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Toronto International Film Festival 2007

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T.O.'s surprise claim to fame

Survey that tracks which city events rate international coverage says film fest is T.O.'s technical knockout

by Francine Kopun
September 8, 2007

http://www.thestar.com/Special/FilmFest/article/254471


The Toronto International Film Festival is the city's biggest international newsmaker by far, according to a new study by a Montreal media monitoring company.

Without it, our biggest claim to fame would be the Toronto Stock Exchange.

"We call it a media eclipse, meaning it's such a big event that it makes everything else look unimportant," said Eric Leveille, general manager of Influence Communication, the company that conducted the study for the Toronto Star and La Presse.

"We would even go so far as to say that while TIFF is going on, it's an excellent time of year for corporations to announce bad news because no one is going to listen. It's eclipsing all other news right now in your city."

The study examined 50 newspapers from eight countries outside of Canada for articles that mentioned Toronto or Montreal – excluding sports stories. Some highlights:

Toronto was mentioned 6,000 times. Montreal was mentioned 3,500 times.

Thirty per cent of the stories about Toronto related to business, with the Toronto Stock Exchange accounting for 13 per cent of mentions.

Another 30 per cent of the stories about Toronto related to culture. In that category, TIFF was by far the biggest story, accounting for one-quarter of all mentions of Toronto.

"This is humongous. Twenty-five per cent of a sector is absolutely huge," said David Lamarche, Influence analyst.

The indie band Arcade Fire was Montreal's top culture story, and it accounted for only 5 per cent of stories in that category. Cirque du Soleil and the Just for Laughs Festival were tied for second – each were named in 4 per cent of stories about culture in Montreal. The Jazz Festival, Leonard Cohen and the Montreal Film Festival tied for third place at 2 per cent each.

TIFF was the most covered topic in the U.K., in the U.S., where it got 10 times more coverage than any other subject in the culture sector, and in India, explained in part by the strong Bollywood connection.

"Bollywood loves Toronto," said Leveille. "More and more they're sending their stars to your city, they're sending their producers out there."

TIFF director Piers Handling said yesterday he knows from first-hand experience that Toronto is known from Houston to Mumbai for the film festival. He argues it's becoming what the Louvre is to Paris – a cultural icon, inextricably linked to the city.

"The festival largely brands the city of Toronto. I'll be so arrogant as to say that to a large extent, we brand Canada," said Handling.

Mayor David Miller said he's not surprised to hear TIFF is such a big news story.

"TIFF is now the most important film festival in the world. It's an extraordinary success," he said, although he stopped short of agreeing with Handling that it should get more funds from any level of government as a result.

The challenge, said Miller, is to use the strength of TIFF to promote Toronto in other ways – as an international business centre, a great place to make films as well as see them, a great place to visit.

Other important Canadian news stories included the AIDS/HIV conference in August 2006, and the Canadian mining industry, which is closely watched in Australia and South Africa. The Dawson College shooting was the biggest news story in Montreal during the period covered by the survey – May 1, 2006 to April 30, 2007.

The arrest of 17 suspected terrorists in the Toronto area did not play as widely or as often as Leveille thought it would – it was the fifth-most reported story about Toronto worldwide, behind TIFF, the AIDS conference, the TSX and Conrad Black. He said that might be because stories about the arrests may have referred to "Canada" or "Ontario" rather than "Toronto."

Toronto, the analysts pointed out, continues to enjoy a reputation as "Toronto the Good." An article in one South African paper, for example, discussed whether or not rumours of a law in Toronto requiring pedestrians to give hand signals before turning were true.

But when it comes to tourism, Toronto needs help. Tourism accounted for only 1 per cent of stories about the city in the international press, compared to 6 per cent of stories about Montreal.

The survey also found that the Toronto Star was the most often cited newspaper and the University of Toronto the most-often mentioned university.

In Montreal, McGill was the university most often mentioned in the international press.
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I agree with Interchange about Captain Mike Across America. Plus: Harvey Weinstein! Standing right beside me! Not screaming like he did at E on Entourage.

Also, Glass: A Portrait of Philip in Twelve Parts is one of the most brilliant docs I've ever seen.

