News   Nov 12, 2024
 239     0 
News   Nov 12, 2024
 420     0 
News   Nov 12, 2024
 494     0 

Toronto International Film Festival 2008

khris

Senior Member
Member Bio
Joined
Aug 28, 2007
Messages
8,726
Reaction score
771
Location
Toronto, ON
This year has some really big names showing up for the annual film fest.
Here is a story from tribute.ca:

Find out which stars are coming to TIFF!
The 33rd Toronto International Film Festival will welcome over 500 filmmakers, actors and industry insiders, representing the finest in film talent from around the world this year. Celebrities who haved confirmed their attendance include: Anne Hathaway, Antonio Banderas, Benicio Del Toro, Brad Pitt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Charlize Theron, Christopher Walken, Colin Farrell, Colin Firth, Sex and the City’s Cynthia Nixon, Frances McDormand, Gerard Butler, Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Hudson, Jessica Biel, John Malkovich, Julianne Moore, Canadian hottie Kevin Zegers, Lauren Graham, Liam Neeson, Matt Damon, Paul Bettany, Peter O’Toole, Paul Gross (whose film Passchendaele is the Opening Night Gala on September 4th), Rachel McAdams, Ralph Fiennes, Renée Zellweger, Ricky Gervais, Viggo Mortensen, Zooey Deschanel and Zac Efron, just to name a few. TIFF runs from September 4 to 13, 2008.
Source

Here is another story from cbc.ca:
Lineup finalized, celebrity visitors set for Toronto film fest
Last Updated: Tuesday, August 19, 2008 | 6:09 PM ET CBC News

U.S. actor Brad Pitt, shown May 15 in Cannes, France, with then-expecting Angelina Jolie, is one of the celebrities expected at the Toronto International Film Festival. (Associated Press) The newest Cohen Brothers film and visits from international stars like Peter O'Toole, Brad Pitt and Youssou N'Dour were among the final Toronto film festival programming announcements unveiled on Tuesday.

Burn After Reading, Joel and Ethan Cohen's dark comedy about a CIA agent's misplaced memoir, joins several dozen last-minute additions to the lineup of the annual festival, set to unspool Sept. 4-13.

As usual, organizers expect to welcome more than 500 special guests, including famous faces from Hollywood (Jennifer Aniston, Alec Baldwin, Charlize Theron, Spike Lee) as well as internationally renowned stars (Ricky Gervais, Preity Zinta, Shohreh Aghdashloo, Wong Kar Wai).

This year's event will see 312 films from 64 countries screened in Toronto, nearly three-quarters of which are world, international or North American premieres.

Filmmakers Kathryn Bigelow and Julian Schnabel, actors Matt Damon and Josh Brolin and painter Chuck Close will take part in the festival's Mavericks program, while Deepa Mehta and Terence Davies join others in presenting and discussing films that influenced them in Dialogues.

The festival will extend outside to the city's popular Yonge-Dundas Square, which will host free outdoor programming, performances and events related to films screening this year. Highlights include appearances by N'Dour, cast members of the musical revival A Chorus Line and NBA star LeBron James.

The Toronto International Film Festival opens with Canadian actor-filmmaker Paul Gross's First World War drama Passchendaele on Sept. 4.

It closes on Sept. 13 with the gala screening of Charles Martin Smith's Scottish heist drama, Stone of Destiny.

Scottish heist drama, Stone of Destiny.
Source
 
Venice chief takes dig at rival Toronto film festival
Last Updated: Thursday, September 4, 2008 | 1:06 PM ET

As the Toronto film festival gets underway Thursday, it is smarting from a rival's shot from across the pond, courtesy of Venice film festival chief Marco Mueller.

The latest edition of the venerable Venice event has come under mounting criticism in local and European media because of the lack of star power at the annual event as well as for a lacklustre lineup so far.

Most of the films in this year's lineup "seemed like plain porridge without sugar," wrote film critic Andrew Pulver of the U.K.'s Guardian newspaper, while Italy's Corriere della Sera lamented about "too many films that have disappointed, too few crammed with Hollywood stars, fewer people in the theatres, fewer parties."

Festival director Mueller has repeatedly defended this year's program as the best of what is currently available (blaming the Hollywood writers' strike for fewer U.S. titles). However, at a press event on Wednesday, he also took a shot at Toronto's festival.

Mueller said that he back-loaded his festival with several highly anticipated titles — like Jonathan Demme's Rachel Getting Married and Darren Aronsofsky's The Wrestler — to steal some of the thunder from rival Toronto, with which Venice traditionally overlaps by a few days.

"We have to give people a reason to pay attention to us once Toronto starts up," he said, according to reports in industry bibles Variety and Hollywood Reporter.

He also pointed out that Toronto will screen nearly two dozen films that were shown at Venice first.

