Quantcast
Channel: CHINO KINO
Viewing all 1051 articles
Browse latest View live

ICFF review: All Roads Lead to Rome

$
0
0


 Italian screen legend, Claudia Cardinale, delivers a sharp, sardonic performance in All Roads Lead To Rome (Tutte le strade portano a Roma), but even she can't save this romantic comedy which screens tonight in Toronto at the ICFF (Italian Contemporary Film Festival).

Cardinale plays 80-year-old Carmen who secretly plans to wed her one true love in Rome against the wishes of her son, Luca (Raul Bova). However, the focus lies on Maggie (Sarah Jessica Parker), a cheery, but daffy divorced mum who tries to re-connect with her rebellious (obnoxious, really) teenage daughter, Summer (Rosie Day) with a trip to a gorgeous Tuscan village that she frequented as a youth. Maggie runs into her old flame, Luca, and Summer wants to return to her sleazy boyfriend in New York who's battling drug charges.

Impulsively, Carmen and Summer steal a car and race to Rome to pursue their men. Of course, Maggie and Luca give chase, personal revelations follow between both pairs, and everyone winds up with the right partner at the end. I won't spoil the ending, but you can probably guess.

A talented cast can't save a predictable script and flat direction. The laughs are never big in All Roads Lead To Rome which has cute written all over it. The highlight of the film is Cardinale, who only has to deliver a gesture or expression to express a thousand words.

Ms. Cardinale will be on hand to present All Roads Lead to Rome tonight in Toronto at 9:30 pm, and Saturday, June 18 at the Trius Winery in Niagara. Click here for details.



Academy Invites a record 683 New Members

$
0
0
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is extending invitations to join the organization to 683 artists and executives who have distinguished themselves by their contributions to theatrical motion pictures. Those who accept the invitations will be the only additions to the Academy’s membership in 2016.

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

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

The 2016 invitees are:

Actors
Mahershala Ali – The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Parts 1 and 2), The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Anthony Anderson – The Departed, Hustle & Flow
Adam Beach – Suicide Squad, Flags of Our Fathers
Kate Beckinsale – Love & Friendship, The Aviator
Chadwick Boseman – Captain America: Civil War, Get on Up
John Boyega – Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Attack the Block
Betty Buckley – Wyatt Earp, Carrie
Rose Byrne – X-Men: First Class, Bridesmaids
Julie Carmen – The Milagro Beanfield War, Gloria
Enrique Castillo – Déjà Vu, Bound by Honor
Morris Chestnut – G.I. Jane, Boyz N the Hood
Cliff Curtis – Live Free or Die Hard, Training Day
Loretta Devine – Crash, I Am Sam
Carmen Ejogo – Selma, Sparkle
Idris Elba – Beasts of No Nation, Pacific Rim
America Ferrera – Cesar Chavez, End of Watch
Vivica A. Fox – Kill Bill, Independence Day
Andrew Garfield – 99 Homes, The Amazing Spider-Man
Greta Gerwig – Frances Ha, To Rome with Love
Jesse D. Goins – The Ugly Truth, Patriot Games
Bruce Greenwood – Flight, Star Trek
Carla Gugino – Watchmen, Night at the Museum
Luis Guzmán – Punch-Drunk Love, Carlito’s Way
Dennis Haysbert – Dear White People, Wreck-It Ralph
Tom Hiddleston – Crimson Peak, Marvel’s The Avengers
James Hong – Safe, Mulan
Oscar Isaac – Ex Machina, A Most Violent Year
O’Shea Ice Cube Jackson* – Ride Along, Friday
Dakota Johnson – Black Mass, Fifty Shades of Grey
Cherry Jones – Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, Signs
Michael B. Jordan – Creed, Fruitvale Station
Daniel Dae Kim – The Divergent Series: Insurgent, Crash
Regina King – Ray, Jerry Maguire
Brie Larson – Room, Trainwreck
Byung-Hun Lee – Terminator Genisys, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra
Nia Long – Keanu, Boyz N the Hood
Sal Lopez – The Astronaut Farmer, Full Metal Jacket
Ignacio López Tarso – Under the Volcano, Nazarin
Patti LuPone – Parker, Driving Miss Daisy
Peter Mackenzie – Trumbo, 42
Rachel McAdams – Spotlight, Midnight in Paris
Eva Mendes – The Place beyond the Pines, Hitch
Tatsuya Nakadai – Ran, Kagemusha
Adepero Oduye – The Big Short, 12 Years a Slave
Marisa Paredes – The Skin I Live In, All about My Mother
Nate Parker – Beyond the Lights, Red Tails
Harold Perrineau – Zero Dark Thirty, 28 Weeks Later
Jorge Perugorría – Che, Strawberry and Chocolate
Silvia Pinal – Vintage Model, The Exterminating Angel
Freida Pinto – Immortals, Slumdog Millionaire
Michelle Rodriguez – Avatar, Girlfight
Anika Noni Rose – For Colored Girls, Dreamgirls
Cecilia Roth – Lucia Lucia, All about My Mother
Mark Rylance – Bridge of Spies, The Other Boleyn Girl
Pepe Serna – The Black Dahlia, The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez
Martin Starr – I’ll See You in My Dreams, Adventureland
Elizabeth Sung – Memoirs of a Geisha, The Joy Luck Club
Sharmila Tagore – Dhadkan, The World of Apu
Tessa Thompson – Creed, Dear White People
Lorraine Toussaint – Selma, Middle of Nowhere
Glynn Turman – Super 8, Men of Honor
Gabrielle Union – Top Five, Bad Boys II
Jacob Vargas – The 33, Jarhead
Alicia Vikander – The Danish Girl, Ex Machina
Emma Watson – The Bling Ring, The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Damon Wayans, Jr. – Big Hero 6, Let’s Be Cops
Marlon Wayans – The Heat, Requiem for a Dream
Rita Wilson – It’s Complicated, Runaway Bride
Daphne Zuniga – Staying Together, Spaceballs

Casting Directors
Shaheen Baig – Youth, The Impossible
Sharon Bialy – Secret in Their Eyes, Mr. Holland’s Opus
Sara Bilbatua – Pan’s Labyrinth, The Devil’s Backbone
Antoinette Boulat – Diary of a Chambermaid, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Deirdre Bowen – Eastern Promises, Billy Madison
Jacqueline Brown – Akeelah and the Bee, Jackie Brown
Carmen Cuba – The Martian, Side Effects
Christian Kaplan – The Book of Life, Rio
Moonyeenn Lee – Avengers: Age of Ultron, Blood Diamond
Natalie Lyon – Inside Out, Toy Story 3
Walter Rippell – Everybody Has a Plan, The Secret in Their Eyes
Richard Rousseau – Saint Laurent, Renoir
Kim Taylor-Coleman – Dope, Oldboy
Manuel Teil – Babel, Y Tu Mamá También

Cinematographers
Bárbara Alvarez – The Second Mother, Whisky
C. Mitchell Amundsen – Ride Along 2, Now You See Me
Adam Arkapaw – Macbeth, McFarland, USA
Sergio Armstrong – No, The Maid
Michael Barrett – Ted 2, A Million Ways to Die in the West
Natasha Braier – The Rover, The Milk of Sorrow
Lula Carvalho – Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, RoboCop
Caroline Champetier – Holy Motors, Of Gods and Men
Enrique Chediak – The 5th Wave, The Maze Runner
Charlotte Bruus Christensen – Far from the Madding Crowd, The Hunt
Sofian El Fani – Timbuktu, Blue Is the Warmest Color
Mátyás Erdély – Son of Saul, The Quiet Ones
Frank Griebe – A Hologram for the King, Cloud Atlas
Kirsten Johnson* – CitizenFour, This Film Is Not Yet Rated
Judith Kaufmann – 13 Minutes, Inbetween Worlds
Jeanne Lapoirie – Gett: The Trial of Viviane Amsalem, My Little Princess
Hélène Louvart – The Wonders, Pina
Félix Monti – Our Last Tango, The Secret in Their Eyes
Peter Pau – The Forbidden Kingdom, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon
Daniel Pearl – Friday the 13th, Aliens vs. Predator – Requiem
Poon Hang-Sang – Ip Man 2: Legend of the Grandmaster, Kung Fu Hustle
Gökhan Tiryaki – Winter Sleep, Once upon a Time in Anatolia
Kim White – Inside Out, Toy Story 3
Jo Willems – The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Parts 1 and 2), The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Steve Yedlin – Carrie, Looper
Nelson Yu Lik-Wai – A Simple Life, 24 City
Haris Zambarloukos – Cinderella, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit
Zhao Fei – The Sun Also Rises, The Curse of the Jade Scorpion

Costume Designers
Olivier Bériot – Lucy, Taken
Madeline Fontaine – The Young and Prodigious T.S. Spivet, Yves Saint Laurent
Pierre-Yves Gayraud – Albert Nobbs, The Bourne Identity
Sonia Grande – Magic in the Moonlight, Even the Rain
Suttirat Anne Larlarb – Steve Jobs, 127 Hours
Manon Rasmussen – Nymphomaniac, A Royal Affair

Designers
Yoshihito Akatsuka – The Left Ear, Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale
Kokayi Ampah – Knight and DayFlags of Our Fathers
Jille Azis – Magic in the Moonlight, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Hannah E. Beachler – Miles Ahead, Creed
Bert Berry – Inside Out, Cars 2
Celia Bobak – The Martian, Shanghai
Stephanie Carroll – Elsa & Fred, Monsoon Wedding
Sue Chan – Gone Girl, 300: Rise of an Empire
Rodolfo Damaggio – Tomorrowland, Terminator Genisys
Rena DeAngelo – Bridge of Spies, The Judge
Warren Drummond – Straight Outta Compton, Nightcrawler
Colin Gibson – Mad Max: Fury Road, Happy Feet Two
Bernhard Henrich – Bridge of Spies, Unfinished Business
Kalina Ivanov – Max, Little Miss Sunshine
Michael Anthony Jackson – Gods of Egypt, Fantastic Four
Philip Keller – Jurassic World, The Last Witch Hunter
Carolyn A. Loucks – Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, RoboCop
Chris Lowe – Spectre, Into the Woods
Ina Mayhew – Barbershop: The Next Cut, Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds
Alice Normington – Suffragette, Nowhere Boy
Hamish Purdy – The Revenant, Step Up All In
Peter Ramsey* – Penguins of Madagascar, Shrek the Third
Pilar Revuelta – Exodus: Gods and Kings, Pan’s Labyrinth
Mark Ricker –Trumbo, Get on Up
Dena Roth – The Wedding Ringer, Think Like a Man Too
David Schlesinger – True Story, Annie
Richard Sherman – The Gift, Beautiful Creatures
Michael Standish – The Danish Girl, Victor Frankenstein
Yohei Taneda – Monster Hunt, The Hateful Eight
Lisa Thompson – Mad Max: Fury Road, San Andreas
Patrice Vermette – Sicario, The Young Victoria
Frank Walsh – The Huntsman: Winter’s War, High-Rise

Directors
Lenny Abrahamson – Room, Frank
Naji Abu Nowar – Theeb
Maren Ade – Everyone Else, The Forest for the Trees
Lexi Alexander – Punisher: War Zone, Green Street Hooligans
Haifaa al-Mansour – Wadjda
Ana Lily Amirpour – A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night
Amma Asante – Belle, A Way of Life
Katie Aselton – Black Rock, The Freebie
Ramin Bahrani – 99 Homes, At Any Price
Anna Boden – Mississippi Grind, It’s Kind of a Funny Story
Catherine Breillat – The Sleeping Beauty, Sex Is Comedy
Israel Cárdenas – Sand Dollars, Carmita
Carlos Carrera – Backyard, El Crimen del Padre Amaro
Nuri Bilge Ceylan – Winter Sleep, Once upon a Time in Anatolia
Souleymane Cissé – Brightness, The Wind
Isabel Coixet – Learning to Drive, Elegy
Ryan Coogler* – Creed, Fruitvale Station
Scott Cooper – Black Mass, Crazy Heart
John Crowley – Brooklyn, Closed Circuit
Julie Dash – Daughters of the Dust
Tamra Davis – Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child, Billy Madison
Jonathan Dayton – Ruby Sparks, Little Miss Sunshine
Dominique Deruddere – Flying Home, Everybody Famous!
Xavier Dolan – Mommy, Tom at the Farm
Cheryl Dunye – My Baby’s Daddy, The Watermelon Woman
Deniz Gamze Ergüven – Mustang
Valerie Faris – Ruby Sparks, Little Miss Sunshine
Shana Feste – Endless Love, Country Strong
Hannah Fidell – A Teacher
Anne Fletcher – The Proposal, Step Up
Ari Folman – The Congress, Waltz with Bashir
Anne Fontaine – Gemma Bovery, Coco before Chanel
Cary Joji Fukunaga – Beasts of No Nation, Jane Eyre
Nicole Garcia – A View of Love, Charlie Says
Juan Antonio Garcia Bayona – The Impossible, The Orphanage
Sarah Gavron – Suffragette, Brick Lane
Lesli Linka Glatter – The Proposition, Now and Then
Ciro Guerra* – Embrace of the Serpent, The Wind Journeys
Laura Amelia Guzmán – Sand Dollars, Carmita
Sanaa Hamri – Just Wright, Something New
Mia Hansen-Løve* – Eden, The Father of My Children
Mahamet-Saleh Haroun – Grigris, Our Father
Mary Harron – The Notorious Bettie Page, American Psycho
Marielle Heller* – The Diary of a Teenage Girl
Albert Hughes – The Book of Eli, Dead Presidents
Hou Hsiao-Hsien – The Assassin, Three Times
Patty Jenkins – Wonder Woman, Monster
Naomi Kawase* – Still the Water, The Mourning Forest
Abdellatif Kechiche – Blue Is the Warmest Color, Black Venus
Abbas Kiarostami – Certified Copy, Taste of Cherry
So Yong Kim – For Ellen, In Between Days
Kiyoshi Kurosawa – Seventh Code, Pulse
Karyn Kusama – Jennifer’s Body, Girlfight
Francis H. Lawrence – The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, I Am Legend
Tobias Lindholm* – A War, A Hijacking
Phyllida Lloyd – The Iron Lady, Mamma Mia!
Ken Loach – The Wind That Shakes the Barley, Kes
Julia Loktev – The Loneliest Planet, Day Night Day Night
Ami Canaan Mann – Jackie & Ryan, Texas Killing Fields
Lucrecia Martel – The Headless Woman, The Holy Girl
Adam McKay* – The Big Short, Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy
Deepa Mehta – Midnight’s Children, Water
Ursula Meier – Sister, Home
Rebecca Miller* – The Private Lives of Pippa Lee, Personal Velocity
Karen Moncrieff – The Dead Girl, Blue Car
Cristian Mungiu* – Graduation, 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
Anna Muylaert – The Second Mother
László Nemes* – Son of Saul
María Novaro – The Good Herbs, Lola
Victor Nunez – Spoken Word, Ulee’s Gold
Euzhan Palcy – Siméon, A Dry White Season
Park Chan-wook* – Stoker, Oldboy
Lucía Puenzo – The German Doctor, El Niño Pez
Lynne Ramsay – We Need to Talk about Kevin, Morvern Callar
Dee Rees – Pariah
Nicolas Winding Refn – Only God Forgives, Drive
Patricia Riggen – The 33, Girl in Progress
Gillian Robespierre – Obvious Child
Patricia Rozema – Kit Kittredge: An American Girl, Mansfield Park
Marjane Satrapi – The Voices, Persepolis
Sam Taylor-Johnson – Fifty Shades of Grey, Nowhere Boy
George Tillman, Jr. – Notorious, Soul Food
Luis Valdez – La Bamba, Zoot Suit
Melvin Van Peebles – Identity Crisis, Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song
Margarethe von Trotta – Rosenstrasse, Marianne and Juliane
Lana Wachowski – Cloud Atlas, The Matrix Trilogy
Lilly Wachowski – Cloud Atlas, The Matrix Trilogy
Taika Waititi – Hunt for the Wilderpeople, What We Do in the Shadows
James Wan – The Conjuring, Saw
Keenan Ivory Wayans* – Scary Movie, A Low Down Dirty Shame
Apichatpong Weerasethakul – Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, Tropical Malady

Documentary
Joslyn Barnes – The House I Live In, Trouble the Water
Danielle Renfrew Behrens – Kurt Cobain: Montage of Heck, The Queen of Versailles
Joe Bini* – Tales of the Grim Sleeper, Encounters at the End of the World
Douglas Blush – The Hunting Ground, The Invisible War
Rachel Boynton – Big Men, Our Brand Is Crisis
Irene Taylor Brodsky – The Final Inch, Hear and Now
Margaret Brown – The Great Invisible, The Order of Myths
Nancy Buirski – Afternoon of a Faun: Tanaquil Le Clercq, The Loving Story
Maro Chermayeff – Marina Abramovic The Artist Is Present, The Kindness of Strangers
Ramona S. Diaz – Don’t Stop Believin’: Everyman’s Journey, Imelda
James Gay-Rees – Amy, Senna
Haile Gerima – Teza, Ashes and Embers
Laurens Grant – The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, Freedom Riders
Richard Hankin – Art and Craft, God Loves Uganda
Kazuo Hara – A Dedicated Life, The Emperor’s Naked Army Marches On
Thomas Allen Harris – Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People, Twelve
Disciples of Nelson Mandela

Matthew Heineman – Cartel Land, Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare
Judith Helfand – The Barber of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement, Blue Vinyl
Amy Hobby – What Happened, Miss Simone?, Shepard & Dark
Kirsten Johnson* – Cameraperson, CitizenFour
Asif Kapadia – Amy, Senna
Aviva Kempner – Rosenwald, The Life and Times of Hank Greenberg
Pedro Kos* – The Square, Waste Land
Victor Kossakovsky – Vivan las Antipodas!, The Belovs
Anita Lee – Stories We Tell, Everybody’s Children
Shola Lynch – Free Angela and All Political Prisoners, Chisholm ’72 – Unbought & Unbossed
Louis Massiah – W.E.B. Dubois: A Biography in Four Voices
Amanda Micheli – La Corona, Double Dare
Spencer Nakasako – Refugee, A.K.A. Don Bonus
Emiko Omori – Rabbit in the Moon, Regret to Inform
Joshua Oppenheimer – The Look of Silence, The Act of Killing
Dawn Porter – Trapped, Gideon’s Army
Gini Reticker – Pray the Devil Back to Hell, Asylum
Azin Samari* – Ethel, The September Issue
Jessica Sanders – After Innocence, Sing!
Regina Scully – The Hunting Ground, Alive Inside
Signe Byrge Sørensen – The Look of Silence, The Act of Killing
David Teague – Cutie and the Boxer, Freeheld
Trinh T. Minh-ha – Forgetting Vietnam, Surname Viet Given Name Nam
Jean Tsien – Shut Up & Sing, Scottsboro: An American Tragedy
Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi – Meru, Youssou N’Dour: I Bring What I Love
Wang Bing – Three Sisters, West of the Tracks

Executives
Pam Abdy
Courtney D. Armstrong
Arturo Barquet
Arianna Bocco
Nicole Brown
Rona Cosgrove
Craig Dehmel
Zanne Devine
Lisa Ellzey
Monique Esclavissat
Pauline Fischer
DeVon Franklin
David W. Greenbaum
Matthew Greenfield
Erica Huggins
Peter Kujawski
Pamela Kunath
Christine Langan
Bonni Lee
James F. Lopez
Xavier Marchand
Anikah Elizabeth McLaren
James Rupert Jacob Murdoch
Lachlan K. Murdoch
Gigi Pritzker
Josh Sapan
Scott Shooman
Adrian Smith
Frank H. Smith
Darren Dennis Throop
Jason D. Young

