![]() |
Malala Yousafzai in He
Named Me Malala. Photo courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures. |
Midnight Madness brings all sorts of mayhem from newbies and old favourites, while the Masters programme includes Cannes hit The Assassin by Hou Hsiao-hsien, Berlin champ Taxi by Jafar Panahi, and Wim Wenders' canuck co-pro Everything Will Be Fine. The big draw on the Vanguard front is Gaspar Noé's 3D porno Love, if anyone's looking for something to see with the kids.
TIFF DOCS
Amazing Grace
Sydney Pollack, USA,
International Premiere
Sydney Pollack’s film of Aretha Franklin’s ‘Amazing Grace.’
Filmed during church services in Los Angeles on January 13 and 14, 1972, the
footage was never seen until now. Featuring Reverend James Cleveland, the
Southern California Community Choir and the Atlantic Records rhythm
section.
A Flickering Truth
Pietra Brettkelly, New Zealand/Afghanistan North American Premiere As Afghanistan
teeters on an unpredictable future, A Flickering Truth uncovers the world of
three dreamers and cinephiles, the dust of 100 years of war and the restoration
of 8,000 hours of film archive that they risked their lives to conceal. What
surprises will emerge from the cloak of time?
A Journey of a Thousand Miles: Peacekeepers
Geeta Gandbhir and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, USA/Pakistan World Premiere
A unit of Bangladeshi female police officers leave their
families to join a United Nations peacekeeping mission in Haiti and challenge
stereotypes about the capabilities of Muslim women. The film focuses on three
of the women as they grapple with the harsh realities of becoming foot soldiers
in a UN Peacekeeping Mission, and the pressures on their families left
behind.
A Young Patriot (Shao Nian * Xiao Zhao)
Du Haibin, China/USA/France Canadian Premiere
This intimate documentary chronicles five years in the life
of a young Chinese student, whose fervent idealism and dedication to Mao’s
legacy stands in stark contrast to contemporary China’s turn towards state
capitalism.
Being AP
Anthony Wonke, United Kingdom/Ireland World Premiere
Being AP is an intimate documentary portrait of AP McCoy –
the greatest jump jockey of all time. As he passes his 40th birthday, an age
beyond which most jockeys are unable to continue, AP contemplates his obsession
with winning, the years of sacrifice that he has endured to become a champion,
the chase for a 20th successive title, and then a future without racing.
Bolshoi Babylon
Nick Read, United Kingdom
World Premiere
For the first time, Russia’s Bolshoi Theatre allows
filmmakers full and uncensored access backstage. After a brutal acid attack on
the ballet company’s director Sergei Filin in January 2013, Bolshoi Babylon
follows the dancers and managers through a new season as they try to regain
their status as the world’s leading dance company.
Dark Horse
Louise Osmond, United Kingdom Canadian Premiere
Set in a former mining village in Wales, Dark Horse is the inspirational true story of Jan Vokes and her group of local friends who decide to take on the elite 'sport of kings' and breed themselves a racehorse. Raised on a slagheap allotment, their foal becomes a source of inspiration and hope.
Set in a former mining village in Wales, Dark Horse is the inspirational true story of Jan Vokes and her group of local friends who decide to take on the elite 'sport of kings' and breed themselves a racehorse. Raised on a slagheap allotment, their foal becomes a source of inspiration and hope.
He Named Me Malala
Davis Guggenheim, USA
International Premiere
Acclaimed documentary filmmaker Davis Guggenheim shows us
how Malala Yousafzai, who was targeted by the Taliban and severely wounded by a
gunshot when returning home on her school bus, remains committed to fighting
for education for all girls worldwide. Providing an inside glimpse into her
extraordinary life — from her close relationship with her father who inspired
her love for education, to her impassioned speeches at the UN, to her everyday
life at home.
Heart of a Dog
Laurie Anderson, USA Canadian Premiere
Heart of a Dog is a personal essay film that explores themes
of love, death, and language. The director’s voice is a constant presence as
stories of her dog Lolabelle, her mother, childhood fantasies and political,
and philosophical theories unfurl in a seamless song-like stream.
Hitchcock/Truffaut
Kent Jones, USA/France
Canadian Premiere
In 1962, two of the greatest minds in cinema sat down for an intimate and expansive conversation. Based on the original recordings of this meeting — used to produce the influential book Hitchcock/Truffaut — this film illustrates the greatest cinema lesson of all time and plummets us into the world of the creator of Psycho, The Birds, and Vertigo. David Fincher, Richard Linklater, Martin Scorsese and other legendary filmmakers add to the discussion of Hitchcock's enduring legacy and influence on cinema.
