southern voice to the film, reading Janis Joplin's achingly intimate letters.

Je Suis Charlie Emmanuel Leconte and Daniel Leconte, France (World Premiere)
On January 7, 2015, French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo was the victim of a terrorist attack that killed 12 people, including some of the greatest French cartoonists such as Cabu, Wolinski, Charb, Tignous and Honoré. The following day a policewoman was shot dead in the street. On January 9, another attack targeted the Jewish community. Four hostages were murdered. This film pays tribute to all these victims.

Miss Sharon Jones! Barbara Kopple, USA (World Premiere)
Two-time Academy Award-winner Barbara Kopple follows R&B queen Sharon Jones over the course of an eventful year, as she battles a cancer diagnosis and struggles to hold her band the Dap-Kings together. Additionally, TIFF Cinematheque will showcase Kopple’s film Harlan County, USA which played at the first Festival in 1976.

The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble Morgan Neville, USA (World Premiere)
This film tells the extraordinary story of the Silk Road Ensemble, an international musical collective created by legendary cellist Yo-Yo Ma. The film follows this group of diverse instrumentalists, vocalists, composers, arrangers, visual artists, and storytellers as they explore the power of music to preserve tradition, shape cultural evolution, and inspire hope.

Nasser Jihan El-Tahri, France/South Africa (International Premiere)
Filmmaker Jihan El-Tahri explores the history of Gamal Abdel Nasser, the revolutionary army officer whose decade-long reign as president of Egypt saw him defy the West during the 1956 Suez Crisis, co-found the international Non-Aligned Movement, and suffer a dramatic defeat to Israel in the Six-Day War.

Our Last Tango (Un tango más) German Kral, Germany/Argentina (World Premiere)
Argentina’s María Nieves and Juan Carlos Copes are the best-known couple in tango’s history and shaped the dance like no others. They danced passionately, loved and hated each other for almost 50 years, until one day they separated, and left a gap in the tango scene. Now, almost at the end of their lives, they tell their story for the first time. Executive produced by Wim Wenders.

P.S. Jerusalem Danae Elon, Canada/Israel (World Premiere)
Danae Elon grew up in Jerusalem. After many years of living abroad, she moves back with her three young sons and French-Algerian husband Philip who are fresh to the city. Over three years, she documents their experiences, bearing witness to what makes Jerusalem so fiercely contested. A looming presence is the memory of her late father, the esteemed author Amos Elon, seen in home movies. Through the prism of one family’s life, the film exposes a complex portrait of Jerusalem today.

The Reflektor Tapes Kahlil Joseph, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
The Reflektor Tapes is a fascinating insight into the making of Arcade Fire's international #1 album Reflektor. The film recontextualizes the album experience, transporting the viewer into a kaleidoscopic sonic and visual landscape. The Reflektor Tapes blends never-before-seen personal interviews and moments captured by the band to dazzling effect, and features 20 minutes of exclusive unseen footage, filmed only for cinema audiences.

Return of the Atom (Atomin paluu) Mika Taanila and Jussi Eerola, Finland/Germany (World Premiere)
Finland was the first country in the West to give permission to build a new nuclear power plant after the Chernobyl disaster. The film portrays the strange and stressful life in the small Finnish ‘nuclear town’ Eurajoki during an era of nuclear renaissance.

Sherpa Jennifer Peedom, Australia/United Kingdom (Canadian Premiere)
Director Jennifer Peedom set out to uncover tension in the 2014 Everest climbing season from the Sherpas' point of view, and instead captured a tragedy when an avalanche struck, killing 16 Sherpas. Sherpa tells the story of how the Sherpas united after the tragedy in the face of fierce opposition to reclaim the mountain they call Chomolungma.

Thru You Princess Ido Haar, Israel (International Premiere)
In her late 30s, Samantha lives in New Orleans and works as a caregiver. She often uploads her songs and musings online and none of her clips get more than a few dozen hits. She doesn't imagine that someone, on the other side of the world, is about to expand the number of listeners by millions. Kutiman, an Israeli musician, discovered Samantha's songs on YouTube and weaves them with audiovisual symphonies composed of musical clips that people posted online.

Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom Evgeny Afineevsky, Ukraine/USA/UnitedKingdom (Canadian Premiere)
Chronicling events that unfolded over 93 days in 2013 and 2014, Winter on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom witnesses the formation of a new civil rights movement in Ukraine. What started as peaceful student demonstrations supporting European integration morphed into a full-fledged violent revolution calling for the resignation of the nation’s president. The film captures the remarkable mobilization of nearly a million citizens from across the country protesting the corrupt political regime that utilized extreme force against its own people to suppress their demands and freedom of expression.

Women He’s Undressed Gillian Armstrong, Australia (International Premiere)
During Hollywood’s golden age, the Australian known as Orry-Kelly was a costume designer for an astonishing 282 films including classics like Some Like It Hot, Casablanca, and An American in Paris. As a gay male during a closeted era, he was also a keeper of secrets. Director Gillian Armstrong (Oscar and Lucinda; Little Women) employs inventive recreations, interviews and film clips to uncover his story.

Documentaries previously announced for the Festival were Brian D. Johnson’s Al Purdy Was Here, Patrick Reed and Michelle Shephard’s Guantanamo's Child: Omar Khadr, Mina Shum’s Ninth Floor, Avi Lewis’ This Changes Everything, and Geneviève Dulude-De Celles’ Welcome to F.L. playing in TIFF Docs; and Michael Moore’s Where to Invade Next for Special Presentations.

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

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 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.

39th Festival des films du monde / Montreal World Film Festival announces World Competition, First Feature Competition


THE 39TH MWFF UNVEILS THE LINE-UP OF ITS WORLD COMPETITION AND FIRST FEATURE COMPETITION

The Montreal World Film Festival is proud to announce the line-up of its World Competition as well as First Feature Competition. Members of both Juries are also public as of today. “Over the decades, the MWFF has achieved its cultural and an economic mission by offering audiences and professionals a multitude of films, of all genres and provenances,” stated Serge Losique who added “An institution recognized by cineastes the world over, this great cinematic institution has always worked hard to assure its perenniality. It has always been about bringing to Montreal screens the new and interesting films that constitute the best showcase of essential cinema culture.”

This year the number of entries to the MWFF sections has overtaken those of previous years : over 2000 feature and short films (in equal proportion) have been screened by the selection commitee not mentioning the other films viewed during festivals abroad. The number of countries within the selection highlights this increase as 86 countries will be representred during the 39th edition of the Festival. There are 36 World Premieres in those competitions.

The 39th Montreal World Film Festival and its International Film Market will take place from August 27th to September 7th 2015.


World Competition

26 Feature films from 31 countries will compete for the Grand Prize of the Americas.

2 Nights Till Morning by Mikko Kuparinen (Finland-Lithuania) 84 mins

A Havana Moment by Guillermo Ivàn Duenas (USA – Cuba - Mexico – Colombia)

A Matter of Courage by Roberto Gervitz (Brazil – Uruguay) 90 mins

Chucks by Sabine Hiebler, Gerhard Ertl (Austria) 93 mins

Demimonde by Attila Szàsz (Hungary) 88 mins

Gassoh by Tatsuo Kobayashi (Japan) 87 mins

Getaway of Love by Tonino Zangardi (Italy) 90 mins

Grey and Black by Luís Filipe Rocha (Portugal – Brazil)

Happy 140 by Gracia Querejeta (Spain) 98 mins

John Hron by Jon Pettersson (Sweden) 127 mins

L’Accabadora by Enrico Pau (Italy – Ireland) 97 mins

Mad Love by Philippe Ramos (France) 96 mins

Memories of the Wind by Özcan Alper (Turkey - Germany - France – Georgia) 140 mins

My Enemies by Stéphane Géhami (Canada) 106 mins

On the Road to Berlin by Sergei Popov (Russia) 82 mins

Outliving Emily by Eric Weber (USA) 88 mins

Rider Jack by This Lüscher (Switzerland) 90 mins

Secret by Selim Evci (Turkey) 102 mins

Seven Days by Xing Jian (China) 73 mins

Summer Solstice by Michal Rogalski (Poland – Germany) 95 mins

Taboo by Khosro Masoumi (Iran) 108 mins

The Invisible Artery by Pere Vilà Barcelo (Spain) 119 mins

The Midnight Orchestra by Jérôme Cohen Olivar (Morocco) 114 mins

The Petrov File by Georgi Balabanov (Bulgaria – Germany) 90 mins

The Soul of a Spy by Vladimir Bortko (Russia) 110 mins

The Visitor by Mehmet Erylimaz (Turkey) 127 mins


First Feature Competition

Beijing Carmen by Wang Fan (China) 95 mins

Closer by Mostafa Ahmadi (Iran) 90 mins

Crushed by Megan Riakos (Australia) 111 mins

Das Deckelbad by Kuno Bont (Switzerland) 97 mins

Dear Deer by Takeo Kikuchi (Japan) 107 mins

Fire Birds by Amir Wolf (Israel) 105 mins

Kagurame byYassuo Okuaki (Japan) 112 mins

Legacy by Nemanja Cipranic (Serbia – Montenegro) 90 mins

Live by Vlad Paunescu (Romania) 107 mins

Lost and found by Show Yanagisawa (Japan) 111 mins

Maresia by Marcos Guttmann (Brazil) 90 mins

Neboke by Norihito Iki (Japan) 115 mins

Our Everyday Life by Ines Tanovic (Bosnia-Hezegovine – Slovenia – Croatia)

Rainbow Without Colours by Tuyen Quang Nguyen (Vietnam) 93 mins

Rosa Chumbe by Jonatan Relayze Chiang (Peru) 75 mins

Orage by Fabrice Camoin (France) 80 mins

Stubborn Boy by Moritz Kramer (Germany) 82 mins

The Funeral by Qi Wang (China) 115 mins

The Plastic Cardboard Sonata by Enrico Falcone, Piero Persello (Italy) 80 mins

The Sum of Histories by Lukas Bossuyt (Belgium – Netherlands) 85 mins

The Thin Yellow Line by Celso Garcia (Mexique) 95 mins

Three Days in September by Darijan Pejovski (Macedonia – Kosovo) 90 mins

Under Heaven by Dalmira Tilepbergen (Khirgizistan) 88 mins

Vals by Anita Lakenberger (Austria) 120 mins


39TH MWFF JURY

DANY LAFERRIÈRE, President
Born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti in 1953, Dany Laferrière left his native country following the killing of his colleague and friend, journalist Gasner Raymond. His first novel, Comment faire l’amour avec un nègre sans se fatiguer was published in 1985 and became an overnight success, propelling him into the front ranks of the new generation of Quebec writers. The novel was later adapted into a sccreenplay by Laferrière and Richard Sadler, earning critical plaudits and several honours.He continued his novelistic output (Éroshima, L’Odeur du café, Le Cri des oiseaux fous…) even as he became a widely read and viewed journalist. He also penned several screenplays, made his directorial debut in 2004 with Comment conquérir l’amérique, and won the 2006 Governor-General’s Award for his youth album Je suis fou de Vava. Among the many honours his books have garnered are the Prix Médicis and Grand Prix du livre de Montréal in 2009, and the Grand Prix littéraire international Metropolis Bleu and the Prix des libraires in 2010. In 2013 he was named to the Académie française and in 2014 Officier de l'Ordre national du Québec.

TEA FALCO
Italian actress and photographer Tea Falco was born in Catania, Sicily in 1986. In 2011 she won one of the most prestigious Italian awards for contemporary art, the Basilio Cascella Award, and soon had her work exhibited, in Italy and abroad. but also in Greece and Los Angeles. She discovered her passion for acting in 2003, and trained at the Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Rome, then at various professional workshops. In 2004 she made her stage debut and her cinema debut the following year in Un angelo per amico by Adriano Chiaramida; from then on she has continued both her theatrical and cinematographic careers. Her first starring role, bringing her to international attention, was in Bernardo Bertolucci’s Me and You, shown in Cannes in 2012. In the same year she also appeared in the fourth episode of Young Montalbano, a popular Italian TV series. Today she lives and works in Rome as an actress and photographer.

VENTURA PONS
One of Spain’s most prominent filmmakers, Catalan director Ventura Pons has made over two dozen features which are regularly shown on screens around the world. He has been the subject of more than 30 international tributes and retrospectives: at London’s ICA , New York’s Lincoln Center and in the world's foremost cinematheques. Pons has received “lifetime achievement awards” in Chicago, Galway, Piestany, Lima, Torino and Montpellier and in Spain he has received the Catalan National Film Award, the Spain Fine Arts Gold Medal, the Catalan Sant Jordi Cross, the Gaudi Honour Award among many others. In 2012 the University of Colorado at Denver held an academic conference on his cinema about which Vervuert has published a book: Ventura Pons: The Unconventional Gaze of Catalan Cinema. He has published his memoirs Mine (and the others) (2011), and a world tour diary, 54 days and a bit more (2012). His most recent film, Virus of Fear, is showing in this year’s MWFF.

PETER RAINER
Peter Rainer is the film critic for the Christian Science Monitor, president of the National Society of Film Critics, and a regular reviewer for "Film Week" on National Public Radio. In 1998 he was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in Criticism. His most recent book is "Rainer on Film: Thirty Years of Film Writing in a Turbulent and Transformative Era." He has twice won the National Entertainment Journalism Award for Best Online Entertainment Critic. Prior to the Christian Science Monitor, Rainer served as film critic for New York magazine, the Los Angeles Times and the Los Angeles Herald Examiner. He has also written and co-produced two documentaries for the A&E Network, on Sidney Poitier and the Hustons. In 1995 he was a member of the main jury for the Venice Film Festival.

GERARDO SALCEDO
Gerardo Salcedo studied communication sciences at Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM). In 1983, he worked as a film professor at UNAM and joined the Dirección de Cinematografia staff. Between 1992 and 2006, he was a programmer and deputy director at Cineteca Nacional. In 2007, he co-founded the film distribution company MVFilms, as well as working as a programmer for the Acapulco and Chihuahua film festivals and sitting on the pre-selection jury for the Expresión en Corto festival in Guanajuato. In 2010, he became deputy director of the Guadalajara Film Festival.

LUIS URQUIZA
Mexican filmmaker Luis Urquiza graduated from UAM (Autonomous Metropolitan University) in communications and complemented his studies with cinema and journalism classes. Since 1987 he has worked as a producer and a director, first for television and then for the large screen. In 2001 he co-founded Astillero Films with Lourdes García. In 2006, he produced and directed a short film, Mother’s Love, followed, in 2014, by Perfect Obedience, his first fiction feature, winner of the Grand Prize of the Americas and Glauber Rocha prize for best Latin American films at the 38th Montreal World Film Festival last year. Urquiza has also produced, among others: Who is Mr. Lopez? (2006) by Luis Mandoki, Teo’s Journey (2008), by Walter Doehner, Hidalgo, the Untold Story (2009) and Morelos (2012) by Antonio Serrano.


JURY OF THE FIRST FEATURE PRIZE

PIERRE-HENRI DELEAU
Pierre-Henri Deleau began his career as an assistant director to Jacques Doniol-Valcroze and Pierre Kast and then as a director in educational television. He directed a short, Virginie ou la double rupture, in 1969. He is the co-founder of the FILMOBLIC production house which produced or co-produced films by Hugo Santiago, Jean-Louis Comolli, Jean-François Dion, Claude Miller, Edouardo de Gregorio and Jean-Pierre Lefebvre. In 1969, he co-founded the Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival and was its director for three decades. In 1996, he co-founded the Forum of European Cinema in Strasbourg, and in 1987 co-founded FIPA (Festival international des programmes audiovisuels) and directed the event in Cannes, Nice and Biarritz until 2009. That year he became member of the selection committee for first works at the European Film Academy. As director of the Cinéma and Littérature collection of Les Éditions Jean-Claude Lattès, he has published books on Michelangelo Antonioni, Groucho Marx, Andrezj Zulawski and Yilmäz Güney, among others.

DONALD RANVAUD
Anglo-Italian with a French name and a marked tendency toward the Brazilian, Donald Ranvaud taught at universities of Warwick and East Anglia, where he became chairman of the film department. He founded the independent film magazine Framework in 1975, which he edited until 1988 and freelanced for MFB, Sight and Sound, The Guardian, La Repubblica, Les Cahiers du Cinéma, American Film as well published books on Italian cinema. During this period he directed documentary items for Channel Four and RAI Uno, including portraits of Paul Schrader, Raul Ruiz, Cui Jian, Laurie Anderson and David Mamet as well as co-directed a feature, Visioni Private. In 1989 he helped start the European SCRIPTFund. Since then he embarked on production full time, with directors and in countries before they become fashionable, particularly China: 1989-1993 (especially Life on a String and including Farewell my Concubine); and Latin America, 1994 - today (Central do Brasil, Familia Rodante, Xango, Lavoura Arcaica, Babilonia 2000, Madame Sata, Cidade de Deus, nominated for four Oscars in 2004). Most recently he was executive producer on The Constant Gardener by Fernando Meirelles.

ANTOINE ZEIND
President of A-Z Films, over Antoine Zeind has worked in all facets of the motion picture industry, from the production and distribution of films to their exhibition. Along with an MBA from University of Quebec in Montreal, he holds a master’s degree in cinema from the University of Montreal. Over his career, he has held key posts with well-known organizations in the industry. From 1999 to 2001, he was the general manager of the “Grande Fête du Cinema Comique”. He also collaborated on screenings at the Montreal World Film Festival. As an exhibitor, he helped plan and coordinate the opening of the 18-plex Colossus in Laval that opened under the Famous Players banner in November of 2000. He also supervised operations of the IMAX theatre inside Montreal’s downtown Famous Players Paramount complex. With Christal Films, he held the post of director of booking and marketing. Zeind served as producer of the short film, Une blonde pour Anatole (1999), A-Z Films Productions, directed by Isabelle Raynauld and starring Andrée Lachapelle, which was broadcast on Radio-Canada.

www.ffm-montreal.org

Toronto International Film Festival announces lineup for inaugural Platform programme


TWELVE BOLD AND UNIQUE VOICES SHINE IN THE INAUGURAL PLATFORM LINEUP AT THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
The new juried programme champions artistically ambitious films by Fabienne Berthaud, Sue Brooks, Diastème, Eva Husson, Joaquim Lafosse, Gabriel Mascaro, He Ping, Pablo Trapero, David Verbeek, Ben Wheatley, Martin Zandvliet and Alan Zweig

The Toronto International Film Festival® revealed the inaugural lineup for Platform, the new juried programme that champions director’s cinema from around the world.

“We created this new programme as a way to sharpen our focus on artistically ambitious cinema in our 40th year and we are thrilled to be able to put the spotlight on these 12 brilliant filmmakers this September,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “They are major creative forces: the next generation of masters whose personal vision will captivate audiences, industry members and media from around the world.”

“Each of the filmmakers in the programme fearlessly transforms a wide range of compelling realities through their unique visual and narrative styles, and they do so with incredible command and precision,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. “From a stark coming-of-age story, a retro-futuristic science-fiction and a lyrical post-western to an abduction thriller, a raw documentary and hard-hitting and topical dramas, this lineup reflects the diversity of international directors’ cinema today.”

Platform films will screen from Thursday, September 10 to Thursday, September 17. Each film will have its first screening for public, press and industry at the Visa Screening Room at the Elgin Theatre.

An international jury composed of acclaimed filmmakers Jia Zhang-ke, Claire Denis and Agnieszka Holland will award the Toronto Platform Prize ($25,000 CAD) to the best film in the programme, which will be announced at the Awards Ceremony on September 20, 2015.

Bang Gang (A Modern Love Story) Eva Husson, France
World Premiere
Biarritz. Sixteen-year-old George, a beautiful high-school student, falls in love with Alex. To get his attention, she initiates a group game with Alex, Nikita, Laetitia and Gabriel during which they will discover, test, and push the limits of their sexuality. Through scandals, love and the breakdown of their value systems, each of them manages this intense period in radically different ways. Starring Daisy Broom, Fred Hotier, Lorenzo Lefebvre, Marilyn Lima, and Finnegan Oldfield.

The Clan (El Clan) Pablo Trapero, Argentina/Spain
North American Premiere
Within a typical family home in the traditional neighbourhood of San Isidro, a sinister clan makes its living off kidnapping and murder. Arquímedes, the patriarch, heads and plans the operations. Alejandro, his eldest son, is a star rugby player who gives into his father’s will and identifies possible candidates for kidnapping. To a greater or lesser extent, the members of the family are accomplices in this dreadful venture as they live off the benefits yielded by the large ransoms paid by the families of their victims. Based on the true story of the Puccio family, this film full of suspense and intrigue takes place in the context of the final years of the Argentine military dictatorship and incipient return to democracy. Starring Guillermo Francella and Peter Lanzani.

French Blood (Un Français) Diastème, France
International Premiere
This is the story of a Frenchman, born in 1965 on the outskirts of Paris. The story of a skinhead, who hates Arabs, Jews, blacks, communists and gays. An anger that will take 30 years to die out. A bastard, who will take 30 years to become someone else. And he will never forgive himself for it. Starring Alban Lenoir, Paul Hamy, Samuel Jouy and Patrick Pineau.

Full Contact David Verbeek, Netherlands/Croatia
World Premiere
A contemporary tale of a man who accidentally bombed a school through a remotely operated drone plane. Modern warfare keeps Ivan safe and disconnected from his prey. But after this incident, this disconnectedness starts to apply to everything in his life. He is unable to process his overwhelming feelings of guilt, but needs to open up to his new love Cindy. Only by facing his victims can he rediscover his humanity and find a new purpose in life. Starring Grégoire Colin, Lizzie Brocheré and Slimane Dazi.

High-Rise Ben Wheatley, United Kingdom
World Premiere
1975. Two miles west of London, Dr. Laing moves into his new apartment seeking soulless anonymity, only to find that the building’s residents have no intention of leaving him alone. Resigned to the complex social dynamics unfolding around him, Laing bites the bullet and becomes neighbourly. As he struggles to establish his position, Laing’s good manners and sanity disintegrate along with the building. The lights go out and the elevators fail but the party goes on. People are the problem. Booze is the currency. Sex is the panacea. Starring Tom Hiddleston, Jeremy Irons, Sienna Miller, Luke Evans and Elisabeth Moss.

HURT Alan Zweig, Canada
World Premiere
Steve Fonyo is a one-legged cancer survivor who completed a cross-Canada run raising $13 million in 1985. The next 30 years were straight downhill: petty theft, larceny and drug addiction. The run has nothing to do with the life of this one-time hero, and everything to do with it. Starring Steve Fonyo.

Land of Mine (Under Sandet / Unter dem Sand) Martin Zandvliet, Denmark/Germany
World Premiere
A story never told before. WWII has ended. A group of German POWs captured by the Danish army, boys rather than men, are forced into a new kind of service under the command of a brusque Danish Sergeant. Risking life and limbs, the boys discover that the war is far from over. Starring Roland Møller, Louis Hofmann, Joel Basman, Emil Buschow, Oskar Buschow and Mikkel Boe Følsgaard.

Looking for Grace Sue Brooks, Australia
North American Premiere
Grace, 16, runs away from home. Her parents, Dan and Denise, head off on the road across the Western Australian wheat belt with a retired detective, Norris, to try and get her back. But life unravels faster than they can put it back together. Grace, Dan and Denise learn that life is confusing and arbitrary, but wonderful. Starring Richard Roxburgh, Radha Mitchell, Odessa Young and Terry Norris.

Neon Bull (Boi Neon) Gabriel Mascaro, Brazil/Uruguay/Netherlands
North American Premiere
Iremar and his makeshift family travel through Northeast Brazil taking care of bulls at the Vaquejadas, a Brazilian rodeo. But the region’s booming clothing industry has stirred new ambitions and filled Iremar’s mind with dreams of pattern-cutting and exquisite fabrics. Starring Juliano Cazarré, Aline Santana, Carlos Pessoa and Maeve Jinkings.

The Promised Land (Hui Dao Bei Ai De Mei Yi Tian) He Ping, China
World Premiere
Ai Ling, growing up in a small town, loses her fiancé Jiang He in Beijing. After returning to her hometown with a broken heart, she has to face all the complications life and love have in store for her. Starring Jiajia Wang, Yi Zhang, and Zhiwen Wang.

Sky Fabienne Berthaud, France/Germany
World Premiere
Romy is on holiday in the USA with her French husband, but the journey quickly turns into a settling of old scores for this worn out couple. After a huge argument, Romy decides to break free. She cuts her ties to a stable and secure life that has become alienating and escapes to the unknown. Drifting through a noisy Las Vegas to the wondrous high desert, she goes on with her solitary journey, abandoning herself to her sole intuitions and making it up as she goes. Liberated, she will cross paths with a charismatic and solitary man, with whom she’ll share an inconceivable but pure love. Starring Diane Kruger, Norman Reedus, Gilles Lellouche, Lena Dunham and Q'orianka Kilcher.