Film Editors
Niels Pagh Andersen – The Look of Silence, The Act of Killing
Joe Bini* – We Need to Talk about Kevin, Cave of Forgotten Dreams
Bettina Böhler – Phoenix, Barbara
Pernille Bech Christensen – The Salvation, In a Better World
Raúl Antonio Dávalos – The Amateurs, Meet Wally Sparks
Marie-Hélène Dozo – Two Days, One Night, L’Enfant
Amy E. Duddleston – Elegy, Laurel Canyon
Suzy Elmiger – Lola Versus, Mighty Fine
Sim Evan-Jones – Shaun the Sheep Movie, Shrek
Sarah Flack – Away We Go, Lost in Translation
Affonso Gonçalves – Carol, Winter’s Bone
Matthew Hamachek – Cartel Land, If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front
Chris King – Amy, Exit through the Gift Shop
Pedro Kos* – The Square, Waste Land
Sylvie Landra – Catwoman, The Fifth Element
Tom McArdle – Spotlight, The Station Agent
Adam Nielsen – A War, A Hijacking
Kevin Nolting – Inside Out, Up
Nathan Nugent – Room, Frank
Stan Salfas – Morning, Let Me In
Azin Samari* – Ethel, The September Issue
Margaret Sixel – Mad Max: Fury Road, Happy Feet
Mary Stephen – Blind Mountain, A Tale of Winter
Troy Takaki – Baggage Claim, The Bounty Hunter
Camilla Toniolo – His Way, Company Man
Bernat Vilaplana – Crimson Peak, Pan’s Labyrinth
Pax Wassermann – Elaine Stritch: Shoot Me, Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer
Julia Wong – Hercules, Extract
Mark Yoshikawa – The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Parts 1 and 2), The Tree of Life

Makeup Artists and Hairstylists
Karen Asano-Myers – Star Wars: The Force Awakens, 42
Pierce Austin – Concussion, After Earth
Julie Dartnell – The Grand Budapest Hotel, Les Misérables
Beatrice De Alba – Away We Go, Frida
Dave Elsey – Mr. Holmes, The Wolfman
Camille Friend – The Hateful Eight, Django Unchained
Anita Gibson – Beyond the Lights, Top Five
Giorgio Gregorini – The Impossible, Apocalypto
Siân Grigg – The Revenant, Ex Machina
Norma Hill-Patton – X-Men: Days of Future Past, The Company You Keep
Duncan Jarman – The Revenant, Rush
Love Larson – The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, The Girl Who Played with Fire
Angela Levin – Cake, Horrible Bosses
Ivana Primorac – Anna Karenina, The Reader
Beverly Jo Pryor – Straight Outta Compton, Selma
Jan Sewell – The Danish Girl, The Theory of Everything
Maurizio Silvi – The Great Gatsby, Moulin Rouge
Heba Thorisdottir – The Hateful Eight, Bridesmaids
Lesley Vanderwalt – Mad Max: Fury Road, The Great Gatsby
Eva von Bahr – The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo

Music
Lesley Barber – The Moth Diaries, Los Locos
Wendy Blackstone – Whitey: United States of America v. James J. Bulger, To Be Heard
Mary J. Blige – The Help, Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire
Kathryn Bostic – Dear White People, The New Black
Carl Davis – The Understudy, Scandal
Joseph S. DeBeasi – The Revenant, Sicario
Joanie Diener – Merchants of Doubt, The Skulls
Fitzgerald Diggs (RZA) – Django Unchained, The Man with the Iron Fists
Germaine Franco – Dope, Mr. and Mrs. Smith
Sia Furler – Zootopia, Fifty Shades of Grey
Peter Golub – Audrey, Countdown to Zero
Amanda Goodpaster – Pitch Perfect 2, Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Tanya Noel Hill – Ant-Man, Chef
Deborah Lurie – Safe Haven, Dear John
Heather McIntosh – Z for Zachariah, Honeymoon
Marcus Miller – About Last Night, Deliver Us from Eva
Antonio Pinto – Amy, Senna
Raphael Saadiq – Epic, Love and Basketball
Jim Schultz – Black Mass, Inglourious Basterds
Del Spiva – Fury, Prometheus
Taura Stinson – Rio 2, Black Nativity
Joseph Trapanese – Straight Outta Compton, Nightcrawler
Shigeru Umebayashi – The Grandmaster, 2046
Fernando Velázquez – Crimson Peak, Mama
Will.i.am – The Great Gatsby, Rio
Marcelo Zarvos – Rock the Kasbah, The Beaver

Producers
Belén Atienza – Out of the Dark, The Impossible
Amy Baer – A Storm in the Stars, Last Vegas
David Barron – Cinderella, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Parts 1 and 2)
Ram Bergman – Don Jon, Looper
Virginie Besson-Silla – Lucy, The Lady
Fernando Bovaira – Biutiful, The Sea Inside
Anne Carey – Mr. Holmes, The Savages
Debra Martin Chase – Sparkle, The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
Bonnie Curtis – Albert Nobbs, Minority Report
Susan Downey – The Judge, Sherlock Holmes
Ed Guiney – Room, Frank
Paul E. Hall – Peeples, For Colored Girls
Rachael Horovitz – Maggie’s Plan, Moneyball
Mark Huffam – The Martian, Exodus: Gods and Kings
Elizabeth Karlsen – Carol, Made in Dagenham
Gail Katz – Pawn Sacrifice, The Perfect Storm
Amy Kaufman – Beasts of No Nation, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints
Neil Kopp – Green Room, Wendy and Lucy
Kristie Macosko Krieger – Bridge of Spies, Lincoln
David Lancaster – Eye in the Sky, Whiplash
Albert Lee – Chinese Zodiac, Let the Bullets Fly
Roy Lee – The Lego Movie, Abduction
Mynette Louie – Land Ho!, Cold Comes the Night
Daniela Taplin Lundberg – Beasts of No Nation, The Kids Are All Right
Lori McCreary – The Magic of Belle Isle, Invictus
Edward L. McDonnell – Sicario, Insomnia
Jamie Patricof – Mississippi Grind, Blue Valentine
Amanda Posey – Brooklyn, An Education
Heather Rae – The Dry Land, Frozen River
Alexander Rodnyansky – Leviathan, Stalingrad
Esther García Rodríguez – Wild Tales, The Skin I Live In
Anish Savjani – Green Room, Meek’s Cutoff
Allison Shearmur – Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Cinderella
Michael Sugar – Spotlight, The Fifth Estate
Robert Teitel – Barbershop: The Next Cut, Men of Honor
Rodrigo Teixeira – The Witch, Mistress America
Nina Yang Bongiovi – Dope, Fruitvale Station

Public Relations
Michael S. Agulnek
Marina Bailey
Jacqueline L. Bazan
Stephen D. Bruno
Cassandra O. Butcher
Zachary Eller
Linda Guerrero
Barry Dale Johnson
Kate Lee
Amy Mastriona
R.J. Millard
Kelly Bush Novak
Fumiko Kitahara Otto
Jack Pan
Terra Potts
Arnold Robinson
David Stern
Lisa Taback
Jean-Pierre Vincent
David S. Waldman
Ryan Werner
Katherine Willing

Short Films and Feature Animation
Alê Abreu – Boy and the World, Cosmic Boy
Line K. Andersen – The Croods, Monsters vs Aliens
Bruce Anderson – Rio 2, Rio
Graham Annable – The Boxtrolls, ParaNorman
Guillaume Aretos – Puss in Boots, Shrek the Third
Serena Armitage – Stutterer, Scorned
Sanjay Bakshi – The Good Dinosaur, Monsters University
Maxwell Boas – Kung Fu Panda 3, Rise of the Guardians
Lydia Bottegoni – Hotel Transylvania, Surf’s Up
Rebecca Wilson Bresee – Zootopia, Frozen
Mark Burton – Shaun the Sheep Movie, Gnomeo & Juliet
Chris Butler – ParaNorman, Coraline
Clément Calvet – Cafard, Song of the Sea
Tom Cardone – Rio 2, Dr. Seuss’ Horton Hears a Who!
Marci Carlin – The Soul of Nashville, Human Destiny
Galen Tan Chu – Epic, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Benjamin Cleary – Love Is a Sting, Stutterer
Pam Coats – Gnomeo & Juliet, Mulan
Melissa Beth Cobb – Kung Fu Panda 3, Kung Fu Panda 2
Deborah Cook – The Boxtrolls, ParaNorman
Jamie Oliver Donoughue – Shok, Life on the Line
Renato Dos Anjos – Wreck-It Ralph, Bolt
Jeff Draheim – Frozen, The Princess and the Frog
Karen Dufilho – Duet, For the Birds
Pato Escala – Bear Story
Katie Fico – Zootopia, Feast
Michael Fong – Inside Out, Toy Story 3
Lori Forte – Epic, Ice Age Continental Drift
Oorlagh George – The Shore
Jonathan Gibbs – Turbo, The Croods
Steven Goldberg – Frozen, Tangled
Judith Gruber-Stitzer – Wild Life, When the Day Breaks
Jorge R. Gutierrez – The Book of Life, Carmelo
Jane Hartwell – The Croods, Madagascar
Georgina Hayns – The Boxtrolls, ParaNorman
Janet Healy – Minions, Despicable Me 2
Tang K. Heng – Kung Fu Panda 2, Kung Fu Panda
Jon W.S. Huertas – The Box, Lone
Raman Hui – Monster Hunt, Shrek the Third
Claire Jennings – Coraline, Father and Daughter
Yong Duk Jhun – The Croods, Shrek Forever After
Sahim Omar Kalifa – Bad Hunter, Baghdad Messi
Scott Kersavage – Zootopia, Wreck-It Ralph
Basil Khalil – Ave Maria, Shooter
Michael Knapp – Epic, Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
Robert Kondo – The Dam Keeper, La Luna
Shawn Krause – Inside Out, Cars 2
Max Lang – Room on the Broom, The Gruffalo
Nicolas Marlet – Kung Fu Panda 3, How to Train Your Dragon 2
Steve Martino – The Peanuts Movie, Ice Age Continental Drift
Dale Mayeda – Planes: Fire & Rescue, Frozen
Brian McLean – The Boxtrolls, ParaNorman
Mike Mitchell – Alvin and the Chipmunks: Chipwrecked, Shrek Forever After
Joe Moshier – Penguins of Madagascar, How to Train Your Dragon 2
James Ford Murphy – Lava, Cars
Kiel Murray – Up, Cars
Yoshiaki Nishimura – When Marnie Was There, The Tale of the Princess Kaguya
Kyle Odermatt – Big Hero 6, Paperman
Linda Campos Olszewski – Car-Ma’, A Bad Hair Day
Gabriel Osorio – Bear Story, Residuos
Sanjay Patel – Sanjay’s Super Team, Tokyo Mater
Martin Pope – Room on the Broom, Chico & Rita
Christian Potalivo – The New Tenants, The Pig
Tina Price – Dinosaur, Fantasia/2000
Peter Ramsey* – Rise of the Guardians, Monsters vs Aliens
Denise Ream – The Good Dinosaur, Cars 2
Julie Roy – Carface, Kali the Little Vampire
Damon Russell – Curfew, Brink
William Salazar – Kung Fu Panda 3, Monsters vs Aliens
Scott Santoro – Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2, Flushed Away
Katherine Sarafian – Brave, Lifted
Kent Seki – Rocky and Bullwinkle, Megamind
Osnat Shurer – One Man Band, Boundin’
Mireille Soria – Home, Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted
Richard Starzak – Shaun the Sheep Movie, A Matter of Loaf and Death
Michael D. Surrey – The Princess and the Frog, The Lion King
Galyn Susman – Ratatouille, Toy Story 2
Imogen Sutton – Prologue, The Thief and the Cobbler
Dice Tsutsumi – The Dam Keeper, Monsters University
Nora Twomey – Song of the Sea, The Secret of Kells
Pablo Valle – How to Train Your Dragon 2, Turbo
Michael Venturini – The Good Dinosaur, Toy Story 3
Pierre-Olivier Vincent – How to Train Your Dragon 2, How to Train Your Dragon
Patrick Vollrath – Everything Will Be Okay (Alles Wird Gut), The Jacket (Die Jacke)
Dan Wagner – Kung Fu Panda 3, Kung Fu Panda 2
Koji Yamamura – Muybridge’s Strings, Mt. Head
Hiromasa Yonebayashi – When Marnie Was There, The Secret World of Arrietty
Raymond Zibach – Kung Fu Panda 3, Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas

Sound
Pud Cusack – Free State of Jones, The Mask of Zorro
Susan Dawes – Deadpool, Wild
Chris Duesterdiek – The Revenant, Elysium
Tammy Fearing – Trainwreck, Bridesmaids
Roberto Fernandez – St. Vincent, Drive
Eric Flickinger – The Big Short, World War Z
Gabriel Gutiérrez – Automata, Mama
Matthew Harrison – Paper Towns, The Maze Runner
Nina Hartstone – The Book Thief, Gravity
Michael Hertlein – The Hateful Eight, American Hustle
Paul Hsu – Spotlight, Salt
George Lara – Chi-Raq, Spotlight
Anna MacKenzie – Spectre, Prometheus
John G. Marquis – Godzilla, Beautiful Creatures
James Harley Mather – Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, Sherlock Holmes
Chuck Michael – Mad Max: Fury Road, X-Men: Days of Future Past
Timothy Karl Nielsen – Racing Extinction, War Horse
Eric Norris – Unbroken, Man of Steel
Ben Osmo – Mad Max: Fury Road, Happy Feet Two
Eliza Paley – Miles Ahead, Carol
Glenfield Payne – Beasts of No Nation, Blue Jasmine
Michele Perrone – The Revenant, Straight Outta Compton
Lisa Pinero – Steve Jobs, Fury
Mac Ruth – The Martian, World War Z
Christopher Scarabosio – Star Wars: The Force Awakens, The Grand Budapest Hotel
Paul P. Soucek – Fright Night, Michael Clayton
Nancy Nugent Title – Spy, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Richard Toenes – Iron Man 3, Warrior
Todd Toon – The Revenant, The Princess and the Frog
Bernard Weiser – American Hustle, The Hurt Locker
David White – Mad Max: Fury Road, The Railway Man
Byron Wilson – Black Mass, True Grit
Matthew R. Wood – Star Wars: The Force Awakens, WALL-E
Tamás Zányi – Son of Saul, Delta

Visual Effects
Kevin Baillie – The Walk, Transformers: Age of Extinction
Sara Bennett – Ex Machina, Hercules
Theo Bialek – The Amazing Spider-Man 2, The Smurfs 2
Richard Bluff – The Big Short, Unbroken
Steve Cremin – Hail, Caesar!, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Parts 1 and 2)
Lindy Wilson De Quattro – Pacific Rim, Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol
Adrian de Wet – The Hunger Games: Mockingjay (Parts 1 and 2), The Hunger Games: Catching Fire
Matt Dessero – Jupiter Ascending, Divergent
Deak Ferrand – By the Sea, Lucy
Ronald Frankel – Gods of Egypt, Riddick
John Gibson – X-Men: Days of Future Past, Snow White and the Huntsman
Martin Hill – The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2, Furious Seven
Bruce L. Holcomb – Ant-Man, Avengers: Age of Ultron
Andrew Jackson – Mad Max: Fury Road, The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies
Matthew Jacobs – Gods of Egypt, Deliver Us from Evil
Anders Langlands – The Martian, X-Men: Days of Future Past
Seth Maury – Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb, Maleficent
Rich McBride – The Revenant, Gravity
Kelvin McIlwain – Furious Seven, Snow White and the Huntsman
Paul Norris – Ex Machina, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation
Dan Oliver – Gods of Egypt, Mad Max: Fury Road
Edward M. Pasquarello – Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension, Tomorrowland
Betsy Paterson – The Hunger Games, The Incredible Hulk
Matthew Shumway – The Revenant, Life of Pi
Jason Smith – The Revenant, Super 8
Kevin Andrew Smith – Hunt for the Wilderpeople, Krampus
Simone Kraus Townsend – Ant-Man, Avengers: Age of Ultron
Stefano Trivelli – Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Pan
Adam Valdez – Maleficent, World War Z
David Vickery – Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, Fast & Furious 6
Steven Warner – The Brothers Grimsby, The Martian
Andrew Whitehurst – Ex Machina, Paddington
Andy Williams – Mad Max: Fury Road, Fury
Tom Wood – Mad Max: Fury Road, The Last Witch Hunter

Writers
Jonathan Aibel – Kung Fu Panda series, Monsters vs Aliens
Sherman Alexie – The Business of Fancydancing, Smoke Signals
Glenn Berger – Kung Fu Panda series, Monsters vs Aliens
Andrea Berloff – Straight Outta Compton, World Trade Center
Vera Blasi – Tortilla Soup, Woman on Top
Ryan Coogler* – Creed, Fruitvale Station
Destin Daniel Cretton – Short Term 12, I Am Not a Hipster
Emma Donoghue – Room
Tina Fey – Mean Girls
Efthimis Filippou – The Lobster, Dogtooth
Jennifer Flackett-Levin – Little Manhattan, Wimbledon
Ryan Fleck – Mississippi Grind, Half Nelson
Alex Garland – Ex Machina, 28 Days Later
Drew Goddard – The Martian, Cloverfield
Ciro Guerra* – Embrace of the Serpent, The Wind Journeys
Mia Hansen-Løve* – Eden, The Father of My Children
Marielle Heller* – The Diary of a Teenage Girl
David Henry Hwang – Possession, Golden Gate
O’Shea Ice Cube Jackson* – The Players Club, Friday
Jia Zhangke – Mountains May Depart, Still Life
Miranda July – The Future, Me and You and Everyone We Know
Laeta Kalogridis – Terminator Genisys, Shutter Island
Naomi Kawase* – Still the Water, Firefly
Richard Kelly – Domino, Donnie Darko
Takeshi Kitano – Outrage, Kikujiro
Hirokazu Koreeda – "Like Father, Like Son, Nobody Knows
Yorgos Lanthimos – The Lobster, Dogtooth
Lee Chang-dong – Poetry, Oasis
Sebastián Lelio – Gloria, Navidad
Mark Levin – Journey to the Center of the Earth, Nim’s Island
Tobias Lindholm* – A War, The Hunt
Adam McKay* – The Big Short, The Other Guys
Rebecca Miller* – Maggie’s Plan, The Ballad of Jack and Rose
Abi Morgan – Suffragette, The Iron Lady
Cristian Mungiu* – Beyond the Hills, Occident
Phyllis Nagy – Carol
László Nemes* – Son of Saul
Park Chan-wook* – Thirst, Oldboy
Charles Randolph – The Big Short, The Life of David Gale
Carlos Reygadas – Silent Light, Battle in Heaven
Clara Royer – Son of Saul
Misan Sagay – Belle, The Secret Laughter of Women
Lorene Scafaria – The Meddler, Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist
Josh Singer – Spotlight, The Fifth Estate
Keenan Ivory Wayans* – White Chicks, A Low Down Dirty Shame
Alice Winocour – Mustang, Home

Members-at-Large
Tina Anderson
M. James Arnett
Dana Belcastro
Schawn Belston
Katherine Beyda
Lynwen Brennan
Camille Cellucci
Annie Chang
Yolanda T. Cochran
Gary Combs
Jenny Fulle
Theodore E. Gluck
Hal H. Haenel
Ramzi Haidamus
Eunice Huthart
Jeff Imada
Stephanie A. Ito
Mike Knobloch
Ravi D. Mehta
Sunny Park
Manny Perry
Ana Maria Quintana
Nancy St. John
Philip Steuer
Keith Woulard
Susan Zwerman

Associates
Adriana Alberghetti
Michelle Bohan
David Bugliari
John Campisi
Esther Chang
Maha Dakhil
David DeCamillo
Jerome Duboz
Helen du Toit
Jeff Gorin
Julie Huntsinger
Tracey R. Jacobs
Adam J. Kanter
Craig Kestel
Franklin Leonard
Betsy A. McLane
Cameron Mitchell
Andrea Nelson Meigs
Emanuel Nunez
Joanelle Romero
Rena Ronson
Lara Sackett
Carin Sage
Phillip Sun
Joanne Roberts Wiles
Warren Zavala



David Bowie is back...on the big screen

$
0
0

review by Allan Tong

Six months after cancer claimed the iconic British musician, David Bowie returns to Canada on select Cineplex screens on July 21, 24 and 31. No, it's not The Man Who Fell to Earth or Labyrinth, but a documentary about Bowie's superb retrospective mounted by London's V&A Museum that traveled to cities from Toronto and Melbourne in 2013-5. Both the show and the film are called David Bowie is and both are indispensable to fans of rock music, pop culture and The Thin White Duke.

