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August 22, 2006
The Toronto List...
Opening night will rock... but not at the Opening NIght Film. On the serious side, the first screening of Deliver Us from Evil should rock the town. And then, at Midnight, true madness... the Toronto premiere of Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhs at Midnight... which I intend to be at, ready for anything.
The Working List... still evolving...
The Masterpieces Going In
Borat - Larry Charles
Day Night Day Night - Julia Loktev
Little Children - Todd Field
Great Expectations or Seen & Solid
The Fall Tarsem Singh
We've been waiting for what's next from this director for a while... fingers crossed
Fay Grim Hal Hartley
A return to form?
The Fountain Darren Aronofsky
Aronofsky's first epic, with the first Hugh Jackman lead and the magnificent Weisz
Jindabyne Ray Lawrence
The director of the much underappreciated Lantana, just picked up by Sony Classics
Pan's Labyrinth Guillermo del Toro
GdT is GoD. (Well, he's cool and fun and smart... but that's nto as quotable)
Paris, Je T'aime Bruno Podalydès, Gurinder Chadha, Gus Van Sant, Joel and Ethan Coen, Walter Salles, Daniela Thomas, Christopher Doyle, Isabel Coixet, Nobuhiro Suwa, Sylvain Chomet, Alfonso Cuarón, Olivier Assayas, Oliver Schmitz, Richard LaGravenese, Vincenzo Natali, Wes Craven, Tom Tykwer, Frédéric Auburtin, Gérard Depardieu, Alexander Payne
It's got to be interesting, right?
Stranger than Fiction Marc Forster
A commerial movie that is aiming higher
Venus Roger Michell
Do we have a better, more daring commerical/art filmmaker working right now than Michell?
2:37 Murali K. Thalluri
Lots of controversy around this 22 year old's work, which already landed him in Cannes and now, The TO.
Macbeth Geoffrey Wright
A hot Shakespeare title again, with another remake on BBC's Shakespeare Re-Told series. This one from the promising Romper Stomper director.
Shortbus John Cameron Mitchell
Really interesting piece... everyone talks about the graphic sex (onanism leading to a self-swallow opens the film), but it blossoms into a whole lot more.
Invisible Waves - Pen-ek Ratanaruang
Interetsing director... Chris Doyle behind the camera...
EMPz 4 Life - Allan King
One of the greatest documentarians alive aims his long, verite' lens at four troubled teens in suburban Toronto.
Rescue Dawn Werner Herzog
The feature version of Little Dieter Needs To Fly, starring Chrisitan Bale... it's gotta be something... it could be truly great
Strike Volker Schlöndorff
The birth of the Solidarity movement from an always interesting Eastern European director
For Your Consideration Christopher Guest
Ckris Guest mocks the awards business... and i didn't even get a cameo...
Nouvelle Chance Anne Fontaine
I adore Ms. Fontaine's work and always look forward to what she has come up with
Black Book Paul Verhoeven
A very interesting director when he's on edge... and this return home seems pretty edgy
The Prisoner or How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair Michael Tucker, Petra Epperlein
The directors of Gunner Palace return with a 1 hour doc on a character we barely noticed in GP... and once again offer the balanced, straight take on some bad acts in Iraq
Deliver Us From Evil Amy Berg
I have written on this remarkable film before. Amy is a friend, so I won't be calling it a masterpiece this week. But the central figure, a pedophile priest who confesses on camera and tries to apologize in his own crazy way, is unlike any movie character you've seen since Hannibal Lechter. (coming from Lionsgate in October)
Ghosts of Cité Soleil Asger Leth
This doc about current Haiti, which the filmmakers now call The Most Dangerous Place on Earth, looks overwhelming
10 Items or Less Brad Silberling
Silberling's first out and out comedy is a movie lover's movie, telling the story of a movie star who looks, talks, and acts a lot like Morgan Freeman, who gots to a bodega in the L.A. suburbs to research a part, meets the world's hottest check out girl, Paz Vega, (she competes with P-Cruz in Volver, actually) and ends up researching a lot more than he expected to that day. Shot on the run with great, charming turns by Freeman, Vega, and a parade of perfect cameoers, 10 Items is going to be one of the unexpected treats for a lot of folks weary from passionate exploration of the soul after passionate exploration of the soul at the fest... though it really does explore deeper feelings as well.