The White Knights (Les Chevaliers Blancs) Joachim Lafosse, France/Belgium
World Premiere
Critically acclaimed Joachim Lafosse brings to the screen the Zoe’s Ark controversy which made headlines in 2007: a story about the limits of the right of interference. Jacques Arnault, head of Sud Secours NGO, is planning a high impact operation: he and his team are going to exfiltrate 300 orphans, victims of Chadian civil war and bring them to French adoption applicants. Françoise Dubois, a journalist, is invited to come along with them and handle the media coverage for this operation. Completely immersed in the brutal reality of a country at war, the NGO members start losing their convictions and are faced with the limits of humanitarian intervention. Starring Vincent Lindon, Valérie Donzelli, Reda Kateb, Louise Bourgoin and Rougalta Bintou Saleh.

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

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

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.



Toronto International Film Festival announces lineup for inaugural Primetime programme


TELEVISION GETS THE SILVER SCREEN TREATMENT IN TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL’S NEW PRIMETIME PROGRAMME
International lineup features shows from the minds of Baltasar Kormákur, Jason Reitman, Morgan Neville, Fabrice Gobert, Lucía Puenzo and Tim Kring

Six high-quality television programs from around the globe comprise the inaugural lineup for Primetime, a new programme launching at the 40th Toronto International Film Festival®. The section presents the best in international television on the big screen, channeling the powerful, small-screen serial storytelling coming from broadcasters, streaming services and independent filmmakers. The lineup features programs from France, Iceland, Argentina and the United States, created by directors Baltasar Kormákur, Jason Reitman, Morgan Neville, Fabrice Gobert, Lucía Puenzo and Nicolás Puenzo, and creator/executive producer Tim Kring.

“The growing convergence and artistic equality between television and cinema has ushered in a new era of high-quality, small-screen programming,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “Primetime aims to spotlight the cross-pollination of these two moving image cultures, showcasing the bold and impressive work that’s being produced on an international scale.”

“Television has entered an artistic renaissance; we’re seeing, among other things, many filmmakers experimenting with that medium to broaden their forms of storytelling,” said Festival Programmer Michael Lerman. “The strongest storytellers are masters of change, and TV offers a narrative flexibility, a platform and a luxury for filmmakers to explore ways of telling longer stories that delve deeper into their characters.”

The programme includes Q&A sessions with show creators following the screenings. The Festival’s Industry Conference will also incorporate leading creative producers and thinkers from the world of long-form and episodic storytelling.

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

Casual created by Zander Lehmann and directed by Jason Reitman, USA
World Premiere
Festival favourite Jason Reitman (Juno, Up in the Air) directs this wonderfully endearing and quirky comedy from Hulu and Lionsgate that follows the story of young internet entrepreneur, Alex Cole, and his recently divorced therapist sister, Valerie. The creator of a popular dating website, Alex pledges to mentor Valerie as she attempts to embrace the craziness of single life. Meanwhile, he’s not above using his newfound success to supply himself with an endless string of beautiful but emotionally shallow women, none of whom will ever make him happy. Living under the same roof for the first time in years, brother and sister soon discover that while life can be both heartbreaking and hilarious, it’s anything but casual. Starring Tommy Dewey, Michaela Watkins and Tara Lynne Barr. The Festival presents the series premiere of Casual, episodes 1 and 2.

CROMO created by Lucía Puenzo and Nicolás Puenzo, Argentina
World Premiere
Directors Lucía Puenzo (XXY, Wakolda), Pablo Fendrik (Blood Appears, El Ardor) and Nicolás Puenzo team up for this timely eco-thriller, based on the real stories of a team of scientists that set out to expose environmental crimes in the dangerous and exotic wetlands of northern Argentina. Starring Germán Palacios, Guillermo Pfening, Emilia Attias, Alberto Ajaka and Malena Sanchez. The Festival presents the series premiere of CROMO, episodes 1, 2 and 8.

Heroes Reborn created by Tim Kring, USA
World Premiere
From creator/executive producer Tim Kring, who imagined NBC’s original critically-acclaimed 2006 Heroes series, comes Heroes Reborn, an epic 13-episode event series that chronicles the lives of ordinary people who discover they possess extraordinary abilities. The series stars Jack Coleman, Zachary Levi, Robbie Kay, Kiki Sukezane, Ryan Guzman, Gatlin Green, Henry Zebrowski, Judith Shekoni, Danika Yarosh and Rya Kihlstedt. The Festival presents the series premiere of Heroes Reborn, episode 1: “Brave New World” and episode 2: “Odessa”.

Keith Richards: Under the Influence directed by Morgan Neville, USA
World Premiere
From Academy Award-winning director Morgan Neville (Twenty Feet from Stardom), this beautifully documented portrait of Keith Richards takes audiences on the road to discover the genesis of his sound as a songwriter, guitarist and performer. This Netflix Original is rich with music and archival materials, drawing upon hours of new, intimate and reflective conversations with Keith. It charts the journey of his sound and influences, back to the music that inspired him then and now — electric blues, country honky-tonk, southern soul, and more — as he creates his first solo album in 23 years.

The Returned (Les Revenants) created by Fabrice Gobert, France
International Premiere
The recently deceased return to (some kind of) life in a small mountain village, in this International Emmy-winning supernatural drama series based on Robin Campillo’s 2004 film Les Revenants, from creator Fabrice Gobert (Simon Werner a disparu...). Starring Anne Consigny, Clotilde Hesme, Céline Sallette, Fédéric Pierrot, Laurent Lucas, Grégory Gadebois, Guillaume Gouix, Pierre Perrier, Ana Girardot, Yara Pilartz, Jenna Thiam, Swann Nambotin and Jean-François Sivadier. The Festival presents the season 2 premiere of The Returned, episodes 1 and 2.

Trapped (Ófærð) created by Baltasar Kormákur, Iceland
World Premiere
In this noir-ish thriller series from director Baltasar Kormákur (Everest, The Deep, 101 Reykjavik), an unidentified torso is found in a small town in Iceland. When a blizzard makes the road out of town impassable, order disintegrates into chaos as the residents realize they are all possible murder suspects or all possibly in danger. A ruthless and troubled cop risks his life, his family and the town’s safety, in order to solve this mystery in the hope of recovering his tarnished reputation. Starring Ólafur Darri Ólafsson, Ilmur Kristjánsdottir, Ingvar Sigurðsson, Nina Dögg Filipusdottir and Bjarne Henriksen. The Festival presents the series premiere of Trapped, episode 1.

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

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.


39th Festival des films du monde / Montreal World Film Festival announces World Greats selection


THE WORLD GREATS SECTION OF THE MWFF PRESENTS NEW FILMS BY NOTED DIRECTORS

Twenty-four features from a score of countries are being shown in the World Greats (out of competition) section of the MWFF. “ Dedicated to experienced filmmakers, this selection offers the latest works by some of the best known directors from around the world, ” said Serge Losique.

Notable among the cineastes included are Majid Majidi whose Muhammad will be getting its world premiere, Jean-Jacques Annaud, who will be showing the North-American premiere of his latest film, Wolf Totem, Cristina Commencini (Latin Lover), Ventura Pons (The Virus of Fear), Ermanno Olmi (Greenery Will Bloom Again), Vincent Bal (Belgian Rhapsody), Ken Kwapis (A Walk in the Woods, with Robert Redford) and Sergio Castellitto (You Can`t Save Yourself Alone), among others.

MWFF willl take place from August 27th to September 7th.


A WALK IN THE WOODS by Ken Kwapis. 2015 / Colour / 98 min USA
After spending two decades in England, Bill Bryson returns to the US, where he decides the best way to connect with his homeland is to hike the Appalachian Trail with one of his oldest friends.

AN ITALIAN NAME (IL NOME DEL FIGLIO) by Francesca Archibugi. 2015 / Colour / 94 min, Italy
Paolo and Simona are expecting. At a dinner with guests one question will lead to an argument that will disturb the entire evening: the name of Paolo and Simonaís son.

BEFORE SPRING (ABL AL RABIE) by Ahmed Atef. 2015 / Colour / 92 min, Egypt
A young blogger who lost both eyes during the Egyptian Revolution recounts in flashback the events of the Spring that eventually came to his country.

BELGIAN RHAPSODY (LA BRABANÇONNE) by Vincent Bal. 2014 / Colour / 100 min, Belgium – Luxembourg
Two Belgian brass bands, the Flemish 'Sint Cecilia' and the Walloon 'En Avant', have both been selected for the great European final. It's a competition with no holds barred.

BLOOD BEAD (AKAI TAMA) by Banmei Takahashi. 2015 / Colour / 108 min, Japan
Tokita would rather be making movies than teaching about them in film school. But it pays the bills and thereís always Yui, the pretty school secretary. Then Ritsuko enters his life...

CHRIEG by Simon Jacquemet. 2014 / Colour / 106 min, Switzerland
Matteo, a rebellious 15-year old is sent to a remote farm for rehabilitation. But the farm is run by the inmates. Matteo must quickly learn to run with the pack.

CORPSE COLLECTOR (SUBIRACH NA TRUPOVE) by Dimitar Dimitrov. 2015 / Colour / 116 min, Bulgaria
Itzo, who drives a morgue wagon, is loved by young, innocent Mimmy, but prefers tough, experienced Katya who mistreats him. Itzo's assistant, Buddy, tells him he's got things all wrong.

EISENSTEIN IN GUANAJUATO by Peter Greenaway. 2015 / Colour / 105 min, Netherlands - Mexico - Finland - Belgium
In 1931, at the height of his artistic powers, Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein travels to Mexico to shoot a new film to be titled Que Viva Mexico!

GITEL by Robert Mullan. 2014 / Colour / 115 min, United Kingdom - Lithuania
September, 5 1969, and Gitel Bargman is about to attend a party to celebrate her 33rd birthday. Racked by guilt simply for being alive, for her it is hardly cause for celebration.

GREENERY WILL BLOOM AGAIN (TORNERANNO I PRATI) by Ermanno Olmi. 2014 / Colour / 95 min, Italy
Dedicated to his father who told him stories of the Great War, Ermanno Olmiís film is a touching slice of life in the First World War trenches on the Italian front.

IT’S REALLY KIND OF YOU by So Jae-ick. 2015 / Colour / 92 min, South Korea
It is late night and raining hard when a strange woman clad only in underwear rushes up to a man who is fishing at the lake, asking for help. Help to do what ?

LATIN LOVER by Cristina Comencini. 2014 / Colour / 104 min, Italy
On the 10th anniversary of the death of Saverio Crispo, Italy's most famous actor, his 5 daughters, born from different mothers and in different countries, are brought together and get to know each other.

MUHAMMAD (Opening Film) by Majid Majidi. 2015 / Colour / 171 min, Iran
The film does not depict Muhammad himself but his world, the pagan age with all its tyranny and oppression as seen through the eyes of young Muhammad from birth to the age of 13.

MY SISTER, THE PIG LADY (DWAEJI GATEUN YEOJA) by Jan Moon-il. 2015 / Colour / 104 min, South Korea
In a small seaside village where all the young men left for the city, three young women scheme to catch the eye of the only bachelor left in town.

NECKAN by Gonzalo Tapia. 2015 / Colour / 92 min, Spain
In 1956, a young Spaniard arrives in Morocco, soon to be independent, to find out what happened years ago to his family. If he discovers the truth, will it be worth the effort ?

SILVER SKIES by Rosemary Rodriguez. 2015 / Colour / 96 min, USA
A group of eccentric retirees' lives are turned upside down when their beloved apartment complex is suddenly sold out from under them. But you can never be too old for new beginnings.

SIMON by Éric Martin, Emmanuel Causse. 2015 / Colour / 96 min, France
Simon, a seventeen-year-old boy is diagnosed with cancer -- Ewingís sarcoma. But he’s not about to bow out without leaving his mark on the world.

SISKA DELUXE by Ian Cvitkovic. 2015 / Colour / 108 min, Slovenia - Czech Republic - Macedonia
Longtime friends and losers, Mile, Fedr and Zekir need to rescue their calamitous professional and personal lives. An innovative pizzeria comes to the rescue.

THE NEXT GENERATION THE NEXT GENERATION PATLABOR - TOKYO WAR Mamoru Oshii. 2015 / Colour / 93 min Japon / Japan
 In a world where giant robots are built and used for labour, a special police force of robots is created to handle crimes relating to these machines.

THE SECRET OF ITALIA (IL SEGRETO DI ITALIA) by Antonello Belluco. 2014 / Colour / 98 min, Italy
Italy, May 1945. The war is over. But for a 15-year-old girl called Italia in a small town in the region of Venice, the tragedy has just begun.

VIRUS OF FEAR (EL VIRUS DE LA POR) by Ventura Pons. 2015 / Colour / 76 min, Spain
A small boy is being taught to swim at a Barcelona municipal pool. He he terrified of the water and the swimming instructor tries to calm him with a kiss. He is immediately accused of abuse.

WINTER by Heidi Greensmith. 2015 / Colour / 95 min, United Kingdom
Devastated by the death of his beloved wife, Woods, a successful artist can no longer connect with his two sons. Motherless, will they have to take of him as well ?

WOLF TOTEM by Jean-Jacques Annaud. 2015 / Colour / 98 min, France – China
The story of young Beijing intellectual's fascination with the wolves he encounters when he's sent to teach Mandarin to minority nomadic herders in the majestic, scenic grasslands of Inner Mongolia.

YOU CAN’T SAVE YOURSELF ALONE (NESSUNO SI SALVA DA SOLO) Sergio Castellitto. 2015 / Colour / 103 min, Italy
When a separated couple meet to discuss the terms of their childrenís holidays, the meal immediately becomes a wide reflection on their past ten years.



39th Festival des films du monde / Montreal World Film Festival announces Closing Film


BELGIAN RHAPSODY BY VINCENT BAL WILL CLOSE THE 39TH MWFF

Belgian Rhapsody the MWFF closing film will be North-American Premiered (Out of Competition) it was announced. Produced by Peter Bouckaert for Eyeworks (Ben XThe VerdictMarina presented and awarded at the MWFF) this comedy stars Amaryllis Ouitterlinden, Arthur Dupont, Jos Verbist, Marc Weiss, Koen Van Impe, Philippe Résimont.

Two Belgian brass bands, the Flemish “Sint Cecilia” and the Walloon “En Avant”, have both been selected for the great European final. The Walloons are blown into the final by Hugues, their exceptionally talented and handsome trumpet player. When Sint Cecilia’s soloist drops dead on stage, Elke, daughter of the band’s conductor Joseph, has the solution: let’s buy that Walloon super talent out. BELGIAN RHAPSODY is a musical comedy about Belgium where anything goes when the two dominant communities compete: double-crossing, schmaltzy songs and even love.

Born in Ghent, Belgium in 1971, Vincent Bal began his career at the age of six appearing in musicals, films and television series. However, he quickly realized that he was far more comfortable behind the camera and enrolled at the LUCA School of Art in Brussels, after which he directed a number of film shorts and TV commercials, notably The Bloody Olive (1996), adapted from a graphic novel by Lewis Trondheim. His best known feature, THE ZIGZAG KID (2012), based on David Grossman’s novel, won the European Film Academy’s Young Audience Award. Together with Colette Bothof, he wrote and directed 26 episodes of the animated series Kika & Bob.

Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 International Shorts programme, additional films


TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL’S SHORT CUTS PROGRAMME OFFERS A VARIETY OF WORLD-CLASS SHORT FILMS

The Toronto International Film Festival® is pleased to announce the lineup for the Short Cuts programme. Thirty-eight international shorts join the previously announced Canadian shorts, which will screen in 11 curated programmes. The compelling lineup encompasses works from filmmakers representing an impressive 35 countries. From provocative narratives to compelling animation, from insightful dramas to profoundly moving documentaries, the works in Short Cuts showcase unique, yet universal, stories about the human condition, in short form.

Short Cuts is programmed by: Shane Smith, Director of Special Projects, TIFF; as well as Jason Anderson, Danis Goulet and Kathleen McInnis, Short Cuts Programmers.

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

Films screening in Short Cuts include:

(Otto) Joris Oprins, Marieke Blaauw and Job Roggeveen, Netherlands, 10’ (World Premiere)
As one couple try, and fail again, for the baby they’ve dreamed of, a little girl accidentally leaves her imaginary baby brother, Otto, behind at a restaurant. Suddenly, the definition of ‘baby’ takes on a new and completely unexpected dimension. Will Otto find a way back home? From the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival filmmakers who brought us the Oscar-nominated animation A Single Life.

7 sheep Wiktoria Szymanska, Poland/United Kingdom/Denmark/Mexico, 21’ (World Premiere)
A lonely little girl tries to create a new world for herself and an equally lonely man. In a visually stunning dreamscape, she finds that freedom and home are synonymous — and that they come at a steep cost.

Barbados Misha Manson-Smith, USA, 7’ (World Premiere)
David is a middle-class guy with middle-class problems, despite his lovely home and beautiful middle-class wife. His son Gary is the same, just 30 years younger. Both are looking for a way out from suburbia and all its trappings. One Sunday lunchtime, however, when the police come knocking, David’s world suddenly becomes even more claustrophobic. Starring Michael Sheen, Radha Mitchell and Ty Simpkins.

Beneath the Spaceship (Under Rymdskeppet) Caroline Ingvarsson, Sweden, 15’ (World Premiere)
A young girl and her older neighbour share an unusual friendship. Together they are inseparable until the outside world peeks in.

Bird Hearts Halfdan Olav Ullmann Tøndel, Norway, 25’ (North American Premiere)
Benjamin and Maya share a life in Oslo. During a late-night dinner party, Maya tells a story about a sexual experience she had in Brazil. As a consequence, Benjamin’s insecurities begin to surface. Bird Hearts is a film about the power of the stories lovers tell. Starring Stine Sørensen, André Sørum and Trine Wiggen.

Blue Spring Andreea Cristina Bortun, Romania, 15’ (World Premiere)
A woman confronts the uselessness of words when confronted by the inevitable departure of her much younger lover.

The Boyfriend Game Alice Englert, Australia, 7’ (World Premiere)
Twelve-year-old friends Tomika and Edith set out in the bush to play their creation, The Boyfriend Game, only to struggle when the lines between real and pretend become blurred.

Bunny Megha Ramaswamy, India, 19’ (North American Premiere)
Bunny is an elegiac look at how fantastical childhood is, and evocative of the heartbreak with which we leave it behind. Wreathed in surrealist imagery, the story is about a little girl and her pet toy Bunny. Starring Syesha Adnani and Faizan Mohammad.

The Call Zamo Mkhwanazi, South Africa, 11’ (Canadian Premiere)
This arresting urban drama from Johannesburg’s Zamo Mkhwanazi focuses on a key moment in the relationship between a taxi driver and a prostitute. When Sibongiseni finds out that Purity is pregnant, he begins to question his own place in the world. Starring Fana Mokoena, MoMo Matsunyane, Ronnie Nyakale and Abena Ayivor.

Concerning the Bodyguard Kasra Farahani, USA, 10’ (World Premiere)
An anonymous henchman fulfils his role in a rigid hierarchy of power and control in this adaptation of a razor-sharp satire written by Donald Barthelme; and recited with great relish by Salman Rushdie.

Deszcz (Rain) Malina Maria Mackiewicz, Australia, 5’ (World Premiere)
In the summer of 1983 in Kraków, Poland, prisoners sentenced to death are not informed of the date of their execution. As Jedzrej waits for his lover Magda in the visitation hall of the Montelupich Political Detainment Centre, a sun shower pours down on Kraków. Each visit could be their last. Starring Lech Mackiewicz and Victoria Haralabidou.

Dragstrip Pacho Velez and Daniel Claridge, USA, 4’ (World Premiere)
At the Lebanon Valley Dragstrip in New York state, spectators, drivers and mechanics wait for their races.

Dream the Other (Soñar el otro) Abril Schmucler Iñiguez, Mexico, 16’ (International Premiere)
Diego is a lonely man with a humdrum life in Mexico City. In his sleep, he dreams of the (far more invigorating) life of a man named Alejandro Valle. As his friend Fabian looks on in disbelief, Diego’s shifting realities begin to take on new forms and new meaning.

El Adiós Clara Roquet, Spain 15’ (Canadian Premiere)
Rosana, a Bolivian maid, has worked for Angela, the elder matriarch of the Vidal family for the last 10 years. On the day of the funeral of her beloved Angela, Rosana is not allowed to grieve with the rest of the family. On the contrary: she is forced to work. El Adiós is an intimate story about how emotional bonds supersede social conventions, racial labels or family regimes.

End of Puberty (Kamaszkor vége) Fanni Szilágyi, Hungary, 13’ (International Premiere)
On a beautiful summer day, teenage twins meet a boy — he acquaints them with matters of sex, anger and jealousy. This is the end of puberty.

Exit/Entrance or Trasumanar Federica Foglia, Italy/Canada, 7’ (World Premiere)
A flow of words and images portrays an artist’s journey through a variety of Italian landscapes and interiors, evoking an eminently modern strain of melancholy: the feeling of belonging to two places and being fully at home in neither. Starring Antonio De Luca.

The Fantastic Love of Beeboy & Flowergirl Clemens Roth, Germany, 10’ (North American Premiere)
Peter is being followed by killer bees; Elsa collects exotic flowers from all over the world. To be together, they both have to overcome their fantasies. But what if love itself is nothing but fantasy? Starring Elisa Schlott and Florian Prokop.

A Few Seconds Nora El Hourch, France, 16’ (North American Premiere)
Five girls live at a Paris home for wayward teens, each of them branded by a deeply troubling past. Forming an ad hoc community-within-a-community, the girls struggle to identify themselves no longer as victims but as something new and hopeful. Starring Marie Tirmont, Charlotte Bartocci, Camille Lellouche, Maly Diallo and Charlotte-Victoire Legrain.

Following Diana (Sendiri Diana Sendiri) Kamila Andini, Indonesia, 40’ (International Premiere)
Diana, a 30-year-old housewife, lives with her husband and son at home, across the street from a building construction site. She spends every day with her only child until her husband comes from work in the evening. One night, Diana's husband presents her with a chart that reveals his shocking plan to share their little family with another woman. Starring Raihaanun, Tanta Ginting and Panji Rafenda Putra.

Hide & Seek Kimie Tanaka, France/Japan/Singapore, 22’ (International Premiere)
Shoichi, a Japanese male nurse living in the city, returns home to the countryside after his mother’s sudden death to sort out the situation of his younger brother Kotaro, who’s been a shut-in for over a decade. Shoichi seeks help from social services, only to be disappointed with their bureaucratic treatment. Frustrated, Shoichi makes a radical decision. Starring Masaki Miura, Kuniaki Nakamura and Sachiko Matsuura.

Latchkey Kids (Yaldey Mafteah) Elad Goldman, Israel, 22’ (North American Premiere)
Gur and his sister Daniel have a remarkably close relationship after years of caring for each other in their empty house. Although Daniel is looking outside for a chance to grow up and fall in love, Gur feels safer at home and refuses to let their bond come undone. Starring Yoav Rottman, Gaia Shalita Katz, Hillel Cappon and Tamara Friedland.

The Magnetic Nature (El ser magnético) Mateo Bendesky, Argentina, 17’ (North American Premiere)
Fifty-five-year-old Aldo and his older brother Pablo live together and take part in a religious practice invented by their father, whose congregation meets mainly online. But for Aldo, the allure of the world outside the garden gates is growing much stronger than “philosophical magnetism.” Starring Claudio Rangnau, Claudio Kustin and Iván Moschner.

Maman(s) Maïmouna Doucouré, France, 21’ (North American Premiere)
The family of eight-year-old Aida is thrown into chaos when her father returns from Senegal with young Rama, whom he introduces as his second wife. Aida may not exactly understand the details, but she understands that her mother is in deep distress, and that there
seems to be but one way to make things better again. Starring Sokhna Diallo and Maïmouna Gueye.

New Eyes Hiwot Admasu Getaneh, France/United Kingdom 12’ (North American Premiere)
A girl who is in the transition of puberty, Selam, encounters something that arouses her sexually for the first time. She becomes restless as the day goes by in her oblivious semi-urban environment.

Nulla Nulla Dylan River, Australia, 6’ (North American Premiere)
Fresh out of the academy, White Cop experiences his first taste of aboriginal community life, as Black Cop puts him to the test. Starring Wayne Blair, Khan Chittenden, Pamela Nangala Sampson and Audrey Napanangka Martin.