If you caught the exhibition, then the film is a 94-minute souvenir that perfectly recaptures the show. If you missed it, then the next best thing is to catch this documentary. David Bowie is is part museum guide, part documentary and part biography. It is an unusual creature in that the curators, Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, speak directly to the camera as in a TV special while periodically Bowie fans gush on camera about their idol as they would in a TV commercial.

However, David Bowie is redeems itself by detailing key moments in Bowie's life by deftly using the exhibitions rare photos, films, costumes, Bowie's audio interviews and his handwritten lyrics. The curators give us a tour of several exhibits, starting with photos of the teenage Bowie and his early band, The Kon-rads, looking confident and "imagining himself as a star already" rising from grim postwar England. We glimpse Bowie in a rare film performing mime under the key influence of teacher Lindsay Kemp, who would teach Bowie to adopt characters later in his music career. "It was much easier to be somebody else," Bowie says in voice-over.

The bulk of the exhibition and this movie are devoted to the 70s, when Bowie catapulted to international fame as Ziggy Stardust, then evolved into the Thin White Duke, moving onto his Berlin years and coming full circle with Ashes to Ashes in 1980. The film literally guides the viewer through each of Bowie's phases, explaining how and why he changed as well as offering the larger cultural context and influence.



We see excerpts of the early and later videos of Space Oddity as Marsh explains the the very first NASA photo of the blue Earth gave birth to Bowie's early anthem. No surprise that the film devotes generous time to the Ziggy era (skintight costumes, photos, sketches, handwritten lyrics to Five Years and Rock 'n' Roll Suicide). Photographer Terry O'Neill explains how the grotesque Diamond Dogs and the famous black-and-white photo of the menacing dog with Bowie were created. Later, we learn the design stories behind Bowie's torn British jacket from the Earthling cover and 2013's The Next Day cover. Also, a curator explains the influence that Cold War Berlin had on Bowie in the mid-70s and see the synthesizer that he used on Heroes.

Taking us out of the exhibits and adding a personal dimension are guest speakers filmed from the last night of the V&A exhibition. Most are fashion designers and musicians, such as Pulp's Jarvis Cocker, imparting how Bowie influenced their lives and art, but the standout is Japanese fashion designer Kansai Yamamoto who recalls how he was full of tears meeting Bowie because their souls were united, despite the language barrier. It sounds corny on the page, but Yamamoto is funny, incisive and heartfelt on screen.

David Bowie is worth seeing.

Film review: Cafe Society

$
0
0

Writer/Director: Woody Allen
Producers: Letty Aronson, Ron Chez, Helen Robin,  Adam B. Stern, Allan Teh, Stephen Tenenbaum, Edward Walson
Cast: Jesse Eisenberg, Kristen Stewart, Steve Carell, Parker Posey, Corey Stoll
Comedy/drama
1 hour, 36 minutes

By now, audiences expect certain elements in a Woody Allen movie: a period piece from the 1930s, a love triangle, a nebbish Woody-Allen-like protagonist, perhaps a gangster, a discussion about morality and, of course, some sharp, funny lines sprinkled throughout.

Cafe Society, the auteur's latest, contains all these ingredients which adds up to an entertaining though flawed film that's parts comedy, romance and drama.

[Spoiler alert] Jesse Eisenberg plays Bobby, a naive Jewish kid from Brooklyn who hits up his bigshot uncle Phil (Steve Carell), a Hollywood agent, for a job. Unwittingly, Bobby falls for Phil's younger secretary, Vonnie (Kristen Stewart) who is secretly Phil's mistress. When Phil leaves his wife for Vonnie, Bobby's world crashes down and he returns to Brooklyn to work for his gangster brother, Ben (Carey Stoll) and runs his high-society nightclub. Years pass, Bobby marries another woman and becomes a father. He grows tougher, harder, wiser. One day, Vonnie and Uncle Phil visit Bobby's New York nightclub and that nearly rekindles his L.A. romance with Vonnie. By the end of the film, we're left with a big What if? What if Vonnie had chosen Bobby instead of Phil?

Cafe Society isn't really a comedy, but a character study of Bobby, whose transformation (from inexperienced boy into worldly man) is rare in a Woody film. His character arc ends on a convincing note of regret. Eisenberg handles the role well, though Stewart and Stoll shine. However, Stoll's mobster character doesn't really belong in this film and threatens to distract us from the Bobby-Vonnie storyline. Similarly, an early scene between Bobby and a first-time hooker is unnecessary and falls flat.  There are too many storylines which nearly capsize the film.

The look of Cafe Society also distinguishes it from a typical Woody film. Vittorio Storaro (The Conformist, Apocalypse Now) use of colour and economical, yet effective camera movement gives the film an added grace.

Cafe Society ranks as a middling, late-Woody film, a mix of comedy, drama and romance.






Toronto International Film Festival announces first films for 41st edition

$
0
0

2016 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL UNVEILS ITS FIRST SLATE OF GALAS AND SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS
Featuring World Premieres from filmmakers including Oliver Stone, Mira Nair, Ewan McGregor, Konkona Sensharma, Lone Scherfig, Raja Amari, Jonathan Demme, Baltasar Kormákur, Amma Asante, Christopher Guest, Feng Xiaogang, Rob Reiner, J.A. Bayona, Arnaud des Pallières, Kiyoshi Kurosawa and many more

Piers Handling, CEO and Director of TIFF, and Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival, announced the first round of titles premiering in the Gala and Special Presentations programmes of the 41st Toronto International Film Festival.

Of the 19 Galas and 49 Special Presentations announced, this initial lineup includes films from such celebrated directors as Werner Herzog, Denis Villeneuve, Jim Jarmusch, Mia Hansen-Løve, Rebecca Zlotowski, Tom Ford, François Ozon, Andrea Arnold, Maren Ade, Park Chan-wook, Kim Jee woon, Kenneth Lonergan, Antoine Fuqua, Damien Chazelle, Pablo Larraín, and Paul Verhoeven.

“Revealing the first round of films offers a highly anticipated glimpse into the Festival’s lineup this year,” said Handling. “Bold and adventuresome work by established and emerging filmmakers from Canada, France, South Africa, Ireland, the UK, Australia, USA, South Korea, Iceland, Germany, Denmark, Chile, India, and China will illuminate Toronto screens and red carpets over another remarkable 11 days this September.”

“The global voices, transformative stories and diverse perspectives of these films capture the cinematic climate of today,” said Bailey.

“New films featuring cinema’s brightest talents promise to captivate and entertain the world’s film community and audiences alike.”

The 41st Toronto International Film Festival runs from September 8 to 18, 2016.

GALAS

Arrival Denis Villeneuve, USA Canadian Premiere
When mysterious spacecraft touch down across the globe, an elite team, led by expert linguist Louise Banks, are brought together to investigate. As mankind teeters on the verge of global war, Banks and the team race against time for answers. To find them, she will take a chance that could threaten her life, and quite possibly humanity. Starring Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, Forest Whitaker, and Michael Stuhlbarg.

Deepwater Horizon Peter Berg, USA World Premiere
Inspired by the true story of the oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico that rocked the globe on April 20, 2010, comes this chronicle of the courage of those who worked on the Deepwater Horizon and the extreme moments of bravery and survival in the face of what would become one of the biggest man-made disasters in history. Starring Mark Wahlberg, Kurt Russell, John Malkovich, Gina Rodriguez, Dylan O'Brien, and Kate Hudson.

.Closing Night Film.
The Edge of Seventeen Kelly Fremon Craig, USA World Premiere
The directorial debut of writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig follows high school junior Nadine, who is already at peak awkwardness when her all-star older brother Darian starts dating her best friend Krista. All at once, Nadine feels more alone than ever, until the unexpected friendship of a thoughtful boy gives her a glimmer of hope that things just might not be so terrible after all. Starring Hailee Steinfeld, Woody Harrelson, Kyra Sedgwick, Haley Lu Richardson, Blake Jenner and Hayden Szeto.

The Headhunter's Calling Mark Williams, Canada World Premiere
A ruthless corporate headhunter in Chicago battles his rival for control of their job placement firm, until a family tragedy brings his personal and professional lives into conflict. Starring Gerard Butler, Alison Brie, Willem Dafoe, Gretchen Mol, Alfred Molina, and Max Jenkins.

The Journey is the Destination Bronwen Hughes, United Kingdom/South Africa World Premiere
The inspiring life story of late photojournalist, artist and activist Dan Eldon, who abandoned a comfortable life in London to document the struggle, heartbreak and hope of a war-torn and famine-ridden region of Africa. Inspiring and irreverent, the film follows a young man coming of age to realize his purpose, his place in the world, and his belief that we can all create positive change. Starring Ella Purnell, Maria Bello, Sam Hazeldine, Ben Schnetzer, and Kelly Macdonald.

JT + The Tennessee Kids Jonathan Demme, USA World Premiere
In this thrilling concert documentary, Academy Award–winning director Jonathan Demme captures the charismatic and highly acclaimed artistry of Justin Timberlake and The Tennessee Kids’ spectacular closing performances from The 20/20 Experience World Tour at the legendary MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.

LBJ Rob Reiner, USA World Premiere
On November 22, 1963, one president's life was taken while another's was resurrected. LBJ tells the story of politician Lyndon B. Johnson who was at risk of fading into irrelevancy but, upon John F. Kennedy's assassination, seized his moment to rescue a nation and claim his place among the most influential US presidents. LBJ is an intimate look into Johnson's masterful political manoeuvring during one of the most difficult times in America's history. Starring Woody Harrelson, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Richard Jenkins, Bill Pullman, Jeffrey Donovan, and Michael Stahl-David.

Lion Garth Davis, Australia World Premiere
After a wrong train takes a five-year-old Indian boy thousands of kilometres from home and family, he survives many challenges before being adopted by an Australian couple. Twenty-five years later, armed with only the scantest of clues, he learns of a new technology called Google Earth, and sets out to find his lost family. This true story stars Dev Patel, Nicole Kidman, Rooney Mara, and David Wenham.

Loving Jeff Nichols, USA North American Premiere
This film celebrates the real-life courage and commitment of Richard and Mildred Loving, who waged a decade-long legal battle that led to the overturning of the state of Virginia’s law prohibiting interracial marriage. Their civil rights case went all the way to the Supreme Court, which in 1967 reaffirmed the very foundation of the right to marry. Starring Joel Edgerton, Ruth Negga, Marton Csokas, Nick Kroll, and Michael Shannon.

.Opening Night Film.
The Magnificent Seven, Antoine Fuqua, USA World Premiere
Director Antoine Fuqua brings his modern vision to a 1960 western classic. With the town of Rose Creek under the deadly control of industrialist Bartholomew Bogue, the desperate townspeople, led by Emma Cullen, employ protection from seven outlaws, bounty hunters, gamblers and hired guns. As they prepare the town for the violent showdown that they know is coming, these seven mercenaries find themselves fighting for more than money. Starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke, Vincent D'Onofrio, Byung-Hun Lee, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Martin Sensmeier, Haley Bennett and Peter Sarsgaard.

A Monster Calls J.A. Bayona, USA/Spain World Premiere
This visually spectacular drama follows a lonely 12-year-old boy struggling with his mother’s illness, until an ancient, wild, and relentless monster appears, guiding him on a journey of courage, faith, and truth. Starring Sigourney Weaver, Felicity Jones, Toby Kebbell, Lewis MacDougall, and Liam Neeson.

Planetarium Rebecca Zlotowski, France/Belgium North American Premiere
Kate and Laura Barlow, two young American spiritualists in 1930s Paris, finish their world tour. Fascinated by their gift, a powerful French film producer hires them to shoot a highly ambitious film. In the vortex of cinema, experiments, and feelings, this new family doesn’t yet see what Europe will soon go through. Stars Natalie Portman, Lily-Rose Depp, Emmanuel Salinger, Amira Casar, Pierre Salvadori and Louis Garrel.

Queen of Katwe Mira Nair, South Africa/Uganda World Premiere
This vibrant true story follows a young girl from the streets of rural Uganda whose world rapidly changes when she is introduced to the game of chess. The support from her family and community instills her with confidence and determination, as she sets out to pursue her dream of becoming an international champion. Starring David Oyelowo, Lupita Nyong'o, and Madina Nalwanga.

The Rolling Stones Olé Olé Olé! : A Trip Across Latin America Paul Dugdale, United Kingdom World Premiere
This documentary film follows The Rolling Stones on a cultural adventure across Latin America, as the band heads towards their historic tour finale — being the first ever rock band to play to a crowd of 1.2 million in Havana, Cuba.

The Secret Scripture Jim Sheridan, Ireland World Premiere
A once vibrant and lively beauty in her youth, Roseanne McNulty has spent the majority of her adult life confined to a mental hospital in rural Ireland. She has been institutionalized for so long, no one seems to remember why she was hospitalized in the first place. When a new chief psychiatrist takes a keen interest in her, he finds a hidden memoir she has written over the course of decades. It unravels the mystery of her incarceration, telling the tale of her passionate, yet tortured, life. Starring Vanessa Redgrave, Rooney Mara, Theo James, Eric Bana, and Jack Reynor.

Snowden Oliver Stone, Germany/USA World Premiere
Academy Award–winning director Oliver Stone tackles one of the most important and fascinating true stories of the 21st century. This politically charged, pulse-pounding thriller reveals the incredible untold personal story of Edward Snowden, the polarizing figure who exposed shocking illegal surveillance activities by the NSA and became one of the most wanted men in the world — considered a hero by some, and a traitor by others. Starring Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Shailene Woodley, Melissa Leo, Zachary Quinto, Tom Wilkinson, Scott Eastwood, Logan Marshall-Green, Timothy Olyphant, Ben Schnetzer, Lakeith Lee Stanfield, Rhys Ifans, and Nicolas Cage.

Strange Weather Katherine Dieckmann, USA World Premiere
A lyrical, emotionally rich drama tracking Darcy as she travels the Deep South with her friend in an effort to process her grief over the loss of her son. A story about forgiveness, redemption, grace, and how to be fully alive when facing death. Starring Holly Hunter, Carrie Coon, and Kim Coates.

Their Finest Lone Scherfig, United Kingdom World Premiere
Danish filmmaker Lone Scherfig’s period comedy-drama follows a group of filmmakers struggling to make an inspirational film to boost morale — and inspire America to join the war — during the London Blitz in World War II. A witty, romantic and moving portrayal of a young woman finding her way, and her voice, in the mayhem of war…and movies. Starring Gemma Arterton, Sam Claflin, Bill Nighy, Jack Huston, Helen McCrory, Eddie Marsan, Jake Lacy, Rachel Stirling, and Richard E. Grant.

A United Kingdom Amma Asante, United Kingdom World Premiere
This biopic tells the true story of Seretse Khama, King of Bechuanaland (modern Botswana), and Ruth Williams, the London office worker he married in 1947 in the face of fierce opposition from their families and the British and South African governments. Starring David Oyelowo and Rosamund Pike.

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

The Age of Shadows (Miljeong) Kim Jee woon, South Korea North American Premiere
The latest from cutting-edge director Kim Jee woon is an epic-scale period thriller about a double agent sent to infiltrate a band of freedom fighters during the Japanese occupation of Korea in the 1920s. Starring Korean superstars Song Kang ho, Han Ji min, and Gong Yoo.

All I See Is You Marc Forster, Thailand World Premiere
Set in exotic locations, this unique and visually-driven psychological drama tells the story of a blind woman and her husband, who upon restoration of her sight, begins to discover previously unseen and disturbing details about themselves, their marriage, and their lives. Stars Blake Lively, Yvonne Strahovski, and Jason Clarke.

American Honey Andrea Arnold, USA North American Premiere
Star, an adolescent girl from a troubled home, runs away with a travelling sales crew who drive across the American Midwest selling subscriptions door to door. Finding her feet in this gang of teenagers, she soon gets into the group's lifestyle of hard-partying nights, law-bending days, and young love. Starring Shia LaBeouf, Riley Keogh, and Sasha Lane.

American Pastoral Ewan McGregor, USA World Premiere
Based on the Pulitzer Prize–winning Philip Roth novel, American Pastoral follows a family whose seemingly idyllic existence is shattered by the social and political turmoil of the 1960s. Ewan McGregor stars in his directorial debut as Seymour “Swede” Levov, a once legendary high school athlete who is now a successful businessman married to a former beauty queen. But turmoil brews beneath the polished veneer of Swede’s life, when his beloved teenage daughter disappears after being accused of committing a violent act. Dedicated to finding her, what he discovers shakes him to the core, forcing him to look beneath the surface and confront the chaos that is shaping the world around him. Also starring Academy Award–winner Jennifer Connelly, Dakota Fanning, Emmy–winner Uzo Aduba, David Strathairn, Valorie Curry, Peter Riegert, and Rupert Evans.

Asura: The City of Madness Kim Sung-soo, South Korea World Premiere
A shady cop finds himself in over his head when he gets caught between Internal Affairs and the city’s corrupt mayor, in this scintillating crime drama from Korean maestro Kim Sung-soo. Stars Hwang Jung-min, Kwak Do-won, Ju Ji-hoon, and Jung Woo-sung.

Barakah Meets Barakah (Barakah yoqabil Barakah) Mahmoud Sabbagh, Saudi Arabia North American Premiere
Saudi Arabia’s first rom-com features comedian and social-media superstar Hisham Fageeh as a mild-mannered civil servant who runs up against his society’s strict mores when he sets out to romance the outspoken daughter of a wealthy couple. Also starring Fatima Al Banawi.

Barry Vikram Gandhi, USA World Premiere
New York City, 1981. Inspired by true events, a young Barack Obama tries to find his way as a college student in a new city as he is faced with questions about race, culture, and identity in this inspiring drama centered on a crucial year in the future President’s life. Starring Devon Terrell, Anya Taylor-Joy, and Ellar Coltrane.

Birth of the Dragon George Nolfi, USA/China/Canada World Premiere
Set against the backdrop of San Francisco’s Chinatown in 1964, this cross-cultural biopic chronicles Bruce Lee’s emergence as a martial-arts superstar after his legendary secret showdown with Shaolin master Wong Jack Man. While details of the fight are hotly disputed to this day, one thing is clear — out of that epic fight, Bruce Lee emerged as The Dragon, the man who brought Kung Fu to the world. Starring Billy Magnussen, Xia Yu, and Philip Ng.

The Birth of a Nation Nate Parker, USA International Premiere
Filmmaker-actor Nate Parker reclaims the title of D.W. Griffith’s 1916 milestone for this epic chronicle, set against the antebellum South, of the life of Nat Turner, a literate slave and preacher, whose financially strained owner accepts an offer to use his preaching to subdue unruly slaves. As he witnesses countless atrocities — against himself and his fellow slaves — Nat orchestrates an uprising in the hopes of leading his people to freedom. Starring Nate Parker, Armie Hammer, Mark Boone Jr., Colman Domingo, Aunjanue Ellis, Dwight Henry, Aja Naomi King, Esther Scott, Roger Guenveur Smith, Gabrielle Union, Penelope Ann Miller, and Jackie Earle Haley.

Bleed for This Ben Younger, USA Canadian Premiere
This film tells the incredible true story of one of the most inspiring and unlikely comebacks in sports history. Vinny “The Pazmanian Devil” Pazienza, shoots to stardom after winning two world title fights before a near-fatal car accident leaves him with a broken neck, and he is told he may never walk again. Against all odds and doctor’s orders, renowned trainer Kevin Rooney agrees to help Vinny return to the ring just a year after the accident, for what could be the last fight of his life. Stars Miles Teller, Katey Sagal, and Aaron Eckhart.

Blue Jay Alex Lehmann USA World Premiere
Meeting by chance when they return to their tiny California hometown, two former high-school sweethearts reflect on their shared past through the lens of their differently dissatisfied presents, in this tender, wise and affecting chamber drama from first-time feature director Alex Lehmann. Starring Mark Duplass and Sarah Paulson.