In 1962, two of the greatest minds in cinema sat down for an intimate and expansive conversation. Based on the original recordings of this meeting — used to produce the influential book Hitchcock/Truffaut — this film illustrates the greatest cinema lesson of all time and plummets us into the world of the creator of Psycho, The Birds, and Vertigo. David Fincher, Richard Linklater, Martin Scorsese and other legendary filmmakers add to the discussion of Hitchcock's enduring legacy and influence on cinema.
Horizon
Bergur Bernburg and Fridrik Thor Fridriksson,
Iceland/Denmark World Premiere
A documentary about the late Icelandic painter Georg Gudni Hauksson, whose innovative interpretations of forms and ideas paved the way for a renaissance in Icelandic landscape painting.
A documentary about the late Icelandic painter Georg Gudni Hauksson, whose innovative interpretations of forms and ideas paved the way for a renaissance in Icelandic landscape painting.
In Jackson Heights
Frederick Wiseman, USA
North American Premiere
Frederick Wiseman's latest documentary is about the diverse
neighborhood of Jackson Heights in Queens, New York where 167 languages are
spoken among immigrants from every continent, and half the population is
foreign-born. The community is an example of America as a ‘melting pot’ settled
and made strong by people committed to making their neighborhood work despite cultural
and religious differences.
It All Started At The End (Todo comenzó por el fin)
Luis Ospina, Colombia
World Premiere
Filmmaker Luis Ospina recounts the history of El Grupo de Cali, the prolific bohemian artistic collective that revolutionized Colombian film and literature in the 1970s and ’80s.
Filmmaker Luis Ospina recounts the history of El Grupo de Cali, the prolific bohemian artistic collective that revolutionized Colombian film and literature in the 1970s and ’80s.
Janis: Little Girl Blue
Amy Berg, USA North
American Premiere
Academy Award-nominated director Amy Berg reveals the raw,
sensitive and powerful woman behind the legend in Janis: Little Girl Blue; the
quintessential story of the short, turbulent, epic existence that changed music
forever. Chan Marshall (aka Cat Power) lends her raspy Southern voice to the
film, reading Janis Joplin's achingly intimate letters.
Je Suis Charlie
Emmanuel Leconte and Daniel Leconte, France World Premiere
On January 7, 2015, French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo
was the victim of a terrorist attack that killed 12 people, including some of
the greatest French cartoonists such as Cabu, Wolinski, Charb, Tignous and
Honoré. The following day a policewoman was shot dead in the street. On January
9, another attack targeted the Jewish community. Four hostages were murdered.
This film pays tribute to all these victims.
Miss Sharon Jones!
Barbara Kopple, USA, World Premiere
Two-time Academy Award-winner Barbara Kopple follows R&B
queen Sharon Jones over the course of an eventful year, as she battles a cancer
diagnosis and struggles to hold her band the Dap-Kings together. Additionally,
TIFF Cinematheque will showcase Kopple’s film Harlan County, USA which played
at the first Festival in 1976.
The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble
Morgan Neville, USA World Premiere
This film tells the extraordinary story of the Silk Road
Ensemble, an international musical collective created by legendary cellist
Yo-Yo Ma. The film follows this group of diverse instrumentalists, vocalists,
composers, arrangers, visual artists, and storytellers as they explore the
power of music to preserve tradition, shape cultural evolution, and inspire
hope.
Nasser
Jihan El-Tahri, France/South Africa International Premiere
Filmmaker Jihan El-Tahri explores the history of Gamal Abdel
Nasser, the revolutionary army officer whose decade-long reign as president of
Egypt saw him defy the West during the 1956 Suez Crisis, co-found the
international Non-Aligned Movement, and suffer a dramatic defeat to Israel in
the Six-Day War.
Our Last Tango (Un tango más)
German Kral, Germany/Argentina World Premiere
Argentina’s María Nieves and Juan Carlos Copes are the
best-known couple in tango’s history and shaped the dance like no others. They
danced passionately, loved and hated each other for almost 50 years, until one
day they separated, and left a gap in the tango scene. Now, almost at the end
of their lives, they tell their story for the first time. Executive produced by
Wim Wenders.