One Last Night (Laila Acharon) Kerem Blumberg, Israel, 22’ (International Premiere)
It’s the last night Noa and Orr have together in Tel Aviv, before Orr leaves for Berlin. Outside a punk gig, when the police arrive and
Orr jumps in to help a friend, both she and Noa get arrested. Now Noa will have to make a final decision about their relationship at the police station. Starring Michal Korman and Agam Schuster.

Oslo's Rose The Sporadic Film Collective, Norway, 7’ (International Premiere)
For more than two years, Nader has been head over heels in love with Janne but unable to let her know, making for an untenable situation for both his work and creativity. At last, one night at the bar, it appears Nader may be able to finally speak and free himself from the writer’s block that has plagued him.

Paradise (Het Paradijs) Laura Vandewynckel, Belgium, 6’ (Canadian Premiere)
Paradise is the story of people heading for a better place on either side of the ocean. Although at times their paths do cross, they never really seem to meet. Starring Thomas Bellinck, Nico Sturm, Liesje De Backer, Jerom Sturm and Rocky Sturm.

Peacock (Furiant) Ondrej Hudecek, Czech Republic, 26’ (International Premiere)
Set in a 19th-century Bohemian village, this twisted queer romance tells a taboo true story about revered Czech writer Ladislav Stroupežnický. Starring Julius Feldmeier and Cyril Dobry.

People Are Becoming Clouds Marc Katz, USA, 15’ (World Premiere)
We follow John and Eleanor, a married couple who are faced with a problem: Eleanor keeps turning into a cloud. The couple visits Weather and Relationship Specialist Dr. Corduroy, hoping to resolve unusual situation. He tries to counsel them through the difficulties in their relationship and also get to the bottom of why exactly people are becoming clouds. Starring Libby Woodbridge, David Ross and Sean Cullen.

Peripheria David Coquard-Dassault, France, 12’ (World Premiere)
A journey into the heart of a large and abandoned council estate, Peripheria portrays an urban environment becoming wild: a modern Pompeii where the wind blows and dogs roam.

Rate Me Fyzal Boulifa, United Kingdom, 17’ (North American Premiere)
A portait of a teenage escort known only as Coco.

The Return of Erkin Maria Guskova, Russia, 29’ (North American Premiere)
Erkin gets out of prison and wants to return to his former life, but everything has changed and he does not know if he can live as a free man. Starring Kahramonjon Mamasaliyev.

Semele Myrsini Aristidou, Cyprus/Greece/USA, 13’ (World Premiere)
Semele will do anything to spend some time with her long absent father. A school note becomes just the excuse for her to visit him at his workplace, where her presence highlights their fragile relationship.

The Signalman (O Sinaleiro) Daniel Augusto, Brazil, 15’ (World Premiere)
A railroad signalman is haunted by a series of otherworldly events in this adaptation of a Charles Dickens short story. Are they truly ghostly manifestations, or the signalman’s psychological response to his isolation and repetitive work?

The Society (Al mujtamaa) Osama Rasheed, Iraq/Germany 13’ (World Premiere)
Lovers Muhamad and Ahmed live in a society that not only rejects homosexuality but also actively and insistently pressures its young men into marriage and fatherhood. Starring Muhamad Atshan, Ahmad Moneka and Fouad, Yaser.

A Tale of Love, Madness and Death (Un Cuento de Amor, Locura y Muerte) Mijael Bustos Gutiérrez, Chile, 22’ (North American Premiere)
“My uncle is schizophrenic and my grandmother suffers from a terminal illness. My grandfather, who is unable to take care of them both, must decide between his wife and his son.” So begins the remarkable documentary from Mijael Bustos about his family, caught between love and duty.

THAT DOG Nick Thorburn, USA, 15’ (World Premiere)
A dark comedy of errors unfolds as two interloping idiots inadvertently wreak havoc on the lives of others. Starring Michael Cera, Tim Heidecker and Andrea Riseborough.

Tuesday (SALI) Ziya Demirel, Turkey/France, 12’ (North American Premiere)
An ordinary day for a teenage girl in Istanbul and her encounters with three different men as she goes to school, plays basketball and takes a bus home. Starring Melis Balaban, Zeki Ocak, Yonca Hiç and Can Karaçayli.

Violet Maurice Joyce, Ireland, 8’ (North American Premiere)
There are many natural enemies for a self-loathing youth. But for Violet O’Reilly, the worst of them all was an unforgiving rectangle that hung on the wall. Violet is the cautionary tale of a young girl who despises her reflection. Tired of the abuse, Violet’s reflection decides she’s not going to take it anymore.

Waves '98 Ely Dagher, Lebanon/Qatar, 15’ (North American Premiere)
In the crumbling tower blocks of post-war Beirut, Omar is restless and isolated, until a luminescent light draws him across the segregated city to a utopian world of enchantment — and he finds himself drifting further away from home.

Wellington Jr. Cécile Paysant, France, 12’ (World Premiere)
A tentative young hunter sets out into the wilderness under the tutelage of his seasoned father. But the rite of passage leads to increasingly surreal and grisly developments in this stop-motion animated marvel. Starring Aurélien Gabrielli and Rémy Lacquittant.

Canadian shorts previously announced include Ashley McKenzie’s 4 Quarters, Marie-Ève Juste’s A New Year, Sol Friedman’s Bacon & God's Wrath, Hector Herrera’s The Ballad of Immortal Joe, Howie Shia’s BAM, Sherren Lee’s Benjamin, Ryan J. Noth’s Beyond The Horizon, Grayson Moore and Aidan Shipley’s Boxing, Connor Jessup’s Boy, Kent Monkman’s Casualties of Modernity, Trevor Mack and Matthew Taylor Blais’ Clouds of Autumn, Cristina Martins’ Dogs Don't Breed Cats, Phillip Barker’s Dredger, Jean-François Leblanc’s The Guy From Work, Don McKellar’s It's Not You, Kevin Papatie’s KOKOM, Joël Vaudreuil’s The Magnificent Life Underwater, Barry Avrich’s The Man Who Shot Hollywood, Amanda Strong and Bracken Hanuse Corlett’s Mia', Caroline Monnet’s Mobilize, Mark Slutsky’s Never Happened, Kathleen Hepburn’s Never Steady, Never Still, Halima Elkhatabi’s NINA, Steven McCarthy’s o negative, Patrice Laliberté’s Overpass, Vivieno Caldinelli’s Portal to Hell!!!, David Bryant and Karl Lemieux’s Quiet Zone, Luiza Cocora’s Remaining Lives, Katherine Monk’s Rock the Box, Zack Russell’s She Stoops To Conquer, Theodore Ushev’s The Sleepwalker, Olivia Boudreau’s The Swimming Lesson, Bahar Noorizadeh Wolkaan, and Chelsea McMullan and Douglas Nayler’s World Famous Gopher Hole Museum.



FESTIVAL TOPS UP ITS GALAS AND SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS WITH NEW FILMS FROM CATHERINE HARDWICKE, ROB REINER, PAN NALIN, GABY DELLAL, DAVID GORDON GREEN AND JAMES VANDERBILT
Paco Cabezas’s Mr. Right named as the Closing Night Film

The Toronto International Film Festival® adds 5 Galas and 19 Special Presentations to its highly anticipated international lineup including the Closing Night Film, Paco Cabezas’s Mr. Right.

Toronto audiences will be among the first to screen films by directors Rob Reiner, Catherine Hardwicke, Pan Nalin, Lorene Scafaria, David Gordon Green, Matthew Cullen, Gaby Dellal, James Vanderbilt and Marc Abraham, and the latest onscreen appearances from Susan Sarandon, Gary Oldman, Drew Barrymore, Tom Hiddleston, Naomi Watts, J.K. Simmons, Robert Redford and Cate Blanchett.

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

GALAS

Disorder (Maryland) Alice Winocour, France/Belgium (North American Premiere)
In this masterfully engineered thriller, a young ex-soldier suffering from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder protects a beautiful woman and her child from a brutal home invasion. Starring Matthias Schoenaerts and Diane Kruger.

Man Down Dito Montiel, USA (North American Premiere)
In a savage post-apocalyptic America, U.S. Marine Gabriel Drummer searches desperately for the whereabouts of his estranged son and wife. Accompanied by his best friend, a hard-nosed Marine whose natural instinct is to shoot first and ask questions later, the two intercept Charles, an apocalyptic survivor carrying vital information about the whereabouts of Gabriel’s family. By revisiting the past, audiences are guided in unravelling the puzzle of Gabriel's experience, and what will eventually lead to the origin of this war-torn America. Starring Shia LaBeouf, Kate Mara, Gary Oldman and Jai Courtney.

Miss You Already Catherine Hardwicke, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
This honest and powerful story follows two best friends, Milly and Jess, as they navigate life’s highs and lows. Inseparable since they were young girls, they can’t remember a time they didn’t share everything — secrets, clothes, even boyfriends — but nothing prepares them for the day Milly is hit with life-altering news. A story for every modern woman, this film celebrates the bond of true friendship that ultimately can never be broken, even in life’s toughest moments. Starring Toni Collette, Drew Barrymore, Dominic Cooper, Paddy Considine, Tyson Ritter and Jacqueline Bisset

Mississippi Grind Ryan Fleck, Anna Boden, USA (Canadian Premiere)
Gerry is a talented, but struggling poker player about to be swallowed up by his unshakeable gambling habit. But his luck begins to change after he meets the young, charismatic Curtis. Gerry convinces his new lucky charm to hit the road with him, towards a legendary high stakes poker game in New Orleans. The highs and lows unveil the duo’s true characters and motivations, and an undeniable bond forms between them. Starring Ben Mendelsohn, Ryan Reynolds, Sienna Miller, Analeigh Tipton and Alfre Woodard.

Closing Night Film
Mr. Right Paco Cabezas, USA (World Premiere) Martha is unlucky in love, but when she finally meets her Mr. Right it seems like she’s found her match — even if he’s an international hitman on the run from the crime cartels who employ him. On the bright side, as long as Hopper or Shotgun Steve don’t kill them first, these two may actually have a chance at happily ever after. Starring Sam Rockwell, Anna Kendrick, Tim Roth, James Ransone, Anson Mount, Michael Eklund and RZA.

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

45 Years Andrew Haigh, United Kingdom (Canadian Premiere)
While preparing for their 45th anniversary, Kate and Geoff’s marriage is shaken with a discovery that calls into question the life they’ve built together, in this emotional tour-de-force. Starring Charlotte Rampling and Tom Courtenay.

About Ray Gaby Dellal, USA (World Premiere)
The touching story of three generations of a family living under one roof in New York as the life-changing transformation by one ultimately affects them all. Ray is a teenager who realizes that she isn’t meant to be a girl and decides to transition from female to male. His single mother, Maggie, must track down Ray’s biological father to get his legal consent to allow Ray’s transition. Dolly, Ray’s lesbian grandmother, struggles to accept that she now has a grandson. They must each confront their own identities and learn to embrace change and their strength as a family, in order to ultimately find acceptance and understanding. Starring Naomi Watts, Elle Fanning, Susan Sarandon, Tate Donovan, Linda Emond, Sam Trammell and Maria Dizzia.

Angry Indian Goddesses Pan Nalin, India (World Premiere)
A comic drama about a group of Indian women finding their hearts and losing their heads! A wild bunch of girls from all over India descend upon Goa. Their closest friend Frieda has invited them to her family home for a surprise announcement: she’s getting married. Thus begins an impromptu bachelorette. Starring Tannishtha Chatterjee, Sandhya Mridul, Sarah Jane Dias, Pavleen Gujral, Anushka Manchanda, Rajshri Deshpande and Amrit Maghera.

Being Charlie Rob Reiner, USA (World Premiere)
Being Charlie is based on a compilation of real-life experiences written by two friends who lived through being stuck in the cycle of rehab. Eighteen-year-old Charlie Mills is a sharp-mouthed addict fighting to get back home, while his father constantly stiff-arms him to limit the distractions during a big election for governor of California. Charlie’s parents are at odds about their son’s return to rehab. Following a feeble attempt at an intervention, he agrees to work the program at a new adult rehab facility where he meets a handful of misfit personalities; among them is Eva, a beautiful but troubled girl, and Travis, a supportive house manager. Charlie’s internal struggle with his addiction is confronted by the envy for his best friend and his separate addiction with Eva. Starring Nick Robinson, Morgan Saylor, Devon Bostick, Cary Elwes, Susan Misner, Common and Ricardo Chavira.

Body (Body/Cialo) Małgorzata Szumowska, Poland (North American Premiere)
Set in Poland, this absurdist dark comedy follows the intertwined stories of a criminal prosecutor, his anorexic daughter, and her therapist who claims she can communicate with the dead. Starring Janusz Gajos, Maja Ostaszewska and Justyna Suwala.

Equals Drake Doremus, USA (North American Premiere)
In a futuristic, utopian society known as the Collective — where inhabitants have been bred to be peaceful and emotionless — a man and a woman discover that they have feelings for one another. Together, they attempt to understand this connection. Starring Kristen Stewart, Nicholas Hoult, Guy Pearce and Jacki Weaver.

I Saw the Light Marc Abraham, USA (World Premiere)
This film tells the story of legendary country western singer Hank Williams, who in his brief life created one of the greatest bodies of work in American music. The film chronicles his meteoric rise to fame and its ultimately tragic effect on his health and personal life. Based on Colin Escott’s award-winning biography. Starring Tom Hiddleston, Elizabeth Olsen, Bradley Whitford, David Krumholtz Cherry Jones and Maddie Hasson.

London Fields Matthew Cullen United Kingdom/USA (World Premiere)
Set in 1999 London, this noir crime thriller based on Martin Amis’ novel of the same name features a star-studded cast, including Johnny Depp, Amber Heard, Cara Delevigne, Theo James, Billy Bob Thorton and Jim Sturgess.

ma ma Julio Medem, Spain/France (International Premiere)
This is the story of Magda. Confronted with tragedy, she reacts with a surge of life that flows inside of her, from the imaginable to the unimaginable. Accompanied by her closest circle, she will live the most unexpected situations filled with humour and delicate happiness. Starring Penélope Cruz, Luis Tosar and Asier Etxeandia.

The Meddler Lorene Scafaria, USA (World Premiere)
Marnie Minervini, recent widow and eternal optimist, moves from New Jersey to Los Angeles to be closer to her daughter. Armed with an iPhone and a full bank account, Marnie sets out to make friends, find her purpose, and possibly open up to someone new. Starring Susan Sarandon, Rose Byrne and J.K. Simmons.

Mr. Six (Lao Pao Er) Guan Hu, China (North American Premiere)
With his son captured, Mr. Six and his old pals stand up to the new, younger generation of hooligans, defending their dignity as once respected gangsters in the neighbourhood. Starring Feng Xiaogang.

Mustang Deniz Gamze Ergüven, Turkey/France/Germany (North American Premiere)
It’s the beginning of the summer in a village in the north of Turkey; Lale and her four sisters come home from school, innocently playing with boys. The supposed debauchery of their games causes a scandal with unintended consequences. The family home slowly turns into a prison, classes on housework and cooking replace school, and marriages begin to be arranged. The five sisters, driven by the same desire for freedom, fight back against the limits imposed on them. Starring Gunes Sensoy, Dogba Doguslu, Tugba Sunguroglu, Elit Iscan, Ilayda Akdogan, Ayberk Pekcan and Nihal Koldas.

My Mother (Mia Madre) Nanni Moretti, Italy/France (North American Premiere)
Margherita is a director shooting a film with the famous American actor, Barry Huggins, who is quite a headache on set. Away from the shoot, Margherita tries to hold her life together, despite her mother’s illness and her daughter’s adolescence. Stars Nanni Moretti, Margherita Buy, John Turturro and Giulia Lazzarini.

Our Brand Is Crisis David Gordon Green, USA (World Premiere)
A Bolivian presidential candidate enlists a management team led by damaged but brilliant strategist “Calamity” Jane Bodine, who seizes the chance to beat her professional nemesis Pat Candy, coaching the opposition. But as Pat zeroes in on every vulnerability, Jane faces a personal crisis as intense as the one her team exploits to boost their numbers, in this drama revealing the machinations of political consultants for whom nothing is sacred and winning is all that matters. Starring Sandra Bullock, Billy Bob Thornton, Anthony Mackie, Joaquim de Almeida, Ann Dowd, Scoot McNairy and Zoe Kazan.

A Tale of Love and Darkness Natalie Portman Israel/USA (North American Premiere)
Based on Amos Oz’s international best-seller, this is the story of his youth at the end of the British Mandate in Palestine and the early years of the state of Israel. The film details young Amos’s relationship with his mother and his birth as a writer, looking at what happens when the stories we tell become the stories we live. Starring Natalie Portman, Gilad Kahana and Amir Tessler.

A Tale of Three Cities (San Cheng Ji) Mabel Cheung, China (International Premiere)
Based on the miraculous true story of Jackie Chan’s parents, this film is about the unbreakable bond of love between an opium-peddling widow and a former spy on the run. Together they witness love and humanity in the face of war, famine, and overwhelming danger. Starring Tang Wei and Sean Lau.

Truth James Vanderbilt, USA (World Premiere)
In the vein of All the President’s Men and The Insider, this is the incredible true story of Mary Mapes, an award-winning CBS News journalist, and Dan Rather’s producer. The film chronicles the story they uncovered of a sitting U.S. president that may have been AWOL from the United States National Guard for over a year during the Vietnam War. When the story blew up in their face, the ensuing scandal ruined Dan Rather’s career, nearly changed a U.S. presidential election, and almost took down all of CBS News in the process. Based on Mapes’s book Truth and Duty. Starring Cate Blanchett, Elisabeth Moss, Robert Redford, Topher Grace, Dennis Quaid and Bruce Greenwood.

The Wave Roar Uthaug, Norway (International Premiere)
Experienced geologist Kristian Eikfjord accepts a job offer out of town. As he’s getting ready to move from the city of Geiranger with his family, he and his colleagues measure small geological changes in the underground. Kristian worries that his worst nightmare is about to come true, when the alarm goes off and disaster is inevitable. With less than 10 minutes to react, it becomes a race against time in order to save as many people as possible, including his own family. Starring Kristoffer Joner, Ane Dahl Torp and Jonas Oftebro.

The Witch Robert Eggers, USA/Canada (Canadian Premiere)
A colonial family leaves plantation life and attempts to reap their harvest on a fledgling farm at the edge of an imposing ancient New England forest. Superstition and dread set in as food grows scarce, a family member goes missing, and the children’s play takes on a frenzied and menacing undercurrent. As they begin to turn on one another, the malevolent machinations of an ethereal presence from within the woods exacerbate the growing corruption of their own nature. Starring Anya Taylor-Joy, Ralph Ineson, Kate Dickie, Harvey Scrimshaw, Ellie Grainger and Lucas Dawson.


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

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 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.




Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 Contemporary World Cinema, City to City, Wavelengths programmes


CONTEMPORARY WORLD CINEMA PROGRAMME PRESENTS 60 OUTSTANDING FILMS FROM ACROSS THE GLOBE
Films from countries including Ethiopia, New Zealand, Peru, Israel, Indonesia, Germany, Australia, Spain, China, France, Japan, Iceland and Morocco in Festival spotlight

A diverse and fascinating selection of 60 films from countries across the globe were announced today in the Toronto International Film Festival’s Contemporary World Cinema programme. Spotlighting work from some of the world’s finest international filmmakers, the lineup delivers an array of compelling films for Festival audiences to savour, journeying through unique and universal stories told on film.

Included in the lineup is the latest from directors Christian Zübert, Nabil Ayouch, Rúnar Rúnarsson, Alexandra-Therese Keining, Grímur Hákonarson, Erik Matti, Oliver Hermanus, Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche, Federico Veiroj, Eric Khoo, Sion Sono, Danielle Arbid, Emin Alper, and Jeremy Sims.

For the fourth year, The Toronto International Film Festival® partners with the University of Toronto’s Munk School of Global Affairs on the Contemporary World Speakers series. This initiative pairs six films in the Contemporary World Cinema programme with expert scholars from the Munk School. Audiences will have the opportunity to interact with filmmakers and scholars in extended discussions, following each film’s second public screening. Speakers include Stephen J. Toope, Ron Levi, Dan Brenznitz, Robert Steiner, Janice Stein, and Robert Austin. The Contemporary World Speakers series is programmed in conjunction with the TIFF Adult Learning department.

Films screening as part of the Contemporary World Cinema programme include:

25 April Leanne Pooley, New Zealand (World Premiere)
Award-winning filmmaker Leanne Pooley utilizes the letters and memoirs of New Zealand soldiers and nurses along with state of the art animation to tell the true story of the 1915 battle of Gallipoli. Dramatic, moving, sometimes humourous and often thrilling, the film explores an event whose resonance continues for Australians and New Zealanders to the present day.

3000 Nights (3000 Layla) Mai Masri, Palestine/France/Jordan/Lebanon/United Arab Emirates/Qatar (World Premiere)
After Layal, a newlywed Palestinian schoolteacher gives birth to a baby boy in an Israeli prison, the chief warden threatens to take her baby away unless she agrees to spy on the other prisoners who are planning a major strike. 3000 Nights makes a prison into a metaphor for Palestine under occupation, exploring the complicated interplay of resilience, empathy, and psychological manipulation between women. Layal fights to survive and maintain hope.

An Naomi Kawase, Japan/France/Germany (North American Premiere)
Sentaro runs a small bakery that serves dorayakis — pastries filled with sweet red bean paste (“an”). When an old lady, Tokue, offers to help in the kitchen, he reluctantly accepts. But Tokue proves to have magic in her hands when it comes to making “an”. Thanks to her secret recipe, the little business soon flourishes. And with time, Sentaro and Tokue will open their hearts to reveal old wounds.

The Apostate (El Apóstata) Federico Veiroj, Spain/France/Uruguay (World Premiere)
A young man finds himself navigating the baffling, labyrinthine bureaucracy of the Catholic Church when he attempts to formally renounce his faith, in this gently absurdist comedy from Uruguay’s Federico Veiroj (A Useful Life).

As I Open My Eyes (A peine j'ouvre les yeux) Leyla Bouzid, Tunisia/France/Belgium (North American Premiere)
Tunis, summer 2010, a few months before the Revolution. Eighteen-year-old Farah is at a crossroads: to fulfill her mother’s wish and enroll in medical school or follow her passion for music. She has joined a subversive rock band, “Joujma”. As it becomes more and more visible, she does not suspect the danger of a regime that watches and infiltrates her privacy.

Baba Joon Yuval Delshad, Israel (World Premiere)
Set in northern Israel, the film tells the story of three generations of strong-willed men: Baba Joon, the patriarch who emigrated to Israel from Persia years ago; his son Yitzhak who maintains the family farm; and young Moti, who doesn't feel beholden to Baba Joon or his father for anything.

Box Florin Șerban, Romania/Germany/France (North American Premiere)
The story by acclaimed Romanian director Florin Șerban (If I Want to Whistle, I Whistle) follows talented 19-year-old boxer Rafael, for whom a session in the ring is everything; and Cristina, an attractive 30-something mother who finds herself at a critical moment in her life. Two characters with their own secrets, two journeys, two outlooks and an intense drama that penetrates to the core.

Campo Grande Sandra Kogut, Brazil/France (World Premiere)
Eight-year-old Ygor and six-year-old Rayane were abandoned by their mother, who left them on Regina’s doorstep in Rio de Janeiro’s Ipanema neighborhood. The sudden and unexpected arrival of these children in Regina’s life and the search for their mother changes their lives.

Chevalier Athina Rachel Tsangari, Greece (North American Premiere)
In the middle of the Aegean Sea, on a luxury yacht, six men on a fishing trip have decided to play a game. Things will be measured, blood will be tested. The man who wins will be the best man, and he will wear upon his littlest finger the victorious signet ring: the “Chevalier”.

A Copy of My Mind Joko Anwar, Indonesia/South Korea (North American Premiere)
She gives facials in a cheap beauty salon. He makes subtitles for pirated DVDs. They find a soulmate in each other. But their love is threatened to a tragic end when she stumbles upon evidence of a corruption case linked to a presidential candidate’s closest aides.

Cuckold Charlie Vundla, South Africa (World Premiere)
Smanga is a successful assistant professor whose life suddenly unravels when his wife leaves him. He spirals into an alcohol, marijuana and sex-fuelled tail spin that places the status of his sanity, career and house in jeopardy. However, with the emergence of a long lost former classmate Jon, he finds the support to fix his life.

Embrace of the Serpent (El Abrazo de la Serpiente) Ciro Guerra, Colombia/Venezuela/Argentina (North American Premiere)
A tale of the first encounter, approach, betrayal and life-transcending friendship between an Amazonian shaman, last survivor of his people, and two explorers that become the first men to travel the Northwest Amazon in search of ancestral knowledge.

The Endless River (La Rivière sans fin) Oliver Hermanus, South Africa/France (North American Premiere)
A fierce crime drama set against an unforgiving landscape, The Endless River is a story about morality, love, revenge and forgiveness.