Brimstone Martin Koolhoven, Netherlands/Germany/France/Belgium/Sweden/United Kingdom North American Premiere
A triumphant epic of survival set in the searing wilds of the Badlands, the menacing inferno of the old American West. This tale of powerful womanhood and resistance against the unforgiving cruelty of a hell on earth follows Liz, a heroine carved from the beautiful wilderness, full of heart and grit, and accused of a crime she didn’t commit, hunted by a vengeful preacher. Stars Guy Pearce, Dakota Fanning, Emilia Jones, Carice Van Houten and Kit Harington.

BrOTHERHOOD Noel Clarke, United Kingdom International Premiere
Writer-director-star Noel Clarke completes the British crime-drama trilogy he began with KiDULTHOOD and AdULTHOOD, in this gritty tale of an ex-con whose dreams of settling down and going straight run up against the long memories (and itchy trigger fingers) of a crew of old enemies. Stars Noel Clarke, Arnold Oceng, David Ajala, Cornell S. John, and Michael "Stormzy" Omari.

Carrie Pilby Susan Johnson, USA World Premiere
Carrie, a person of high intelligence who graduated Harvard at 18, struggles to make sense of the world as it relates to morality, relationships, sex and leaving her New York City apartment. Susan Johnson makes her feature directorial debut in this beautiful adaptation of the acclaimed novel. Stars Bel Powley, Nathan Lane, Gabriel Byrne, Vanessa Bayer, and Jason Ritter.

Catfight Onur Tukel, USA World Premiere
A reunion between two old school friends sparks a no-holds-barred war of attrition, in this outrageously madcap black comedy. Stars Sandra Oh, Anne Heche, Alicia Silverstone, Craig Bierko, and Dylan Baker.

City of Tiny Lights Pete Travis, United Kingdom World Premiere
Tommy Akhtar — cricket fan, devoted son and deadbeat private eye — is just emerging from another hangover when his next case walks through the door. Hooker Melody wants him to find her friend who has gone missing. As he delves deeper into the case, Tommy’s journey to uncover the truth leads him into the hidden layers of modern London, unlocking shocking secrets about past loves, friendships, and family. Starring Riz Ahmed, Cush Jumbo, James Floyd, Billie Piper and Roshan Seth.

The Commune (Kollektivet) Thomas Vinterberg, Denmark/Sweden/Netherlands North American Premiere
Danish auteur Thomas Vinterberg’s new film focuses on a middle-aged professional couple in 1970s Denmark who decide to experiment with communal living by inviting a group of friends and random eccentrics to cohabit with them in a sprawling house. With Trine Dyrholm, Ulrich Thomsen, and Helene Reingaard Neumann.

Daguerrotype (Le Secret de la chambre noire) Kiyoshi Kurosawa, France/Japan/Belgium World Premiere
Kiyoshi Kurosawa makes his first film outside Japan with this French-language ghost romance fantasy, about an aging photographer whose obsession with an archaic technique draws his young assistant and beautiful daughter into a dark and mysterious world. With Tahar Rahim, Constance Rousseau, Olivier Gourmet, and Mathieu Amalric.

A Death in the Gunj Konkona Sensharma, India World Premiere
Set in 1979, this coming of age story follows a shy young Indian student who quietly and fatefully unravels during a family road trip to McCluskiegunj. Stars Vikrant Massey, Ranvir Shorey, Kalki Koechlin, Gulshan Devaiah, Tillotama Shome, Jim Sarbh, Tanuja Mukherjee, Om Puri, and Arya Sharma.

Denial Mick Jackson, USA/United Kingdom World Premiere
Based on the book History on Trial: My Day in Court with a Holocaust Denier, this riveting, true-life drama recounts the courtroom showdown between historian Deborah E. Lipstadt and notorious Holocaust denier David Irving, who accused her of libel when she declared him a Holocaust denier. In the English legal system, in cases of libel, the burden of proof is on the defendant, therefore it was up to Lipstadt and her legal team to prove that the Holocaust had occurred. Starring Academy Award-winner Rachel Weisz, Tom Wilkinson, Timothy Spall, Andrew Scott, Jack Lowden, Caren Pistorius and Alex Jennings.

Elle Paul Verhoeven, France North American Premiere
Michèle seems indestructible. As the head of a leading video game company, she brings the same ruthless attitude to her love life as to business. Being attacked in her home by an unknown assailant changes Michèle’s life forever. When she resolutely tracks the man down, they are both drawn into a curious and thrilling game — a game that may, at any moment, spiral out of control. Stars Isabelle Huppert, Laurent Lafitte, Anne Consigny, Charles Berling, Virginie Efira, Christian Berkel, Judith Magre, Jonas Bloquet, Alice Isaaz, Vimala Pons, Raphaël L Lenglet, Arthur Mazet, Lucas Prisor, Hugo Conzelmann, and Stéphane Bak.

Foreign Body (Jassad gharib, Corps etranger) Raja Amari, Tunisia/France World Premiere
Samia immigrates to France illegally. Obsessed by the idea her radical islamist brother might be stalking her, she first finds refuge with Imed, an acquaintance from her village, then with Leila, her employer. Desire and fear heightens the tension between the three protagonists. With Hiam Abbass, Sarra Hannachi, and Salim Kechiouche.

Frantz François Ozon, France/Germany Canadian Premiere
Set in a small German town in the aftermath of World War I, this elegiac tale of love and remembrance follows a young woman mourning the death of her fiancé, Frantz, who was killed in battle in France. She forms a bond with a mysterious Frenchman who has arrived to lay flowers on her beloved’s grave. Starring Paula Beer, Pierre Niney, Marie Gruber, Ernst Stötzner, Johann Von Bülow, and Anton Von Lucke.

The Handmaiden (Agassi) Park Chan-wook, South Korea North American Premiere
A crook-turned-servant falls for the vulnerable heiress she had originally schemed to swindle, in this audacious, visually sumptuous, and highly erotic period piece from writer-director Park Chan-wook. Starring Kim Min-hee, Kim Tae-ri, Ha Jung-woo, Cho Jin-woong, Kim Hae-sook, and Moon So-ri.

Harmonium (Fuchi ni tatsu) Kôji Fukada, Japan/France North American Premiere
A Japanese family’s humdrum daily routine is fatefully upset by the arrival of a stranger from the father’s past, in this slow-burning dramatic thriller. Stars Tadanobu Asano, Mariko Tsutsui, Kanji Furutachi, Taiga, Momone Shinokawa, and Kana Mahiro.

I Am Not Madame Bovary Feng Xiaogang, China World Premiere
A café proprietor spends a decade petitioning the Chinese legal system after being swindled by her ex-husband, in this caustically comic contemporary fable. Stars Fan Bingbing.

The Journey Nick Hamm, United Kingdom North American Premiere
A dramatization of the events preceding the historic 2006 St. Andrews Agreement, which brought peace to Northern Ireland after years of violent strife between Unionist and Republican factions. Stars Timothy Spall, Colm Meaney, John Hurt, Toby Stephens and Freddie Highmore.

King of the Dancehall Nick Cannon, USA/Jamaica World Premiere
Nick Cannon directs and stars in this high-energy musical about a young man from Brooklyn who gets caught up in the vibrant Kingston music scene during a visit to Jamaica. Starring Nick Cannon, Whoopi Goldberg, Busta Rhymes, Peter Stormare, Kimberly Patterson, Louis Gossett Jr., Kreesha Turner, Kamani Marley, Collie Budz, Killer Bean, and Beenie Man.

La La Land Damien Chazelle, USA Canadian Premiere
Writer-director Damien Chazelle captures the story of Mia, an aspiring actress, and Sebastian, a dedicated jazz musician, who are struggling to make ends meet in a city known for destroying hopes and breaking hearts. Set in modern day Los Angeles, this original musical about everyday life explores the joy and pain of pursuing your dreams. Starring Ryan Gosling, Emma Stone, John Legend, and Rosemarie DeWitt.

The Limehouse Golem Juan Carlos Medina, United Kingdom World Premiere
In the notorious Limehouse district of 19th-century London, a series of murders have shaken the city. The crimes are so monstrous that the press claim they’re the work of The Golem — a mythic creature from European legend. With no leads and in a desperate attempt to avoid the mobs wrath, Scotland Yard promote the seemingly inexperienced Detective Kildare to stop the slaughtering. Stars Bill Nighy, Olivia Cooke, Douglas Booth, Daniel Mays, Sam Reid, Maria Valverde, and Eddie Marsan.

Manchester by the Sea Kenneth Lonergan, USA Canadian Premiere
A reclusive handyman must face his painful past when he returns to his Massachusetts hometown after the sudden death of his beloved older brother, in this emotionally overwhelming and critically acclaimed drama from writer-director Kenneth Lonergan. Stars Michelle Williams, Kyle Chandler, Casey Affleck, Lucas Hedges, Gretchen Mol, and Matthew Broderick.

Mascots Christopher Guest, USA World Premiere
Starring many of his regular troupe of actors, Christopher Guest’s new comedy takes place in the ultra-competitive world of sports mascots where they compete for the most prestigious award in their field, the Gold Fluffy. Cast includes Jennifer Coolidge, Jane Lynch, Fred Willard, Parker Posey, Bob Balaban, Harry Shearer and Ed Begley Jr.

Maudie Aisling Walsh, Canada/Ireland Canadian Premiere
Maudie tells the true story of Maud Lewis, who overcame the physical challenge of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis to become one of Canada’s premier folk artists. Stars Sally Hawkins and Ethan Hawke.

Neruda Pablo Larraín, Chile/Argentina/Spain/France Canadian Premiere
Pablo Larraín weaves an engrossing metafictional fable around the 1948 manhunt for celebrated poet and politician Pablo Neruda, who goes underground when Chile outlaws communism and is pursued by an ambitious police inspector hoping to make a name for himself by capturing the famous fugitive. Starring Gael García Bernal, Alfredo Castro, Luis Gnecco, Mercedes Morán, Diego Muñoz, Pablo Derqui, and Michael Silva.

Nocturnal Animals Tom Ford, USA/United Kingdom North American Premiere
The second feature from writer-director Tom Ford follows the story of a woman who is forced to confront the demons of her past, as she is drawn into the world of a thriller novel written by her ex-husband. This romantic thriller of shocking intimacy and gripping tension explores the thin lines between love and cruelty, and revenge and redemption. Stars Amy Adams, Jake Gyllenhaal, Michael Shannon, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Isla Fisher, Karl Glusman, Armie Hammer, Laura Linney, Andrea Riseborough, and Michael Sheen.

The Oath Baltasar Kormákur, Iceland World Premiere
Icelandic action ace Baltasar Kormákur directs and stars in this psychological thriller about a father who tries to pull his daughter out of her world of drugs and petty crime, only to find that danger can be found in unexpected places. Also stars Gísli Örn Garðarsson and Hera Hilmar.

Orphan (Orpheline) Arnaud des Pallières, France World Premiere
Four moments in the lives of four female characters. Sandra’s youth as she moves to Paris and has a brush with disaster. Karine’s teenage years, an endless succession of runaways, men and mishaps, because anything is better than her desolate family home. The childhood of a little girl called Kiki, captured as a game of hide and seek turns to tragedy. And finally the grown-up life of Renée, a woman who thought she was safe from her own past. Gradually, we come to understand that these four characters are actually different sides of the same woman. Starring Adèle Haenel, Adèle Exarchopoulos, Gemma Arterton and Sergi López.

Paris Can Wait Eleanor Coppola, USA World Premiere
An American woman in a tired marriage finds herself on an unforeseen road trip from Cannes to Paris with a dashing Frenchman. What should be a seven-hour drive unexpectedly takes two days with many diversions: picturesque sites, fine food and wine, humour, fun, wisdom — and romance. Starring Diane Lane, Arnaud Viard and Alec Baldwin.

Paterson Jim Jarmusch, USA North American Premiere
Paterson is a bus driver in the city of Paterson, New Jersey. He adheres to a simple routine, writing poetry and observing the city on his route. His wife, Laura, lives in an ever-changing world. He supports her newfound ambitions; she champions his secret gift for poetry. The film channels the history and energy of the City of Paterson. The quiet triumphs and defeats of daily life are observed over one week, along with the poetry evident in its smallest details. Stars Adam Driver and Golshifteh Farahani.

The Salesman (Forushande) Asghar Farhadi, Iran/France North American Premiere
A sudden eruption of violence creates an atmosphere of simmering tension between a husband and wife, in this work of slow-burning domestic suspense from Iranian director Asghar Farhadi. Featuring Shahab Hosseini and Taraneh Alidousti.

Salt and Fire Werner Herzog, Germany/USA/France/Mexico North American Premiere
Shot in Bolivia, writer-director Werner Herzog’s Salt and Fire follows a mysterious hostage-taking where the leader of a small scientific delegation is deliberately stranded with two blind boys in an area of gigantic salt flats. Starring Michael Shannon, Gael García Bernal and Veronica Ferres.

Sing Garth Jennings, USA/France World Premiere
A show-biz impresario who happens to be a koala attracts a menagerie of musical hopefuls when he holds a singing contest to try and save his theatre. Written and directed by Garth Jennings, this animated musical comedy features more than 85 hit songs. Starring Matthew McConaughey, Reese Witherspoon, Seth MacFarlane, Scarlett Johansson, John C. Reilly, Taron Egerton, and Tori Kelly.

Souvenir Bavo Defurne, Belgium/Luxembourg/France North American Premiere
Liliane was once “Laura”, a rising star in the singing world, who had her moment of glory when she finished second behind Abba in the 1974 European Song Contest. Now working in a meat factory, Liliane’s brush with fame has been all but forgotten. But when she meets Jean, a 21-year-old boxer, her dreary life is suddenly turned upside down. With Isabelle Huppert, Kévin Azaïs, and Johan Leysen.

Things to Come (L'Avenir) Mia Hansen-Løve, France/Germany Canadian Premiere
A delicate and affecting tale about a middle-aged professor whose carefully structured life is thrown into disarray when her husband leaves her for another woman, and who finds an unlikely new companion in a former student and radical young communist. With Isabelle Huppert, André Marcon, Roman Kolinka, Edith Scob, Sarah Le Picard, and Solal Forte.

Toni Erdmann Maren Ade, Germany Canadian Premiere
An alternately hilarious and mortifying comedy about the fraught relationship between a repressed corporate consultant and her incessantly prank-playing dad. Starring Peter Simonischek, Sandra Hüller, Michael Wittenborn, Thomas Loibl, Trystan Pütter, Hadewych Minis, Lucy Russell, Ingrid Bisu, Vlad Ivanov, and Victoria Cocias.

Trespass Against Us Adam Smith, United Kingdom World Premiere
Three generations of the Cutler family live as notorious outlaws among some of the wealthiest lands in Britain. They spend their time hunting, raiding large estates, and tormenting the police. In the midst of it all, Chad finds himself torn between respect for his father and a desire for a better life for his children. The law is cracking down on his clan, and the decision might not be his to make. Stars Michael Fassbender, Brendan Gleeson, Lyndsey Marshal, Killian Scott, Rory Kinnear, and Sean Harris.

Una Benedict Andrews, United Kingdom Canadian Premiere
When a young woman unexpectedly arrives at an older man's workplace looking for answers, the secrets of the past threaten to unravel his new life. Their confrontation will uncover buried memories and unspeakable desires shaking them both to the core. Starring Rooney Mara, Ben Mendelsohn, and Riz Ahmed.

Unless Alan Gilsenan, Canada/Ireland World Premiere
Reta Winters has many reasons to be happy, but all the quiet satisfactions of her well-lived life suddenly disappear when her eldest daughter Norah inexplicably drops out of college and is found on a Toronto street corner, panhandling and refusing to speak. An adaptation of the final novel by the late, great Canadian novelist Carol Shields. Starring Catherine Keener, Matt Craven, Hannah Gross, Martha Henry, and Hanna Schygulla.

The Wasted Times (Luo Man Di Ke Xiao Wang Shi) Cheng Er, China World Premiere
Love, hatred, and betrayal abound in Shanghai during the chaotic, war-torn 1930s. Mr. Lu is ambushed during an important meeting with the Japanese army, but his sister’s husband, Watabe, sacrifices himself to save Mr. Lu. Worse still, the Japanese brutally murder Mr. Lu’s children and sister. To avenge their deaths, Mr. Lu’s mistress attempts to kill the culprit but ends up dead. Years later as the Sino-Japanese war comes to a close, Mr. Lu visits Mrs. Wang, the abandoned wife of his former boss who reveals an astonishing truth about the tragedy. Cast includes Zhang Ziyi, Ge You, and Tadanobu Asano.


WORLD PREMIERE OF ANTOINE FUQUA’S THE MAGNIFICENT SEVEN TO OPEN 41st TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke, Vincent D’Onofrio, Byung-Hun Lee, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Martin Sensmeier, Haley Bennett, and Peter Sarsgaard

The Toronto International Film Festival® today announced that Antoine Fuqua’s The Magnificent Seven will open the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival. Starring Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt, Ethan Hawke, Vincent D’Onofrio, Byung-Hun Lee, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Martin Sensmeier, Haley Bennett, and Peter Sarsgaard, The Magnificent Seven will have its World Premiere on September 8 at Roy Thomson Hall.

“We are pleased to welcome acclaimed filmmaker Antoine Fuqua back to the Festival, and have been proud to present audiences with his feature films including Training Day and The Equalizer,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO of TIFF. “Fuqua has delivered an exciting character-driven film on a grand scale, while putting his own unique spin on the genre making for a thrilling opening night.”

“Fuqua’s ability to effortlessly blend visceral action and the emotion of drama is what makes him such a compelling storyteller, and this film is no exception,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival. “With an incredible ensemble cast who deliver commanding performances, our audience is certainly in for a ride.”

“This will be my third time bringing a film to Toronto, and having The Magnificent Seven selected as the opening night film is a true honour,” said director Antoine Fuqua. “I can’t think of a better place, or a better crowd for the film’s World Premiere.”

Director Antoine Fuqua brings his modern vision to a classic. With the town of Rose Creek under the deadly control of industrialist Bartholomew Bogue (Peter Sarsgaard), the desperate townspeople, led by Emma Cullen (Haley Bennett), employ protection from seven outlaws, bounty hunters, gamblers, and hired guns — Sam Chisolm (Denzel Washington), Josh Faraday (Chris Pratt), Goodnight Robicheaux (Ethan Hawke), Jack Horne (Vincent D’Onofrio), Billy Rocks (Byung-Hun Lee), Vasquez (Manuel GarciaRulfo), and Red Harvest (Martin Sensmeier). As they prepare the town for the violent showdown that they know is coming, these seven mercenaries find themselves fighting for more than money. The screenplay is by Nic Pizzolatto and Richard Wenk. The film is produced by Roger Birnbaum and Todd Black.

The Magnificent Seven is presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures and Columbia Pictures in association with LStar Capital and Village Roadshow Pictures.

The 41st Toronto International Film Festival runs September 8 to 18, 2016.


THE TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL CLOSES WITH THE WORLD PREMIERE OF KELLY FREMON CRAIG’S THE EDGE OF SEVENTEEN
Comedy-drama stars Hailee Steinfeld, Woody Harrelson and Kyra Sedgwick

The Toronto International Film Festival announced today the highly anticipated World Premiere of Kelly Fremon Craig’s The Edge of Seventeen as the Closing Night Gala. Starring Hailee Steinfeld, Woody Harrelson, and Kyra Sedgwick, the Closing Night film will screen at Roy Thomson Hall on September 17.

The Edge of Seventeen marks the feature directorial debut of writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig and is produced by Academy Award winner James L. Brooks (Terms of Endearment, Broadcast News, Big, Say Anything, The Simpsons, Jerry Maguire and As Good as It Gets).

“It’s always a pleasure to close the Festival with laughter,” said Piers Handling, Director and CEO, TIFF. “The Edge of Seventeen is an entertaining and witty coming-of-age tale that will leave audiences smiling long after the lights have come up.”

“We’re thrilled to introduce Festival audiences to Kelly Fremon Craig’s feature film debut, The Edge of Seventeen,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. “As the film’s writer-director, Kelly captures perfectly the angst and energy of being a teenager, while Academy Award nominees Hailee Steinfeld and Woody Harrelson deliver great performances.”