P.S. Jerusalem
Danae Elon, Canada/Israel World Premiere
Danae Elon grew up in Jerusalem. After many years of living
abroad, she moves back with her three young sons and French-Algerian husband
Philip who are fresh to the city. Over three years, she documents their
experiences, bearing witness to what makes Jerusalem so fiercely contested. A
looming presence is the memory of her late father, the esteemed author Amos
Elon, seen in home movies. Through the prism of one family’s life, the film
exposes a complex portrait of Jerusalem today.
The Reflektor Tapes
Kahlil Joseph, United
Kingdom World Premiere
The Reflektor Tapes is a fascinating insight into the making
of Arcade Fire's international #1 album Reflektor. The film recontextualizes
the album experience, transporting the viewer into a kaleidoscopic sonic and
visual landscape. The Reflektor Tapes blends never-before-seen personal
interviews and moments captured by the band to dazzling effect, and features 20
minutes of exclusive unseen footage, filmed only for cinema audiences.
Return of the Atom (Atomin paluu)
Mika Taanila and Jussi Eerola, Finland/Germany World
Premiere
Finland was the first country in the West to give permission
to build a new nuclear power plant after the Chernobyl disaster. The film
portrays the strange and stressful life in the small Finnish ‘nuclear town’
Eurajoki during an era of nuclear renaissance.
Sherpa
Jennifer Peedom, Australia/United Kingdom Canadian Premiere
Director Jennifer Peedom set out to uncover tension in the
2014 Everest climbing season from the Sherpas' point of view, and instead
captured a tragedy when an avalanche struck, killing 16 Sherpas. Sherpa tells
the story of how the Sherpas united after the tragedy in the face of fierce
opposition to reclaim the mountain they call Chomolungma.
Thru You Princess
Ido Haar, Israel International Premiere
In her late 30s, Samantha lives in New Orleans and works as
a caregiver. She often uploads her songs and musings online and none of her
clips get more than a few dozen hits. She doesn't imagine that someone, on the
other side of the world, is about to expand the number of listeners by
millions. Kutiman, an Israeli musician, discovered Samantha's songs on YouTube
and weaves them with audiovisual symphonies composed of musical clips that
people posted online.
Winter on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom
Evgeny Afineevsky,
Ukraine/USA/UnitedKingdom Canadian Premiere
Chronicling events that unfolded over 93 days in 2013 and
2014, Winter on Fire: Ukraine’s Fight for Freedom witnesses the formation of a
new civil rights movement in Ukraine. What started as peaceful student
demonstrations supporting European integration morphed into a full-fledged violent
revolution calling for the resignation of the nation’s president. The film
captures the remarkable mobilization of nearly a million citizens from across
the country protesting the corrupt political regime that utilized extreme force
against its own people to suppress their demands and freedom of
expression.
Women He’s Undressed
Gillian Armstrong, Australia International Premiere During
Hollywood’s golden age, the Australian known as Orry-Kelly was a costume
designer for an astonishing 282 films including classics like Some Like It Hot,
Casablanca, and An American in Paris. As a gay male during a closeted era, he
was also a keeper of secrets. Director Gillian Armstrong (Oscar and Lucinda;
Little Women) employs inventive recreations, interviews and film clips to
uncover his story.
MIDNIGHT MADNESS
Baskin
Can Evrenol, Turkey World Premiere
A squad of unsuspecting cops goes through a trapdoor to Hell
when they stumble upon a Black Mass in an abandoned building. The nightmarish
feature debut Baskin is the first-ever Midnight Madness film from Turkey.
The Devil’s Candy
Sean Byrne, USA World
Premiere
The director of the 2009 Midnight Madness People’s Choice
Award winner The Loved Ones is back with an equally fresh twist on the
supernatural genre. A struggling artist (Ethan Embry) and his family buy the
house of their dreams only to discover the property's mysterious dark past and
a former tenant who wants more than to simply come back home. From the
producers of Midnight Madness hits You’re Next and The Guest.
Midnight Madness Closing Night Film:
The Final Girls
Todd Strauss-Schulson, USA
International Premiere
Max (American Horror Story’s Taissa Farmiga) is a high
school senior whose mom (Malin Akerman) was a celebrated ’80s scream queen. At
a screening, Max and her friends are mysteriously transported inside her mom’s
most infamous movie, where they must fend off the camp counselors’ raging
hormones, battle a deranged machete-wielding killer and find a way to escape
the movie and get back home.
The Girl in the Photographs
Nick Simon, USA World
Premiere
Big-city glamour clashes with small-town values and a
killer’s knife, in this bloody cocktail of terror from director Nick Simon and
executive producer Wes Craven. Colleen’s life in the sleepy town of Spearfish
is disrupted when she starts receiving photographs of brutally murdered women.