The Fear (La Peur) Damien Odoul, France (World Premiere)
Gabriel, an introverted young man, finds terror and appalling carnage in the hell-on-earth of the trenches between 1914 and 1918. At the end of his horrifying interior journey through the conflict — full of sound, fury and blood — he will discover his own humanity.

Frenzy (Abluka) Emin Alper, Turkey/France (North American Premiere)
In the new film from award-winning Turkish writer-director Emin Alper, an ex-con, just released after serving a 15-year sentence, is recruited as a police informant as political violence grips Istanbul.
*Stephen J. Toope, Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs and an officer of the Order of Canada, is an international scholar on law, human rights, and global affairs. He will speak about Frenzy in a Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

Girls Lost Alexandra-Therese Keining, Sweden (World Premiere)
Kim, Bella and Momo, three bullied teenage girls, are going through the throes of finding themselves. Surrounded by a dark world of teenage violence, marginalization and sexual confusion, the girls have only each other. They come across a curious magical plant that, when consumed, transforms the girls temporarily into boys. Not only does their gender change, the world around them, and their response to it, is altered.

Granny's Dancing on the Table Hanna Sköld, Sweden (World Premiere)
Thirteen-year-old Eini grows up isolated from society with her violent father, a man afraid of the world, who keeps her very close. The brutality that Eini is exposed to pushes her to almost lose her sense of self — but through the power of her own imagination she is able to create a world from which she can draw strength to survive.

A Heavy Heart (Herbert) Thomas Stuber, Germany (World Premiere)
Director Thomas Stuber (winner of the Student Academy Award) tells the story of an aging boxer from the former East who learns he has limited time to try to rectify the mistakes of his past.

Homesick (De nærmeste) Anne Sewitsky, Norway (Canadian Premiere)
When Charlotte, 27, meets her half-brother Henrik, 35, for the first time as an adult, it becomes an encounter without boundaries,between two people who don't know what a normal family is. How does sibling love manifest itself if you have never experienced it before? Homesick is an unusual family drama about seeking a family, and breaking every rule to be one.

Hong Kong Trilogy: Preschooled Preoccupied Preposterous Christopher Doyle, Hong Kong (World Premiere)
This is a story of Hong Kong told by three generations. The voices you hear onscreen come from real life interviews. The film is a dream as well as a document, as each generation wonders how to live, here and now.

Honor Thy Father Erik Matti, Philippines (World Premiere)
An idyllic family’s life crumbles when the couple, Edgar and Kaye, discover that the investment scheme Kaye runs is one big scam. With friends turning against them and murderous big-time investors at their heels, Edgar is forced to return to his dark roots to save his family.

Imbisibol (Invisible) Lawrence Fajardo, Philippines/Japan (International Premiere)
Invisible essays the story of four Filipino migrant workers in Japan, in a crucial encounter that mirrors the difficult challenges that confront the “Pinoy” diaspora. The main characters in the film include Linda, a mail-to-order-bride who married a Japanese “salaryman”; Benjie, an illegal migrant worker who has been jumping from one odd job to another in the last 17 years; Manuel, an overstayer who now works as a male entertainer in a bar in the red light district; and Rodel, a newcomer who works as a day labourer in a logging company.

In the Room Eric Khoo, Hong Kong/Singapore (World Premiere)
In The Room deals with love, life and lust. Eric Khoo’s latest film is a tapestry of stories, all of which unfold in a hotel room over several decades. The common thread is sex. That hotel room is Room 27 at the Singapura Hotel, which started out as a ritzy establishment in the 1940s but has, over the decades, lost its sheen of respectability. For some, Room 27 is a nameless numbered room, a place which provides a cloak of anonymity, where one could indulge in indiscretions and the forbidden, where their trespasses will be forgiven once they return the key and sign the bill.

Incident Light (La Luz Incidente) Ariel Rotter, Argentina/France/Uruguay (World Premiere)
Since the car accident where both her husband and brother died, Luisa has not been able to put her life back together, until she meets a seductive stranger who forcefully proposes starting over. The new man’s overwhelming energy may be hiding warning signs about his character. But Luisa is confused, and the desire she feels for the new man merges with the absence of the man she lost — the possibility of rebuilding a family blurring with her own inability to accept her husband’s death.

Ivy (Sarmaşik)Tolga Karaçelik, Turkey (Canadian Premiere)
Trapped at anchor due to a legal dispute, the skeleton crew of a cargo ship come into potentially deadly conflict with one another, in this slow-burning psychological thriller from Turkish writer-director Tolga Karaçelik.

Jack Elisabeth Scharang, Austria (North American Premiere)
One winter’s night a girl freezes to death after suffering brutal injuries. Jack is convicted of her murder. When he is released from prison 15 years later, he goes from being a jailbird poet to a real ladykiller and darling of Vienna’s society. Can a man change so fundamentally? Or is it a case of once a murderer, always a murderer?

Journey to the Shore (Kishibe no tabi), Kiyoshi Kurosawa, Japan/France (North American Premiere)
Mizuki’s husband drowned at sea three years ago. When he suddenly comes back home, she is not that surprised. Instead, Mizuki is wondering what took him so long. She agrees to let him take her on a journey. A touching ghost story from Japanese master Kiyoshi Kurosawa (Tokyo Sonata, Pulse).

The Kind Words (Hamilim Hatovot) Shemi Zarhin, Israel/Canada (International Premiere)
At the death of their mother, three siblings are shocked to discover that their “real” father may not be their biological father, and he in turn may be an Algerian Muslim. The Kind Words is a warm, sometimes humourous, and often dramatic story about identity and love.
*Dan Breznitz, Director of Research and Professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs, is an expert on innovation-based growth and how we respond to global changes. He will speak about The Kind Words in a Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

Koza Ivan Ostrochovský, Slovakia/Czech Republic (North American Premiere)
This subtle fusion of documentary and fiction follows a young Roma boxer as he embarks on a tragicomic return to the ring in order to pay for his girlfriend’s abortion. Koza features Peter Baláž, who competed at the 1996 Olympic Games in Atlanta, and Ján Franek, Olympic medallist from Moscow 1980, as his coach. Featuring the outstanding performances of non-professional actors and blurring the lines between representation and presence, Koza is a powerful and haunting challenge to the concept of authenticity.

Lamb Yared Zeleke, Ethiopia/France/Germany/Norway (North American Premiere)
After his mother dies and draught hits his village, Ephraïm, a young Ethiopian boy, has to go live with relatives at the other end of the country. He takes his mother’s lamb with him, it is his only source of comfort. One day, his uncle announces that he will have to sacrifice the lamb for the upcoming religious feast, but Ephraïm is ready to do anything to save his only friend and return home.

Last Cab to Darwin Jeremy Sims, Australia (International Premiere)
Rex drives a cab and has never left Broken Hill in his life. When he discovers he doesn’t have long to live, he decides to drive across the heart of the country to Darwin, where he’s heard he will be able to die on his own terms; but along the way he discovers that before you can end your life you’ve got to live it, and to live it you’ve got to learn to share it.
*Robert Steiner, Director of the Fellowships in Global Journalism Program, is a writer and award-winning former foreign correspondent now teaching journalism at the Munk School. He will speak about Last Cab To Darwin in a Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

Let Them Come (Maintenant ils peuvent venir) Salem Brahimi, France/Algeria (World Premiere)
Algeria, at the end of the 1980s: against the background of mounting violence from a radical Islamist opposition repressed by the army, compelled by his mother, Noureddine marries Yasmina. As the conflict becomes more pronounced, he and his family have to defend themselves from the onslaught of pervasive barbarity. A chilling foray into a very contemporary drama, and remarkable adaptation from the novel with the same title by Arezki Mellal.
*Janice Stein, founding Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs and member of the Order of Canada, is an internationally renowned expert on conflict management. She will speak about Let Them Come (Maintenant ils peuvent venir) in a Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

Magallanes Salvador del Solar, Peru/Argentina/Colombia/Spain (International Premiere)
While driving his cab, Magallanes unexpectedly meets Celina, a woman he first met more than 20 years ago, under completely different circumstances. In what would turn out to be a personal quest for redemption, Magallanes will do everything within his power to help her overcome her difficulties, only to find out that Celina would much rather give up everything she owns than accept his help.

Mekko Sterlin Harjo, USA (International Premiere)
Mekko, starring Rod Rondeaux and Zahn McClarnon, tells the story of a homeless Native American parolee who discovers a chaotic yet beautiful community living on the streets of Tulsa. He also uncovers an old-world darkness that threatens to destroy them from within, one he must fight before it’s too late.

A Month of Sundays Matthew Saville, Australia (World Premiere)
Real estate agent Frank Mollard won’t admit it, but he can’t move on. Divorced but still attached, he can’t sell a house in a property boom — much less connect with his teenage son. One night Frank gets a phone call from his mother. Nothing out of the ordinary. Apart from the fact that she died a year ago. A Month of Sundays is about parents, children, regrets, mourning, moments of joy, houses, homes, love, work, television, Shakespeare and jazz fusion; about ordinary people and improbable salvation — because everyone deserves a second chance.

Much Loved Nabil Ayouch, Morocco/France (North American Premiere)
The heat of Marrakesh’s night, money flows freely to the rhythms of lusts satiated and humiliations suffered. Noha, Randa, Soukaina, and Hlima sell pleasures of the flesh. They share an apartment and form a makeshift family, united in their womanhood, full of light, dignity and joy, they manage to keep their spirits and dreams alive. Their families depend on them, and as they move from one embrace to the other, they always go home loveless. A hard-hitting but luminous drama from Moroccan director Nabil Ayouch.
*Ron Levi, Deputy Director of the Munk School and Director of the Master of Global Affairs Degree, is an expert on how people respond to crime and violence in a global context. He will speak about Much Loved in an extended Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

Murmur of the Hearts Sylvia Chang, Taiwan/Hong Kong (North American Premiere)
Legendary Taiwanese actress and filmmaker Sylvia Chang directs this magical story of estranged siblings whose shared memories of their mother’s fairy tales begin to draw their lives together once again.

One Breath (Ein Atem) Christian Zübert, Germany (World Premiere)
One Breath is the story of two women from different backgrounds but with the same desire: happiness. Elena, young, well-educated and with no perspective in her home country, Greece, is trying to pursue a better life. And Tessa, a 30-something mother and successful manager in Germany, is torn between happiness as an individual and a mother. These two women meet and their encounter changes both their lives forever.
*Robert Austin, Associate Professor at the Munk School’s Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, is an expert on East Central and Southeastern Europe and coordinates the Hellenic Studies Program. He will speak about One Breath in a Q&A session following the second public screening of the film.

One Floor Below (Un Etaj mai Jos) Radu Muntean, Romania/France/Germany/Sweden (North American Premiere)
After being the sole unfortunate witness to a domestic quarrel that ends up in a murder, Sandu finds himself at odds with two very close neighbours. One is the bizarre murderer, the other is his very own conscience.

Parisienne (Peur de rien) Danielle Arbid, France (World Premiere)
The new film from Lebanese director Danielle Arbid follows a young Arab immigrant in Paris, whose encounters with three men reveal different facets of her new country, and of herself.

Paths of the Soul (Kang Rinpoche) Zhang Yang, China (World Premiere)
Director Zhang Yang blurs documentary and fiction in this account of a band of pilgrims who make a 2,000-kilometre journey on foot to Lhasa, the holy capital of Tibet and beyond.

THE PEOPLE vs. FRITZ BAUER (Der Staat gegen Fritz Bauer) Lars Kraume, Germany (North American Premiere)
Germany, 1957. Attorney general Fritz Bauer receives crucial evidence on the whereabouts of SS-Obersturmbannführer Adolf Eichmann, the man responsible for the mass deportation of the Jews. Because of his distrust in the German justice system, Bauer contacts the Israeli secret service Mossad, thereby committing treason.

Price of Love Hermon Hailay, Ethiopia (North American Premiere)
A young Addis Ababa taxi driver’s cab is stolen when he gets caught up in the dark side of love. He finds himself stuck in a relationship with a prostitute, making him confront his past and discover the price of love.

Rams (Hrútar) Grímur Hákonarson, Iceland (Canadian Premiere)
Winner of the Un Certain Regard prize at this year's Cannes festival, Grímur Hákonarson’s stunningly shot drama focuses on two Icelandic sheep farmers whose decades-long feud comes to a head when disaster strikes their flocks.

Schneider vs. Bax Alex van Warmerdam, Netherlands/Belgium (North American Premiere)
Schneider, a hit-man, is given a task: before the night has passed he must kill the writer Ramon Bax.

Song of Songs (Pesn pesney) Eva Neymann, Ukraine (North American Premiere)
1905. A Jewish Shtetl. Shimek and Buzya are two 10-year-olds. Of course, she is a princess and he is a prince. They live in the same yard, in neighbouring palaces. Years later Shimek begins to understand what Buzya really means to him when he receives the news that she is about to be married.

Sparrows Rúnar Rúnarsson, Iceland/Denmark (World Premiere)
Sparrows is a coming-of-age story about 16-year-old Ari, who has been living with his mother in Reykjavik and is suddenly sent back to the remote Westfjords to live with his father Gunnar. There, he has to navigate a difficult relationship with his father, and he finds his childhood friends changed. In these hopeless and declining surroundings, Ari has to step up and find his way.

Starve Your Dog Hicham Lasri, Morocco (World Premiere)
Fifteen years after he was dismissed of his functions, the former Minister of Interior during Morocco’s sinister decade of repression steps out of the shadows to make his confessions and disclose the monarchy’s dark secrets. He calls a filmmaker, famous for her daring documentaries during the time when he was in power, before the change of reign. She reunites the technical crew that was once her professional family — and while nothing seems to fall into place, she risks missing the confessions.

The Steps Andrew Currie, Canada (World Premiere)
An uptight New Yorker and his party girl sister visit their dad at his lake house to meet his new wife and her rough-around-the-edges kids. When the parents announce they're adopting a child to bring the family closer together, it has the opposite effect. Starring Jason Ritter, Emmanuelle Chriqui, James Brolin and Christine Lahti.

Story of Judas (Histoire de Judas) Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche, France (North American Premiere)
Rabah Ameur-Zaimeche’s bold re-imagining the story of the Biblical figure of Judas Iscariot proposes that he is not a traitor, but rather Jesus’ most loyal and trusted disciple and steward. As Jesus’ teachings astound more and more crowds, he attracts the attention of resistance groups, high priests and the Roman authorities. When he drives the merchants from the Temple, Judas shows himself to be the guardian of the words of the master.

Stranger (Zhat) Yermek Tursunov, Kazakhstan (World Premiere)
Stranger is a film about freedom, with one man’s fate in focus. The times are hard: 1930s to 1940s Kazakhstan. A Kazakh steppe is scourged by famine, wasteland, collectivization and war. Having lost his father, a 9-year-old boy gathers his belongings and disappears. He lives alone in the mountain cave. Years pass by and returning to his village seems almost impossible.

Te prometo anarquía (I Promise You Anarchy) Julio Hernández Cordón, Mexico/Germany (North American Premiere)
Childhood friends Miguel and Johnny are dedicated to skating and having fun. To earn easy money and continue skating they secretly sell their blood. Business is good, until a large transaction turns out to be not as they imagined.

Thank You for Bombing Barbara Eder, Austria (World Premiere)
Three international TV correspondents — Ewald (Erwin Steinhauer), Lana (Manon Kahle) and Cal (Raphael von Bargen) — cross paths while waiting for a war that has already begun long ago in their own lives.

The Treasure (Comoara) Corneliu Porumboiu, Romania/France (North American Premiere)
Two neighbours set out to unearth a buried treasure in their own backyard, in this delightful fusion of contemporary fairy tale and political parable from Romanian New Wave master Corneliu Porumboiu (Police, Adjective).

Truman Cesc Gay, Spain/Argentina (World Premiere)
After being diagnosed with terminal cancer, a Madrid man resolves to spend his last days putting his affairs in order, in this delicate and intimate drama from Spanish director Cesc Gay. A humourous and honest portrait of the courage it takes to accept that death is just another part of life.

The Whispering Star (Hiso Hiso Boshi) Sion Sono, Japan (World Premiere)
Sion Sono wrote the screenplay and drew the accompanying storyboards in 1990, and 25 years later they’ve materialized into this black and white science fiction movie.

Previously announced Canadian titles in the Contemporary World Cinema programme include Kazik Radwanski’s How Heavy this Hammer, Anne Émond’s Les êtres chers, Philippe Falardeau’s My Internship in Canada and Igor Drljača’s The Waiting Room.



2015 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL LOOKS TO LONDON FOR SEVENTH ANNUAL CITY TO CITY PROGRAMME

The 40th Toronto International Film Festival® shines its spotlight on eight bold features from the city of London, England for the seventh edition of the City to City programme. The lineup showcases adventurous new works by contemporary directors living and working in the global city, and will expose audiences to the fearless cinema emerging from the region. Already known as a cultural capital and a hotbed for internationally acclaimed film — and contemporary arts in general — England’s capital is home to a number of up-and-coming filmmakers poised to contribute to the future of cinema.

The lineup of City to City films was programmed by Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF, and Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. The annual City to City series focuses on the films and filmmakers from a selected international hot spot breaking new ground in cinema. Past programmes featured films from Tel Aviv, Istanbul, Buenos Aires, Mumbai, Athens and Seoul.

“We’re thrilled to shine an international spotlight on these up-and-coming filmmakers out of London, by sharing these exciting and provocative films with our audiences in September,” said Handling. “The Festival has a long relationship with British cinema, and we couldn’t be happier to be continuing this tradition,” continued Bailey.

“We have an excellent relationship with TIFF, and it’s a real pleasure to be partnering on this year’s City To City programme,” said Adrian Wootton, Chief Executive of Film London and the British Film Commission. “As ever, the lineup is incredibly strong, from the London strand to the wider programme which features films like High-Rise, The Program, LEGEND, The Danish Girl, Sunset Song and The Martian, all of which made use of United Kingdom locations, facilities and expertise. It is a fantastic year for UK film at the Toronto International Film Festival, one of the world’s best film festivals, and it is set to be all the more exciting thanks to London House and the opportunity it gives us to showcase the UK’s incredible offer when it comes to talent, versatility and innovation.”

Couple in a Hole Tom Geens, United Kingdom/Belgium/France (World Premiere)
A middle class British couple end up living like feral creatures in a camouflaged hole in the middle of a vast forest in France. Starring Paul Higgins and Kate Dickie.

The Hard Stop George Amponsah, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
Over several years The Hard Stop features Marcus and Kurtis, childhood friends of Mark Duggan, the young man whose death ignited the UK riots in 2011. Marcus was sentenced for starting the riots in Tottenham that turned into the worst civil unrest in recent British history. The film reflects the current class divisions in British society as it charts the everyday challenges Marcus and Kurtis face as they grieve the loss of their dear friend, and negotiate incarceration and unemployment while the media debate about who their friend was and the inquest into his killing plays out in the background.

Kill Your Friends Owen Harris, United Kingdom (North American Premiere)
Set in 1990s London, Kill Your Friends follows a 27-year-old A&R man — Steven Stelfox — slashing his way through the music business. Fueled by greed, ambition and inhuman quantities of drugs, Stelfox searches for his next hit record. But as the hits dry up and the industry changes, Stelfox takes the concept of “killer tunes” to a murderous new level. Starring Nicholas Hoult, James Corden, Rosanna Arquette and Ed Skrein.

Kilo Two Bravo Paul Katis, United Kingdom (International Premiere)
Set in Afghanistan in 2006, a group of British soldiers find themselves trapped in an unmarked minefield, setting into motion a desperate rescue mission. Based on a harrowing real life event, this suspenseful drama sheds light on the bravery, selflessness and heroism soldiers must have to avoid severely tragic consequences. Starring David Elliot and Mark Stanley.

London Road Rufus Norris, United Kingdom (International Premiere)
A film adaptation of the National Theatre's ground-breaking musical by Alecky Blythe and Adam Cork about the “Suffolk Strangler” murders in Ipswich in 2006. London Road follows the community who found themselves at the epicentre of these tragic events, and uses their own words set to an innovative musical score. Starring Tom Hardy and Olivia Colman.

Northern Soul Elaine Constantine, United Kingdom (North American Premiere)
John and Matt are changed forever when they discover American soul music. No longer satisfied with the prospect of a dead-end factory job, they dream of finding the American soul record which will make them famous DJs. Northern Soul was phenomenally popular with British youth in the 1970s, taking the north of the country by storm. This is the story of a youth culture that changed a generation and influenced songwriters, producers, DJs and designers for decades to come. This is the story of Northern Soul. Starring Elliot James Langridge, Joshua Whitehouse, Antonia Thomas and Steve Coogan.

The Ones Below David Farr, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
Kate and Justin are a successful working couple in their mid-30s whose lives are destined to change forever when the seemingly charming Teresa and Jon move into the flat downstairs. Kate and Teresa become especially close when they both discover that they are pregnant. But when Teresa loses her baby in an accident, she blames Kate. After that, nothing is ever the same. Starring Clémence Poésy, David Morrissey and Stephen Campbell Moore.

Urban Hymn Michael Caton-Jones, United Kingdom (World Premiere)
Urban Hymn is a redemptive coming-of-age story which follows a neglected and wayward teen, Jamie, whose incredible singing voice offers an escape to a better life until she finds her loyalties torn between her inspiring, unconventional care worker and her possessive and volatile best friend. Starring Letitia Wright, Isabella Laughland and Shirley Henderson.



WAVELENGTHS PUSHES THE LIMITS OF CINEMATIC ART, FEATURING BOLD, ESSENTIAL WORK FROM SOME OF TODAY’S LEADING AUTEURS AND ARTISTS
Including new films by Miguel Gomes, Tsai Ming-liang, Chantal Akerman, Peter Tscherkassky, Sergei Loznitsa, Ben Rivers, Yto Barrada, Francis Alÿs, Evan Johnson and Guy Maddin, Pietro Marcello, Pablo Agüero, Beatrice Gibson, Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc, Nicolás Pereda, and a major installation by Apichatpong Weerasethakul

The Toronto International Film Festival®’s Wavelengths programme is pleased to present 54 films, videos and installations by some of the world’s most influential auteurs and artists who challenge conventional expression and seek to redefine the art of cinema. Curated by Andréa Picard, with contributions from members of TIFF’s international programming team, Wavelengths comprises experimental film and video art, category-defying feature-length films — many of which flout the traditional fact-fiction boundaries and opt instead for cinema at its most expansive — and immersive, captivating installations, which redefine the potential for moving image art.

The 2015 edition features a seductive mix of master filmmakers, award-winning artists and emerging, new talent. Some of the highlights include the critical hit of this year’s Cannes, Miguel Gomes’ breathtakingly inventive, three-part Arabian Nights; disarmingly intimate dialogue-portraits by iconic and iconoclastic auteurs Chantal Akerman and Tsai Ming-liang, respectively; a major new montage film by Ukrainian master, Sergei Loznitsa; (World Premiere)s by Nicolás Pereda, Pablo Agüero, and Mark Lewis; and two important works from a new Italian cinema, Pietro Marcello’s exquisite Bella e perduta, and Roberto Minervini’s powerful and all-too prescient The Other Side.

“This year’s Wavelengths is marked by a certain youthful exuberance — one that is caught up in the contradiction of exhibiting energy, inventiveness and ample daring, while taking stock of the world’s various states of emergency, on large levels and intimate scales,” said Picard.“With renewed faith in the image — abstract ones, even frail ones, and those stemming from reality, remembrance or imagination — the filmmakers and artists in this year’s programme are actively proving cinema’s singular ability to engage with collective, individual, social and political memory.”

Additional highlights of this year’s programme include a new short and feature-length film by British filmmaker and artist Ben Rivers; the Festival’s first appearance by this year’s Baloise Art Prize winners, UK artist Beatrice Gibson and French artist Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc; the Abraaj Art Prize winner Yto Barrada; new works by emerging filmmaking talents, Lois Patiño and Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias; a record number of Canadian (and Toronto) contributions, including the (World Premiere) of a major new film by Montreal-based experimental filmmaker Daïchi Saïto and two recent discoveries presented in restored archival prints of films by Paul Sharits and by Philippe Garrel.

New to Wavelengths this year, works outside the cinema include the latest installation by Indian-American filmmaker Shambhavi Kaul; a lecture-performance by Toronto-based artist Annie MacDonell and French artist Maïder Fortuné originally commissioned by Le Centre Pompidou’s Hors Pistes festival; and TIFF’s first collaboration with the Art Gallery of Ontario to present lauded Thai filmmaker and artist, Apichatpong Weerasethakul’s installation, Fireworks (Archives), as well as a new work by Corin Sworn and Tony Romano.