“It’s an enormous honour that The Edge of Seventeen has been chosen as TIFF’s closing night film," said writer-director Kelly Fremon Craig. “This film has been a real labour of love from start to finish, and it’s a joy to see it resonating so much with audiences. I’m thrilled and humbled that The Edge of Seventeen will close out the Festival. "

The Edge of Seventeen follows high school junior Nadine (Hailee Steinfeld), who is already at peak awkwardness when her all-star older brother Darian (Blake Jenner) starts dating her best friend Krista (Haley Lu Richardson). All at once, Nadine feels more alone than ever, until the unexpected friendship of a thoughtful boy (Hayden Szeto) gives her a glimmer of hope that things just might not be so terrible after all.


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 in person from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. ET daily at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, until August 14 for My Choice packages and August 24 for TIFF Choice packages, 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.


Call for submissions: EURODOC Pitch, and One‐on‐One for Emerging Filmmakers

$
0
0

CALL FOR PROJECTS:
EURODOC PITCH and ONE‐ON‐ONE FOR EMERGING FILMMAKERS

Montreal, August 1, 2016 – Doc Circuit Montréal (DCM) is delighted to announce two exciting calls for projects: the EURODOC Pitch and the One‐on‐One for Emerging Filmmakers. Established québecois producers and emerging filmmakers are invited to submit their documentary projects by September 15th as part of these two pitching events.

EURODOC Pitch

We are now accepting submissions to the prized EURODOC Pitch! Five Quebec-based documentary producers will be selected for the opportunity to pitch live in the hopes of receiving a $4,000 grant and securing a much coveted slot for one of Europe’s leading training programs.

The EURODOC program covers:
  • the development, packaging, co-production, and financing of a documentary feature film
  • offers its participants workshops and meetings with international professionals
Eligibility:
  • All Quebec-based documentary producers, from emerging to established
  • Projects with an european coproduction and international broadcast potential
  • Apply by September 15, 2016
The five finalists will be selected to participate in a live pitch session during Doc Circuit Montréal (Nov. 2016) before an audience of DCM delegates and a jury of EURODOC representatives and European Commissioning Editors. Presented in collaboration with AQPM.

One‐on‐One for Emerging Filmmakers

DCM is proud to announce the sixth edition of the One‐on‐One for Emerging Filmmakers, in which emerging filmmakers have the opportunity to make valuable connections with a roster of Quebec’s top documentary producers:
  • Ten Quebec-based emerging documentary filmmakers
  • Ten established documentary producers
  • A pitch training will be offered by EyeSteelFilm on Wednesday September 28
  • A full day of documentary pitches and consultations on Wednesday, October 5
Past editions of the event have resulted in numerous successful collaborations. The One‐on‐One for Emerging Filmmakers takes place in the offices of the ARRQ.

We encourage all Quebec-based emerging filmmakers to apply by September 15, 2016.

For more information on eligibility for both Calls for Projects and how to submit, please visit our website: http://ridm.ca/en/doc-circuit-montreal/call-for-projects

About Doc Circuit Montréal
Each year, Doc Circuit Montréal organizes an intensive schedule of business meetings and professional‐development workshops as RIDM’s professional market. The 12th edition of Doc Circuit Montréal will take place from November 12 to 16, 2016.

Toronto International Film Festival announces Canadian selections, Talent Lab, Pitch This!, Rising Stars

$
0
0

POLITICS AND BOLD STORYTELLING HEADLINE CANADIAN LINEUP AT THETORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL

The Toronto International Film Festival® announced an exciting lineup of Canadian features, packed with World Premieres from acclaimed filmmakers Deepa Mehta, Alanis Obomsawin, Bruce McDonald, and Brigitte Berman to promising new work from Kevan Funk, Anne Émond, Chloé Robichaud, Jamie Kastner, and Vincent Biron. North American Premieres include the latest from Xavier Dolan, Nathan Morlando, Kim Nguyen, Ann Marie Fleming, and Johnny Ma.

“We are thrilled to present a robust selection of projects from some of Canada’s best filmmakers,” said Steve Gravestock, Senior Programmer, TIFF. “From thought provoking documentaries and affecting dramas, to unconventional biographies and thrillers, to animated features, this year’s selections highlight the diversity and high-calibre work produced in Canada.”

“We are proud to shine a spotlight on both veteran filmmakers and emerging talent in this year’s slate,” said Magali Simard, Film Programmes Manager, TIFF. “Canadians continue to forge their own path on a global scale with their own distinct perspectives and methods of storytelling.”

The Canada Goose Award for Best Canadian Feature Film will be presented to one of many outstanding Canadian filmmakers, and the City of Toronto Award for Best Canadian First Feature Film will be presented to the filmmaker with the most impressive debut feature film at the Festival. This year’s Canadian awards jury is composed of producers Luc Déry (Incendies, Monsieur Lazhar) and Anita Lee (Stories We Tell, Invention), filmmaker Mina Shum (Double Happiness, Ninth Floor), and cultural critic and novelist Hal Niedzviecki.

The 41st Toronto International Film Festival runs September 8 to 18, 2016.

SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS

Below Her Mouth April Mullen, Canada World Premiere
Below Her Mouth is a bold, uninhibited drama that begins with a passionate weekend affair between two women. Dallas, a roofer, and Jasmine, a fashion editor, share a powerful and immediate connection that inevitably derails both of their lives. Starring Erika Linder, Natalie Krill, and Sebastian Pigott.

It’s Only the End of the World Xavier Dolan, Canada/France North American Premiere
After 12 years of absence, a writer goes back to his hometown, planning on announcing his upcoming death to his family. As resentment soon rewrites the course of the afternoon, fits and feuds unfold, fuelled by loneliness and doubt, while all attempts of empathy are sabotaged by people’s incapacity to listen, and to love. Starring Vincent Cassel, Marion Cotillard, Gaspard Ulliel, Nathalie Baye, and Léa Seydoux.

Mean Dreams Nathan Morlando, Canada North American Premiere
Mean Dreams is a tense coming-of-age thriller about a 15-year-old boy who steals a bag of drug money and runs away with the girl he loves. While her violent and corrupt cop father hunts them down, they embark on a journey that will change their lives forever. A potent fable at its heart, Mean Dreams fuses the desperation of life on the run with the beauty and wonder of first love. Starring TIFF Rising Star Sophie Nélisse, Josh Wiggins, Bill Paxton, and Colm Feore.

Two Lovers and a Bear Kim Nguyen, Canada North American Premiere
This film is set in the Great North, near the North Pole, in a modern town where about 200 souls live precariously in minus 50 degree weather, and where roads lead to nowhere but the endless white. It is in this eerie lunar landscape that Lucy and Roman, two young tormented souls, fell in love. But now, ghosts from Lucy's past are coming back, and she needs to run away or she will burn. Together, these lovers decide to make a leap for life, a leap for inner peace. Starring Tatiana Maslany and Dane DeHaan.

Weirdos Bruce McDonald, Canada World Premiere
Nova Scotia, 1976. It’s the weekend of the American Bicentennial and 15-year-old Kit is running away from home. With girlfriend Alice, Kit hitchhikes through the maritime landscape towards a new home with his mother, Laura. Along the way, Kit and Alice’s relationship is tested as Kit approaches a realization that will change his life forever. Starring Dylan Authors, Julia Sarah Stone, Molly Parker, and Allan Hawco.

Window Horses (The Poetic Persian Epiphany of Rosie Ming) Ann Marie Fleming, Canada North American Premiere
Window Horses is a feature-length animated film about a young Canadian poet who embarks on a whirlwind voyage of discovery — of herself, her family, love, history, and the nature of poetry. Featuring the voices of Sandra Oh, Ellen Page, Don McKellar, Nancy Kwan, and Shohreh Aghdashloo, the film is filled with poems and histories created by a variety of artists and animators, who set out to blend a vast myriad of differences between cultures, philosophies, arts, and time frames.

MASTERS

Anatomy of Violence Deepa Mehta, Canada/India World Premiere
In 2012, a young woman was gang raped by six men inside a moving bus in New Delhi. She was beaten senseless and thrown naked out onto the street. Eleven actors collaborated on Deepa Mehta’s devastating fictional dramatization of the lives of the rapists.

We Can’t Make the Same Mistake Twice Alanis Obomsawin, Canada World Premiere
In 2007, the Child and Family Caring Society of Canada and the Assembly of First Nations filed a landmark discrimination complaint against Indian Affairs and Northern Development Canada. They argued that child and family welfare services provided to First Nations children on reserves and in the Yukon were underfunded and inferior to services offered to other Canadian children. Veteran director Alanis Obomsawin’s documentary We Can’t Make the Same Mistake Twice documents this epic court challenge, giving voice to the tenacious childcare workers at its epicentre.

TIFF DOCS

All Governments Lie: Truth, Deception, and The Spirit of I.F. Stone Fred Peabody, Canada World Premiere
Investigative journalists Amy Goodman, Glenn Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill, Matt Taibbi, and others are changing the face of journalism, no longer tied to mainstream media, choosing independent alternatives. Cameras follow as they uncover government and corporate secrets, just as ground-breaking and influential American journalist I.F. Stone did decades ago.

Black Code Nicholas de Pencier, Canada World Premiere
Based on the book by Professor Ron Deibert, Black Code is the story of how the internet is being controlled and manipulated by governments in order to censor and monitor their citizens. As they battle for control of cyberspace, ideas of citizenship, privacy, and democracy are challenged to the core.

Giants of Africa Hubert Davis, Canada World Premiere
On a continent where dreams are often displaced for necessity and survival, the game of basketball brings hope to many young men in Africa. Masai Ujiri, president and general manager of the Toronto Raptors, returns to Africa each summer to stage basketball development camps. Young men from across the continent overcome staggering odds, with an unwavering spirit, to attend these camps that are held in Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana and Rwanda. As Masai and his team of coaches work to train and inspire the raw talent that they encounter, Giants of Africa captures the amazing physical and emotional journey that these young African men pass through.

Mostly Sunny Dilip Mehta, Canada World Premiere
Growing up in small-town Sarnia as the daughter of strict Sikh parents, no one anticipated Sunny Leone’s remarkable transformation into an adult film star and Penthouse cover girl — not even Sunny herself. More astonishing still, she has reinvented herself in India as a mainstream reality TV star and Bollywood actress, beloved by millions despite widespread awareness of her spicy past. Mostly Sunny asks what makes Sunny tick, and explores the birthplace of the Kama Sutra’s paradoxical relationship with sex.

The River of My Dreams Brigitte Berman, Canada World Premiere
Actor-writer-director Gordon Pinsent is one of Canada’s most beloved artists. Filled with humour, passion, and complexity, this film by Academy Award–winning filmmaker Brigitte Berman tells Gordon Pinsent's story, as well as a universal story about the human condition, while making creative use of state-of-the art digital technology.

The Skyjacker’s Tale Jamie Kastner, Canada World Premiere
The Skyjacker’s Tale is a documentary thriller about Ishmael Muslim Ali (né Labeet), one of the most wanted U.S. fugitives ever, who successfully hijacked a plane to Cuba after being convicted of murdering eight people on a golf course owned by the Rockefellers.

The Stairs Hugh Gibson, Canada World Premiere
The Stairs tells the story of Marty, Greg, and Roxanne, each of whom survived decades of street involvement in Toronto. Using that experience, each works in public health to help their old neighbourhood, while struggling to maintain their newly-found stability. Told over five years, The Stairs defies stereotypes about drug use, sex work, and homelessness through an intimate portrait that is by turns funny, surprising, and moving.

DISCOVERY

ARQ Tony Elliott, USA/Canada World Premiere
In a future where corporations battle against sovereign nations over the last of the world’s energy supplies, Renton and Hannah relive a deadly home invasion over and over again. The intruders are bent on getting the ARQ, an experimental energy technology that could end the wars — and is also creating a time loop that is making the day repeat.

Hello Destroyer Kevan Funk, Canada World Premiere
A young junior hockey player's life is shattered by an in-game act of violence. In an instant his life is abruptly turned upside down; torn from the fraternity of the team and the coinciding position of prominence, he is cast out and ostracized from the community. As he struggles with the repercussions of the event, desperate to find a means of reconciliation and a sense of identity, his personal journey illuminates troubling systemic issues around violence. Starring TIFF Rising Star Jared Abrahamson.

Jean of the Joneses Stella Meghie, Canada Canadian Premiere
Writer-director Stella Meghie's debut feature is an acerbic coming-of-age tale that revolves around the troubled Jones family, one of whom dies at the start of the film. When the paramedic who answers their 911 call falls for rambunctious Jean, the courtship goes south during a calamitous funeral. Starring Taylour Paige and Gloria Reuben.

Old Stone Johnny Ma, Canada/China North American Premiere
When a drunken passenger causes Lao Shi to swerve and hit a motorcyclist, the driver stops to help the injured man. When no police or ambulance arrive, he drives the victim to the hospital, checks him in, and finds himself responsible for the man’s medical bills. The repercussions of Shi’s selfless act expose a society rife with bone-chilling callousness and bureaucratic indifference. On the verge of losing his cab, his job, and his family, Lao Shi has to resort to desperate measures to survive. Starring Chen Gang.

Prank Vincent Biron, Canada North American Premiere
Stefie, a lonely young boy, is approached by Martin, Jean-Sé, and Lea to record their daily pranks with his cellphone. The four prankmeisters decide to set up a stunt which goes beyond anything they've done so far... but who will be the victim? Prank is a funny and sometimes scary coming-of-age story about friendship, curiosity, peer pressure, and the loss of innocence.

Werewolf Ashley McKenzie, Canada World Premiere
Blaise and Nessa are marginalized methadone users in a small town. Each day they push their rusty lawn mower door-to-door begging to cut grass. Nessa plots an escape, while Blaise lingers closer to collapse. Tethered to each other, their getaway dreams are kept on a suffocatingly short leash.

CONTEMPORARY WORLD CINEMA

Boundaries Chloé Robichaud, Canada World Premiere
The paths of three women cross in Besco, a small isolated island facing an important economic crisis. Starring Macha Grenon, Emily VanCamp, Nathalie Doummar, and Rémy Girard.

X Quinientos Juan Andrés Arango, Canada/Colombia/Mexico World Premiere
Three separate but powerful stories of three teenagers who must come to terms with their new reality when they are forced to migrate to different parts of the Americas after the loss of someone they loved.

VANGUARD

Nelly Anne Émond, Canada World Premiere
A film inspired by the life and work of Nelly Arcan. Nelly is a portrait of a fragmented woman, lost between irreconcilable identities: writer, lover, call girl, and star. Several women in one, navigating between great exaltation and great disenchantment. The film mirrors the violent life and radical work of its subject, paying tribute to a writer who insisted on taking risks. Starring TIFF Rising Star Mylène Mackay.

PRIMETIME

nirvanna the band the show created by Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol; directed by Matt Johnson, Canada World Premiere
Two lifelong best friends and roommates are planning the greatest musical act in the history of the modern world. If only they could book their first gig.

TIFF CINEMATHEQUE

A Cool Sound from Hell Sidney J. Furie, Canada
A striking record of hipster Toronto in the 1950s, Sidney J. Furie’s long-thought-lost second feature follows a bored young man who kicks his middle-class destiny to the curb and plunges into the Hogtown netherworld of jazz, sex, and narcotics. Bronwen Hughes’ The Journey is the Destination was a Canadian feature previously announced in the Gala programme.


SHORT FILMS, EPIC STORYTELLING: TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL PRESENTS A POWERFUL AND DIVERSE CANADIAN SHORT FILM LINEUP

The Toronto International Film Festival® unveiled an exciting slate of 37 Canadian short films sure to captivate and inspire international audiences with their original and compelling stories. This year’s short film roster celebrates established filmmakers and a new wave of talent. Their creative visions are as diverse in perspectives and distinctive in experiences as Canada is rich in communities, people, and voices. This year’s selection includes 17 films by women directors, 6 films from Canadian Indigenous directors, and several films that focus on stories from remote regions of the country. From animation to documentary, fiction to experimental, these shorts showcase fascinating and provocative stories that are uniquely Canadian.

Canadian films in the Short Cuts programme are eligible for the Short Cuts Award for Best Canadian Film, and the Short Cuts Award for Best Film. This year's jury includes American filmmaker Abteen Bagheri (That B.E.A.T.), French filmmaker Eva Husson (Bang Gang), and Canadian filmmaker Jeff Barnaby (Rhymes for Young Ghouls).

SHORT CUTS

3-Way (Not Calling) Molly McGlynn, Canada World Premiere
Mel struggles to find excitement in her relationship and convinces her reluctant partner Kevin to have a threesome, which he sets up with their local millennial barista, Gina, who overstays her welcome.

5 Films About Technology Peter Huang, Canada World Premiere
A look at the dumber side of modern technology.

Ape Sodom Maxwell McCabe-Lokos, Canada World Premiere
Three degenerates navigate the descending hierarchy of post-consumerist enlightenment.

Blind Vaysha Theodore Ushev, Canada North American Premiere
Blind Vaysha doesn’t see the present. She was born with a left eye that only sees the past and a right eye that only sees the future. This story is a metaphor for the struggle to live in the moment, and how people seek comfort in memories of the past or in hope brought on by the future.

Cleo Sanja Zivkovic, Canada World Premiere
Cleo discovers an unexpected connection as she ventures outside her comfort zone into a part of town she has never experienced before.

CYCLES Joe Cobden, Canada World Premiere
A man is stuck in loops of abstract memories after a relationship suddenly ends. He relives the love lost, from first meeting to last goodbye.

DataMine Timothy Barron Tracey, Canada Toronto Premiere
This cunning example of stop-motion animation tackles our obsessions with security, surveillance, and digital culture.

Emma Martin Edralin, Canada World Premiere
Emma, 14, has alopecia — a condition of rapid, unpredictable hair loss. Fighting a futile battle against her changing appearance, her only hope is acceptance.

Four Faces of the Moon Amanda Strong, Canada World Premiere
This intricate stop-motion animation interlaces Canada’s colonial past with writer-director Amanda Strong’s personal family history — and illuminates Cree, Métis, and Anishinaabe reclamation of culture, language, and nationhood.

A Funeral for Lightning Emily Kai Bock, Canada/USA World Premiere
Seven months pregnant, a young woman is stuck living off-the-grid, under her husband’s pretense of a “free life,” as he pursues other ambitions.

Gods Acre Kelton Stepanowich, Canada World Premiere
Frank lives alone on his family’s ancestral Cree lands, but water levels are rising due to climate change, and evacuation seems more necessary every day.

HAND.LINE.COD. Justin Simms, Canada World Premiere
On the remote, ruggedly beautiful Fogo Island, traditional fishers lead a revolution in sustainability. Returning to a traditional cod catching method and engaging in a modern experiment to deliver directly to a commercial market of big city chefs in Toronto, the story provides a provocative window on the concept of the economic nutrition label and exposes where the money goes in the process.

Imitations Fabian Velasco and Milos Mitrovic, Canada World Premiere
After getting plastic surgery to look like a famous teen pop-star, an introverted super fan named Arnold begins to experience irreversible side effects as his face begins to fall apart during a night out doing karaoke.

Late Night Drama Patrice Laliberté, Canada World Premiere
1:34 AM. A snowy suburb. Jérémie, 24, parks his modified car in front of a crowded club. His friends’ usual concerns —“Hey man, do you have something that will help me make it through the night”? — do not interest him. Jérémie is looking for someone.

Mariner Thyrone Tommy, Canada World Premiere
A young, marine navigation student suffers intense anxiety during his final exams, when an incident from his past returns to both haunt and help him.

Mutants Alexandre Dostie, Canada North American Premiere
In the summer of 1996, life throws a curveball in the face of Keven Guénette and it hits him hard. Guided by his paraplegic baseball coach, Keven discovers the mutating effects of sex and love.

Nothing about Moccasins Eden Mallina Awashish, Canada North American Premiere
Director Eden Mallina Awashish struggles to understand why her grandmother refuses to allow her to shoot a film about moccasins. Her failed attempt turns into a playful deconstruction of cultural loss, a record of the resolve to protect Atikamekw tradition.

