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The opening press conference of the 2014 Toronto Film Festival (Sept. 4th - 14th) was almost exactly what one would have expected. There was the food (coffee, juice and bagels). Then we went into the theater at the Bell Light Box on King Street in downtown Toronto where we heard sponsors being thanked and saw some trailers for movies that had been selected for the primary screenings.
There were the usual inane questions as to how many of the reporter’s countries films had been selected and so on. All pretty mundane stuff to be sure. Then someone asked about why they decided to only have “world premieres” during the first two weeks of the festival.
That got me interested. It seems that the people at TIFF had decided to declare a semantic war on the competition. This was a major zig in the festival’s modus operandi. After all, Toronto had made its reputation as “The festival of festivals” taking the best from everywhere and presenting it anew. What was this all about?
It’s the semantics that got me. Apparently, there were lots and lots of “North American” or “Canadian premieres” which meant that the films had been shown in runs or festivals in one of the other continents or down in the ‘States. No one has any problems with that. But apparently, some producers and directors had been touting their films as “World” premieres when they had actually been shown in Telluride or Bangkok or someplace equally obscure or foreign.
Apparently, TIFF decided that if anyone besides themselves and a few producers or friends had seen it before they’d put the film in the back of the line where people would be tired and may have already gone home.
Does this mean that if a film has had a “test screening” some place that it can’t have a real World Premier? Probably not, but the new policy does indeed diss a bunch of worthy foreign films that might deserve an early gala and the opportunities that come with it. It seems kind of petty.
Anyway. The early line up seems pretty good, and if we get credentials we’ll get into more detail of what’s coming up and what isn’t. In the meantime, we’ll let Toronto embarrass itself with the antics of its Mayor.
But I have digressed. The whole purpose of this event was for CEO and Director of the Toronto International Film Festival Piers Handling and Artistic Director Cameron Bailey to announce the first round of titles premiering in the Galas and Special Presentations programs of the 39th Toronto International Film Festival®, you know, to introduce some of the movies as the Oscar bait.
Since the 13 Galas and 46 Special Presentations weren’t all booked yet an initial lineup was announced, which includes 37 world premieres from directors including Noah Baumbach, Susanne Bier, David Dobkin, Philippe Falardeau, Mia Hansen-Løve, Ning Hao, François Ozon, Christian Petzold, Lone Scherfig and Chris Rock.
“Toronto can anticipate another remarkable lineup of films,” said Handling. “Cinema’s collective and transformative experience lives at the heart of our Festival — a sentiment that inspires the global dialogue rippling throughout the selections revealed today.”
“We can't wait to present the new films from some of cinema's brightest talents,” added Bailey. “This year we'll welcome filmmakers from France, Germany, China, the UK, the US and more to red carpets in Toronto.”
And with that, they showed us the “sizzle reel” a bunch of trailers giving us previews of coming attractions:
Among the obvious Oscar contenders are these films that played in other festivals, which will be shown later include:
Mike Leigh's Mr. Turner starring Timothy Spall as the inventor of Impressionism half a century early
Wild by Canadian director Jean-Marc Vallee with Reese Witherspoon as a recovering heroine addict on a 1100 mile solo hike after her destructive behavior lead to the break up of her marriage.
The Judge with Robert Downey, Jr. and Robert Duvall, which is all about chewing the scenery. It all looked interesting, but then again, it was supposed to.
And there’s David Cronenberg's Maps To The Stars.
For more information, go to: http://www.tiff.net/
Toronto International Film Festival
Septermber 4 - 14, 2014
Venues include:
Steve & Rashmi Gupta Box Office
TIFF Bell Lightbox
Reitman Square, 350 King Street West
Toronto, ON M5V 1J2, Canada
Princess of Wales Theatre
300 King St West
Toronto, ON M5V 1J2, Canada
Roy Thomson Hall
60 Simcoe St.
Toronto, ON M5J 2H5, Canada