SHORT FILM PROGRAMMES

Wavelengths 1: Fire in the Brain
Like a fire in the brain that lights up perceptive powers, this programme is a seductively surreal visual exploration of the relationship between image, sound, and movement.
3D Movie Paul Sharits, USA (restored archival print courtesy of Anthology Film Archives)
Fugue Kerstin Schroedinger, Canada/Germany
Prima Materia Charlotte Pryce, USA
The Fire in My Brain That Separates Us Benjamin Ramírez Pérez, Germany
Something Horizontal Blake Williams, Canada/USA
The Exquisite Corpus Peter Tscherkassky, Austria

Wavelengths 2: YOLO
Subjective experience is channeled through artistic collaborations in this programme, which offers YOLO-infused reflections on identity and contemporary dislocation.
A Distant Episode Ben Rivers, UK
An Old Dog’s Diary Shai Heredia and Shumona Goel, India
The Reminder Behrouz Rae, USA
Solo for Rich Man Beatrice Gibson, UK
YOLO Ben Russell, USA/South Africa
Analysis of Emotions and Vexations Wojcieck Bąkowski, Poland
Bunte Kuh Parastoo Anoushahpour, Faraz Anoushahpour and Ryan Ferko, Canada/Germany

Wavelengths 3: Light Space Modulator
This programme explores ways of recording and reshaping space with light, of measuring and mapping our bodily presence and impact vis-à-vis regional, global and abstracted cartographies.
Navigator Björn Kämmerer, Austria/Germany
Théodolitique David K. Ross, Canada
Office Space Modulation Terrarea (Janis Demkiw, Emily Hogg, Olia Mishchenko) Canada
Palms Mary Helena Clark, Canada/USA
Occidente Ana Vaz, France/Portugal
Terrestrial Calum Walter, USA
Tarlabaşı Cynthia Madansky,Turkey

Wavelengths 4: Psychic Driving
Is now a time for outrage? This programme of political statements and personal inquiries breathes new life into the politics of the image.
Actua1 Philippe Garrel, France (restored archival print courtesy of La Cinémathèque française)
Time for Outrage! Friedl vom Gröller, Austria
Untitled Behrouz Rae, USA
Many Thousands Gone Ephraim Asili, Brazil/USA
Neither God nor Santa Maria Samuel M. Delgado and Helena Girón, Spain
Psychic Driving William E. Jones, USA
UNcirCling John Creson and Adam Rosen, Canada
Engram of Returning Daïchi Saïto, Canada

PAIRINGS

Night without distance (Noite Sem Distância) Lois Patiño, Spain/Portugal (North American Premiere)
An instant in the memory of a landscape: the smuggling that for centuries crossed the line between Portugal and Galicia. The Gerês Mountains knows no borders, and rocks cross from one country to another with insolence. Smugglers also disobey this separation. The rocks, river, and trees: silent witnesses to help them to hide.
Night without distance precedes previously announced feature-film, Minotaur by Nicolás Pereda.

Santa Teresa and Other Stories (Santa Teresa y Otras Historias) Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias Mexico/Dominican Republic/USA (North American Premiere)
Dominican filmmaker Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias radically extrapolates from Roberto Bolaño’s unfinished, posthumous novel 2666, to produce a baroque fictionalized account of Ciudad Juárez. This noir-tinged tale soon begins to dovetail and intersect with a host of other stories recounted by a chorus of disembodied voices, creating a narrative palimpsest that blurs the line between factual documentation, lyrical observation, and fictional imagination.
Preceded by:
Paradox of Praxis 5 Francis Alÿs, Mexico (International Premiere)
The latest in Belgian-born, Mexico City-based contemporary artist Francis Alÿs’ series of performative videos that politicize absurd or seemingly futile gestures, Paradox of Praxis 5 documents the artist’s nocturnal perambulations through Juárez as he kicks a ball of fire along the city’s desolate streets. Transcending metaphor, the eerie, mobile conflagration traces out an imaginary map of a devastated city.

Sector IX B (Secteur IX B) Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc, France/Senegal (North American Premiere)
Taking inspiration from L’Afrique fantôme — the controversial diary by surrealist writer Michel Leiris recounting his participation in the ambitious French ethnographic expedition of the 1930s to Dakar and Djibouti — Mathieu Kleyebe Abonnenc’s arresting first feature reflects on identity, cultural appropriation, and the transference of memory though objects.
Preceded by:
Faux Départ (False Start) Yto Barrada, Morocco/USA (North American Premiere)
The latest film by French-Moroccan artist Yto Barrada observes the elaborate fossil industry in Morocco. Paying homage to the “preparators” in the arid region between the Atlas Mountains and the Sahara Desert, whose intrepid work is fuelling a thriving trade in artifacts real, faux and hybrid, False Start is a rebuke to the fetishistic thirst for foreign objects, a sly meditation on authenticity, and a paean to creativity.

Previously announced was the pairing of Isiah Medina’s 88:88 preceded by Denis Côté’s short film May We Sleep Soundly.

FEATURES

Afternoon (Na ri xia wu) Tsai Ming-liang, Taiwan (North American Premiere)
A disarmingly candid, insightful and ultimately very moving conversation between Taiwanese auteur Tsai Ming-liang and his muse, actor Lee Kang-sheng, whose storied relationship represents one of the great collaborations in cinema history.

Arabian Nights: The Restless One Miguel Gomes, Portugal/France/Germany/Switzerland (North American Premiere)
A major hit at this year's Cannes, this epic, three-part contemporary fable by Portuguese auteur Miguel Gomes (Tabu) adopts the structure from the Arabian Nights texts in order to explore Portugal's plunge into austerity. The first volume of this thrillingly inventive and wildly ambitious triptych includes appearances by cunning wasps, virgin mermaids, an exploding whale, erection-inducing potions and a talking rooster.

Arabian Nights: The Desolate One Miguel Gomes, Portugal/France/Germany/Switzerland (North American Premiere)
Part Two of Portuguese auteur Miguel Gomes’ majestic, mutating modern-day folk tale relates how desolation has invaded humanity through stories involving a distressed judge on a night of three moons, a runaway, a teleporting murderer, a wounded cow, a sad, chain-smoking couple in a concrete apartment block, and a ghost dog named Dixie.

Arabian Nights: The Enchanted One Miguel Gomes, Portugal/France/Germany/Switzerland (North American Premiere)
The third and concluding volume of Portuguese auteur Miguel Gomes’ Scheherazadean triptych brings this epic to a close with the sound of birdsong and the promise of the ineffable.

Eva Doesn’t Sleep Pablo Agüero, France/Argentina/Spain (World Premiere)
One of Argentina’s most visionary and politically engaged cinematic voices, director Pablo Agüero takes the unbelievable story of the transport of the embalmed body of beloved First Lady Eva Perón, and transforms it into a strangely riveting cinema experience, with a supremely creepy performance from Gael García Bernal.

The Event Sergei Loznitsa, Netherlands/Belgium (North American Premiere)
Ukrainian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa follows his monumental documentary Maïdan with this found-footage epic about the failed coup of August 1991 that signaled the fall of the Soviet Union.

Lost and Beautiful (Bella e perduta) Pietro Marcello, Italy (North American Premiere)
Part fable, part documentary, part film poem, the latest exquisite feature by Pietro Marcello (La bocca del lupo) pays homage to a humble shepherd who became a symbol of hope and generosity for a struggling and conflicted Italy.

No Home Movie Chantal Akerman, Belgium (North American Premiere)
Shuttling between fiction, adaptation, documentary and essay film, Belgian filmmaker Chantal Akerman has created one of the most original, daring and influential oeuvres in film history. No Home Movie is a sober, profoundly moving portrait of Akerman’s mother in the months leading up to her death, when she was mostly confined to her Brussels apartment. A Polish Jew who survived Auschwitz, her mother suffered from chronic anxiety, an affliction that shaped Akerman’s thematic preoccupations with gender, sex, cultural identity, existential ennui, solitude and mania.

The Other Side Roberto Minervini, France/Italy (North American Premiere)
In turns tender and disturbing, Italian filmmaker Roberto Minervini produces a powerful hybrid docu-fiction film, profiling drug addicts and private militia in Louisiana, who live on the fringes of society.

The Sky Trembles and the Earth is Afraid and the Two Eyes Are Not Brothers Ben Rivers, United Kingdom (North American Premiere)
Partially inspired by Paul Bowles’ short story A Distant Episode, the latest feature by British filmmaker Ben Rivers (Two Years at Sea, A Spell to Ward Off the Darkness) charts a mysterious transformation from observational making-of to inventive adaptation shot against a staggering Moroccan landscape.

Previously announced feature films include Mark Lewis’ Invention, and Evan Johnson and Guy Maddin’s The Forbidden Room.

INSTALLATIONS

Fallen Objects Shambhavi Kaul, USA/India (World Premiere)
Presented in partnership with Scrap Metal Gallery from September 10-20, this new installation by Indian-American artist-filmmaker Shambhavi Kaul is comprised of a large projected video loop composed of seven shots that continuously rearrange themselves based on an internal code, and floorbound sculptures in the form of scraps of cloth — the “fallen objects” of the title. Stripping away the narrative potential of its genre cinema-derived source material, Fallen Objects considers cinematic space outside the cinema and imagines humans inside it.

Fireworks (Archives) Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Thailand/Mexico (Canadian Premiere)
Presented in partnership with the Art Gallery of Ontario from September 10-27 (Closed on Mondays), the new installation from Palme d’Or-winning Thai filmmaker and contemporary artist Apichatpong Weerasethakul fuses the artist’s exploration of memory, ephemeral elements like light and phantoms, and the malleable nature of history and storytelling while exhuming Thailand’s political legacy through an ingenious use of pyrotechnics.

Previously announced programming includes the lecture-performance, Stories Are Meaning-Making Machines by Annie MacDonell and Maïder Fortuné; and film installations La Giubba by Corin Sworn and Tony Romano; The Forbidden Room – A Living Poster by Galen Johnson; and Bring me the Head of Tim Horton by Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson.

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

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
@TIFF_NET
#TIFF15
Facebook.com/TIFF

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.




TIFF announces 200 Influential speakers over 7 days at 2015 TIFF Industry Conference


WENDY CALHOUN, NURI BILGE CEYLAN, YU DONG, STEPHEN FREARS AND NIIJA KUYKENDALL AMONG 200 INFLUENTIAL SPEAKERS OVER 7 DAYS AT TIFF INDUSTRY CONFERENCE

The TIFF Industry Conference offers delegates invaluable access to the wisdom and experience of creative and business leaders during the 40th Toronto International Film Festival.

“TIFF Industry is excited to present a lineup of cinematic masters, creative innovators and business visionaries to equip delegates with meaningful tools for success,” said Kathleen Drumm, Director, TIFF Industry Office. “With a diverse range of topics from story development to sales and distribution, we offer an incomparable professional development opportunity for industry members at all levels of experience.”

TIFF connects with major media and technology companies to deliver potent and relevant sessions at the Conference. Attendees are guaranteed a memorable experience from speakers representing companies such as Fox Searchlight, Google, Huayi, ICM Partners, IM Global, iQiyi, Kickstarter, Sundance Productions, Vice Media, Vimeo, and Wanda.

The TIFF Industry Conference covers Creative Process, Financing and Co-Production, Marketing, Sales and Distribution and Future of Content. There will be day-long focused sessions for both the Asian Film Summit and Doc Conference. All events are hosted fromSeptember 11 to 17 at the Glenn Gould Studio and CBC Conference Centre.


STATE OF THE INDUSTRY
Kick your TIFF Industry Conference mornings off with an overview of the day’s theme or topic. Each session is led by an industry leader, followed by an extended Q&A. Presenters include:

  • Bianca Goodloe (Goodloe Law)
  • Lorenzo Soria (Hollywood Foreign Press Association)
  • Mike Goodridge (Protagonist Pictures)
  • Danny Gabai (Vice Media)

MOGULS
TIFF Industry’s onstage conversation series features some of the most powerful and influential movers and shakers of the film world. This year’s Moguls include Nicolas Chartier (Voltage Pictures), and Yu Dong (Bona Film Group) who will present in the Asian Film Summit sessions.


MASTER CLASS
Master Class provides the opportunity to explore the creative process of cinematic masters. This year’s sessions include Stephen Frears (The Program), co-presented by Pinewood Studios, andNuri Bilge Ceylan (Winter Sleep), co-presented with the Directors Guild of Canada. Jia Zhang-ke (Mountains May Depart) kicks off the Asian Film Summit with his Master Class.


INDUSTRY DIALOGUES
Industry Dialogues, supported by the Ontario Media Development Corporation, examine the current creative and business landscape of the film industry and the ever-changing future of cinema. Some of our topics and speakers include:

The Perfect Fit: Casting for Independent Film and TV
The panel, co-presented by the Casting Society of America, includes the following leading casting directors:

  • Carmen Cuba (The Martian)
  • Paul Schnee (Barden/Schnee)
  • Richard Hicks (Casting Society of America)
  • Keith Simanton (IMDB) – Moderator
Mo’ Money, More Problems: How Big Budgets Differ Around the World
This session explores varying budgets around the world and their effect on distribution and marketing decisions. Panelists include:

  • Jill Gwen Braginets (Fox Searchlight Pictures)
  • John Fithian (National Association of Theatre Owners)
  • Al Munteanu (SquareOne Entertainment)
  • Erik Matti (Honor Thy Father)
  • Kerri Craddock (Toronto International Film Festival) – Moderator
How to Speak Finance-ese
This panel of financing specialists includes:
  • John Vandervelde (The Entertainment and Media Finance Group)
  • Emily Best (Seed&Spark)
  • Charles King (MACRO)
  • Tara Parker (Goodmans LLP)
  • Adam Leipzig (CreativeFutures) – Moderator
Financing Talent Discovery
Panelists discussing how the financing process can lead to the discovery of new talent, in a panel co-presented with the Directors Guild of Canada, include:
  • Deborah Sathe (Film London Microwave)
  • Doreen Boonekamp (Netherlands Film Fund)
  • Laura Michalchyshyn (Sundance Productions)
From Micro to Medio
Panelists discussing the medium-budget bracket from $15M - $40M include:
  • Aaron L. Gilbert (Bron Studios)
  • Gareth Unwin (Kilo Two Bravo)
  • Robert Jones (Fyzz Facility)
  • Mimi Steinbauer (Radiant Films International)
Building a (Successful) Digital Marketing Campaign
This panel of digital marketing gurus includes:
  • Zachary Soreff (Sawyer Studios)
  • Bonnie Voland (IM Global)
  • Keyvan Peymani (ICM Partners)
Recouping the Investment
Panelists discussing the change in revenue streams include:
  • Lisa Bunnell (Landmark Theatres)
  • Logan Mulvey (Alchemy)
  • Wayne Marc Godfrey (The Fyzz Facility)
  • Kent Sanderson (Bleecker Street)
  • Brad Pelman (The Fremantle Corporation) – Moderator
How to Win at Digital Distribution
This panel of digital distribution experts includes:
  • Scilla Andreen (IndieFlix)
  • Michael Murphy (Gravitas Ventures)
  • Yolanda Macias (Cinedigm)
  • Eric Stein (Impact Global) – Moderator
Additional topics in the lineup include Data-Driven Content Development and Show-Running, with presenters including:
  • Isabelle Glachant (Chinese Shadows)
  • Sarah Goodman (Porch Stories)
  • Michael Gottwald (High Maintenance)
  • Anadil Houssein (Dillywood)
  • Matt Johnson (Operation Avalanche)
  • Claudia Landsberger (Baseworx for Film)
  • Sydney Levine (Sydney’s Buzz)
  • Keith Simanton (IMDB)
  • Eric Stein (Impact Global Media)
  • Evette Vargas (Digital Reign)

UPFRONT: GENDER IN MEDIA DISCOURSE
The inaugural series of no-holds-barred conversations around the most current topics in the film industry will discuss the evolving role of gender equilibrium in media. The series includes topics such as Financing Female-Led Films and Uncovering Unconscious Bias. Speakers in the series include:
  • Wendy Calhoun (Empire)
  • Gigi Pritzker (OddLot Entertainment)
  • Rina Fraticelli (Women in View)
  • Niija Kuykendall (Warner Bros Pictures)
  • Lydia Dean Pilcher (Cine Mosaic)
  • Melissa Silverstein (Indiewire)
  • Julie Ann Crommett and Daraiha Greene (Google) - Hosts

ASIAN FILM SUMMIT
Asian Film Summit, supported by Telefilm Canada and co-presented by the China-West Filmmakers Alliance, is a key element of the Festival’s ongoing commitment to building bridges between Asian cinema and the West. This year’s full day of partnership news, trends and interviews focused on China’s film industry includes the following topics and presenters:

China-Hollywood Collaborations: The Future is Now
Panelists exploring the tenability and benefits of collaborations between Hollywood studios and Chinese corporations include:
  • Felice Bee (Huayi Brothers International Ltd.)
  • Jerry Ye (Wanda)
Clearing the Hurdles of the Chinese Film Industry
This panel of experts discussing censorship, distribution and exposure in the Chinese film industry includes:
  • An Xiaofen (Desen International Media)
  • Andy Li (iQiyi)

DOC CONFERENCE
TIFF Doc Conference, sponsored by A+E Studios, features a full day of presentations and conversations on the current landscape of documentary production, financing and distribution. Topics will explore the evolution of the creative and business aspects of documentary, starting the day with an intimate conversation with lauded documentary director Asif Kapadia (Amy) hosted by Thom Powers (Toronto International Film Festival).

Seven Awesome Tips for Selling Your Film Directly
Jeremy Boxer (Vimeo) will discuss democratization of the digital age and distributing film, series, and video directly to an audience.

Do Docs Change Anything? A conversation with Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein
The team of Avi Lewis and Naomi Klein (This Changes Everything) discuss the role of documentaries in creating social change with their multi-platform project’s Engagement Lead,Katie McKenna (Working Knowledge).

Dangerous Docs: Documentary vs. Journalism
Angelica Das (Game Lab Center for Media & Social Impact at American University) shares wisdom from the groundbreaking study "Dangerous Documentaries: Reducing Risk when Telling Truth to Power” on facing rising challenges from governments and corporations.

The Year Kickstarter Broke $100M for Documentaries
Kickstarter's Dan Schoenbrun and George Schmaltz will provide insights, stats, and strategies to illuminate best practices and innovation on the platform.

Finding the Money: A New Study on Documentary and Philanthropy
Simon Kilmurry (International Documentary Association) speaks to Maria De Rosa andMarilyn Burgess (Communications MDR) about their new study on Philanthropy and Documentary, commissioned by Documentary Organization of Canada.

Your film can change the world… if the right people see it.
Christie Marchese (Picture Motion), examines how to tell stories to create a movement and positively impact the world.

Documentary Now! with Bill Hader
Bill Hader (Trainwreck) and director Rhys Thomas (Documentary Now!) talk about working on IFC's new comedic doc series, and share an exclusive preview of the upcoming episode Gentle & Soft: The Story of the Blue Jean Committee.


FILMMAKER LOUNGE
The perfect meeting space for industry professionals with free WiFi and a variety of meeting spaces, the Filmmaker Lounge is open September 10 to 17, from 9:30am to 6:30pm, and is located in the Glenn Gould Studio Lobby at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre, 250 Front St. West, Toronto.

Industry Happy Hours
An opportunity to unwind and meet filmmakers, producers, and potential business partners from around the world, Industry Happy Hours are held in the Glenn Gould Studio Lobby at the Canadian Broadcasting Centre, 250 Front St. West, September 11 to 16 from 5:30pm to 6:30pm. The Industry Cocktail, held on September 17 from 5:30pm to 7:30pm will celebrate the close of another year of successful industry events.


ADDITIONAL INDUSTRY PROGRAMMING AND INITIATIVES

Festival 101
An insider’s look on how to maximize your time at the Festival and all the resources available to you, this session is a great way to meet new colleagues and TIFF decision-makers in an informal environment.

CMPA Producer’s Award
This award is presented annually to an outstanding Canadian producer with a Canadian feature at the Festival and will take place this year on Thursday, September 10.

Horizontal Case Study: Spring
Taking one independent film from last year’s Official Selection, a panel will analyze that film’s creative, financing, marketing and distribution. Speakers examining the award-winning filmSpring include:
  • Justin Benson (Spring)
  • Aaron Moorhead (Spring)
  • Luca Legnani (Spring)
  • Nate Bolotin (XYZ Films)
  • Raffaella Delvecchio (Apulia Film Commission)
  • Janet Brown (FilmBuff)
  • Tim League (Drafthouse Films)
Short Cuts Connections
Speakers and panelists in this series of presentations, panels and roundtables for short film directors and producers include:
  • Richard Abramowitz (Abramorama)
  • Sharon Badal (Tribeca Film Festival)
  • Matt Johnson (Operation Avalanche)
  • Fred Joubaud (Ouat Media)
  • Sydney Neter (SND films)
  • Ryan Turek (Blumhouse Productions)
Telefilm Canada Talent to Watch
Presented by Telefilm Canada, this series highlights the hottest homegrown directors that are the buzz of 2015. Topics include Canada’s Class of 2015: Powered by Creativity; Maximizing Your Audience: Savvy Marketing Insights with Gary Faber (Entertainment Research Marketing); and Alternative Routes: From Art House to Your House.

Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS!
This opportunity for six filmmaker teams to pitch their feature film idea in six minutes to an industry audience to win $15,000 toward their project takes place on Sunday, September 13. Projects include:
  • Brown Girl In The Ring: The Prequel - Sharon Lewis and Jenn Paul
  • Claire, from the Bus - Andrew Nicholas McCann Smith, Kjartan Hewitt and Jordan Canning
  • Demonolatry - Laura Perlmutter and Daniel Perlmutter
  • E.V.E. - A.J. Bond
  • Mohammed VI - Matthew Hannam and Kaveh Nabatian
  • Passover - Daniel Schachter and Constance Malpel
Indiewire @ the Festival
The editorial team from Indiewire brings back their popular Q&A sessions with some of the most notable actors and directors at the Toronto International Film Festival.

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

Online industry registration for the Toronto International Film Festival is now open. There are five pass types, each offering access to the Industry Conference and Doc Conference. Online registration closes August 28. To learn more about passes and price points visit:http://tiff.net/industry

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
@TIFF_Industry | #TIFFConference
@TIFF_NET #TIFF15
Facebook.com/TIFF


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: Reel Asian's So You Think You Can Pitch?


The Toronto Reel Asian Film Festival has announced a call for submissions for its 2015 edition of So You Think You Can Pitch?, a pitch competition for filmmakers. Winners receive up to $18,000 in production services and cash towards making the project based on their winning pitch.

They accept pitches for any film idea, be it dramatic, documentary, musical or experimental, up to 24 minutes in length, as long as you feature an Asian member in a key creative role, either in front or behind the camera. Applications will be accepted until September 28 at 5pm.

Selected finalists teams will participate in an intensive boot camp at the Reel Asian Pitch Clinic, where finalists gain in-depth professional advice on pitching like a pro in front of a live audience. Finalists will compete at a live Pitch Competition Finale during the 2015 Reel Asian Festival this November 5-15th. Finalists will also be awarded with a 2015 Festival Pass, with access to festival screenings and Industry Series sessions, where you can gain insightful knowledge from industry professionals and access the many networking opportunities throughout the festival.

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Got a great idea for a dramatic, documentary, musical or experimental Short Film? We want to help you make it!

The 10th Annual Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival's pitch competition - So You Think You Can Pitch? awards two winning filmmaking teams (each from the Emerging Artist and Established Artist categories) with a production package & cash prize to kick-start and/or finish your short film. Application Deadline: Monday, September 28th by 5PM!

Reel Asian 'So You Think You Can Pitch?' winners receive:

- Production packages from Charles Street Video worth $18k & $10k respectively

- Opportunity to screen your work at the Reel Asian film fest 2016

- $2000 cash

Full Pitch guidelines & application form is available at: http://www.reelasian.com/festival/industry-series/so-you-think-you-can-pitch/

Send completed application or any questions to industry@reelasian.com (Aram Collier - Industry & Education, Reel Asian). Deadline: applications due 5pm on Monday, September 28.

Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 guest list, fact sheet


THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL ROLLS OUT THE RED CARPET FOR A STAR-STUDDED SEPTEMBER WITH FILMMAKERS AND TALENT FROM AROUND THE GLOBE

The 40th Toronto International Film Festival® welcomes an unparalleled guest list of celebrated film talent from around the globe during the 11-day event, which runs September 10 to 20, 2015.

Filmmakers expected to present their world premieres in Toronto include: Ridley Scott, David Gordon Green, Barbara Kopple, Jonás Cuarón, Stephen Frears, Leanne Pooley, Ben Wheatley, Baltasar Kormákur, Meghna Gulzar, Jason Bateman, Álex de la Iglesia, Eva Husson, Nicolás Pereda, Alan Zweig, He Ping and Michael Moore.