Nutag – Homeland Alisi Telengut, Canada North American Premiere
A non-narrative hand-painted visual poem about diaspora, homeland, and the tragic mass-deportations of the Kalmyk people during World War II.

Oh What a Wonderful Feeling François Jaros, Canada North American Premiere
A truck stop becomes a nighttime realm of menace and mystery for a young woman who harbours her own secrets.

Plain and Simple Raphaël Ouellet, Canada World Premiere
A window into the lives of four different characters who share an acute sense of loneliness and a hidden longing to connect.

Red of the Yew Tree Marie-Hélène Turcotte, Canada North American Premiere
A voyage begins on the occasion of a pheasant hunt, leading the hunter through a vast and yet intimate landscape in this delicately evocative animation.

The Road to Webequie Ryan Noth and Tess Girard, Canada World Premiere
A mining company has promised to create opportunities for the remote Webequie First Nation. Through the eyes of three youths facing an uncertain future, this observational yet expansive documentary shows the struggles — and hopes — of a community confronting challenges that many Canadians will never experience.

Shahzad Haya Waseem, Canada World Premiere
Shahzad, an 11-year old Pakistani boy who moves to Toronto with his father, has to find his home in a foreign land, only to discover home itself has become foreign.

Small Fry Eva Michon, USA/Poland/Canada World Premiere
A teenage girl visits her dad on vacation and finds his news a little hard to swallow.

SNIP Terril Calder, Canada World Premiere
SNIP cuts up colonial Canadian histories by telling a story of survival amidst genocide. Annie and Gordon travel back in time to save Charlie and Niska, who are trapped in a nightmare reality designed to eradicate native culture by erasing their children.

The Smoke Rebecca Addelman, Canada World Premiere
A woman nearing middle-age returns to her hometown for a bat mitzvah and along the way becomes desperate for a cigarette.

The Taste of Vietnam Pier-Luc Latulippe, Canada World Premiere
Chloe has to leave town. Arnaud is determined to make her last night one she’ll never forget.

TMG_103 (rough cut) Walter Woodman, Canada World Premiere
A behind-the-scenes look at an actress deciding whether or not to do her first sex scene.

Tshiuetin Caroline Monnet, Canada World Premiere
An extraordinary look at the historic Tshiuetin line amidst the beauty of the northern landscape.

Twisted Jay Cheel, Canada World Premiere
In 1996, an urban legend was born in small-town Ontario when the Can-View Drive-In was hit by a tornado during a screening of the movie Twister. News of the event spread around the world. But what is even more amazing is... it didn't happen.

Whispering Breeze Jonathan Tremblay, Canada World Premiere
This captivating ode to the beauty of childhood and the pain of exile combines black-and-white images of a coastal town with the imagined words of an elderly woman, who longs to see her home once more.

Wild Skin Ariane Louis-Seize, Canada World Premiere
The quiet life of a young and solitary woman is disturbed when she discovers a baby python in her apartment. This mysterious presence unleashes her deepest urges and allows her to express, for the first time, who she truly is.

Your Mother and I Anna Maguire, Canada/United Kingdom World Premiere
This adaptation of a story by Dave Eggers looks at the small moments that belie the larger tensions between generations, as a dad recounts to his daughter all the ways he and his wife changed the world… or so he says.

WAVELENGTHS

350 MYA Terra Long, Morocco/Canada World Premiere
The Tafilalt region of the Sahara Desert was once the Rheic Ocean. 350 MYA imagines the ocean's continued presence in the landscape.

Dark Adaptation Chris Gehman, Canada World Premiere
Dark Adaptation extends the experiments with refracted light that Chris Gehman began with Refraction Series. Using simple materials, and shooting on 16mm reversal film, Gehman explores the qualities of pure light and colour in motion. The film is a collaboration with electronic music composer Graham Stewart (Violence and the Sacred).

Strange Vision of Seeing Things Ryan Ferko, Canada/Serbia World Premiere
Despite the title’s twin references to eyesight, Ryan Ferko’s Strange Vision of Seeing Things is a film about unseen buildings and conflicts in Belgrade, Serbia: those deliberately obscured; those unseeable to a tourist’s eyes; and those masked by monuments — their hyper-visibility a form of obfuscation.

Untitled, 1925 Madi Piller, Canada Toronto Premiere
Travelling through the highlands of Peru, the artist follows the path her grandfather took in 1925, from Lima to Cuzco. The vast, silent territory of the Andes is the backdrop for the artist’s insights and reflections on identity and belonging.

International titles for the Short Cuts programme will be announced on August 9. The complete Wavelengths programme will be announced on August 16.


TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL REVEALS PARTICIPANTS FOR 2016 TALENT LAB AND TELEFILM CANADA PITCH THIS!
Atom Egoyan, Christine Vachon, and Jim Stark to act as Governors for 13th annual Talent Lab

The Toronto International Film Festival® today announced the participants in the 2016 editions of Talent Lab™ and Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! Produced by TIFF’s Industry team, these programmes provide an opportunity for talented emerging filmmakers to learn from leading international film artists, helping to develop their skills and knowledge of the industry at a pivotal point in their careers.

“We are delighted to welcome all the participants in these two terrific programmes,” said Kathleen Drumm, Director, Industry at TIFF. “It’s a great chance for them to hone their craft, to develop their projects and to access the knowledge of highly respected voices in the industry.”

Now in its 13th year, the Talent Lab is a comprehensive, five-day artistic development programme led by esteemed Governors, who will guide 20 filmmakers to develop their creativity, artistic process, and independent voices. Featuring both Canadian and International participants, the Talent Lab is designed to launch the careers of the next generation of filmmakers. This year’s Governors include Atom Egoyan (The Sweet Hereafter, Adoration), Christine Vachon (Carol, Boys Don’t Cry), and Jim Stark (Coffee and Cigarettes). Additional guests will be announced in the coming weeks. Talent Lab runs from September 6 to 10, 2016.

Returning for its 17th year, Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! gives six talented teams the chance to bring their feature film project to life. Each team will have six minutes to pitch their original projects, live in front of a jury of international film experts, and an audience of over 200 industry professionals. The winner will be awarded a $15,000 prize to develop their project.

TALENT LAB TORONTO

The 2016 Talent Lab participants:

Canadian Participants International Participants
Ben Petrie Alejandra Márquez Abella (Mexico)
Caroline MonnetAleksandra Terpinska (Poland)
Frieda Luk Anwar Boulifa (United Kingdom)
Jesse Klein Bryn Chainey (Australia)
Joyce Wong Mark Noonan (Ireland)
Kelton Stepanowich Martín Morgenfeld (Argentina)
Meryam Joobeur Mateo Bendesky (Argentina)
Randall Okita Myrsini Aristidou (Cyprus)
Reem Morsi Sofia Carrillo (Mexico)
Slater Jewell-Kemker Zamo Mkhwanazi (South Africa)

The 2016 Talent Lab Governors:

Atom Egoyan
Atom Eqoyan is a Canadian director, writer, and producer. He has won numerous awards, including five prizes at the Cannes Film Festival (the Grand Prix, International Critics Awards, and Ecumenical Jury Prizes), two Academy Award nominations, eight Genie Awards, prizes from the National Board of Review, and an award for Best International Adaptation at the Frankfurt Book Fair. His films have been presented in numerous retrospectives across the globe and 14 have played at the Festival.

Christine Vachon
Christine Vachon is an American film producer. She is an Independent Spirit Award and Gotham Award winner and co-founded indie powerhouse Killer Films with partner Pamela Koffler in 1995. Over the past decade and a half, the two have produced some of the most celebrated American indie features, including Carol (nominated for six Academy Awards), Far From Heaven (nominated for four Academy Awards), Still Alice (Academy Award winner), Boys Don’t Cry (Academy Award winner), One Hour Photo, Kids, Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Happiness, Velvet Goldmine, Safe, I Shot Andy Warhol, Camp, Swoon, and I’m Not There (Academy Award nominated).

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

Congratulations to Talent Lab participants Caroline Monnet (Tshiuetin) and Kelton Stepanowich (Gods Acre) on the selection of their films in the 2016 Short Cuts programme and to the following Talent Lab alumni with films in the Festival’s 2016 selection:

Feature Films:
 Ashley McKenzie, Director, Werewolf
 Hugh Gibson, Director, The Stairs
 Johnny Ma, Director, Old Stone
 Kevan Funk, Director, Hello Destroyer
 Tony Elliot, Director, Arq

Short Cuts Canada:
 Maxwell McCabe-Lokos, Director, Ape Sodom
 Tess Girard, Co-Director, The Road to Webequie

TELEFILM CANADA PITCH THIS!

Telefilm Canada’s PITCH THIS! challenge takes place on Sunday, September 11 at 4:30 p.m. and is open to all Festival Industry and Press delegates.

The 2016 Telefilm Canada PITCH THIS! finalists are:

Mary Goes Round Matt Code and Molly McGlynn
Mary Goes Round is a comedic drama about a closeted alcoholic and substance abuse counsellor who gets arrested for a DUI and loses both her job and fiancé. When she gets a call from her estranged father, she returns to her hometown in New Jersey where she must learn to take responsibility for herself and her family. She learns that her father is dying of cancer and he wants Mary to form a bond with her teenaged half-sister whom she’s never met.

Qalupalik Sean Wainsteim and Nyla Innuksuk
Set amidst stunning Baffin Island landscape in Nunavut and filmed in the Inuit language of Inuktitut, Qalupalik is a thriller about an Inuit girl who returns to her hometown to search for her missing brother, only to discover that she’s being hunted by creatures awakened from Inuit legend.

Sharkasaurus Spencer Estabrooks and Greg Jeffs
The story of a pair of star-crossed lovers. When the rebellious Emo, son of a paleontologist, falls for the promiscuous daughter of a widowed creationist, they accidentally awaken a prehistoric tunneling dino-shark and they must evolve their ideological difference or succumb to the inevitable jaws of Sharkasaurus.

The Art of Being Busy Lauren Grant, Chris Ross, and Lauren Corber
The Art of Being Busy is a romantic comedy about a young woman who’s terrified her newly discovered breast cancer is going to ruin a hot new romance and derail her career, so she uses social media to pretend she’s far away…having the time of her life.

The Edible Woman Francine Zuckerman and Karen Shaw
When a soon-to-be married, market research employee who has recently lost her appetite for food meets a freewheeling academic in 1960s Toronto, she must decide to accept the life laid out in front of her or use her newly blossoming appetite for life to create a future of her choosing.

To Be Continued Rob Grant, Luke Black, and Mike MacMillan
After committing suicide, bullied teen Evan discovers that he and his friends return to life every time they die — sparking an increasingly bloody prom-night battle between the tormented and their aggressors.


TIFF RISING STARS REVEALED FOR 2016 TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Jared Abrahamson, Grace Glowicki, Mylène Mackay and Sophie Nélisse

The Toronto International Film Festival® proudly introduces the four actors selected to participate in the 2016 TIFF Rising Stars programme: Jared Abrahamson, Grace Glowicki, Mylène Mackay and Sophie Nélisse. Now in its sixth year, the intensive professional development programme immerses participants in a series of public events and industry meetings during the Festival.

“Canadian talent have proven themselves among the best in the world,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director, Toronto International Film Festival. “We are truly proud to connect this year’s TIFF Rising Stars with the global film industry, offering them an international platform for showcasing their work and a launch pad to develop their careers.”

The four Rising Stars will take part in a series of specialized programming organized by TIFF’s Industry team that includes seminars with casting directors, media training, one-on-one meetings with filmmakers, as well as a series of unique networking opportunities. New this year, additional international Rising Stars will be announced in the coming weeks.

Jared Abrahamson
Jared Abrahamson was born and raised in Flin Flon, Manitoba and currently resides in Vancouver, British Columbia. After a stint working in the mines and competing as a pro mixed martial arts fighter, he attended the Vancouver Film School. Abrahamson had a lead role in the Hallmark Hall of Fame film Finding a Family (2011) and parts in the ABC pilot The Manzanis, Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days (2012), and Awkward. Recently, Abrahamson filmed roles in Keep Watching (2016); Hello Destroyer (TIFF 2016); Gun (2016); Veracruz (2016); Never Steady, Never Still (2016); Hollow in the Land (2016); and a recurring character on AMC’s Fear the Walking Dead. He will soon be seen in the TV drama Travelers (2017).

Grace Glowicki
Grace Glowicki is an actor, director, and writer based in Toronto, Ontario. She has appeared in films at many major US film festivals this year. At the Sundance Film Festival, her performance in Ben Petrie's Her Friend Adam (2016) won her a Special Jury Prize for Outstanding Performance. The film has since played SXSW Film Festival, NYC’s Rooftop Films, and the Sundance Short Film Tour. She also starred in Jason Jeffrey’s A Teachable Moment (2016), which played the Tribeca Film Festival. Upcoming acting projects include the narrative feature Cardinal (2017), directed by Grayson Moore and Aidan Shipley; Jordan Canning’s Suck it Up (2017), which she co-executive produced; and Tito, her feature-length directorial debut.

Mylène Mackay
Mylène Mackay is an actor and comedian. Born in Saint-Didace, Quebec and currently based in Montreal, she graduated from L’École nationale de théâtre du Canada in 2011. Mackay appeared on television and on stage before her first major film role in André Turpin’s Endorphine (2015). Upcoming roles include André Forcier’s Embrasse moi comme tu m’aimes (2016), and the title role in Anne Émond’s Nelly (TIFF 2016), based on the life and work of author Nelly Arcan. Mackay is also involved in several voice dubbing projects.

Sophie Nélisse
Sophie Nélisse was born in Windsor, Ontario and raised in Montreal, Quebec. She starred in Brian Percival’s The Book Thief (2013) and Philippe Falardeau’s Monsieur Lazhar (2011), which was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and earned her a Genie Award for her performance. Nélisse’s latest film credits include Andre Turpin's Endorphine (2015); Stephen Herek’s The Great Gilly Hopkins (2015); Nathan Morlando’s Mean Dreams (TIFF 2016), which premiered at Cannes; Radu Mihaileanu’s The History of Love (2016); Dominic James’s Wait Till Helen Comes (2016), set to be released this October; and Academy Award nominee Yan England’s directorial debut, 1:54 (2016). In August 2016, Nélisse begins filming her latest role in Lea Pool's Et Au Pire On Se Mariera.

Alumni of the TIFF Rising Stars programme include Sarah Gadon (Maps to the Stars, Dracula Untold, Enemy, Belle), Tatiana Maslany (Two Lovers and a Bear, Emmy-nominee for Orphan Black), Stephan James (Race, Selma), Connor Jessup (American Crime, Closet Monster) and Shannon Kook (Dark Places).

The 2016 jury who helped select the participants includes filmmakers Clement Virgo, Albert Shin, and Jennifer Podemski, Rising Star alumnus Connor Jessup, and film critic Johanna Schneller.


ANDREW CIVIDINO IS TIFF’S 2016 LEN BLUM RESIDENT

TIFF announced today that screenwriter and filmmaker Andrew Cividino is the 2016 Len Blum Resident. Launched in 2015, the Residency pays homage to one of Canada’s most celebrated screenwriters, Len Blum, by providing one Canadian filmmaker with the opportunity to live, work and be mentored at TIFF Bell Lightbox. The Residency is generously supported by Toronto-based filmmaker and distributor, Ron Mann.

Cividino will take up residency at the Festival Tower for three months later this year and receive one-on-one script consultations with Len Blum and mentoring from TIFF’s Industry and Programming teams, as well as support from TIFF partners.

A TIFF Talent Lab alumnus, Ontario-born Cividino is an award-winning filmmaker and graduate of Ryerson University. His debut feature, Sleeping Giant, was one of only seven international films selected for the 2015 Cannes Critics’ Week, and went on to win several awards, including Best Canadian First Feature Film at the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival®.

“We're delighted this talented filmmaker will be joining us at TIFF Bell Lightbox,” said Kathleen Drumm, Director, Industry at TIFF. “For decades, TIFF has worked to become a supportive hub for emerging artists in the film industry and the Len Blum Residency enables us to elevate new talent and to share our resources.”

“It’s an honour to be selected for the Len Blum Residency and I can’t wait to dive in,” said Cividino. “It’s an opportunity to write my film in a place that is a constant source of inspiration for me, with access to incredible industry support and the Lightbox’s fantastic programming at my doorstep. I couldn’t be happier.”

“I am delighted to support the Len Blum Residency and thrilled to have Andrew Cividino as the 2016 recipient,” said Ron Mann. “The script is the foundation of a film and so important to its success. This programme recognizes that, and will help Andrew continue along his path as a successful filmmaker.”

Cividino will use the Residency to work on a new screenplay, We Ate the Children Last, a feature expansion of his award-winning sci-fi short film, adapted from Yann Martel’s short story of the same name. It tells of a young woman’s strange reaction to a radical treatment for a lethal pandemic that creates an insatiable hunger which she struggles to conceal. When other treatment patients begin to behave darkly, the ensuing media maelstrom creates chaos among the masses.

Andrew Cividino is also developing a project with Rhombus Media, as well as a slate of works at Film Forge, the production banner he co-partners with producer Karen Harnisch.

Writer-director candidates for the programme were nominated by established producers, directors and screenwriters within the Canadian film industry. The 2015 Resident was Stephen Dunn, who is presently collaborating with Len Blum on a feature film project.


The 41st Toronto International Film Festival runs September 8 to 18, 2016.

Purchase Festival ticket packages online 24 hours a day at tiff.net/tickets; by phone from 10am to 7pm ET daily at 416.599.TIFF or 1.888.599.8433; or visit the Steve & Rashmi Gupta Box Office at TIFF Bell Lightbox in person from 10am to 10pm ET daily at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, until August 14 for My Choice packages and August 24 for TIFF Choice packages, while quantities last.

TIFF prefers Visa.

Social Media:
Facebook.com/TIFF
@TIFF_NET#TIFF16

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.


Isabelle Huppert and the French shine at UniFrance, TIFF

$
0
0
Jean-Pierre & Luc Dardenne (directors, The Unknown Girl)
Story and photos by Allan Tong

Over the weekend, UniFrance celebrated France's directors, screenwriters and stars attending TIFF this year with their films. These include Paul Verhoeven's controversial Elle starring the legendary Isabelle Huppert, the Dardenne brothers'The Unknown Girl and renowned director, Agnes Varda who was in Toronto to receive an award named after the late, great film critic Roger Ebert.


Co-screenwriter Christelle Berthevas & Arnaud des Pallieres, director of Orphan (Orpheline)

Sophie Semin & Reda Kateb, stars of Wim Wenders' The Beautiful Days of Aranjuez
(Les Beaux Jours d'Aranjuez)

Carolina Bartczak (X-Men: Apocalypse)

Paul Verhoeven, director of Elle, starring Isabelle Huppert

Francois Ozon, director of Frantz
Isabelle Huppert, legendary French actress starring in Elle. Below, she is whispering to her director, Paul Verhoeven.



Agnes Varda, the celebrated director received the Golden Thumb award at this weekend's Ebert Tribute, named in honour of film critic Roger Ebert. 

Cannes Film Festival director Thierry Fremaux& Nathalie Baye (It's Only the End of the World)

 Center: Kiyoshi Kurosawa, director of Daguerrotype
(Le Secret de la chambre noire) with his stars Tahar Rahim (left) and Constance Rousseau (right)


Telefilm and Birks salute women at TIFF

$
0
0
Story and photos by Allan Tong
Sandra Oh

Last night at the posh Shangri-La Hotel in downtown Toronto, Telefilm Canada and jewelerer Birks feted a dozen women in Canadian film at the Birks Diamond Tribute. They included actresses Amanda Crew (Silicon Valley),Caroline Dhavernas (Hannibal) Christine Horne (Hyena Road),Sandra Oh (Grey's Anatomy, Window Horses) and Jennifer Podemski (Fire Song); directors Tracey Deer(Mohawk Girls),Ann Marie Fleming (Window Horses), April Mullen (Below Her Mouth, 88), Léa Pool (Set Me Free) and Ann Shin (My Enemy, My Brother); and, for the first time, screenwriters Emma Donoghue (Room) and Marie Vien (La passion d'Augustine).