Things get even crazier for Colleen when L.A. based celeb-photographer Peter
Hemmings (Kal Penn) returns to his hometown of Spearfish to investigate.
Midnight Madness Opening Night Film:
Green Room
Jeremy Saulnier, USA North American Premiere
Broke, tired and at each other’s throats after a cancelled
gig, a young punk rock band accepts a sketchy matinee show to get themselves
home. When they stumble upon something they weren’t supposed to witness, the
quartet is trapped in a terrifying siege. Directed by Jeremy Saulnier (of 2013
Cannes Film Festival FIPRESCI Prize winner Blue Ruin), the film stars Anton
Yelchin, Imogen Poots, Alia Shawkat, and Patrick Stewart.
-Green Room is preceded by the previously announced short
film The Chickening from directors Nick DenBoer and Davy Force.
Hardcore
Ilya Naishuller, Russia/USA
World Premiere
Resurrected with no recollection of his past, a cyborg named
Henry (the audience’s POV) and his ally, Jimmy (Sharlto Copley, District 9)
must fight through the streets of Moscow in pursuit of Henry’s kidnapped wife
in the world’s first action-adventure film to be entirely shot from the first person perspective.
The Mind’s Eye
Joe Begos, USA World Premiere
Joe Begos returns with a psychokinetic thriller about Zack
Connors (Graham Skipper), whose abilities have kept him off the grid for years
until he’s recruited by the mysterious Dr. Slovak. The snowy New England
landscape turns into a whirlwind of psychic rage, flying axes, and brutal
revenge as Zack does everything in his power to stop Dr. Slovak's deadly
descent into synthetically engineered telekinetic madness.
Southbound
Roxanne Benjamin, David Bruckner, Patrick Horvath and Radio
Silence, USA World Premiere
Five intertwining tales of terror unfold along an endless
desert highway. On a desolate stretch of road, weary travellers — two men on
the run from their past, a band on their way to the next gig, a man struggling
to get home, a brother in search of his long-lost sister and a family on
vacation — are forced to confront their worst fears and darkest secrets in
these interwoven tales of terror and remorse on the open road.
SPL 2 - A Time For Consequences
Soi Cheang, Hong Kong
International Premiere The anticipated follow-up to the bone-cracking
martial arts brawler SPL (also known as Sha Po Lung and Kill Zone) that debuted
in the programme in 2005 stars Midnight Madness discovery Tony Jaa (Ong Bak).
When an undercover cop (Wu Jing) has his cover blown and is thrown into a
prison in Thailand run by a crime syndicate, he must team up with a prison
guard (Jaa) to bust out and get revenge on those who wronged him. Filled with
gun battles, prison riots and frenetic fight choreography, SPL 2 might knock
the wind out of you — and possibly a few teeth.
Yakuza Apocalypse (Gokudo Daisenso)
Takashi Miike, Japan
North American Premiere
Japanese cinematic extremist Takashi Miike returns to his
gonzo roots with this mind-melter that finds room for vampires, gangsters,
monsters, martial arts and even a yakuza knitting circle. A true master and MVP
of the programme, Miike wowed previous Midnight Madness audiences with such
hits as Fudoh: The New Generation, Audition, The City of Lost Souls, Ichi the
Killer, Zebraman, The Great Yokai War and Sukiyaki Western Django. He returns
with a film too wild to be described and too fun to be missed!
VANGUARD
Collective Invention (Dolyeon Byeoni)
Kwon Oh-kwang, South Korea World Premiere
Young and unemployed Gu is desperate to make some money and
participates in a clinical trial for a pharmaceutical company’s new drug. As an
unknown side effect, he slowly transforms into a fish. This bizarre situation
becomes Korea’s hottest news and fish man Gu is catapulted into the spotlight
and becomes a superstar, only to fall from grace just as quickly.
Demon
Marcin Wrona, Poland/Israel World Premiere
Peter is a stranger in the hometown of his future wife
Janet. As a wedding gift from the bride's grandfather, he receives a piece of
land where the two can build a house and raise a happy family. While preparing
the land for construction, Peter finds hidden bones of human bodies in the
ground beneath his new property. Then very strange things begin to happen.