The Festival also welcomes thousands of producers and other industry professionals bringing films to us.

The following filmmakers, creators and artists are expected to attend the Toronto International Film Festival:

Marc Abraham, Lenny Abrahamson, Hany Abu-Assad, Evgeny Afineevsky, Pablo Agüero, Chantal Akerman, AKIZ, Emin Alper, Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche, George Amponsah, Laurie Anderson, Faraz Anoushahpour, Parastoo Anoushahpour, Joko Anwar, Danielle Arbid, Myrsini Aristidou, Gillian Armstrong, Harrison Atkins, Jacques Audiard, Nabil Ayouch, Jason Bateman, Joe Begos, Mateo Bendesky, Roxanne Benjamin, Amy Berg, Bergur Bernburg, Fabienne Berthaud, Thomas Bidegain, Wayne Blair, Matthew Taylor Blais, Anna Boden, Andreea Cristina Bortun, Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, Leyla Bouzid, Salem Brahimi, Pietra Brettkelly, Sue Brooks, Matthew Brown, David Bruckner, Robert Budreau, Jayro Bustamante, Sean Byrne, Paco Cabezas, A.D. Calvo, Nelson Carlo de los Santos Arias, Jon Cassar, Michael Caton-Jones, Sylvia Chang, Soi Cheang, Mabel Cheung, Andrew Cividino, Elaine Constantine, Scott Cooper, Julio Hernández Cordón, Catherine Corsini, John Crowley, Jonás Cuarón, Maris Curran, Andrew Currie, Jamie M. Dagg, Ely Dagher, Terence Davies, Tammy Davis, Álex de la Iglesia, Salvador del Solar, Samuel M. Delgado, Gaby Dellal, Julie Delpy, Yuval Delshad, Nick DenBoer, Diastème, Drake Doremus, Christopher Doyle, Igor Drljaca, Geneviève Dulude-De Celles, Stephen Dunn, Barbara Eder, Guy Édoin, Jussi Eerola, Robert Eggers, Atom Egoyan, Adil El Arbi, Halima Elkhatabi, Danae Elon, Jihan El-Tahri, Roland Emmerich, Anne Émond, Can Evrenol, Lawrence Fajardo, Philippe Falardeau, Bilall Fallah, Kasra Farahani, David Farr, Jean-Loup Felicioli, Pablo Fendrik, Ryan Ferko, Simon Fitzmaurice, Ryan Fleck, Federica Foglia, Davy Force, Maïder Fortuné, Stephen Frears, Fridrik Thor Fridriksson, Cary Fukunaga, Alain Gagnol, Florian Gallenberger, Deniz Gamze Ergüven, Geeta Gandbhir, Cesc Gay, Tom Geens, Beatrice Gibson, Nitzan Gilady, Helena Girón, Amos Gitaï, Fabrice Gobert, Tim Godsall, David Gordon Green, Paul Gross, Guan Hu, Ciro Guerra, Davis Guggenheim, Meghna Gulzar, Patricio Guzmán, Ido Haar, Lucile Hadžihalilovic, Du Haibin, Andrew Haigh, Hermon Hailay, Grímur Hákonarson, Catherine Hardwicke, Sterlin Harjo, Owen Harris, Brian Helgeland, Oliver Hermanus, Gavin Hood, Tom Hooper, Patrick Horvath, Eva Husson, Nicholas Hytner, Anders Thomas Jensen, Brian D. Johnson, Duke Johnson, Evan Johnson, Kent Jones, Kahlil Joseph, Marie-Ève Juste, Tolga Karaçelik, Paul Katis, Charlie Kaufman, Shambhavi Kaul, Naomi Kawase, Yaelle Kayam, Alexandra-Therese Keining, Eric Khoo, Sebastian Ko, Sandra Kogut, Barbara Kopple, Hirokazu Kore-eda, Baltasar Kormákur, German Kral, Lars Kraume, Tim Kring, Joachim Lafosse, Patrice Laliberté, Yorgos Lanthimos, Hicham Lasri, Daniel Leconte, Emmanuel Leconte, Sherren Lee, Claude Lelouch, Michael Lennox, Mark Lewis, Sergei Loznitsa, Guy Maddin, Michael Mann, Pietro Marcello, Alejandra Márquez Abella, Justin Martinez, Gabriel Mascaro, Mai Masri, Erik Matti, Steven McCarthy, Tom McCarthy, Bruce McDonald, Sam McKeith, Tom McKeith, Julio Medem, Isiah Medina, Deepa Mehta, Piero Messina, Takashi Miike, Rebecca Miller, Roberto Minervini, Josh Mond, Caroline Monnet, Dito Montiel, Michael Moore, Jocelyn Moorhouse, Nanni Moretti, Radu Muntean, Ilya Naishuller, Pan Nalin, Arab Nasser, Tarzan Nasser, László Nemes, Morgan Neville, Eva Neymann, Gaspar Noé, Bahar Noorizadeh, Rufus Norris, Ryan J. Noth, Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, Kwon Oh-kwang, Marcel Ophüls, Louise Osmond, Luis Ospina, Ivan Ostrochovský, Stephen Page, Kire Paputts, Jennifer Peedom, Nicolás Pereda, Osgood Perkins, He Ping, Leanne Pooley, Natalie Portman, Corneliu Porumboiu, Robin Pront, Lucía Puenzo, Nicolás Puenzo, Radio Silence, Kazik Radwanski, Behrouz Rae, Jean-Paul Rappeneau, Nick Read, Patrick Reed, Rob Reiner, Jason Reitman, Arturo Ripstein, Ben Rivers, Jay Roach, Ariel Rotter, Patricia Rozema, Rúnar Rúnarsson, Zack Russell, Seung-wan Ryoo, Adam Salky, Jeremy Saulnier, Matthew Saville, Mark Sawers, Lorene Scafaria, Elisabeth Scharang, Sebastian Schipper, Kerstin Schroedinger, Grant Scicluna, Ridley Scott, Florin Serban, Michelle Shephard, Howie Shia, Mina Shum, Nick Simon, Jeremy Sims, Hanna Sköld, Marko Skop, Mark Slutsky, Peter Sollett, Paolo Sorrentino, The Sporadic Film Collective, Simon Stone, Todd Strauss-Schulson, Thomas Stuber, Corin Sworn, Malgorzata Szumowska, Mika Taanila, Kimie Tanaka, Terrarea, Johnnie To, Pablo Trapero, Joachim Trier, Athina Rachel Tsangari, André Turpin, Yermek Tursunov, Jean-Marc Vallée, Joost van Ginkel, James Vanderbilt, Ana Vaz, Federico Veiroj, David Verbeek, Lorenzo Vigas, Denis Villeneuve, Magnus von Horn, Charlie Vundla, Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Wim Wenders, Ben Wheatley, Alice Winocour, Frederick Wiseman, Anthony Wonke, Marcin Wrona, Leena Yadav, Zhang Yang, Martin Zandvliet, Shemi Zarhin, Yared Zeleke, Jia Zhang-ke, Christian Zübert, and Alan Zweig.

The following guests are expected to attend the Toronto International Film Festival:

Christopher Abbott, Maisa Abd Elhadi, Alon Aboutboul, Abdelkarim Abu Baraka, Shohreh Aghdashloo, Waris Ahluwalia, Anajosé Aldrete, Vladimir Alexis, Sarah Allen, Joan Allen, Mathieu Amalric, Robert Amjarv, Jesuthasan Antonythasan, Benjamin Arthur, Ascot Royals, Kate Ashley, Mohammed Assaf, Hiba Atallah, Qais Atallah, Kevin Bacon, Jag Bal, Sofia Banzhaf, Tara Lynn Barr, Drew Barrymore, Joel Basman, Sean Bean, Jonny Beauchamp, Monica Bellucci, Tim Beresford, Bernardo Bernardo, The Big Sound, Luke Bilyk, Rougalta Bintou Saleh, Emily Blunt, Alexis Bonogofsky, Devon Bostick, Rachida Brakni, Adrien Brody, Erika Brodzky, Josh Brolin, Bruce Peninsula, Daniel Brühl, Sandra Bullock, Lindsay Burdge, Emil Buschow, Oskar Buschow, Will Butler, Win Butler, Rose Byrne, Michael Caine, Deragh Campbell, Michael Caton, Josh Charles, Régine Chassagne, Jessica Chastain, Tannishtha Chatterjee, Ricardo Chavira, Emmanuelle Chriqui, Suzanne Clément, Kristine Cofsky, Emory Cohen, Toni Collette, Common, Tom Courtenay, Bryan Cranston, John Lloyd Cruz, Penélope Cruz, Jimena Cuarón, Matt Damon, Jeff Daniels, Mackenzie Davis, Benicio Del Toro, Monica Deol, Johnny Depp, Rajshri Deshpande, Tommy Dewey, Agyness Deyn, Steve Dhillon, Fariborz David Diaan, Sarah Jane Dias, Garret Dillahunt, Ma-Anne Dionisio, David Disher, Ryan Donnelly, Jean Dujardin, Willonson Duprate, Francesca Eastwood, Joel Edgerton, Jean Romane Edmond, Dennis Edney, Patricia Edney, Jesse Eisenberg, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Carmen Ejogo, Idris Elba, Viss Elliot Safavi, Greg Ellis, Cary Elwes, Elle Fanning, Feng Xiaogang, Dominic Flores, Mikkel Boe Følsgaard, Ben Foster, Jeremy Gara, Gael García Bernal, Maxim Gaudette, Filip Geljo, Jasmin Geljo, Greta Gerwig, Domhnall Gleeson, Donald Glover, Cad Gold Jr., Caroline Goodall, John Goodman, Topher Grace, Greg Grunberg, Pavleen Gujral, Jake Gyllenhaal, Tom Hardy, Allan Hawco, Ethan Hawke, Salma Hayek, Liam Hemsworth, Aksel Hennie, Tom Hiddleston, Randeep Hooda, Sacha Horler, Christine Horne, Nicholas Hoult, Patrick Huard, Rhys Ifans, Reef Ireland, Jeremy Irons, Jeremy Irvine, Christopher Jacot, Stephan James, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Connor Jessup, Wang Jiajia, Jillea, Harvey Keitel, Anna Kendrick, Richard Kerr, Irrfan Khan, Kirin Kiki, Jack Kilmer, Tim Kingsbury, Burghart Klaußner, Naomi Klein, Johannes Krisch, Diane Kruger, Peter Kurth, Kutiman, Shia LaBeouf, Karen Lamassonne, Martin Landau, Caleb Landry Jones, Diane Lane, Brie Larson, Gilles Lellouche, Alban Lenoir, Dave Liang, Marilyn Lima, Maša Lizdek, Kayla Lorette, Yo-Yo Ma and members of the Silk Road Ensemble, Amrit Maghera, Anushka Manchanda, Kate Mara, Jackson Martin, Steve Martin, Rachel McAdams, Anthony McCoy, Katelyn McKerracher, Chad McKinney, Baya Medhaffer, Alyx Melone, Tyler Messick, Dounia Mikou, Helen Mirren, Susan Misner, Jessica Mitchell, Reece Moffett, Roland Møller, Ali Momen, Julianne Moore, Elisabeth Moss, Sandhya Mridul, Axelle Munezero, William Nadylam, Jean Baptiste Nazaire, Navid Negahban, Sophie Nélisse, Cynthia Nixon, Tom Noonan, Dean Norris, Kim Novak, Michael Nyqvist, Chris O'Dowd, Alvaro Ogalla, Dean O'Gorman, Elizabeth Olsen, David Oyelowo, Ellen Page, Hunter Page-Lochard, Dev Patel, Michael Peña, Ron Perlman, Terry Pheto, Christopher Plummer, Clémence Poésy, Imogen Poots, Keith Poulson, Tara Pratt, Princess Shaw, Ahmad Qassim, Dennis Quaid, Eddie Redmayne, Richard Reed Perry, Callum Keith Rennie, Ryan Reynolds, Keith Richards, Julian Richings, Emma Roberts, Nick Robinson, Sam Rockwell, Scott Rodger, Géza Röhrig, Sandro Romero, Saoirse Ronan, Chloe Rose, Sakis Rouvas, Louis Roux, Geoffrey Rush, Andrew Ryder, Alain Saadeh, Gia Sandhu, Susan Sarandon, Morgan Saylor, Aliocha Schneider, Matthias Schoenaerts, Mike Scott, Nick Serino, Gingger Shankar, Sharon Jones and The Dap-Kings, Kiernan Shipka, Sarah Silverman, J.K. Simmons, Julia Simpson, Goran Slavkovic, Sarah Snook, Sebastian Stan, Kristen Stewart, Patrick Stewart, Yunfan Sun, Donald Sutherland, Kiefer Sutherland, Rossif Sutherland, Theo Tams, Juno Temple, David Thewlis, Tory N. Thompson, River Tiber, Karelle Tremblay, Jacob Tremblay, Ulrike C. Tscharre, Peter Vack, Marine Vacth, Chantal Vaillancourt, Erwin Van Cotthem, Željko Veljkovic, Alicia Vikander, Vinay Virmani, Christopher Walken, Michaela Watkins, Naomi Watts, Matt Watts, Andy Weir, Rachel Weisz, Chase Williamson, Rachel Wilson, Kate Winslet, Letitia Wright, Fouad Yammine, Anton Yelchin, Odessa Young, Zhao Tao, and Elsa Zylberstein.



2015 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL FACT SHEET
(Numbers in parentheses are 2014 statistics)

399 Total: Features — 289; Shorts — 110 (392 Total: Features — 284; Shorts — 108)

256 Features that are World, International, or North American Premieres: 132, 27 and 97 respectively (248 Total: 138 World; 37 International; 73 North American)

6,118 Total Submissions: International — 4,893; Canadian — 1,225 (5,671: International — 4,557; Canadian —1,114)

71 Countries (79)

28 Screens Used (28)

16 Programmes (16)

30,894 Minutes of Film (30,943)

278’ Longest Film: The Memory of Justice (From What is Before— 388’)

1’ Shortest Film(s): The Reminder and Untitled (A Single Life, O Canada and Open Form – Game on an Actress’s Face— 2’)

39 Canadian features, including co-productions (31)

24 Canadian features making their World Premiere, including co-productions (24)

45 Canadian shorts, including co-productions (46)

6 Installations mounted in venues across the city as part of Wavelengths (5)


The 2015 Toronto International Film Festival® Official Film Schedule was released today and is available at TIFF Bell Lightbox or by visiting tiff.net/festival. Copies will also be distributed in the Toronto Star and Metro on Thursday, August 27. A section about the Festival will appear in the Toronto Star on Thursday, September 3, and will include the full film schedule.

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 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.

Toronto International Film Festival announces 2015 Discovery, TIFF Kids, In Conversation With..., Festival Street programmes


TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL UNVEILS DISCOVERY PROGRAMME FEATURING 30 FILMS BY EXCITING NEW FILMMAKERS FROM ACROSS THE GLOBE

The Toronto International Film Festival® announced today its Discovery programme showcasing 30 outstanding and absorbing feature films, including 16 World Premieres, by first and second time directors from Canada and across the globe.

“Discovery is the place where Festival audiences will find the future of filmmaking,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. “You can expect to uncover thrilling new voices, inspiring storytellers and hidden gems among this fantastic showcase of work from some of the most exciting new directors from around the world.”

The diverse Discovery lineup includes Desde Allá, an intense social drama from Venezuelan newcomer Lorenzo Vigas; Tom and Sam McKeith’s Manila-set thriller Beast; German filmmaker Sebastian Ko’s riveting suspense We Monsters; Michael Lennox’s A Patch of Fog which chronicles a British anti-bromance; Very Big Shot, the debut from Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, delving into a darkly comedic world of coke smuggling in Lebanon; Maris Curran’s intimate drama Five Nights in Maine; Irish director Simon Fitzmaurice’s feature debut, the coming-of-age story My Name is Emily; and Mexico’s Alejandra Márquez Abellas’ debut, the poignant drama Semana Santa.

The Toronto International Film Festival is also delighted to announce an additional title has been added to the Cinematheque Programme — a special 20th anniversary screening of Michael Mann’s magnum-opus Heat, followed by a Q&A with the acclaimed writer/director; and in the Vanguard Programme, the Festival announces the world premiere of Pedro Morelli’s Zoom.

DISCOVERY PROGRAMME

A Patch of Fog Michael Lennox, United Kingdom World Premiere
A celebrated novelist and TV personality finds his reputation on the line when he is caught shoplifting by a lonely security guard, intent on becoming his friend for life. Stephen Graham (Pirates of the Caribbean, Boardwalk Empire) stars alongside Conleth Hill (Game of Thrones), Lara Pulver (Sherlock), Arsher Ali (Four Lions) and Ian McElhinney (Game of Thrones).

The Ardennes Robin Pront, Belgium World Premiere
Two bandit brothers, one fresh from prison, the other eager to escape their criminal past, form a potentially explosive love triangle with the ex-con’s ex-girlfriend, in Robin Pront’s Cain vs. Abel update.

Beast Tom McKeith, Sam McKeith, Australia/Philippines World Premiere
Deep in the slums of Manila, a young boxer's life is changed forever when his father pressures him to cheat in a fight.

Black Adil El Arbi, Bilall Fallah, Belgium World Premiere
Fifteen-year-old Mavela is a member of the notorious Black Bronx gang. She falls head over heels in love with the charismatic Marwan, a boy from the rival gang 1080ers. The two young people are brutally forced to choose between loyalty to their gang and their love for each other. An impossible choice ... or not?

Born to Dance Tammy Davis, New Zealand World Premiere
A Maori teen faces parental and social pressure while leading his competitive hip-hop dance crew toward the regional championships, in this exhilarating feature directorial debut from New Zealand actor Tammy Davis.

Dégradé Arab Nasser, Tarzan Nasser, Palestine/France/Qatar North American Premiere
Gaza Strip, present day. Christine’s beauty salon is heaving with female clients: a bitter divorcée, a stern religious woman, a disenchanted housewife addicted to prescription drugs, and a young bride-to-be, among others. But their day of leisure is disrupted when gunfire breaks out across the street. A gangland family has stolen the lion from Gaza’s zoo, and the police have decided it’s time to wrestle control. Stuck in the salon, the women start to unravel...

Desde Allá Lorenzo Vigas, Venezuela North American Premiere
Fifty-year-old Armando picks up young boys in the streets of Caracas and pays them to come home with him. He also regularly spies on an older man with whom he seems bound by something in the past. One day he meets 17-year-old Elder, the leader of a small gang. Violent at first, their relationship morphs into something beautiful ... until the inevitable happens.

Downriver Grant Scicluna, Australia International Premiere
James has served time for drowning a little boy when he himself was just a child, although the body was never found. Upon his parole, a visit from his victim's mother sends him on a quest to find the truth. With little time and danger at every turn, James risks his freedom and his life to uncover the trail of sins that might give closure to a grieving mother.

Eva Nová Marko Škop, Slovakia World Premiere
Eva would do anything to regain the love of the one she hurt the most — her son. She is a recovered alcoholic, but decades ago she was a famous actress.

Five Nights in Maine Maris Curran, USA World Premiere
Reeling from the tragic, sudden death of his wife, a man travels to rural Maine to seek answers from his estranged mother-in-law, who is herself confronting guilt and grief over her daughter's death. Starring David Oyelowo (Selma), Dianne Wiest and Rosie Perez.

The Here After (Efterskalv) Magnus von Horn, Poland/Sweden/France North American Premiere
When John returns home to his father after serving time in prison, he is looking forward to starting his life afresh. However in the local community, his crime is neither forgotten nor forgiven. John’s presence brings out the worst in everyone around him and a lynch-mob atmosphere slowly takes shape. Feeling abandoned by his former friends and the people he loves, John loses hope and the same aggressions that previously sent him to prison start building up again. Unable to leave the past behind, he decides to confront it.

Ixcanul Jayro Bustamante, Guatemala/France Canadian Premiere
María, a young 17-year-old Mayan girl, lives and works with her parents on a coffee plantation in the foothills of an active volcano in Guatemala. An arranged marriage awaits her. Although María dreams of going to the “big city,” her status as an indigenous woman does not permit her to change her destiny. A snake bite forces her to go out into the modern world where her life is saved, but at what price?

James White Josh Mond, USA Canadian Premiere
James White (Christopher Abbott) is a troubled twenty-something trying to stay afloat in a frenzied New York City. He retreats further into a self-destructive, hedonistic lifestyle, but as his mother (Cynthia Nixon) battles a serious illness James is forced to take control of his life. The directorial debut of Martha Marcy May Marlene producer Josh Mond, James White, which had its world premiere at Sundance Film Festival 2014 where it was the winner of the Audience Award: NEXT, is a confident and closely observed debut that explores loss and the deep relationship between a mother and son.

Keeper Guillaume Senez, Belgium/Switzerland/France North American Premiere
Maxime and Mélanie are in love. Together, they clumsily explore their sexuality with fiery curiosity until the day Mélanie realizes she’s pregnant. At first Maxime takes the news badly, but then he gets used to the idea of becoming a father. He convinces Melanie to keep the baby. So it’s been decided – Maxime and Mélanie, all of fifteen years old, will become parents.

Les Cowboys Thomas Bidegain, France/Belgium North American Premiere
A vast prairie, a country and western gathering somewhere in the east of France. Alain is a central figure in this community. He’s dancing with his daughter, 16-year-old Kelly, as his wife and their young son Kid watch from the sidelines. But on this day, Kelly disappears, and the family falls apart. Alain embarks on a relentless search for his daughter, even though it costs him everything and takes him to dark, unsettling places, where his sole support is Kid, who sacrifices his youth to accompany his father on this seemingly endless quest.

Meghmallar Zahidur Rahim Anjan, Bangladesh World Premiere
A case of mistaken identity throws an apolitical chemistry teacher into the maelstrom of the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War, in the striking debut feature from director Zahidur Rahim Anjan.

Mountain Yaelle Kayam, Israel/Denmark North American Premiere
An Orthodox Jewish woman, living at the edge of the cemetery on Jerusalem's Mount of Olives, becomes fascinated by a nocturnal community of prostitutes and drug dealers congregating amongst the tombstones. Mountain is a haunting and dramatic exploration of a women's search for identity.

My Name is Emily Simon Fitzmaurice, Ireland North American Premiere
Packed off to a foster home after her father is institutionalized, a rebellious young Irish girl resolves to bust her dad out of the hospital where he's been confined, in this spirited coming-of-age tale from celebrated memoirist and first-time feature director Simon Fitzmaurice.

The Paradise Suite Joost van Ginkel, Netherlands/Sweden/Bulgaria World Premiere
This dexterous tale of survival from director Joost van Ginkel traces the intersecting stories of six immigrants from very different backgrounds in Amsterdam who learn that they can irreversibly influence each other's lives, sometimes with just one glance.

Semana Santa Alejandra Márquez Abella, Mexico World Premiere
Dali and her eight-year-old son Pepe take a vacation to Acapulco with Dali’s boyfriend, Chavez. Instead of bringing them closer, their beach holiday brings out things in each of them that threaten to pull this emerging family apart.

Spear Stephen Page, Australia World Premiere
Djali, a young Aboriginal man, sets off on a journey of initiation to understand what it means to be a man in a modern day world. He sees the problems being faced by Aboriginal men in remote and urban communities. As he struggles to find his place, he becomes awakened to a spiritual force within, guiding him on his journey into manhood.

Very Big Shot (Film Kteer Kbeer) Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, Lebanon/Qatar World Premiere
Intending to smuggle the amphetamine Captagon to Iraqi Kurdistan, a small-time Lebanese drug dealer discovers that a way to foil customs, with the help of a talentless filmmaker. Posing as a film producer, he has no qualms manipulating public opinion to his advantage.

The Wait (L’attesa) Piero Messina, Italy North American Premiere
Waiting for someone is an act of faith. Anna and Jeanne, isolated in a Sicilian country house in Caltagirone, are waiting for Giuseppe’s arrival. He is the former’s son, the latter’s boyfriend. Their wait turns into a mysterious act of love and will, while in the streets people are celebrating Easter.

We Monsters (Wir Monster) Sebastian Ko, Germany North American Premiere
Paul and Christine know their teenage daughter Sarah has been thrown off track by their separation — but is she capable of committing a horrible crime? Wanting to protect her, they decide attempt to hide her wrongdoing, but their joint guilt forces the family back together under a web of lies. The directorial debut from German actor Sebastian Ko, We Monsters is a gripping psychological thriller.

Wedding Doll (Chatona Meniyar) Nitzan Gilady, Israel International Premiere
Fixated on romantic fantasies, a kindly and strong-willed young woman with a mild mental disability embarks on a relationship — much to the concern of her protective mother — in this assured first feature from director Nitzan Gilady.