What distinguishes this list of honourees this year from last is racial diversity. In 2015, the honoured women were all white, a point not lost on some attendees. Perhaps to rectify this imbalance (particularly in the year of #OscarsSoWhite), Telefilm has included Asians (Oh, Shin and Fleming) and First Nations (Podemski, Deer) in a profound way. 

Documentarian Shin feels she she has been "lucky" in getting her films made about Asian and black issues, but is about to make her first fictional film. "I hear it's tougher," she says. In particular, she feels it's hard to get Asian males on screen. "There's a bias."

From the red carpet:





Emma Donoghue (screenwriter, Room)

Jennifer Podemski 
 Below Her Mouth director April Mullen (center) with her stars (left and rightNatalie Krill & Erika Linder

Julia Sarah Stone (Mean Dreams)

Marie Vien

Mouna Traoré (Murdoch Mysteries)

Richie Mehta (director, India in a Day)

Sandra Oh hugs Tzi Ma


Tracey Deer (director, Mohawk Girls)

Tzi Ma (Hell on Wheels)

Zacharias Kunuk (director, Maliglutit - Searchers)



The gathering of the Canadian film tribe: the CFC BBQ

$
0
0
Story and photos by Allan Tong

"You going to the barbecue?"

If you're a Canadian at TIFF, you inevitably hear that question, followed by, "Did you get an invite?"

Held in the first Sunday afternoon of the festival, "the barbecue" is a gathering of the Canadian film tribe as well as a fundraiser for the Canadian Film Centre. It takes place on the manicured lawns of the CFC far north of the Lightbox but near the millionaire mansions of the Bridal Path. Given its distance and isolation, the barbecue is hard to crash and coveted.

If you're lucky enough to get in, you nibble on burgers, hot dogs and pizza and sip wine and beer that sponsors generously donate. But the real point is to show your face, shake hands and catch up with other Canadian filmmakers from various disciplines. Exchanging business cards is an essential ritual.

Each year, CFC founder Norman Jewison delivers a speech and this year under a sweltering sky, the venerable film director, wearing his "NJ" baseball cap, asked for a moment of silence on the anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
By 3:00, the shuttle buses that earlier had ferried guests from Yonge & Front streets began to take them back downtown so they could catch a film or hit the next party.

Norman Jewison

Editor Greg Hopen

Joan Jenkinson, ‎VP Development at Hungry Eyes Film & TV & director Howard Wiseman

The Eggplant Collective
CFC alumni, screenwriter Jeremy Hull& producer Marc Almon

 Christina Jennings (Chair, Board of Directors, CFC, and CEO, Shaftesbury) 
Director (Kim's Convenience) Gloria Kim and husband Jason


 Slawko Klymkiw, CFC CEO 
Writer-director Dawn Kuisma

Eileen Arandiga, CFC director of operations & special projects

Actor, writer and director Bobby Del Rio enjoying a tasty dessert

Editor Michael Doherty & actress Paula Kaye
Actress Leesa Kopansky

TV writers Sara Basso Mina Sewell Mancuso

ChinoKino editor and director David Eng & editor Tamara Scherbak

Actress Clara Pasieka

 Irene Torres of the band, The Sugar Devils & Julie Federman of LinkedIn


How to schmooze at TIFF

$
0
0
Story & photos by Allan Tong

It's day 8 at TIFF, the Americans have left and, while the galas and screenings continue strong, the parties are over. That's left me to reflect on schmoozing. 

What's schmoozing? That's the art of making small talk to impress someone at a festival party without overtly pitching them or blowing smoke up their ass. Newbies fail miserably at this, and one must learn the nuances through painful trial-and-error. However, to get a head start here are 10 tips:

1) Dress the part. I love the Jays, but I sure as hell wouldn't wear a Jose Bautista jersey to a TIFF party (the exceptions being Kevin Smith and Spike Lee who can wear any damn sports jerseys they want). Who want to look like a schlub or homeless? 

Men, wear a dress jacket at the very least. Tie optional. Jeans are okay as long they are clean and ironed. Dress shoes preferred, but you can get away with running shoes because it's considered anti-authoritarian.


Renown Hong Long-born actor Tzi Ma is a good example. Here he is on the red carpet at the Birks-Telefilm reception a few days ago to promote the feature, Arrival, in which he stars. Mr. Ma's ensemble is simple, yet suave.

Women have it tougher. The posher the party, the more dazzling the dress. And walking in high heels hurts like hell.

Sandra Oh, here seen at the same Telefilm-Birks gala and starring in Catfight, provides another good example. She oozes glamour and sophistication. You meet her and you immediately feel she is Somebody. So, does this mean you should mortgage your condo to wear a designer dress or suit? Of course not. Just wear something that makes you comfortable and confident. Remember: without confidence, you're dead.

2) Wear shades.

This is award-winning director Zacharias Kunuk, at TIFF this year to unveil his latest feature, Maliglutit (Searchers). Mr. Kunuk's films also premiere at Cannes and other A-list festivals. Besides those accomplishments, Mr. Kunuk is bad-ass. Why? Because he wears shades. Not only shades, but eyewear that's unique to his Inuit culture, which, in turn, makes him even more bad-ass. Weat shades. Who cares if you're inside a dark club and you walk into the waiter balancing a tray of Dom Perignon champagne flutes? Wear shades.

3) Carry a smartphone.
This tip goes hand-in-hand (literally) with point #2 as seen here:


Director Rose Legace and actor Werner Artinger look important, don't they? Who cares if they're not actually talking to anybody or if Werner had to borrow my shades that I paid $6 for in Kensington Market? They look powerful. Don't you want to schmooze them?

4) Speak in 24 words or less.
When somebody asks you, What's your project?, answer them with a few succinct sentences, like "I'm making a zombie musical comedy about a slave rebellion in the deep South." Don't talk about "symbollism" or how you were "inspired" by a dream, or how in act two so-and-so happens, or explain any supporting characters, or speculate that "maybe" this happens or that. The moment you stray past 24 words, the other person's eyes turn glassy and they're mentally going through their Google Calendar appointments for tomorrow (see tip #7 below). No one gives a shit about the details. If your 24 words are powerful and focused, somebody will want to learn more and even ask for a business card.

5) Carry business cards.
This sounds basic, but you would be amazed. Carry lots of them. They are the cheapest form of marketing. The only people who don't carry cards are studio moguls and Robert Redford. You're not there yet.

6) Ask what the other person does first.
Two reasons: By asking first, you flatter the other person. People (not only actors & actresses) love to talk about themselves. Secondly, you can suss out whether you want to stay in touch with this person or not. What's the criteria? If they violate tip #4 and babble, then they don't know what they're doing. However, if they tell you what work they have done and what they are working on now (succinctly), then get their card.

7) Maintain eye contact.
Study actor/writer/director Bobby Del Rio here. Well, maybe, you don't need to fellate a gelato, but maintain eye contact with the person you're talking to. (Bobby, by the way, stars in my improvised comedy series, Modern Love is Hell, that I'm currently developing with a veteran producer. Click here for a sample.) Now, if the other person you're talking to looks past you at the row of free Chardonnay lined up the bar as you explain your zombie slave musical, then move on. Don't waste time with wankers.

8) Exit gracefully.
"Pleasure meeting you and enjoy the festival," is a mature, succinct (that word again) way to exit a meet with somebody. Feigning an epileptic seizure is not.

9) Drop names strategically.
Good: I'm developing a comedy series with producer Amos Adetuyi who has a film at TIFF called Jean of the Joneses. (Chances are, the other person will recognize the name and/or his credits.)

Bad: My $85-million zombie slave musical stars Denzel Washington and Leonardo Di Caprio, and Spike Lee will direct it. (Who are you kidding?)

10) I can't think of another tip, and besides, Did we sign a development deal where I promised you 10? Get real.

TIFF and the art of self-promotion

$
0
0
BaBa Zula rocks TIFF
Story & photos by Allan Tong

Each September, the world's second-largest film festival (after Cannes) attracts armies of filmgoers, showbiz heavies and journos. A while back (I don't know when), some marketing folks began to open drop-in lounges to promote everything from eyeliner to self-published mafia memoirs. Meanwhile, state film commissions throw lavish parties to promote their nation's filmmaking industry while film producers orchestrate death-defying stunts. On King Street, which was closed to traffic during the first half of the fest, tea, chocolate and other vendors were giving away samples to long lines. They all aim to generate Tweets and blog space for themselves and their clients. Hey, there's a huge market at TIFF. Let's hang our shingle here. 





The newest drop-in this year was the OomPH Lounge which hosted the Todd Shapiro Show, broadcasting live to radio listeners 47 storeys above neighbouring Roy Thompson Hall. A self-published memoir about a troubled childhood, paintings, a sports jerseys and organic hand lotion were on display as well as some sort of beverage. People floated in and out, catching breathtaking views of Lake Ontario, but I found the lounge too chill although friendly.


Instead, I got my adrenaline fix from another rooftop, The Thompson Hotel. Journalists were invited to witness an aerial stunt by three Russians with a rabid YouTube following. Two producers are making a film, called We Kill Death, and they were publicizing it in the middle of TIFF with, of course, a stunt. Would it take place at the Thompson rooftop, which was surrounded by condos? Nope. After an hour, someone pointed to a crane a mile east jutting into the sky. Three dark specks were crawling up it without safety cables, nets, nothing. Us jaded journos watched in astonishment as the three daredevils reached the very tip of the crane. If the producers wanted to attract press, they got it. Bonus marks for originality.


Left to right: Alex Ginzburg (producer), Mustang Wanted, Vitaliy Raskalov, Vadim Makhorov
and Tony Lee (producer)

However, this year's champion in self-promotion was Turkish Cinema who threw a party on the TIFF Lightbox patio, Malaparte. So what? you ask. Many people throw parties here. The difference was BaBa Zula, a space rock band (a la Spiritualized) from Istanbul who wore trippy garb andunleashed wave after wave of guitar feedback that echoed across downtown Toronto. Baba Zula blew minds, mesmerized the audience and got everyone to their feet. Until then, they were all trading business cards and sipping wine.




Toronto International Film Festival Announces 2016 Award Winners

$
0
0

The Toronto International Film Festival® announced its award winners at a ceremony at TIFF Bell Lightbox today, hosted by Piers Handling, CEO and Director of TIFF, and Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director of the Toronto International Film Festival. To watch the presentation, visit tiff.net/ceremony. The 41st Festival wraps up this evening.

The short film awards below were selected by a jury comprised of American filmmaker Abteen Bagheri (That B.E.A.T.), French filmmaker Eva Husson (Bang Gang), and Canadian filmmaker Jeff Barnaby (Rhymes for Young Ghouls).

SHORT CUTS AWARD FOR BEST CANADIAN SHORT FILM
The Short Cuts Award for Best Canadian Short Film goes to Alexandre Dostie’s Mutants. The jury remarked, “Mutants takes a summer in Quebec and infuses it with a ribald lyricism. Awkward moments of sexual awakening paired with self cannibalism and self immolation rise it above standard nostalgia. It was a film that took chances with both its subject matter and humour, and framing it through the eyes of children. Congratulations.” The award offers a $10,000 cash prize.

SHORT CUTS AWARD FOR BEST SHORT FILM
The Short Cuts Award for Best Short Film goes to Raymund Ribay Gutierrez’s Imago. The jury remarked, “Some films are not easy to watch. But it's a beautiful thing to find a filmmaker who has a daring voice. We feel that with this movie we witnessed a bold, cinematic statement, and we cannot wait to see what features this director will give to the world.” The award offers a $10,000 cash prize.

The jury gave honourable mentions to Or Sinai’s Anna, and Orlando von Einsiedel’s The White Helmets.

The Canadian awards below were selected by a jury comprised of producers Luc Déry (Incendies, Monsieur Lazhar) and Anita Lee (Stories We Tell, Invention), filmmaker Mina Shum (Double Happiness, Ninth Floor), and cultural critic and novelist Hal Niedzviecki.

CITY OF TORONTO AWARD FOR BEST CANADIAN FIRST FEATURE FILM
The City of Toronto Award for Best Canadian First Feature Film goes to Johnny Ma’s Old Stone (Lao shi). The jury remarked, “For its remarkably mature, powerfully rendered portrait of an innocent taxi driver caught in a proto-capitalist China, the jury is pleased to select Old Stone.” This award carries a cash prize of $15,000, made possible by the City of Toronto.

CANADA GOOSE AWARD FOR BEST CANADIAN FEATURE FILM
The Canada Goose Award for Best Canadian Feature Film goes to Mathieu Denis and Simon Lavoie for Those Who Make Revolution Halfway Only Dig Their Own Graves (Ceux qui font les révolutions à moitié n'ont fait que se creuser un tombeau). The jury remarked, “For its uncompromising, electrifying portrait of youthful idealism and democratic exhaustion in contemporary Canada, and for its capacity to stir both heart and mind, the jury is thrilled to select Those Who Make Revolution Halfway Only Dig Their Own Graves.” This award carries a cash prize of $30,000 and a custom award, sponsored by Canada Goose.

THE PRIZES OF THE INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION OF FILM CRITICS (FIPRESCI PRIZES)
The Festival welcomed an international FIPRESCI jury for the 25th year. The jury members composed of jury president Steffen Moestrup (Denmark), Neta Alexander (Israel), Michael Sicinski (USA), Diego Faraone (Uruguay), Jake Howell (Canada), and Louis-Paul Rioux (Canada).

Prize of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) for the Discovery programme is awarded to Mbithi Masya for Kati Kati. The jury remarked, “With a generous and poetic tone, not without a degree of anger at personal and political injustice, FIPRESCI is pleased to present the prize in the Discovery programme to an exciting and unique new voice in cinema, Mbithi Masya for his debut feature Kati Kati.”

Prize of the International Federation of Film Critics (FIPRESCI) for Special Presentations is awarded to Feng Xiaogang for I Am Not Madame Bovary. The jury remarked, “For its ambitious rendering of a woman’s Kafkaesque struggle as she takes on the Chinese legal system, and sophisticated play of both form and content, FIPRESCI presents the prize in the Special Presentations programme to Feng Xiaogang’s I Am Not Madame Bovary.”

NETPAC AWARD
As selected by a jury from the Network for the Promotion of Asian Pacific Cinema for the 5th consecutive year, the NETPAC Award for World or International Asian Film Premiere goes to Maysaloun Hamoud’s In Between (Bar Bahar). Jury members include jury chairperson Jeannette Paulson Hereniko (USA), Bina Paul (India), and Sabrina Baracetti (Italy). The jury remarked, “A confident debut about three contemporary Palestinian women living in Tel Aviv whose strong bond of sisterhood supports an exploration and shift in relationships, careers, and sexuality.”

TORONTO PLATFORM PRIZE
This is the sophomore year for Platform, the Festival’s juried programme that champions director’s cinema from around the world. The Festival welcomed an international jury comprised of legendary filmmakers Brian De Palma and Mahamat-Saleh Haroun, and acclaimed actor Zhang Ziyi, who awarded the Toronto Platform Prize to Pablo Larraín for Jackie. The jury remarked, "Our decision was unanimous. We found one film that combined an extraordinary script with precise direction and unforgettable acting. For its exploration of the myth of American Camelot and its preeminent performance by Natalie Portman, the 2016 prize goes to Jackie.” The award offers a $25,000 cash prize and a custom award.

The jury awards a special mention to Khyentse Norbu’s Hema Hema: Sing Me a Song While I Wait (he-mà he-mà), “for a film that is a metaphor for our time. In an age of technology, this film uses masks to reconnect its characters with human instinct and emotion.”

GROLSCH PEOPLE’S CHOICE AWARDS
This year marked the 39th year that Toronto audiences were able to cast a ballot for their favourite Festival film for the Grolsch People’s Choice Award. This year’s award goes to Damien Chazelle’s La La Land. Writer-director Damien Chazelle captures the story of Mia, an aspiring actress, and Sebastian, a dedicated jazz musician, who are struggling to make ends meet in a city known for destroying hopes and breaking hearts. Set in modern day Los Angeles, this original musical about everyday life explores the joy and pain of pursuing your dreams. The award offers a $15,000 cash prize and custom award, sponsored by Grolsch. The second runner up is Mira Nair’s Queen of Katwe. The first runner up is Garth Davis’s Lion.

The Festival presents a free screening of the award-winning film La La Land tonight at 6 p.m. at Roy Thomson Hall. Tickets will be available on a first-come, first-served basis beginning at 4 p.m. at Roy Thomson Hall.

The Grolsch People’s Choice Midnight Madness Award goes to Ben Wheatley’s Free Fire. Justine has brokered a meeting in a deserted warehouse between two Irishmen and a gang led by Vernon and Ord who are selling them a stash of guns. But when shots are fired in the handover, a heart stopping game of survival ensues. The second runner up is Julia Ducournau’s Raw. The first runner up is André Øvredal’s The Autopsy of Jane Doe.

The Grolsch People’s Choice Documentary Award goes to Raoul Peck for I Am Not Your Negro. With unprecedented access to James Baldwin’s original work, Raoul Peck completes the cinematic version of the book Baldwin never finished — a radical narration about race in America today that tracks the lives and assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X and Medgar Evers. The second runner up is Fisher Stevens’ Before the Flood. The first runner up is Steve James’ ABACUS: Small Enough to Jail.

DROPBOX DISCOVERY PROGRAMME FILMMAKERS AWARD
The Dropbox Discovery Programme Filmmakers Award goes to Yanillys Perez for Jeffrey. Jury members include Lane Kneedler, Director of Programming at AFI, producer Caroline Benjo of Haut et Court, and Alice Tynan of Dropbox. The jury remarked, “A true collaboration between subject and storyteller, Jeffrey weaves verite and socially conscious observation together with poetic moments of magical realism. With this beautiful combination, director Yanillys Perez not only captures the boundless spirit and imagination of her protagonist, but also offers new possibilities for narrative filmmaking. We believe people will love discovering Jeffrey." The production team is awarded a free Dropbox for Business account.

#TIFF16

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 reveals 2016 Student Academy Award winners

$
0
0
The Academy has voted 17 students as winners of the 43rd Student Academy Awards® competition. The Academy received a record number of entries this year – 1,749 films from 286 domestic and 95 international colleges and universities – which were voted by a record number of Academy members. The 2016 winners join the ranks of such past Student Academy Award winners as Pete Docter, Cary Fukunaga, John Lasseter, Spike Lee, Trey Parker and Robert Zemeckis.

First-time honors go to Maharishi University of Management, DePaul University, Michigan State University, The Polish National Film, Television and Theatre School in Lodz.

All Student Academy Award-winning films are eligible to compete for 2016 Oscars in the Documentary Short Subject, Animated Short Film or Live Action Short Film category. Past Student Academy Award winners have gone on to receive 49 Oscar nominations and have won or shared eight awards in several categories, including Writing, Directing, Documentary Feature and Animated Feature Film.

Students will arrive in Los Angeles for a week of industry activities that will culminate in the awards ceremony on Thursday, September 22, at 7:30 p.m., at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills. The medal placements – gold, silver and bronze – in the seven award categories will be announced at the ceremony.

New this year, the Foreign Film category has been expanded to include separate awards for narrative, animation and documentary entries. Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal awards will be given in the Foreign Narrative category; Gold Medal awards will be given in the Foreign Animation and the Foreign Documentary categories. The U.S. competition categories remain the same: Alternative, Animation, Narrative and Documentary. Gold, Silver and Bronze Medal awards will be given in each.