Now off to see Michael Clayton. Mmmmmmmm....George Clooney.
 
But when it comes to tourism, Toronto needs help. Tourism accounted for only 1 per cent of stories about the city in the international press, compared to 6 per cent of stories about Montreal.

I find that sentence very funny! They actually NEED a survey for that? LOL
 
"RELIGULOUS: A Conversation with Bill Maher and Larry Charles" 1:00pm Sunday at Ryerson is my most anticipated pick this year. Can't wait to see Bill Maher in person discussing his film with clips (the film is incomplete).
 
I slipped through Jerkville yesterday afternoon and the place was crawling with over-tanned people wearing unspeakably loud clothes and cheap cologne shrieking into cellphones, and sunken-eyed drones lined up like zombies outside the Hazelton.
 
And how's the movie? I have a crush on Tony Leung since the early 80s and still have :p

Oh, agreed! Tony Leung Chiu Wai (not to be confused with the rather drab Tony Leung Ka Fai) is dishy. If you ever have the opportunity, rent "The Eagle Shooting Heroes" It's a very hard to find historical kung fu musical comedy where the cast is inexplicably dressed in Persian attire. Tony Leung Chiu Wai is hysterically funny as the evil villain. The film was made during a lull in the filming of "The Ashes Of Time" and has the same all star cast. When I die, I want to have my ashes scattered on Tony Leung Chiu Wai.
 
I slipped through Jerkville yesterday afternoon and the place was crawling with over-tanned people wearing unspeakably loud clothes and cheap cologne shrieking into cellphones, and sunken-eyed drones lined up like zombies outside the Hazelton.

Traffic must have been light in Woodbridge.
 
I slipped through Jerkville yesterday afternoon and the place was crawling with over-tanned people wearing unspeakably loud clothes and cheap cologne shrieking into cellphones, and sunken-eyed drones lined up like zombies outside the Hazelton.

A very typical crowd for the first two weeks in september. Scary thing is they get even uglier by mid next week.
 
Oh, agreed! Tony Leung Chiu Wai (not to be confused with the rather drab Tony Leung Ka Fai) is dishy. If you ever have the opportunity, rent "The Eagle Shooting Heroes" It's a very hard to find historical kung fu musical comedy where the cast is inexplicably dressed in Persian attire. Tony Leung Chiu Wai is hysterically funny as the evil villain. The film was made during a lull in the filming of "The Ashes Of Time" and has the same all star cast. When I die, I want to have my ashes scattered on Tony Leung Chiu Wai.


I know which movie you are talking about. I never saw it cause it's rubbish. Another film that has such big cast I remember was Days of Being Wild. Too bad they didn't make part 2, which was supposed to be about Tony's character. His entrance at the end of part one was mesmerizing despite he was only on screen for 2-3 minutes. And the music was good too! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nxUOIAyuvw
 
And how's the movie? I have a crush on Tony Leung since the early 80s and still have :p


Well, I got to the Ryerson well over an hour in advance this morning to see it, and ran into one of my co-workers, and I was surprised to see her there because she didn't tell me she was seeing the Ang Lee movie. And so we went in and we were chatting and she was all "I'm so glad this is less than 2 hours, we can have lunch afterwards" and I was all "No, its more than 2 and a half hours" and she was all "not unless there is a misprint in the schedule" and I was all "but that was our concern - 2 and a half hours of Mandarin first thing on Sunday" and that, boys and girls, was when I first realized I was at the wrong theatre, and so I saw Eastern Promise instead, which was really really good.
 
Yep, David Cronenburg's brand new Eastern Promises was terrific. A certain rather courageous fight scene from the film, set in a bathhouse and featuring a rather buff Viggo Mortensen, will impress many and be long remembered. Mortensen's performance as a Russian hood is all-around great actually, and stands out in an excellent cast including Naomi Watts, Armin Mueller-Stahl, and a hair-trigger Vincent Cassel. So much fun.

Variety thought Lust, Caution was too talky.

Including Eastern Promises I've seen another 9 films in the last 2 days and am currently beyond writing about them in greater depth. Cheers!

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