Previously announced Canadian titles in the Discovery Programme include Stephen Dunn’s Closet Monster, Adam Garnet Jones’ Fire Song, Jamie M. Dagg’s River, Kire Paputts’ The Rainbow Kid, and Andrew Cividino’s Sleeping Giant.

CINEMATHEQUE PROGRAMME

Heat Michael Mann, USA
Hard-boiled ex-con Neil McCauley is the leader of a crew of seasoned thieves who operate with grim determination and military discipline. But when a last-minute replacement on his team leads to a bloody triple murder during an armoured truck robbery, McCauley is targeted by veteran detective Vincent Hanna, whose obsessive dedication both mirrors and contrasts with McCauley's ruthless professionalism. Starring Al Pacino and Robert DeNiro with Jon Voight, Val Kilmer, Ashley Judd, Tom Sizemore and Amy Brenneman.

VANGUARD PROGRAMME

Zoom, Pedro Morelli, Canada World Premiere
Zoom is a fast-paced, pop-art inspired, multi-plot contemporary comedy. The film consists of three seemingly separate but ultimately interlinked storylines about a comic book artist, a novelist and a film director. Each character lives in a separate world but authors a story about the life of another.

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



TIFF KIDS PROGRAMME SATISFIES EVEN THE SMALLEST CINEPHILES AT THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

The Toronto International Film Festival® presents an international selection of family-friendly films as part of this year’s TIFF Kids programme. The lineup opens a world of cultural perspectives for young festival-goers, presenting everything from animated adventures to touching coming-of-age stories. The programme boasts the world premiere of the remastered and expanded Brad Bird classic The Iron Giant with performances from Jennifer Aniston and Harry Connick Jr.

"The TIFF Kids programme is all about bringing the best of international children's cinema to the Festival," said Elizabeth Muskala, Director of Youth Learning. "This year we are thrilled to showcase films from Europe and Asia, as well as a classic animated family feature, with The Iron Giant: Signature Edition."

The Boy and the Beast (Bakemono no ko) Mamoru Hosoda, Japan International Premiere
A young boy in modern-day Tokyo stumbles into an alternate dimension and becomes the apprentice to a bearlike warrior, in this stunning animated fantasy from writer-director Mamoru Hosoda. Cast includes Koji Yakusho and Aoi Miyazaki. Recommended for ages 11 and up.

My Skinny Sister (Min lilla syster) Sanna Lenken, Sweden/Germany Canadian Premiere
Just as Stella enters the exciting world of adolescence, she discovers that her big sister and role model Katja is hiding an eating disorder. The disease slowly tears the family apart. A story about jealousy, love and betrayal told with warmth, depth and laughter. Starring Rebecka Josephson, Amy Deasismont and Annika Hallin. Recommended for ages 11 and up.

Phantom Boy Alain Gagnol and Jean-Loup Felicioli, France/Belgium North American Premiere
From the Academy Award-nominated directors of A Cat in Paris comes a thrilling new adventure. An 11-year-old boy named Leo, becomes an unlikely superhero when he discovers that he has the ability to leave his body and fly through walls. When a nefarious gangster takes control of New York’s power supply, only he can save the city. Cast includes Audrey Tautou, Édouard Baer and JeanPierre Marielle. Recommended for ages 10 and up.

The Iron Giant: Signature Edition Brad Bird, USA World Premiere
Remastered and enhanced with two new scenes, the modern animated classic about a young boy befriending a gigantic space robot returns to enchant a new generation of audiences. Cast includes Jennifer Aniston, Harry Connick, Jr., Vin Diesel and Eli Marienthal. Recommended for ages 7 and up.



FESTIVAL’S IN CONVERSATION WITH… PROGRAMME OFFERS INTIMATE DISCUSSIONS WITH CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED TALENT
On-stage appearances by Julianne Moore, Salma Hayek, Sarah Silverman and Matthew Weiner

This September, the Toronto International Film Festival® invites audiences to four unique, intimate sessions with preeminent stars from the film and television worlds. Offering compelling, in-depth exchanges and revealing personal experiences from their latest projects, this year’s esteemed lineup of special guests includes Julianne Moore, Salma Hayek, Sarah Silverman,
and Matthew Weiner.

“Our In Conversation With… events always offer something unexpected. Whether it’s a personal anecdote, a surprising fact, or an industry tidbit, audiences will be enchanted by this year’s lineup of prestigious guests,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival. “Festivalgoers will have the exclusive opportunity to hear from the top talent of the film and television industries in a candid and intimate environment.”

In Conversation With... replaces the Festival's former Mavericks programme.

In Conversation With… Julianne Moore
Among her numerous accolades throughout her career in film, television, on stage and as a NY-Times Bestselling author, Academy Award® and Emmy®-winning actress Julianne Moore is the ninth person in Academy history to receive two Oscar nominations in the same year and the only American actress to be awarded top acting prizes at the Cannes, Berlin and Venice film festivals. Having appeared in more than 60 feature films, she will next be seen this October in Freeheld– part of the Festival’s official selection – opposite Ellen Page and Michael Shannon, and in November as President Coin in Francis Lawrence’s upcoming Hunger Games sequel Mockingjay: Part 2. Julianne is an Artist Ambassador for Save the Children U.S. Programs, is on the Advisory Council of The Children’s Health Fund, and is a supporter of Planned Parenthood and the Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance. Moore will hit the stage for a special conversation on the occasion of the premiere of her highly anticipated new film.

In Conversation With… Salma Hayek
Academy Award-nominee and Emmy winner Salma Hayek has proven herself as a prolific actress, producer and director in both film and television. Hayek has several films set for release this year and next, including the Festival selection Septembers of Shiraz alongside Adrien Brody, Tale of Tales by acclaimed Italian director Matteo Garrone, and as the voice “Teresa Taco” in Seth Rogen’s upcoming animated feature Sausage Party. She was nominated for an Academy Award, Golden Globe®, Screen Actors Guild and a BAFTA award for her leading role in Julie Taymor’s Frida. Noted for her acting career, Hayek has also dedicated much of her time to social activism, previously serving as spokesperson for the Pampers/UNICEF partnership worldwide and the Avon Foundation's Speak Out Against Domestic Violence program. In November 2005, she served as co-host, alongside Julianne Moore, at the Nobel Peace Prize Concert in Oslo. She was also part of the One campaign that singer and activist Bono created, as well as a member of Global Green, and Youth Aids. Born and raised in Coatzacoalcos, Mexico, Hayek studied International Relations in college in Mexico. Hayek takes the stage to discuss her remarkable career to date.

In Conversation With… Sarah Silverman
Two-time Emmy winner Sarah Silverman is a versatile performer with a repertoire that includes everything from film and television to stand-up comedy and iconic videos. Silverman next stars in the lead role of drama I Smile Back– in the Festival’s official selection – and in Ashby. She recently wrapped production on the ‘Top Secret Untitled Lonely Island Project,’ as well as a comedy pilot for HBO which she executive produced and in which she stars. Last year she was awarded an Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Variety Special for her comedy special We Are Miracles. Other credits include Wreck-It Ralph, Take This Waltz and her concert film Sarah Silverman: Jesus is Magic. Silverman’s sharp sense of humour is sure to entertain audiences as she discusses her varied career.

In Conversation With… Matthew Weiner
Matthew Weiner serves as creator, Executive Producer, writer and director on the critically acclaimed drama Mad Men. This exclusive on-stage conversation is sure to delight fans and will include a screening of the final episode of Season 1, “The Wheel,” which Weiner wrote and directed, accompanied by his engaging and entertaining live commentary, as well as a discussion about Weiner’s career to date. Mad Men is nominated for 11 Emmy nominations this year including Outstanding Drama Series and two writing nominations for Weiner including the finale of the series which he also directed. Since the series premiere in 2007, Mad Men has become one of television’s most honored shows joining an elite group in 2011 when it became only the fourth drama to be awarded four consecutive Emmy Awards for Outstanding Drama Series. Additional honors for the series include: three Golden Globe Awards for Best Television Drama Series; a Peabody Award; three Producers Guild Awards; four Writers Guild Awards; two BAFTA Awards; five Television Critics Association Awards, including Program of the Year; and being named seven years running to AFI’s Top 10 Outstanding Television Programs. Weiner’s additional credits include serving as an Executive Producer and writer on The Sopranos, and writer on various television comedy series including The Naked Truth, Becker, and Andy Richter Controls the Universe. In addition to his television credits, Weiner wrote and directed the feature film, Are You Here, featuring performances from Owen Wilson, Zack Galifianakis and Amy Poehler. Weiner currently lives in Los Angeles with his wife, architect Linda Brettler, and their four sons.



FESTIVAL STREET: WHERE CINEMA MEETS THE SIDEWALK
Film-Themed Free Programming takes over King Street from Sept. 10-13

The Toronto International Film Festival® invites audiences to step outside the theatre this year with the return of the hugely popular Festival Street initiative. From September 10 to 13, King Street West between Peter and University Streets will be closed to vehicular traffic and transformed into a pedestrian paradise free for all to enjoy.

“We’re thrilled to be bringing back all the free Festival Street fun for another year,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival. “TIFF is informally known as the ‘people’s festival’ and Festival Street is one of our most accessible initiatives. Full of film-themed free programming, it’s an opportunity for everyone to have their own special Festival experience.” In celebration of TIFFs 40th anniversary, Festival Street is literally reaching new heights with Questival, a walking interactive quiz designed by Frontier Design & Innovation. A fleet of balloons with emblazoned with artwork, each representing a past Festival film, will float above King Street for four days only. The NewCanadianMusic.ca stage features one-of-a-kind presentations connected to film as well as a line-up of up-and-coming musical talent. New this year, cinema-inspired installations explore everything from experimental film to stop-motion animation, the Slaight Family Zone welcomes even the littlest cinephiles to Festival Street, and Food Truck Village will leave no taste bud unsatisfied.

“This year we wanted to incorporate more cinematic elements into the programming for Festival Street,” said Nobu Adilman, Festival Street Programmer for the Toronto International Film Festival. “From our on-stage presentations and interactive installations to our family zone, visitors can sit back and observe or they can jump in and be active participants." Learn more and see the full schedule by visiting tiff.net/festivalstreet.

Questival

In the spirit of the 40th Festival, TIFF challenges audiences to ace the Questival walking quiz. Look up along Festival Street and you will spot a fleet of balloons emblazoned with flashy icons, each one representing a past Festival film. Play the game online at tiff.net/questival to win free film tickets to this year’s Festival – competition ends 10pm Friday at 5pm. Created by Frontier Design & Innovation, a creative exploration company made up of a magazine, design studio and ventures group focused on design-driven ideas and idea-driven design.

NewCanadianMusic.ca Stage

Titicut Follies – The Ballet World Premiere
Inspired by filmmaker Frederick Wiseman’s groundbreaking 1967 documentary, Titicut Follies –The Ballet is a cross-genre exploration integrating film, dance and music created by Wiseman, acclaimed choreographer James Sewell, and Saturday Night Live Music Director Lenny Picket. Over the course of an hour, the ballet will be performed three times, with Wiseman, Sewell and Picket in attendance. A newly restored 35mm print of Wiseman’s Titicut Follies screens in the TIFF Cinematheque programme and Wiseman’s latest film In Jackson Heights will screen in the TIFF Docs programme.

NARI
Making its world premiere, NARI is the unsung story of the lives of Lakshmi Shankar and her daughter Viji, two extraordinary artists who helped bring Indian music to the West in the 1970s through their close collaborations with Ravi Shankar and George Harrison. This arresting, multi-generational, multimedia mash-up was conceived by Gingger Shankar – singer, composer and the only woman in the world to play the double violin – in collaboration with producer Dave Liang and multidisciplinary artist Sun Yunfan.

Mohammed Assaf
Winner of the second season of Arab Idol, Mohammed Assaf makes his Canadian debut on Festival Street. Since winning Arab Idol, Assaf has toured the world, performing in a number of sold-out concerts to audiences in the Middle East, Europe and the Americas. Assaf met with the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Ban Ki-moon, in New York in November 2013 and was named Goodwill Ambassador for Peace by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA). The Idol, a film about Assaf’s journey, makes its world premiere in the Special Presentations programme.

Bruce Peninsula and the Sounds of Sleeping Giant
Bruce Peninsula recreates their booming soundtrack for Sleeping Giant, Andrew Cividino’s debut feature that screens in the Discovery programme, as soaring outtakes from the film transport you to the wilds of Northern Ontario.

Telefilm Canada presents Canada’s Got Game live!
Co-hosted by Ben Mulroney (etalk) and Teddy Wilson (InnerSpace), Telefilm Canada presents the second edition of its Canada’s Got Game live game show in collaboration with the Toronto Star. This year the public will have a chance to be contestants, alongside Canadian actors. Two teams, captained by Vinay Virmani (The Steps) and Michael Seater (Life With Derek), compete in hilarious games to test their knowledge of Canadian cinema. Come cheer on Amanda Brugel (Room), Jack Fulton (Closet Monster), Cara Gee (Empire of Dirt) and Pat Mills (Guidance).

Bookaboo on Festival Street
Rock-’n’-read fun with puppets! Don’t miss a rare opportunity to see Bookaboo, the internationally famous drumming rock puppy, share and read beautiful picture books with a host of celebrities live onstage! Bookaboo is a coproduction between UK's Happy Films and Canada's Sinking Ship Entertainment.

Movie-Themed Uke Jam!
Movie themes get anthemic makeovers by Toronto’s most virtuosic ukulele players! From the Looney Tunes Overture to The Bee Gees’ More Than A Woman (featured in Saturday Night Fever) — and a little Elvis in between — Steve McNie and his band of merrymakers will have the kids up and dancing in seconds!

River Tiber
As River Tiber, 25-year-old Toronto singer/multi-instrumentalist and producer Tommy Paxton-Beesley is unafraid to push his love for R&B and hip hop production into unusual places: pitching his vocals to sound like Mariah Carey, multi-tracking his voice into a dozen ghost choruses, and narrowing the gap in the soul spectrum between Jodeci and Flying Lotus. 2015 has been good to the rising artist, who found his voice notably sampled on Drake’s If You're Reading This It’s Too Late and performed on BADBADNOTGOOD and Ghostface Killah collaborative album, Sour Soul.

The Big Sound Festival Soul Revue
Festival Street goes full-on Motown with The Big Sound, a 25+ super-group of local players from across all musical genres, and featuring hot soul singers Maylee Todd, Gary Beals, Wade O. Brown, Maya Killtron and Tanika Charles. From Aretha to Stevie, classic cuts from the greatest musical era of all time get the full sonic treatment that transformed Detroit into Hitsville, USA.

Ascot Royals
Formed in Canada, the Ascot Royals are two British-born brothers, Jimmy and Ben Chauveau, the Isreali-born Tal Vaisman, and a rural Ontario boy, Sam Stark. It is this cultural mosaic and shared devotion to music that gives the Ascot Royals their stand-alone sound.

Jillea
Jillea is the winner of Slaight Music’s 2013 It’s Your Shot song-writing and artist development competition. Known for her urban-tinged pop and emotive voice, Jillea has just completed writing and recording her debut EP with production by Andrew “Marty” Martino (of Down With Webster) and Adam Alexander.

Jessica Mitchell
Singer-songwriter Jessica Mitchell is country music’s best kept secret. After signing a publishing deal with Slaight Music Publishing, Mitchell embarked on several writing trips to Nashville where she found herself inspired by the raw honesty and storytelling nature of the country music genre. She has spent the last few years travelling between Toronto and Nashville, collaborating with top-notch songwriters including Stephen Kozmeniuk, Todd Clark and John Goodwin.

Theo Tams
Singer, songwriter, trumpet and piano player Theo Tams has just released a new six-song EP, Back Pocket, the follow-up to his 2009 debut album, Give It All Away. Theo is currently signed to Slaight Music/Warner Music Canada and is still fondly remembered for winning the sixth and final season of Canadian Idol.

DJ John Kong
Toronto-based DJ John Kong sets are a genre-bending mix of soul-jazz, funk, disco, boogie, house, and hip-hop where only the groove makes the rules.

DJ Chico
DJ Chico was one of the first DJs to bring vintage soul, R&B, and greasy garage punk to the rock ‘n’ roll clubs of Toronto including The El Mocambo, The Horseshoe Tavern, The Silver Dollar, and the near-mythic Lion Club.

Sunclef
Using an eclectic sonic palette, Toronto-based music producer and DJ Sunclef creates an underlying energy and mood that connects people and moments with sounds and rhythms that are, at once, both forward reaching and accessible.

Festival Street Installations

The Situated Cinema Project; in-camera
This portable micro-cinema was commissioned by Toronto-based media-arts exhibition group Pleasure Dome, filmmaker Solomon Nagler, and Canadian architects Thomas Evans and Jonathan Mandeville. Step inside, or watch the film through peep holes on the outside, to catch the world premiere of Pilgrimage, an experimental 16mm film loop by Canadian filmmakers Nagler and Alexandre Larose. Pilgrimage draws on issues of memory, decay, palimpsest and the rubbing together of archive, fiction and situations, constructed from 8mm strips of found footage that the artists gleaned during a residency in Sydney, Australia.

demi monde World Premiere
A major new installation by experimental filmmaker and multimedia artist Richard Kerr, demi monde is a mesmerizing slow dissolve of Hollywood footage, which degrades and replenishes at a near imperceptible pace. Created from a dual projector slideshow of 160 handmade 35mm transparencies culled from an archive of Hollywood movies, which were digitized in a series of long dissolving sequences, demi monde is a painterly display of slow cinema writ large. Ebbing between abstraction and recognizable imagery, demi monde hints at cinema and life’s grander themes as it exhumes immersive, haunting and beautiful apparitions. demi monde will make its premiere on September 10 at the wall on the north-east corner of King and John, and will continue to be projected nightly until the end of the Festival.

Andy Warhol: Stars of the Silver Screen Photo Booth
Calling all Warhol Superstars! This photo booth transforms filmstrips into .GIFs you can share with friends on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter, in anticipation of TIFF’s fall exhibition Andy Warhol: Stars of the Silver Screen, which opens October 30 at TIFF Bell Lightbox.

Food Truck Village

For the first time ever, TIFF launches Food Truck Village at Pearl and John St, a selection of the city's top mobile vendors with delicious offerings that range from tasty vegan and sweet treats to meaty paradise and savoury delights. Trucks include bgood’s hand crafted fast foods, Chimney Stax authentic Hungarian desserts, Heirloom’s local & sustainable snacks, Toronto's first BBQ themed truck – Hogtown Smoke, Koi Gourmet’s Korean fusion cuisine and Localista, the farm-to-street inspired food truck.

Slaight Family Zone

Pop and Lock Dance Machine
Can't dance? Don't sweat it. Through the magic of stop-motion animation, the Pop and Lock Dance Machine gives dancers - of all ages - legit moves and the video evidence to prove it. Created by Catshrine, Toronto-based mixed-media artists Christopher F. and Irene A., who specialize in strange creatures, enviro-sculpture, portraiture, wearable art and animation.

Colouring Book
Grab a paintbrush and collaborate with local artist Jeff Blackburn on our epic, street-spanning colouring book, and check back daily to see the panels take shape with every new dab, stroke, and blob.

Hand Drawn Headshots
Got two minutes? Canadian comic artist and illustrator Steve Manale (Superslackers) will blow your mind with his lifelike, hand-drawn headshots that you can (and should) use to book your next audition!

Magician
Magic on the big screen is one thing; magic right before your eyes is something else! James Alan has spent the past 10 years creating magic and turning tricks and illusions into astonishing memories.

Sponsor & Partner Activations

Airbnb Festival Insider
Discover Airbnb's best kept secrets for local living in Toronto. Enter to win $1,000 travel credit redeemable in 191 countries!

Line and Cheese Party!
Visit the All You Need Is Cheese booth for Canadian Cheese popcorn and a chance to win great prizes.

Express Pop-Up Shop
Stop by for free giveaways, a chance to win prizes and to see the Express Fall Collection.

Restaurant Row Patio Extensions
All 14 street-level eateries along Restaurant Row extend their patios along King Street, allowing more space for Festival-goers to enjoy all the Entertainment District has to offer — and recharge before their next screening.

City of Toronto INFOTOGO Visitor Information Centre
The City of Toronto's INFOTOGO Visitor Information Centre offers brochures, maps, guide books, and more to help visitors make the most of their time on Festival Street and Toronto.

Other Awesome Activations

TIFF Membership Tent
Stop by for a visit and learn about membership, year round programming and how the power of film comes to life, 365 days a year

TIFF Shop
Find the perfect gift for the film lover in your life: choose from uniquely designed products, accessories, books, DVDs and great stuff for kids.

Festival Street Piano
Come and release your inner Rachmaninoff on our public piano, imaginatively painted by local artist Jonathan Petersen.

Festival Seating
When it’s time to take a break during all the action, make a stop at TIFFs Festival Seating areas. Do some business; catch up with old friends; play a game; listen to a street-side concert; or grab a quick bite before continuing your festivities.



The 2015 Toronto International Film Festival® Official Film Schedule was released today and is available at TIFF Bell Lightbox or by visiting tiff.net/festival. Copies will also be distributed in the Toronto Star and Metro on Thursday, August 27. A section about the Festival will appear in the Toronto Star on Thursday, September 3, and will include the full film schedule.

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.

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
@TIFF_NET
#TIFF15
Facebook.com/TIFF

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.


Academy announces 2015 Student Academy Award winners


All winning films now eligible for Oscars

The Academy has voted fifteen students as winners of the 42nd Student Academy Awards competition. The Academy received a record number of entries this year — 1,686 films from 282 domestic and 93 international colleges and universities — which were voted upon by a record number of Academy members. Past Student Academy Award winners have gone on to receive 47 Oscar® nominations and have won or shared eight awards. Previous winners include Pete Docter, John Lasseter, Spike Lee, Trey Parker and Robert Zemeckis.

Students will arrive in Los Angeles for a week of industry activities that will culminate in the awards ceremony on Thursday, September 17, at 7:30 p.m., at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills. The medal placements – gold, silver and bronze – in the five award categories will be announced at the ceremony.

First-time honors go to Chapman University in the Alternative category and Filmakademie Wien in the Foreign Film competition. Academy members voted the winners from a field of 33 finalists, announced last month.

The 42nd Student Academy Awards ceremony on September 17 is free and open to the public, but advance tickets are required. Tickets may be obtained online at Oscars.org today. Any remaining tickets will be made available at the door on the evening of the event. The Samuel Goldwyn Theater is located at 8949 Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Hills.

The Student Academy Awards were established in 1972 to provide a platform for emerging global talent by creating opportunities within the industry to showcase their work.

The winners are (listed alphabetically by film title):

Alternative
Chiaroscuro, Daniel Drummond, Chapman University, California
Zoe, ChiHyun Lee, The School of Visual Arts, New York

Animation
An Object at Rest, Seth Boyden, California Institute of the Arts
Soar, Alyce Tzue, Academy of Art University, San Francisco
Taking the Plunge, Nicholas Manfredi and Elizabeth Ku-Herrero, The School of Visual Arts

Documentary
Boxeadora, Meg Smaker, Stanford University
I Married My Family’s Killer, Emily Kassie, Brown University
Looking at the Stars, Alexandre Peralta, University of Southern California

Narrative
Day One, Henry Hughes, American Film Institute, California
Stealth, Bennett Lasseter, American Film Institute
This Way Up, Jeremy Cloe, American Film Institute

Foreign Film
Everything Will Be Okay…, Patrick Vollrath, Filmakademie Wien, Austria
Fidelity, Ilker Catak, Hamburg Media School, Germany
The Last Will, Dustin Loose, Filmakademie Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany


Spike Lee, Debbie Reynolds & Gena Rowlands to receive Academy's 2015 Governors Awards


The Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voted Tuesday night (August 25) to present Honorary Awards to Spike Lee and Gena Rowlands, and the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award to Debbie Reynolds. All three awards will be presented at the Academy’s 7th Annual Governors Awards on Saturday, November 14, at the Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center®.

“The Board is proud to recognize our honorees’ remarkable contributions at this year’s Governors Awards,” said Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs. “We’ll be celebrating their achievements with the knowledge that the work they have accomplished – with passion, dedication and a desire to make a positive difference – will also enrich future generations.”

Lee, a champion of independent film and an inspiration to young filmmakers, made an auspicious debut with his NYU thesis film, Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads, which won a Student Academy Award® in 1983. He proceeded to blaze a distinctive trail with such features as She’s Gotta Have It, School Daze and Do the Right Thing, which earned him a 1989 Oscar® nomination for Original Screenplay. His work as a director ranges from the Oscar-nominated documentary feature 4 Little Girls to such mainstream successes as Malcolm X and Inside Man. Lee’s other feature credits include Mo’ Better Blues, Jungle Fever, Crooklyn, He Got Game, 25th Hour, Miracle at St. Anna and Red Hook Summer. He currently serves as the artistic director of the graduate film program at NYU.