The winners are (listed alphabetically by film title):

Alternative
All These Voices, David Henry Gerson, American Film Institute
Cloud Kumo, Yvonne Ng, City College of New York
The Swan Girl, Johnny Coffeen, Maharishi University of Management

Animation
Die Flucht, Carter Boyce, DePaul University
Once upon a Line, Alicja Jasina, USC
The Wishgranter, Echo Wu, Ringling College of Art and Design

Documentary
Fairy Tales, Rongfei Guo, New York University
4.1 Miles, Daphne Matziaraki, University of California, Berkeley
From Flint: Voices of a Poisoned City, Elise Conklin, Michigan State University

Narrative
It’s Just a Gun, Brian Robau, Chapman University
Nocturne in Black, Jimmy Keyrouz, Columbia University
Rocket, Brenna Malloy, Chapman University

Foreign Narrative
Invention of Trust, Alex Schaad, University of Television and Film Munich (Germany)
Tenants, Klara Kochanska, The Polish National Film, Television and Theatre School (Poland)
Where the Woods End, Felix Ahrens, Film University Babelsberg KONRAD WOLF (Germany)

Foreign Animation
Ayny, Ahmad Saleh, Academy of Media Arts Cologne (Germany)

Foreign Documentary
The Most Beautiful Woman, Maya Sarfaty, Tel Aviv University (Israel)

The 43rd Student Academy Awards ceremony on September 22 is free and open to the public, but advance tickets are required. Tickets may be obtained online at oscars.org starting 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.


Jackie Chan, Anne V. Coates, Lynn Stalmaster and Frederick Wiseman to receive Academy’s 2016 Governors Awards

$
0
0
The Board of Governors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences voted Tuesday night (August 30) to present Honorary Awards to actor Jackie Chan, film editor Anne V. Coates, casting director Lynn Stalmaster and documentary filmmaker Frederick Wiseman. The four Oscar statuettes will be presented at the Academy’s 8th Annual Governors Awards on Saturday, November 12, at the Ray Dolby Ballroom at Hollywood & Highland Center.

“The Honorary Award was created for artists like Jackie Chan, Anne Coates, Lynn Stalmaster and Frederick Wiseman – true pioneers and legends in their crafts,” said Academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs. “The Board is proud to honor their extraordinary achievements, and we look forward to celebrating with them at the Governors Awards in November.”

After making his motion picture debut at the age of eight, Chan brought his childhood training with the Peking Opera to a distinctive international career. He starred in – and sometimes wrote, directed and produced – more than 30 martial arts features in his native Hong Kong, charming audiences with his dazzling athleticism, inventive stunt work and boundless charisma. Since Rumble in the Bronx in 1996, he has gone on to enormous worldwide success with the Rush Hour movies, Shanghai Noon, Shanghai Knights, Around the World in 80 Days, The Karate Kid and the Kung Fu Panda series of animated films.

A native of Reigate, England, Coates worked her way up to lead editor on a handful of features before collaborating with David Lean on Lawrence of Arabia and winning her first Oscar. In her more than 60 years as a film editor, she has worked side by side with many leading directors on an impressive range of films, including Sidney Lumet (Murder on the Orient Express), Richard Attenborough (Chaplin) and Steven Soderbergh (Erin Brockovich). She also earned four additional Oscar nominations, for Becket, The Elephant Man, In the Line of Fire and Out of Sight.

Stalmaster, a one-time stage and screen actor from Omaha, Nebraska, began working in casting in the mid-1950s. Over the next five decades, he applied his talents to more than 200 feature films, including such classics as Inherit the Wind, In the Heat of the Night, The Graduate, Fiddler on the Roof, Harold and Maude, Deliverance, Coming Home, Tootsie and The Right Stuff. He has enjoyed multiple collaborations with directors Stanley Kramer, Robert Wise, Hal Ashby, Norman Jewison and Sydney Pollack, and has been instrumental in the careers of such celebrated actors as Jon Voight, Richard Dreyfuss, Scott Wilson, Jill Clayburgh, Christopher Reeve and John Travolta.

From his home base in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Wiseman has made one film almost every year since 1967, illuminating lives in the context of social, cultural and government institutions. He created a sensation with his first documentary feature, Titicut Follies, which went behind the scenes at Bridgewater State Hospital for the criminally insane. The film established an unobtrusive, observational storytelling style that has strongly identified his work, from the gritty (Law and Order, Public Housing, Domestic Violence) to the uplifting (La Danse – The Paris Opera Ballet, National Gallery, In Jackson Heights).

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.”


85 countries in competition for 2016 Foreign Language Film Oscar

$
0
0
Eighty-five countries have submitted films for consideration in the Foreign Language Film category for the 89th Academy Awards. Yemen is a first-time entrant.

The competitive Foreign Language Film category was introduced in 1956 for the 29th Academy Awards. In celebration of its 60th anniversary, the Academy has created a complete playlist of acceptance speeches and a poster gallery of all the Foreign Language Film Oscar winners.

The 89th Oscars will be held on Sunday, February 26, 2017, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

The 2016 submissions are:

Albania, Chromium, Bujar Alimani, director;
Algeria, The Well, Lotfi Bouchouchi, director;
Argentina, The Distinguished Citizen, Mariano Cohn, Gastón Duprat, directors;
Australia, Tanna, Bentley Dean, Martin Butler, directors;
Austria, Stefan Zweig: Farewell to Europe, Maria Schrader, director;
Bangladesh, The Unnamed, Tauquir Ahmed, director;
Belgium, The Ardennes, Robin Pront, director;
Bolivia, Sealed Cargo, Julia Vargas Weise, director;
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Death in Sarajevo, Danis Tanovic, director;
Brazil, Little Secret, David Schurmann, director;
Bulgaria, Losers, Ivaylo Hristov, director;
Cambodia, Before the Fall, Ian White, director;
Canada, It’s Only the End of the World, Xavier Dolan, director;
Chile, Neruda, Pablo Larraín, director;
China, Xuan Zang, Huo Jianqi, director;
Colombia, Alias Maria, José Luis Rugeles, director;
Costa Rica, About Us, Hernán Jiménez, director;
Croatia, On the Other Side, Zrinko Ogresta, director;
Cuba, The Companion, Pavel Giroud, director;
Czech Republic, Lost in Munich, Petr Zelenka, director;
Denmark, Land of Mine, Martin Zandvliet, director;
Dominican Republic, Sugar Fields, Fernando Báez, director;
Ecuador, Such Is Life in the Tropics, Sebastián Cordero, director;
Egypt, Clash, Mohamed Diab, director;
Estonia, Mother, Kadri Kõusaar, director;
Finland, The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki, Juho Kuosmanen, director;
France, Elle, Paul Verhoeven, director;
Georgia, House of Others, Rusudan Glurjidze, director;
Germany, Toni Erdmann, Maren Ade, director;
Greece, Chevalier, Athina Rachel Tsangari, director;
Hong Kong, Port of Call, Philip Yung, director;
Hungary, Kills on Wheels, Attila Till, director;
Iceland, Sparrows, Rúnar Rúnarsson, director;
India, Interrogation, Vetri Maaran, director;
Indonesia, Letters from Prague, Angga Dwimas Sasongko, director;
Iran, The Salesman, Asghar Farhadi, director;
Iraq, El Clásico, Halkawt Mustafa, director;
Israel, Sand Storm, Elite Zexer, director;
Italy, Fire at Sea, Gianfranco Rosi, director;
Japan, Nagasaki: Memories of My Son, Yoji Yamada, director;
Jordan, 3000 Nights, Mai Masri, director;
Kazakhstan, Amanat, Satybaldy Narymbetov, director;
Kosovo, Home Sweet Home, Faton Bajraktari, director;
Kyrgyzstan, A Father’s Will, Bakyt Mukul, Dastan Zhapar Uulu, directors;
Latvia, Dawn, Laila Pakalnina, director;
Lebanon, Very Big Shot, Mir-Jean Bou Chaaya, director;
Lithuania, Seneca’s Day, Kristijonas Vildziunas, director;
Luxembourg, Voices from Chernobyl, Pol Cruchten, director;
Macedonia, The Liberation of Skopje, Rade Šerbedžija, Danilo Šerbedžija, directors;
Malaysia, Beautiful Pain, Tunku Mona Riza, director;
Mexico, Desierto, Jonás Cuarón, director;
Montenegro, The Black Pin, Ivan Marinović, director;
Morocco, A Mile in My Shoes, Said Khallaf, director;
Nepal, The Black Hen, Min Bahadur Bham, director;
Netherlands, Tonio, Paula van der Oest, director;
New Zealand, A Flickering Truth, Pietra Brettkelly, director;
Norway, The King’s Choice, Erik Poppe, director;
Pakistan, Mah-e-Mir, Anjum Shahzad, director;
Palestine, The Idol, Hany Abu-Assad, director;
Panama, Salsipuedes, Ricardo Aguilar Navarro, Manolito Rodríguez, directors;
Peru, Videophilia (and Other Viral Syndromes), Juan Daniel F. Molero, director;
Philippines, Ma’ Rosa, Brillante Ma Mendoza, director;
Poland, Afterimage, Andrzej Wajda, director;
Portugal, Letters from War, Ivo M. Ferreira, director;
Romania, Sieranevada, Cristi Puiu, director;
Russia, Paradise, Andrei Konchalovsky, director;
Saudi Arabia, Barakah Meets Barakah, Mahmoud Sabbagh, director;
Serbia, Train Driver’s Diary, Milos Radovic, director;
Singapore, Apprentice, Boo Junfeng, director;
Slovakia, Eva Nová, Marko Skop, director;
Slovenia, Houston, We Have a Problem!Žiga Virc, director;
South Africa, Call Me Thief, Daryne Joshua, director;
South Korea, The Age of Shadows, Kim Jee-woon, director;
Spain, Julieta, Pedro Almodóvar, director;
Sweden, A Man Called Ove, Hannes Holm, director;
Switzerland, My Life as a Zucchini, Claude Barras, director;
Taiwan, Hang in There, Kids! Laha Mebow, director;
Thailand, Karma, Kanittha Kwunyoo, director;
Turkey, Cold of Kalandar, Mustafa Kara, director;
Ukraine, Ukrainian Sheriffs, Roman Bondarchuk, director;
United Kingdom, Under the Shadow, Babak Anvari, director;
Uruguay, Breadcrumbs, Manane Rodríguez, director;
Venezuela, From Afar, Lorenzo Vigas, director;
Vietnam, Yellow Flowers on the Green Grass, Victor Vu, director;
Yemen, I Am Nojoom, Age 10 and Divorced, Khadija Al-Salami, director.






10 documentary shorts named to Oscar's 2016 shortlist

$
0
0

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences today announced that the field of Documentary Short Subject contenders for the 89th Academy Awards has been narrowed to 10 films, of which 5 will earn Oscar nominations.

Voters from the Academy’s Documentary Branch viewed this year’s 61 eligible entries and submitted their ballots to PricewaterhouseCoopers for tabulation.

Nominations for the 89th Oscars will be announced on Tuesday, January 24, 2017.

The 89th Oscars will be held on Sunday, February 26, 2017, at the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

The 10 films are listed below in alphabetical order by title, with their production companies:

Brillo Box (3¢ Off), Brillo Box Documentary
Close Ties, Munk Studio - Polish Filmmakers Association
Extremis, f/8 Filmworks in association with Motto Pictures
4.1 Miles, University of California, Berkeley
Frame 394, Compy Films
Joe’s Violin, Lucky Two Productions
The Mute’s House, The Jerusalem Sam Spiegel Film School
The Other Side of Home, Feeln
Watani: My Homeland, ITN Productions
The White Helmets, Grain Media and Violet Films




145 documentary features submitted for 2016 Oscar race

$
0
0

One hundred forty-five features have been submitted for consideration in the Documentary Feature category for the 89th Academy Awards®.

Several of the films have not yet had their required Los Angeles and New York qualifying releases. Submitted features must fulfill the theatrical release requirements and comply with all of the category’s other qualifying rules in order to advance in the voting process. A shortlist of 15 films will be announced in December.

Films submitted in the Documentary Feature category also may qualify for Academy Awards in other categories, including Best Picture, provided they meet the requirements for those categories.


Nominations for the 89th Oscars® will be announced on Tuesday, January 24, 2017.

The 89th Oscars will be held on Sunday, February 26, 2017, at the Dolby Theatre® at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood, and will be televised live on the ABC Television Network at 7 p.m. ET/4 p.m. PT. The Oscars also will be televised live in more than 225 countries and territories worldwide.

The submitted films, listed in alphabetical order, are:

The Abolitionists
Abortion: Stories Women Tell
All Governments Lie: Truth, Deception, and the Spirit of I.F. Stone
Almost Holy
Amanda Knox
Among the Believers
Anne Frank Then and Now
The Anthropologist
Apparition Hill
Art Bastard
The Ataxian
Audrie & Daisy
Author: The JT Leroy Story
The Bad Kids
Be Here Now (The Andy Whitfield Story)
The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years
A Beautiful Planet
Beauty Bites Beast
Becoming Mike Nichols
Before the Flood
Behind Bayonets and Barbed Wire
Behind the Cove - The Quiet Japanese Speak Out!
Best and Most Beautiful Things
The Best Democracy Money Can Buy: A Tale of Billionaires and Ballot Bandits
Best Worst Thing That Ever Could Have Happened
A Billion Lives
Black Women in Medicine
Blood on the Mountain
Boy 23: The Forgotten Boys of Brazil
The Brainwashing of My Dad
Bright Lights: Starring Carrie Fisher and Debbie Reynolds
By Sidney Lumet
The C Word
Cameraperson
Citizen Soldier
City of Gold
Class Divide
Colliding Dreams
Command and Control
Dancer
Danny Says
Defying the Nazis: The Sharps’ War
Disturbing the Peace
Do Not Resist
Don’t Blink - Robert Frank
The Eagle Huntress
Eat That Question: Frank Zappa in His Own Words
Eating You Alive
Equal Means Equal
Eva Hesse
Everything Is Copy - Nora Ephron: Scripted & Unscripted
A Family Affair
Finding Babel
Fire at Sea
The First Monday in May
Floyd Norman: An Animated Life
Francofonia
Generation Startup
Gimme Danger
Gleason
Harry & Snowman
Hate Rising with Jorge Ramos
Holy Hell
Hooligan Sparrow
How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can’t Change
Huntwatch
I Am Not Your Negro
Indian Point
Into the Inferno
Iron Moon
Ivory. A Crime Story
The Ivory Game
Jim: The James Foley Story
Kate Plays Christine
Keepers of the Game
Landfill Harmonic
The Last Man on the Moon
Life, Animated
Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World
Look at Us Now, Mother!
The Lovers and the Despot
Magnus
Making a Killing: Guns, Greed, and the NRA
Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures
Marathon: The Patriots Day Bombing
Marinoni: The Fire in the Frame
Mavis!
Maya Angelou: And Still I Rise
Mifune: The Last Samurai
Miss Sharon Jones!
The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble
My Love, Don’t Cross That River
National Bird
National Parks Adventure
Never Surrender
"Newtown
Norman Lear: Just Another Version of You
Notes on Blindness
Nuts!
O.J.: Made in America
Off the Rails
Older than Ireland
Olympic Pride, American Prejudice
On the Map
100 Years, One Woman’s Fight for Justice
Our Last Tango
Presenting Princess Shaw
The Red Pill
Rigged 2016
The Rolling Stones Olé Olé Olé!: A Trip across Latin America
Rooted in Peace
The Ruins of Lifta
Seasons
The Seventh Fire
Shadow World
Silicon Cowboys
Sky Ladder: The Art of Cai Guo-Qiang
Solitary
Southwest of Salem: The Story of the San Antonio Four
Starving the Beast
The Syndrome
Thank You for Your Service
Theo Who Lived
They Will Have to Kill Us First - Malian Music in Exile
13th
This Is Life
Tickled
Tony Robbins: I Am Not Your Guru
Tower
The Trans List
Trapped
Trezoros: The Lost Jews of Kastoria
USS Indianapolis The Legacy
The Uncondemned
Under the Gun
Under the Sun
Underfire: The Untold Story of Pfc. Tony Vaccaro
Unlocking the Cage
Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe
Voyage of Time: The IMAX Experience
We Are X
Weiner
When Two Worlds Collide
The Witness
Zero Days



Film review: Gimme Danger

$
0
0
Directed by Jim Jarmusch

Review by Allan Tong

Punk pioneers, The Stooges, receive the deluxe rock doc treatment in the entertaining, funny and illuminating Gimme Danger. Makes sense that indie king, Jim Jarmusch, tells the story of the iconoclastic band that hailed from working class Michigan during the flower power era then roared across stages and recorded three seminal albums before drugs poisoned the band.

Stooges' front man, Iggy Pop, dominates the storytelling and it's clear he's the driving force throughout the band's frenetic history. Iggy's reminisces are detailed and warm. It's jarring to see him (as young James Osterberg) in old photos wearing suits and posing with his early bands behind drum kits (he started as a drummer). Blues freak Osterberg then travels to Mecca (aka Chicago) and gradually finds his voice by banding with the Asheton brothers, Ron and Scott, and a bassist, and mentoring under rock revolutionaries, the MC5.

 The MC5 spark the band onstage (and surprisingly Clarabell, the clown from the 50s' kid program, The Howdy Doody Show). Legendary DJ/publicist Danny Fields discovers them, and the Stooges land a record deal with a label that just couldn't handle them. Recording of the Stooges' three albums, including Fun House, is detailed in interviews with the band members, and so are their drug addictions.



Beyond that, there's no mention of their private lives. Surely, wives and girlfriends played some role in the music and lives of the Stooges. Also, the long wilderness years of 1975 to 2003 before their reunion flash by too briefly. Guitarist James Williamson became a successful computer programmer in Silicon Valley while another band member drove cabs. I'm not quite sure what happened to the Asheton brothers. Wish there was a little more about them in this period.

Given the lack of film footage, clever animation and deft editing keep the film moving. (The only vintage film is the often-seen 1970 Cincinnati concert where Iggy smears peanut butter across his chest.) The story moves effortlessly and doesn't suffer any slow moments. Gimme Danger captures the Stooges' anarchic spirit and turbulent history on film.

5 cool things at IIDEX this year

$
0
0


Story and photos by Allan Tong

With a movie screening, walking tours, book signings, workshops, panels, awards and parties, IIDEX, Toronto's annual interior design expo, has blossomed into a multimedia affair that's expanded beyond its two days (Nov.30-Dec.1) on the convention floor. Here are five cool things we saw at IIDEX (in no particular order):


Integral Man: This well-crafted documentary of Integral House tells the story behind the making of one of Canada's most beautiful residences nestled in Toronto's posh Rosedale ravine. The house was built over nine years according to the musical tastes of owner Jim Stewart, a violinist. The house includes a performance space that is frequently used for arts fundraisers to this day. The film offers views generous views of the interior backed by an evocative score and fine cinematography. At the extended post-screening Q&A at the TIFF Bell Lightbox, director Joseph Clement revealed the Stewart was thankfully hands-off during the editing process, though I would have preferred that the film offered a little more insight into Stewart, a remarkable man who was a renown musician battling illness, but made his fortune authoring calculus textbooks.


The ORENDA is designer Miles Keller's vision for a single-person electric car. "Orenda" is an Iroquois name for a spiritual power inherent in people and their environment and Keller's car consciously resembles the native Canadian tradition of dog sleds and canoes.


The vehicle is made of ash runners covered with a Dacron skin. A wooden car may sound unusual, but Keller reminds us that in the past horse-and-carriages and airplanes like the Sopwith Camel were made of wood.


Lasers cut intricate designs on wood, acrylic and stainless steel on these panels by Artotech. From abstract to geometric, these patterns can be used as room dividers, window coverings or railing. They're eye-catching in whatever form.




This tall Frovi wing chair blocks out noise. Wing chairs aren't a new idea, but these sleek, comfy design create a zone of silence that's needed in today's world of 500-square-foot condos.

VR stands for virtual reality. You've probably seen folks wear these at tech conventions, but VR is gradually catching on in real estate to marketing of homes and office buildings. Just strap on a smartphone attached to a set of goggles and suddenly enter a building where you move around a room 360 desgrees or "walk" through an entire structure by turning in and walking in every direction. inSCENEVR's demo transports you to a rooftop patio offering a dazzling view of Montreal's skyline, both day and night.



Liminal 360 from Melbourne, Australia lets you click on screen using handsets to transport you into different rooms of a condo. Overall, the experience is so convincing that first-time users can become disoriented after removing the goggles or during a demo they could bump into walls and people. Expect to see more VR goggles in the future.
Viewing all 1051 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>