Catch a Fire Phillip Noyce
A drama about Apartheid from a smart, skilled, often political director of slick films. Should be very worth the time.
The Dog Problem Scott Caan
Caan's Dallas 362 was a fest favorite, though it never really found a home. But he is a young director worth watching. And so we shall...
Exiled Johnnie To
One of the kick-ass Asian beloveds, To will also have Election and Election 2 at TIFF.
Posted by poland at August 22, 2006 01:42 PM
Comments
I thought you already saw Borat.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at August 22, 2006 02:17 PM
Looking forward to...
2:37
Borat
Coeurs
Copying Beethoven
Diggers
Fay Grim
For Your Consideration
The Host
Lake of Fire
The Last King of Scotland
Little Children
Offside
Pan's Labyrinth
Rescue Dawn
Taxidermia
and whatever film(s) I know nothing about that I just happen to see because it fits a schedule that I wind up loving.
Posted by: djk813
at August 22, 2006 02:58 PM
I Don't Want to Sleep Alone - Tsai Ming-liang
I'd love to see this up there since there hasn't been domestic distribution for his last few films.
Posted by: palmtree
at August 22, 2006 04:17 PM
I've seen it twice... and can't wait for the third viewing...
Posted by: David Poland
at August 22, 2006 04:21 PM
I saw a trailer last night for The Last King of Scotland. I saw two notable features: a really crappy title, and a queasy sense in my mind about why it was that a movie about an African dictator famous for killing thousands of Africans in Africa was about...a white guy. Fortunately the trailer addressed this as well, but sort of in passing. But Whitaker looked good.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at August 22, 2006 04:46 PM
Wait a minute - who has been waiting for the next Tarsem Singh movie?
Posted by: jeffmcm
at August 22, 2006 04:47 PM
Rather impressive that they're getting the entire New Crowned Hope lineup -- also a bit surprising, since it means they'll all be premiering at Toronto instead of the NCH festival itself.
Posted by: Josh Martin
at August 22, 2006 04:48 PM
The Masterpieces Going In???
Posted by: grandcosmo
at August 22, 2006 04:51 PM
One more thing - who wants to place wagers on what percentage of DP's review of The Fountain will be about Rachel Weisz and what percentage will be about everything else in the movie? I'm thinking 60/40.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at August 22, 2006 04:54 PM
Awesome! Johnnie To has three movies to be shown in 2006 Toronto Film Festival -"Exiled" , "Election" and "Election 2".
PS: "Triad Election" in the US title of "Election 2".
Posted by: marychan
at August 22, 2006 04:55 PM
J. To is so damned prolific and so damned good.
I still marvel at the opening of Broadcast News where an entire 8 minute action scene is filmed in one long meandering camera take. Brilliant!
Posted by: palmtree
at August 22, 2006 05:05 PM
Man, whatta lineup! Can someone tell me where Sundance fits into the landscape in terms of relevance any more?
I can't wait for BORAT but Larry Charles's MASKED AND ANONYMOUS is one of the worst films I've ever seen. Ever.
Posted by: PetalumaFilms
at August 22, 2006 05:08 PM
M&A is considered by many to be The Worst Film Ever Made.
I have spared myself the grief.
As a director, I think L.C. is one of the greatest record producers ever... which is to say, he rides with those who brung him... and if they are being indulgent, the film goes that way... and if they are being brilliant, the film goes that way... he gets it done for the visionary, for better or worse.
Posted by: David Poland
at August 22, 2006 05:59 PM
I've been waiting for the next Tarsem flick - I thought "The Cell" was fantastic. I know I'm in the minority.
Posted by: Josh Massey
at August 22, 2006 06:01 PM
You can like the movie, but I beg of you: don't feed his pretentiousness by referring to him as 'Tarsem'.
Posted by: jeffmcm
at August 22, 2006 06:13 PM
I wish I could reccommend MASKED AND ANONYMOUS as a good laugh, but it's not even funny bad. It's just bad bad.