Mueller upped the ante for next year, saying the 2009 festival will begin a bit later. While this year got underway in late August, next year's edition will start on Sept. 2, putting it in direct competition with Toronto and possibly forcing filmmakers to decide which festival to attend.

Though Venice is the older and more established event, Toronto is seen as a key market and audience-oriented festival, where both major distribution deals are struck and real filmgoers (as opposed to industry insiders) watch the films. Toronto is also now seen as the starting point for serious films to begin their bids for Oscars, Golden Globes and other film awards.

The Venice International Film Festival ends Saturday, with a jury presided by Wim Wenders to award the prestigious Golden Lion trophy.
Source

With the new opening of the home of TIFF in 2009, I really hope that this move by Venice doesn't hurt TIFF.
 
TIFF has great programmers, is very well respected within the film industry and works like a well oiled machine. These types of stories often pop up around this time of year. Sometimes it's Montreal, this year it's Venice.

Is Lightbox opening in 2009 or 2010?

I'm pretty stoked about some of the Midnight Madness programming. I've got tix for "Detroit Metal City", "Not Quite Hollywood", "Eden Log", "Sexy Killer" and the one I'm looking forward to the most, the extremely controversial "Martyrs". Can't wait!
 
If we have a President Palin by this time next year, I expect a few TIFFsters to seek asylum in Canada
 
Analysis: Toronto film fest could offer surprises

(CNN) -- A mere film festival cannot compete with the Academy Awards' grip on the public imagination, but the 33rd Toronto International Film Festival (which begins Thursday) comes pretty close -- in part because it has become the first important bellwether for the onslaught of Oscar hopefuls.
Spike Lee's World War II drama, "Miracle of St. Anna," is one of the hot tickets at the film festival.

Spike Lee's World War II drama, "Miracle of St. Anna," is one of the hot tickets at the film festival.

Last year's bumper crop of contenders included "Into the Wild," "In the Valley of Elah," "Atonement," "I'm Not There," "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" and the eventual best picture winner, "No Country For Old Men." After 10 days in Toronto, it was obvious that 2007 would go down as an exceptionally strong year for American film.

According to pre-festival buzz, 2008 will struggle to match it. The studio specialty divisions that produced many of last year's quality pictures -- including Paramount Vantage, which co-produced "No Country For Old Men" and "There Will Be Blood" -- have been cut back or eliminated entirely, incorporated into their corporate parents.

And American movies mostly have been absent from this month's Venice and Telluride film festivals amid whispers that Hollywood's submissions just weren't up to grade.

For better or (frequently) worse, the Toronto festival prefers to operate a more open-door policy with the studios, which at least guarantees glamour-starved Canadians a steady stream of celebrities trotting down the red carpet. More than 500 are expected this year, including Brad Pitt, Jennifer Aniston, Dakota Fanning, Jeanne Moreau, Ricky Gervais and Charlize Theron. (Pitt and Aniston will not be together.)

Hot tickets -- and at nearly $40 for gala screenings, they better be -- include the Coen brothers' latest, "Burn After Reading," which also screened in Venice; Spike Lee's World War II drama, "Miracle of St. Anna"; and new films from Jonathan Demme, Darren Aronofsky and Richard Linklater.

Toronto also will provide North Americans their first chance to see many of the most talked-about films from May's Cannes International Film Festival, including Steven Soderbergh's two-part epic "Che," brothers Luc and Jean-Pierre Dardenne's "Silence de Lorna" and Terence Davies' highly praised "Of Time and the City."

With a lineup of 249 features from 64 countries, there can be no shortage of potential, and talk is enthusiastic about a number of films.

"Borat" director Larry Charles is back with a satirical documentary fronted by Bill Maher, "Religulous," which threatens -- or promises -- to put a cat among the doves.

There are hopes Ed Harris can pull off a grand Western in the old style with his film of the Robert Parker novel "Appaloosa." A cast headed by Viggo Mortensen, Jeremy Irons, Renee Zellweger and Harris himself certainly makes the prospect appetizing.

Last year's spate of Iraq-themed pictures failed to ignite the box office, but Kathryn Bigelow's bomb-disposal thriller, "The Hurt Locker" (with Jeremy Renner, Ralph Fiennes and Guy Pearce), could be the first to buck the trend. According to Toronto Eye critic Jason Anderson, this one has "real breakout potential."

Meanwhile, Telluride reviews for Danny Boyle's true-life fairy tale, "Slumdog Millionaire," have been little short of ecstatic. Can a movie really be both "Dickensian" and "a blast," as Variety proclaims?

Here's hoping. Watch this space -- I'll be reporting back this time next week.
Source
I didn't know that Canada was "glamour-starved"...
 

Back
Top