Rowlands, an original talent whose devotion to her craft has earned her worldwide recognition as an independent film icon, received Academy Award nominations for her lead performances in A Woman under the Influence (1974) and Gloria (1980), both directed by her husband and frequent collaborator, John Cassavetes. She got her start on the New York stage and in live television in the 1950s and has appeared in 40 feature films to date, from The High Cost of Loving in 1958 to Six Dance Lessons in Six Weeks, which she starred in earlier this year. Her other notable films include Lonely Are the Brave, Faces, Minnie and Moskowitz, Opening Night, Another Woman, Unhook the Stars, Hope Floats, Playing by Heart, The Notebook and Broken English.

Reynolds, a Hollywood icon since she won hearts with her buoyant performance in Singin’ in the Rain, embarked on the role of a lifetime as a founding member of the Thalians, a charitable organization conceived and sustained by entertainers to promote awareness and treatment of mental health issues. She served as the group’s president almost continuously from 1957 to 2011, adding numerous terms as board chair and frequently presiding over its annual fundraising gala. Her tireless efforts have enabled the Thalians to contribute millions to the Mental Health Center at Cedars-Sinai and to UCLA’s Operation Mend, which helps military veterans recover from the physical and psychological wounds of war. Reynolds has appeared in more than 40 feature films, including The Tender Trap, A Catered Affair and Mother, and received a 1964 Oscar nomination for her lead performance in The Unsinkable Molly Brown.

The Honorary Award, an Oscar statuette, is given “to honor extraordinary distinction in lifetime achievement, exceptional contributions to the state of motion picture arts and sciences, or for outstanding service to the Academy.”

The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award, also an Oscar statuette, is given “to an individual in the motion picture arts and sciences whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry.”

2015 Festival des Films du Monde awards – winners


Jury

President: Dany Laferrière, writer (Canada)
Luis Urquiza, filmmaker (Mexico)
Gerardo Salcedo, festival programmer (Mexico)
Peter Rainer, writer & film critic (United States)
Ventura Pons, filmmaker, (Spain)
Tea Falco, actress (Italy)


Features

Grand Prize of the Americas
Mad Love by Philippe Ramos (France)

Special Grand Jury Award
Misafir (The Visitor/La Visiteuse)by Mehmet Eryilmaz (Turkey)

Tie for Best director
2 nights til morningby Mikko Kuparinen (Finland / Luthania)
Dosieto Petrov (Petrov File / Le Dossier Petrov) by Georgi Balabanov (Bulgaria / Germany)

Best Actress
Malin Buska forThe Girl King by Mika Kaurismäki (Canada / Finland /Germany / Sweden)

Best Actor
Wolfram Berger for Rider Jackby This Lüscher (Switzerland)

Best Screenplay
Letnie Przesilenie (Summer Solstice / Solstice d’été)by Michal Rogalski (Poland/ Germany)

Best Artistic contribution
Seven Days by Xing Jian (China)

Innovation Award
Un Instante En La Habana (Havana Moment)by Guillermo Ivàn Duenas (USA / Cuba / Mexico/ Colombia)


Short Films 

1st Prize
La Voce (La voix)by David Uloth (Canada)

Jury Award
Honeysuckleby Lucy Lumsden (United Kingdom)


Zenith awards for best first fiction feature

Jury members for First Fiction Films
Pierre Henri Deleau, Donald Ranvaud and Antoine Zeind

Golden Zenith for the Best First Fiction Feature Film
Chuyi (The Funeral / Les funérailles) by Qi Wang (China)

Silver Zenith for the First Fiction Feature Film
Para Minha Amada Morta (To My Beloved / À Ma Bien Aimée) by Ali Muritiba (Brazil))

Bronze Zenith for the First Fiction Feature Film
La Linea Delgada Amarilla (The Thin Yellow Line) by Celso Garcia (Mexico)

Special Mentions of the First Feature Film Jury
Asman Aldynda (Under Heaven) by Dalmira Tilepbergen (Kyrgyzstan)
and
Rosa Chumbe by Jonatan Relayze Chiang (Peru)


Public Awards

The Public was invited to vote for the most popular films presented during the 2015 Montreal World film festival


Public Award for the most popular film of the Festival
Chucks by Sabine Hiebler and Gerhard Ertl, from the Cornelia Travnicek novel (Austria)

Public Award for the most popular Canadian film of the Festival
The Girl King by Mika Kaurismäki (Canada / Finland /Germany / Switzerland)


Glauber Rocha Award for the Best Latin American Film
La Delgada Linea Amarilla (The Thin Yellow Line) from Celso Garcia (Mexico)

Award for Best Documentary – TIE
Marzia, Ystäväni (Marzia My Friend / Marzia Mon Amie) by Kirsi Mattila (Finland)
and
Playing Lecuona by Pavel Giroud (Spain- Colombia)

Best Canadian Short Film
La Voce (The Voice / La Voix) by David Uloth (Canada)

FIPRESCI Prize (International Film Critics), World Competition
Misafir (The Visitor / La Visiteuse) by Mehmet Eryilmaz (Turkey)

FIPRESCI Prize (International Film Critics), First Feature Rosa Chumbe by Jonatan Relayze Chiang (Peru)

Ecumenical Jury Prize
L’orchestre de minuit by Jérôme Cohen Olivar (Morroco)

Ecumenical Jury Mentions
Un Instante En La Habana by Guillermo Ivàn Duenas (USA, Cuba, Mexico, Colombia)
and
Dorogo Na Berlin (On The Road To Berlin) by Sergei Popov (Russia)


OTHER AWARDS

A special grand prize of the Americas is awarded to producer Lord Puttnam for his exceptional contribution to the world of cinema.



Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal (RIDM) announces 12 films in this year’s festival


The 18th annual Montreal International Documentary Festival (RIDM) will be held from November 12 to 22. As a sneak preview before the announcement of the full line-up, the festival is pleased to pre-announce 12 films from this year’s program.

INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION
This year’s international competition will include The Other Side by director Roberto Minervini. Selected by both the Cannes Festival and the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) this year, the film follows the daily lives of marginal people living in Louisiana, taking us a modern American abyss.

Homeland by Abbas Fahdel, named best international feature at the Visions du Réel festival, is a chronicle of life in Iraq before and after the American invasion of 2003. An epic work of incalculable importance, Homeland is an unprecedented journey inside a country’s descent into the chaos of war.

CANADIAN COMPETITION
In the Canadian competition, festivalgoers will discover Pinocchioby André-Line Beauparlant and Bienvenue à F.L. by Geneviève Dulude-De Celles. In Pinocchio, Beauparlant films a portrait of her brother, a compulsive liar whose true activities are unknown to her. The director undertakes a quest, full of twists and turns, to unmask and rescue the man, serving a prison sentence in Brazil for fraud.

Bienvenue à F.L., also selected by the TIFF, examines a community of teenagers in the self-contained world of their high school in Sorel-Tracy. Having learned to develop thick skins, they talk about their environment, identity and the particular time of life that is adolescence.

PANORAMA
The Panorama section is a non-competitive selection of the best documentaries made since 2014. This year, the selection includes the latest films from Chantal Akerman and Frederick Wiseman, both also being shown at the TIFF this year. In No Home Movie, Akerman makes a solemn portrait of her mother, a death-camp survivor, in the final years of her life. For the first time, the Belgian filmmaker places her mother – who has cast a long shadow over her body of work – at the centre of the film, making us experience her death as a devastating wave.

In his new film In Jackson Heights, Wiseman explores the Jackson Heights neighbourhood in the New York City borough of Queens. Known for its cultural diversity and its role as a first American home for countless immigrants, the working-class neighbourhood has some 100 different communities and remains a hotbed of LGBT activism.

Also featured in the Panorama section, filmmaker Nikolaus Geyrhalter (Our Daily Bread) presents Over the Years. In 2004, the director visited a century-old Austrian textile mill. After interviewing the few employees remaining after a wave of layoffs, Geyrhalter documented the inexorable decline and eventual shuttering of the company. For nine years, he followed the radical changes experienced by the cast-off workers in an Austria that often touts its socio-economic health.

Le Bouton de nacre,the new film by Patricio Guzmán, won the Silver Bear and the Ecumenical Jury Prize at the most recent Berlin Film Festival. This philosophical essay examines history through the prism of the elements. This time, water is the thread guiding Guzmán’s exploration of the past. Water forms Chile’s longest border, and as a result it seems to contain all of the country’s memories and secrets.

Olmo and the Seagull by Brazilian director Petra Costa and Danish director Léa Glob, presented at the Locarno Film Festival, is another Panorama entry. The film documents the personal and professional life of Olivia, an actress in the famous Théâtre du soleil in Paris, during her pregnancy. While she and Serge, her boyfriend and colleague, have their love put to the test, the two artists play roles combining fiction and documentary as a way to show us their lives full of doubt, worry and joy.

In Peggy Guggenheim – Art Addict, director Lisa Immordino Vreeland details the fascinating, stranger-than-fiction life of the impulsive Peggy Guggenheim who, over the course of the 20th century, witnessed and participated in the emergence of many famous contemporary artists.

Oncle Bernard – L'anti-leçon d'économie by Québécois filmmaker Richard Brouillette will also be presented in the Panorama section. Filmed in 2000 during the making of Encirclement: Neoliberalism Ensnares Democracy, this interview with Bernard Maris, a.k.a. Oncle Bernard, is a fascinating conversation with the independent thinker who was Charlie Hebdo’s economics analyst, assassinated along with his colleagues in January.

Lastly, Marjorie Sturm will be among the many filmmakers showcased this year with her new film The Cult of JT LeRoy, a look back at the scandal surrounding JT LeRoy, the enfant terrible of American literature, media darling and “best friend” of Gus Van Sant. When LeRoy’s secret was revealed, the art world was turned upside down.

EARLY BIRD RIDM PASSES
To receive an early bird discount on passes for all films (including the UXdoc Space but excluding the opening and closing films), visit www.ridm.qc.ca or La Vitrine - www.lavitrine.com. This special offer takes effect today and ends on October 1. Passes can be purchased online or from the La Vitrine box office in the 2-22 Building (2 Sainte-Catherine East). Early bird passes, available in limited quantities, are on sale for just $80 including taxes.
http://lavitrine.com/activity/Passeport_RIDM_2015


Quebec’s only film festival dedicated to documentaries, the Montreal International Documentary Festivalpresents the best reality-based films, including the works of established directors and new talents.

The 18th annual RIDM will take place from November 12 to 22, 2015
Information:
www.ridm.qc.ca / info@ridm.qc.ca

11th Montreal International Black Film Festival announces lineup


The Montreal International Black Film Festival celebrates History from Martin Luther King to Malcom X and of course Rosa Parks, with a bold, diverse and meaningful programming

Today, at the Former NFB Theatre, programming for the 11th edition of the Montreal International Black Film Festival (MIBFF) was announced. The MIBFF, created by the Fabienne Colas Foundation and presented by Global News Montreal, will take place from September 29 to October 4, 2015 with a variety of memorable events that will leave a mark in the Festival’s history.

Canada’s biggest black film festival, the Montreal International Black Film Festival, is returning with a rich and bold programming honouring Afro-American History. The programming includes the “Black Market”, exciting special events, the “Cinema Without Borders” professional development activities program for the youth from the South, tributes, attendance of international guests and much more. In addition, the MIBFF will debut an exhibition and after parties. Moviegoers will get the chance to watch uncut, quality films; feature-length, mid-length, shorts, documentaries and narrativefilms will all be presented, most making their Canadian debut! Festivalgoers will also get the chance to see actors and directors from all corners of the globe sharing their passions. And there's something for everyone!

Some of the highlights include: Sweet Mickey for President, The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, Selma, Breathe Umphefumlo, Dennis Rodman’s Big Bang in Pyongyang, Dry, Terrible love, Manos sucias (Dirty Hands), White water, En quête d’identité, Thina Sobali (The two of us), Una vida: Of Mind and Music, 3 ½ minutes - ten bullets, Game Face, O KA (notre maison), My father’s land, La belle vie, Imperial dreams, Battle dream chronicle and many more! Productions are divided into several categories: drama; art, poetry, and music; comedy; accomplishment or portrait; Haitian films; identity, history, and traditions; immigration and segregation; bullying; and the human condition.

After the success of its 10th anniversary edition, the MIBFF continues its innovation with a variety of entertaining events that transcends borders, where the past meets the present.

A SYMBOLIC CONTEXT: SPECIAL AMERICAN PROGRAM

With the generous support of the Consulate general of the United States in Montreal

2015 is a symbolic year of many ground-breaking anniversaries in American history: 50 years since the historic march from Selma to Montgomery led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; 60 years since Rosa Parks’ refusal to surrender her seat to a white passenger on a public bus in Montgomery, initiating a new era in the American quest for freedom and equality; and 50 years since the assassination of human rights activist Malcolm X. The 11th MIBFF is proud and honoured to be featuring a strong and significant Special American Program that will give Montrealers access to more independent films,actors, speakers and American directors. This Program includes tributes, screening of 20 films which include the festival’s opening and closing films, an exhibition on 25 trailblazing Afro-American women, movie discussion on the power of non-violence and the Festival’s Kick-off Party.

2015 also marks the 5th anniversary of the devastating earthquake in Haiti. To commemorate this event, the festival chose to open with an excellent filmthat unveils an important chapter in Haiti’s political history.

TRIBUTES AND HONORARY AWARDS

TRIBUTE TO MARTIN LUTHER KING III

Tuesday, September 29, 7PM, Imperial Theatre | $25
Presented by Global News Montreal
Human rights advocate, community activist and political leader Martin Luther King III will receive the Montreal International Black Film Festival's 2015 Humanitarian Award on opening night. As the oldest son of the late Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Mrs. Coretta Scott King, Martin Luther King III is carrying the family torch and pursuing equality and justice for all people. The MIBFF is thrilled to grant him this prestigious award in recognition of his involvement in significant policy initiatives to maintain the fair and equitable treatment of all citizens, at home and abroad. The tribute will precede the screening of the opening film, Ben Patterson’sSweet Mickey for President.


TRIBUTE TO PAUL HAGGIS & DAVID BELLE

Friday, October 2, 7PM, Cineplex Odéon du Quartier Latin | $20
Presented by Centre des Viandes F. Iasenza, Transat and Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec
Paul Haggis, Canadian Oscar-winning director (founder of Artists for Peace and Justice – APJ) and David Belle, filmmaker, CEO of APJ and founder of Ciné Institute (Jacmel, Haïti), will receive the 2015 Social Impact Award in recognitionof their important contributions to Haitian education and social justice. This double tribute will precede the screening of 5 films directed by graduates of Ciné Institute (Jollywood, the new wave of Haitian cinema) who have been invited as part of the Cinema without Borders (The Fabienne Colas Foundation’s Youth & Diversity Program) followed by a Q&A with Haggis, Belle and the graduates.


OPENING AND CLOSING FILMS

OPENING FILM – BEN PATTERSON’S SWEET MICKY FOR PRESIDENT
2015 Audience Award and Jury Award for Best Documentary at Slamdance
Tuesday, September 29, 7PM, Imperial Theatre | $25
Presented Global News Montreal
Quebec Premiere: Music and politics collide when international music star, Pras Michel of the Fugees, returns to his homeland of Haiti after the devastating earthquake of 2010 to mobilize a presidential campaign for Haiti’s most controversial musician: Michel Martelly, aka Sweet Micky. The filmfeatures: Pras Michel, Michel Martelly (Sweet Micky), Wyclef Jean, Sean Penn, Ben Stiller, President Bill Clinton, Mirlande Manigat, René Préval... Sweet Micky for President is Ben Patterson’s first feature film. Patterson is the founder of Onslot Creative, where he built a reputation as a soughtafter visual content director for brands and artists. Hosted by Pras Michel, Grammy Award-winner and founder of Fugees.

After the screening, at 10PM at Le Petit Olympia, Pras Michel will host the Festival Kick Off party with various artists and local DJs. $20 in advance.

CLOSING FILM – STANLEY NELSON’S THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGARD OF THE REVOLUTION
2015 Official Selection at Sundance International Film Festival
Sunday, October 4, 7PM, Theatre Hall-Concordia | $20
Presented by Fondation Fabienne Colas
Quebec Premiere: This feature-length documentary explores the Black Panther Party, its significance to the broader American culture, its cultural and political awakening for black people, and the painful lessons wrought when the movement derailed. Master documentarian Stanley Nelson goes straight to the source, weaving a treasure trove of rare archival footage with the voices of the people who were there: police, FBI informants, journalists, white supporters and detractors, and the Black Panthers who remained loyal to the party and those who left it. Stanley Nelson is Emmy Award-winningdocumentary filmmaker, MacArthur “Genius” Fellow, and member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars). He was awarded theNational Humanities Medal by President Barack Obama in August 2014. The festival closing and awards ceremonies will precede the screening.


MOVIE-TALK: THE POWER OF NON-VIOLENCE
Wednesday, September 30, 7PM, D.B. Clarke Theatre (Concordia) | $20
Presented by the Peace Grantmakers Network– in collaboration with Consulat Général des États-Unis à Montréal, Concordia University, Global News Montreal, The Suburban, the Fabienne Colas Foundation
Presented as part of the International Day of Peace,the screening of SELMA, the story of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s historic struggle to secure voting rights for all people, will precede a panel discussion on The Power of Non-Violence: An interfaith perspective on the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with guest of honour, Martin Luther King III. Hosted by Laura Gallo, the panel includes:Révérend Darryl Gray, special assistant to the national president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference; Dr. Victor Goldbloom, President of the Christian Jewish Dialogue of Montreal;Afra Jalabi, Journalist and peace activist; Thupten Jinpa Langri, Writer and English translator to the Dalai Lama.


EXHIBITION: WE HAVE A DREAM
September 30 – October 4, 5PM-10PM, Former ONF| Free Entry
With the generous support ofthe Consulate general of the United States in Montreal
We are proudly showcasing 25 trailblazing African-American women with lasting legacies, including Rosa Parks, Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou, Harriet Tubman, Alice Walker, Angela Davis and Oprah Winfrey, in a “We Have a Dream” exhibition. The goal of this exhibition is to showcase the stories of African-American women who have made history through their struggles, fights, advocacy and audacity. These women have made the United States and North America a much better place, and serve as excellent role models to inspire others to break down barriers of injustice… and dare to dream a bigger dream.


THE MIBFF BLACK MARKET
Presented by Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec and Transat
The MIBFF Black Market is back with internationally renowned industry professionals, experts, intellectuals, and visionaries. Our guests will share an exciting blend of cutting-edge thinking and real world experience on today’s most critical filmmaking issues. This year, the MIBFF Black Market presents:

· A panel discussion on the realities of North-south co-productions featuring film icons Souleymane Cissé, Abderrahmane Sissako, Moussa Touré and Pierre Magny.

· The Youth and Diversity program’s Cinema without Borders project, created by the Fabienne Colas Foundation and presented by Transat, gives five young graduates from Jacmel, Haiti’s Ciné Institute the chance to take advantage of a professional development trip during the MIBFF including master classes, workshops, talks and the chance to meet filmmakers from here and abroad. With the support of l’Inis, l’OJIQ.

· A Jollywood evening featuring the new wave of Haitian film out of Jacmel.

· A tribute to Paul Haggis, Canadian Oscar winning director and founder of Artists for Peace and Justice and David Belle, director and founder of Ciné Institute.


FESTIVAL AFTER PARTIES

September 29 - October 4, 10PM, Le Petit Olympia & Monument National’s Café Lounge | $15- $20
As a new and exclusive feature of this year’s edition, the festival will be hosting public after-parties with DJs and acoustic concerts by sensational artists. Experience the festival after hours, where you can network and dance to live soul, Hip Hop, Jazz, Afro-Brazilian and Caribbean beats.

Pras Michel, Grammy Award Winner and founding member of The Fugees will host the Festival Kick Off Party at Le Petit Olympia, Tuesday, September 29, 10PM. $20 (in advance).

The Monument National’s Café Lounge After Parties at 10PM include:

· Afro-Latino After Party with Paulo Ramos, Friday October 2

· Afro-Caribbean After Party with Senaya, Saturday October 3

· Jazz Wrap up Party with Dawn Tyler Watson, Sunday October 4

A 3 night Pass for the Monument National Café Lounge’s after parties is available to keep the party going all festival for $30 (excluding Festival Kick Off Party with Pras Michel at le Petit Olympia)!

PRE-FESTIVAL EVENING: 60 YEARS OF KONPA MUSIC
Saturday, September 26, 8PM, Centre culturel La Perle retrouvée | $20
Présenté par Magnus Poirier
To celebrate 60 years of Konpa music, a pre-festival event will take place at La Perle Retrouvée. Music critic and radio host (Espace Music) Ralph Boncy and DJ Jean Nonez will make us relive the best moments of Konpa – Haiti’s most popular music. Proceeds will go to Centre culturel La Perle Retrouvée.


CINEMA WITHOUT BORDERS: JOLLYWOOD
Thurday October 1 and Friday October 2, 9AM-3PM, l’Inis | Free entry for graduates
With the generous support of Transat, Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Québec, l’Inis, l’OJIQ, Fabienne Colas Fondation, Ciné Institute
As a part of the Young & Diversity Program established in 2014, the Fabienne Colas Foundation is encouraging young filmmakers to initiate a dialogue in the international audiovisual industry through the Cinema without Borders program. In the first edition of Cinema without Borders, five young graduates of the Ciné Institute in Jacmel, Haiti, have the opportunity to attend professional development activities in Montreal including masterclasses, lectures, film set visits, city tours and film screenings. This is a great chance for young filmmakers to learn and gain exposure. The five graduates will present their work as part of the movie discussion “Jollywood, a new wave of Haitian cinema from Jacmel, Haiti” in the presence of David Belle (director and founder of Ciné Institute) and Paul Haggis (Oscar Winning director and founder of Artists for Peace and Justice).


JURY MEMBERS

Narrative Feature Films: Pierre Magny, president of the jury, director; Co-Hoedeman, animated film director, animator, writer, concept developer and filmmaker; Catherine Hébert, director.

Documentary Feature Films: Rachelle Salnave, president of the jury, filmmaker; Isabelle Depelteau, director and screenwriter; Dan Shannon, producer, director and DP.

Short and Mid-Length Narrative Films:Alice Tran, president of the jury, MAtv host and actress; Aleksander Lubczynski, filmmaker; Maxence Bradley, producer, director and independent consultant.


TICKETS & PASSES

PASSES

- PLATINUM CARD: Full Access: VIP package (See details on website) - $300

- GOLD CARD: Access to all films: Imperial Theatre, Quartier Latin, Former NFB Theater, Concordia) – $195

- PASSEPORT:Access to: Quartier Latin, Former NFB Theater– $135

- MOVIE ACCESS PASS: 10 films only 80$

- BLACK MARKET PASS - $20

- AFTER-PARTY PASS: Café Monument National only 30$


INDIVIDUAL TICKETS

- Regular ticket - 1 film – 10$

- Opening Night - $25

- Closing Night – 20$

- Special Events – $20

- After Party (Monument National)$15


VENUES

- Imperial Theater: Centre Sandra et Leo Kolber:1430, Rue de Bleury

- Cineplex Odéon du Quartier Latin: 350, Rue Émery

- Former NFB Cinema: 1564, Rue St-Denis

- Concordia University (DB Clarke Theatre et Theatre Hall): 1455 Boul. De Maisonneuve Ouest

- L’inis (Institut national de l’image et du son) : 301, Boul de Maisonneuve Est

- La Perle Retrouvée: 7655, 20e ave

- Le Petit Olympia: 1282, Rue Amherst

- Café Lounge du Monument National: 1182, Boulevard St-Laurent

The 11th Montreal International Black Film Festival, created by the Fabienne Colas Foundation, will be held from September 29 to October 4, 2015 and is presented by Global News Montreal.

About the Montreal International Black Film Festival – MIBFF
The Montreal International Black Film Festival (MIBFF) was created in 2005 by the Fabienne Colas Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to promoting cinema, art and culture. As Canada’s biggest Black Film Festival, MIBFF’s mission is to stimulate the development of the independent filmindustry and to foster the creation of films on international black realities. The Festival wants to promote a different kind of cinema: cinema from both here and abroad that doesn't always make it to the silver screen. We showcase ground-breaking cinema that both moves and shocks us, all while raising awareness. Join us for a fresh look at black cinema from all four corners of the globe! www.montrealblackfilm.com





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