Funny bad (and an excellent reccomendation for horrible movie lovers) is Matthew Bright's TIPTOES. Gary Oldman as a midget! Kate Beckinsale has never looked hotter, buy oy yoy oy. I saw the film at Sundance and in the introduction, Bright said he hoped the producers walk outside after the screening and get hit by a bus. Strangely he hasn't made a film since:
http://imdb.com/title/tt0316768/
Posted by: PetalumaFilms
at August 22, 2006 06:59 PM
"Jindabybe Ray Lawrence
The director of the much underappreciated Lantana, just picked up by Sony Classics"
YES YES YES!!! You guys are in for a brilliant treat. That movie is stunning. Laura Linney, Gabriel Byrne and Deborra-Lee Furness are all excellent. I loveloveloved that movie.
"2:37 Murali K. Thalluri
Lots of controversy around this 22 year old's work, which already landed him in Cannes and now, The TO."
Definitely lots of controversy down here over this movie. Amongst many things it was the secret opening night film of the Melbourne Film Festival (people weren't told what movie it would be until the screening started) and that resulted in walk outs due to the film's discussions about rape, incest and the film's extremely graphic ending. Nasty piece of work there.
"Macbeth Geoffrey Wright
A hot Shakespeare title again, with another remake on BBC's Shakespeare Re-Told series. This one from the promising Romper Stomper director."
There has been such polar-opposite reactions to this film so far. Some call it masterful, others call it disgusting exploitation. Victoria Hill as Lady Macbeth is a standout I've heard (but not in the typical LADY MACBETH way if you know what I mean)
I hope Tarsem Singh's new movie is anywhere near the visual orgasm that The Cell was.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at August 22, 2006 10:20 PM
BTW, the most controversial Aussie film of the year is also showing at Toronto. That would be Ana Kokkinos' The Book of Revelation. As the news headlines put it "The $4.5mil Public Funded Rape Film"
lol.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at August 22, 2006 10:21 PM
It's BREAKING NEWS, not BROADCAST NEWS, and it's the best movie released (sort-of) this year. I saw it in '05 and was just bowled over by how resoundingly brilliant it was. Already out on DVD and cheap at twice the price.
Posted by: Cadavra
at August 22, 2006 11:56 PM
I have nothing much to say about Toronto, because I think it's an overrated festival run by idiots... but I do recommend trying to see Snowcake. While watching a movie starring Sigourney Weaver as a mentally challenged person might sound trying, it's actually a very funny and moving film. One of the hilights of this year's Tribeca Film Festival and Mr. Alan Rickman's finest moment.
Posted by: EDouglas
at August 23, 2006 05:07 AM
Please don't toss around phrases like "Alan Rickman's finest moment" without meaning it. The man was Hans Gruber, for God's sake.
Posted by: Josh Massey
at August 23, 2006 05:30 AM
Hmmm...Snowcake, eh? I'll add that to my list. I decided to go full out and took the week off of work to see as many as I could. I have 30 tickets burning a hole in my pocket... I will do everything I can to be at Borat. Can't wait for that one. Also...new Hong Sang-Soo! Yay!
Posted by: Kambei
at August 23, 2006 05:56 AM
He actually smiles and *laughs* in the movie... he actually has range!
Posted by: EDouglas
at August 23, 2006 06:05 AM
Coming Soon...Alan Rickman is...SNAPES ON A PLANE!
Posted by: Cadavra
at August 23, 2006 09:54 AM
As for last week, Johnnie To is still shooting EXILED....
http://www.kaijushakedown.com/2006/08/exiled_still_sh.html
PS: Some correction:
TRIAD ELECTION is the US title of ELECTION 2, not "in" US title of ELECTION 2.... Sorry....
Posted by: marychan
at August 23, 2006 10:29 AM
I cant wait to see:
The Fountain
Pan's Labyrinth
The Host (could be the next Save The Green Planet?)
Borat
Mon Meilleur Ami
Babel
Zidane
Renaissance & Princess (Actual innovation in Anime?)
The Half Life of Timofey Berezin (the Engineer in me loves the name)
Manufactured Landscapes (Burtynsky's photographs are stunning, and if this is in Special Presentations it may be something special)
Paris Je T'aime (I wonder if all those directors will show up :-) )
Time (Kim Ki-Duk is brilliant)
Rescue Dawn
Even the obligatory Miike offering looks interesting!
I think this will be one of the best TIFFs in the last 10 years.
Posted by: bobbob911
at August 23, 2006 11:53 AM
Aren't some of these movies opening in, like, a months time? And as wide releases too?
