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Toronto Film Festival's blogThe Toronto International Film Festival, held September 10 to 19 in Canada's most vibrant and exciting metropolis, has become one of the most important film events on the festival calendar. Showcasing more than 250 films and hosting industryites from around the world, Toronto can "make or break" films looking for international distribution and a chance at Oscar gold. From glitzy red carpet premieres to challenging art films to cutting edge new media, the Festival offers something for every taste. A Festival of Discoveries
Sunday, September 14-------For the first time in the past few years, the Toronto International Film Festival will be best remembered for its discoveries, rather than the bigger-budget entries that graced the Galas. Many of those films were critical and industry disappointments (including The Burning Plain, The Third Man, Miracle of St. Anna, The Brothers Bloom, Pride And Glory, The Duchess and several others). Of course, they delivered the necessary stardust that has now become de rigeur for this uptown event. However, the snippets of news coverage on the major entertainment news magazines leads you to believe that Toronto is primarily the haunt of such demi-gods and goddesse as Brad Pitt, Ed Harris, Antonio Banderas, Viggo Mortensen, Anne Hathaway and the like.....of course it is a treat that they do, in fact, show up. But this year, the radar was definitely out for the "next new thing", a necessary stimulus in a distribution scene that is unstable and unyielding, to say the least. Well, luckily the good folks at IndieWire, that inestimable resource, sent out a survey to top film critics and industry bigwigs, to get their assessments of what were the standout at this year's festival. Well, this group got it right, in my opinion, in their picks. The films highlighted were among my fondest and most delicious Festival memories. These are the films that certainly deserve a bigger audience and a definite theatrical berth....but will these humanistic, empathetic gems find a champion to overcome their commercial frailties?
After seeing so many films in a very contained period of time, one feels almost as if you have just met dozens of new people, who somehow feel they will be profound influences on your own life. That they just exist on the screen does not make them any less real to me. I wonder about what happened to them once the film was over, and where there are in this moment of time? In other words, the sheer humanism of so many of the films listed above, moved me in a way that only cinema can touch. In that sense, I found the Festival extremely hopeful. And hope, even more than film, is a commodity that we are in desperate need of in the months ahead. Thanks for the memories and the discoveries, Toronto........ Sandy Mandelberger, Toronto FF Dailies Editor |
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