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at August 24, 2006 01:16 AM
KC: Yeah, that's the thing about Toronto. Everyone always makes a huge deal about it but the biggest and best movies playing there are usually the ones that already have distribution and are being released by the end of the year. Journalists/critics just like making a big deal about it because it gives them a chance to see these movies early so they can be the first on the bandwagon. Quite a few of the Oscar movies were there...Capote, Walk the Line (how that didn't get a BP and director nom is beyond me), etc... but a lot of the stuff that doesn't have a distributor is hit/miss. Can't think of one Napoleon Dynamite/Little Miss Sunshine like hit to come out of Toronto in the last few years, but David could correct me on that if I'm wrong.
Posted by: EDouglas
at August 24, 2006 06:06 AM
Like, if you lived in Toronto it'd be pretty awesome to go see something, but I can't imagine travelling all the way to Toronto (no matter where you are) just to see movies that you can see cheaper over the next few months. And with the advantage of having knowledge about whether its a good or bad movie.
Like, the Melbourne Film Festival is a pretty big film festival in Australia (the second or first biggest I assume) but looking at all the stuff that was screening it was all movies that are out over the next couple of months and then there's the titles that I've never heard of and don't feel like spending $15 on.
Festivals are weird.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at August 24, 2006 06:47 AM
Toronto is a mix of films that will be coming out (some as early as the week after the film festival ie. the festival is the Premiere party), films that will trickle out over the next year, and films that will never come out.
I'd guess probably half of those films above will not come out in the theaters. Plus, the movies people are most interested in ahead of time are the ones that people have actually heard something about. This naturally results in films that are likely to come out.
There are always, *always*, a large number of finds at the festival. Three off the top of my head: Tsotsi, Whale Rider, George Washington.
Posted by: bobbob911
at August 24, 2006 07:49 AM
KC, if you subtract movies youve heard of (and thus are probably coming out) and movies you've never heard of, there arent a whole lot of movies left!
Nobody had heard of Napolean Dynamite before Sundance either.....
Posted by: bobbob911
at August 24, 2006 07:52 AM
Crash premiered at and was bought out of Toronto.
Posted by: djk813
at August 24, 2006 08:20 AM
The press is naturally there to cover the Gala screenings and the upcoming fall releases, so that's the coverage you'll get. [Insert Oscar contender here] disappointed audiences and critics and is looking less like a nominee now. [Insert Fall release with big stars here] wowed the crowd...
Thing is, they are showing 261 feature films so obviously most of them are not those big films, and most are never going to get US distribution no matter how good they are. Pick out a couple of the upcoming releases that you just can't wait for, some known quantities that aren't commercial, and then take chances. There are a lot of international titles that likely won't ever see any play in the US outside of festivals. Sure you're going to occasionally wind up with the occasional film that is painful to sit through, but you will also will discover many gems.
That's the real joy of the Toronto Film Festival - the many films that I would have never had seen except for it. And in today's age where for most films you see you've already been bombarded with trailers and ads and articles, it's fun to sit down for a film and realize you have no idea what to expect. Plus, the festival is well run and not too difficult to get tickets (again, especially if you're willing to take chances).
Posted by: djk813
at August 24, 2006 09:11 AM
The films I had never heard of prior to the fest have usually been my favourites--Oldboy, Nobody Knows, A Ma Soeur and The Duelist stand out in my memory--although the adoring crowd at the Sideways premier and the infectious laughter at The General were also treasured movie-going moments. I usually try to avoid the movies that will be opening wide within weeks--although something like Borat might be more "special" at the fest...
I'm getting very excited about this year--although both week-ends conflict with my Ultimate Frisbee finals. I might just have to show up to screenings in cleats & sweat. I apologise to all in advance.
Posted by: Kambei
at August 24, 2006 10:30 AM
"KC, if you subtract movies youve heard of (and thus are probably coming out) and movies you've never heard of, there arent a whole lot of movies left!"
lol, I mean movies that are by big directors and have distributers and are coming out soon and then there are films by no name directors that I'd rather wait to hear stuff about before planting down cash for them.
I would've hated to have paid to see Oldboy in a cinema.
I suppose it doesn't help that even the smaller interesting sounding films aren't really reported on and it always seems people forget them come the time of the year when people start talking about their favourite films of the year.
Posted by: KamikazeCamelV2.0
at August 24, 2006 08:39 PM
How about Thank You For Smoking EDouglas? Would that count? Toronto kicks ass. I've been there four times for the festival now. It is a blast and worth every single penny.
Posted by: Stella's Boy
at August 24, 2006 09:12 PM
"I would've hated to have paid to see Oldboy in a cinema."
Why?
There's a whole programme in the festival called "Masters" which is generally films by top-tier directors around the world. Even in this programme, most of the films still rarely get distribution over here.....
Posted by: bobbob911
at August 25, 2006 07:53 AM
EDouglas' statement is right for any film festivals other than Sundance. Many good movies
are already [pre-bought] before they are finished.
( Unlucky, while many US distributor think that Sundance Film Festival is the best place to buy movies, many overseas distributor always overlook Sundance Film Festival )
Posted by: marychan
at August 27, 2006 10:21 AM
Toronto has become, in my opinion, the most significant film festival in the world, in great part because of its range.
That said, it is not primarily a sales festival for domestic product. Half a dozen films a year, when all is said and done.
Sundance is a very different animal. In some ways, because indie film has faltered, the two have become much more stratified in the last couple of years. Lots of new product at Toronto, especially foreign. But Sundance has the feel of being an indie bazaar.
Interesting discussion.
Posted by: David Poland
at August 27, 2006 11:54 AM
True, Toronto probably gets a lot bigger interntional turn-out than Sundance, both press and industry, and true enough, Crash and Thank You For Smoking would indeed be two Toronto standouts...(as would Hostel from last year), though you don't usually hear the festival mentioned when people talk about those movies, unlike Sundance. (How many articles have you read about Little Miss Sunshine or Napoleon Dynamite that mention the festival, compared to how many mentions Toronto has gotten with Crash or TYFS)
Anyway, a lot of the movies I really want to see (Pan's Labyrinth, Copying Beethoven, Volver), I'm seeing this coming week, a week before Toronto even starts. I guess it's not that big a deal to me cause being in NY, I know I'll get a chance to see most of the movies even if they don't get major distribution, but of course, a lot of the ones people are going to Toronto to see are the ones that already do have distributors.
Figure on a cost of $700-800 (presuming you get press credentials) to see movies that many people have already seen or will be able to see in a matter of months. Not worth it.
Posted by: EDouglas
at August 27, 2006 12:09 PM
I have never spent that much to go to Toronto, but I don't stay for the whole thing. And it is more than worth it. It's not just about seeing great movies. I love the city and greatly enjoy walking around Toronto with all the other movie lovers. I love talking to people in line about what they have seen and will see. I love seeing midnight movies with a rowdy crowd. Plus, five or six movies that I saw and liked or loved last year still haven't been released to theaters or DVD as of now. For me it is more than worth it.
Posted by: Stella's Boy
at August 27, 2006 04:11 PM
By the way, according to Variety's poll in 9/2005, most buyers, sellers and producers still think that Cannes is the best film festival in the world. It also stated that "Cannes, Berlin, Toronto, Venice and Sundance were adjudged the top five events overall, by a clear margin, followed a long way down by San Sebastian. "
http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout=print_story&articleid=VR1117928629&categoryid=2063
But it is just a result of the poll in 9/2005. In 9/2006, the result would be changed.
Posted by: marychan
at August 27, 2006 10:59 PM
Not that I've been to tons of festivals, but I've been to a few and Toronto is by far my favorite. It's not hard to see 5 films in a day, so you figure you can see 1 film with fall distribution, 1 film from a known quantity that might get picked up, and 3 films that you know little to nothing about in one day. I've seen many wonderful films at Toronto that still aren't available on DVD in the US.
I've always just bought tickets the regular way and never had much problem. Festivals aren't a cheap thing and since the exchange rate isn't nearly as good as it once was, it's not quite the same bargain, but it's still very reasonably priced. Plus, Toronto in September is a nice place to be, the venues are pretty nice for the most part, the festival is well run, standing in line with other festival goers comparing notes is fun, and it's just an overall great atmosphere. I always tell people who think it would be fun to take a trip to a film festival, that Toronto is the one to go to. No, I'm not being paid to shill the festival, but the week in Toronto in September is one of my most anticipated events every year.
Posted by: djk813
at August 29, 2006 06:45 AM
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