Der Nachtmahr
AKIZ, Germany North American Premiere
When 17-year -old Tina passes out at a party, she assumes it
was just the side-effect of her wild lifestyle on the decadent Berlin-party
scene. Soon she becomes unsettled and nervously manic as a mysterious ugly
creature starts to haunt her, in both her dreams and waking hours, and nobody
believes her.
Evolution
Lucile Hadžihalilović, France World Premiere
A 10-year-old boy
discovers a dead body in the sea just before he is brought to the hospital for
a mysterious injection. Before long, something appears to be growing inside of
him.
February
Osgood Perkins,
USA/Canada World Premiere
In February,
beautiful and haunted Joan makes a bloody and determined pilgrimage across a
frozen landscape toward a prestigious all girls prep school, where Rose and Kat
find themselves stranded after their parents mysteriously fail to retrieve them
for winter break. As Joan gets closer,
terrifying visions begin plaguing Kat while Rose watches in horror as she
becomes possessed by an unseen evil force.
Lace Crater
Harrison Atkins, USA World Premiere
On a weekend trip to the Hamptons with friends, Ruth
(Lindsay Burdge) encounters a mysterious ghost (Peter Vack) haunting the guest
house. One thing leads to another and
they find themselves in the throes of an unexpected one-night stand. Soon, Ruth begins suffering from a bizarre
sexually-transmitted disease that leaves doctors and friends confused and
frightened. As her body and social
connections begin to disintegrate, she must find a way to reconcile her
condition with the world around her, or risk losing herself to a void from
which she may never emerge.
Love
Gaspar Noé, France North American Premiere
January 1, early morning. The telephone rings. Murphy wakes
up next to his young wife and two-year-old child. He listens to his voicemail:
Electra’s mother, sick with worry, wants to know whether he has heard from her
daughter. Electra’s been missing for a long time. She's afraid something really
bad has happened to her. Over the course of a long rainy day, Murphy finds
himself alone in his apartment, reminiscing about the greatest love affair of
his life: his two years with Electra. A burning passion full of promises,
games, excess and mistakes.
Men & Chicken (Mænd og Høns)
Anders Thomas Jensen, Denmark North American Premiere
Men & Chicken revolves around two special-natured
brothers, Elias and Gabriel (Mads Mikkelsen and David Dencik). Upon their
father’s passing, they find out through their father’s will that they are
adopted. Elias and Gabriel decide to seek out their natural father and set out
for the island Ork, where their biological father lives. Here they discover a
most paralyzing, yet liberating truth about themselves and their family.
My Big Night (Mi Gran Noche)
Álex de la Iglesia, Spain World Premiere
The story unfolds amidst a frenzied and lavish New Year's
Eve television special, taped during a sweltering hot August in Madrid. An
unemployed Jose is sent to join hundreds of extras cooped up on set, day and
night, as they hysterically celebrate the fake coming of the New Year — over
and over again. The star of the show,
Alphonso, is a charismatic ratings-chasing diva; and Adán, a young Latino
singer, is being hounded by fans that are trying to blackmail him.
The Missing Girl
A.D. Calvo, USA World Premiere The Missing Girl tells the
story of Mort, the lonely and disillusioned owner of a comic book shop, and
Ellen, the emotionally disruptive, aspiring graphic novelist he's hired. The
story involves the search for a girl who isn’t missing and the discovery that
it's never too late for late bloomers.
Veteran
Ryoo Seung-wan, South Korea North American Premiere A tough
cop targets the tyrannical heir to a mega-corporation in this hard-hitting
thriller from South Korean cult auteur Ryoo Seung-wan (Crying Fist, City of
Violence).
MASTERS
11 Minutes (11 Minut)
Jerzy Skolimowski, Poland/Ireland North American Premiere
A jealous husband out of control, his sexy actress wife, a
sleazy Hollywood director, a reckless drug messenger, a disoriented young
woman, an ex-con hot dog vendor, a troubled student on a mysterious mission, a
high-rise window cleaner on an illicit break, an elderly sketch artist, a
hectic paramedics team and a group of hungry nuns: a cross-section of
contemporary urbanites whose lives and loves intertwine. They live in an unsure
world where anything could happen at any time. An unexpected chain of events
can seal many fates in a mere 11 minutes.
The Assassin (Nie Yinniang)
Hou Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan North American Premiere
Ninth century China. A general’s ten-year-old daughter Nie
Yinniang is abducted by a nun who transforms her into an exceptional assassin.
Years later, she is sent back to the land of her birth with orders to kill the
man to whom she was promised. Nie Yinniang must now choose between the man she
loves and the sacred way of the righteous assassins.
Bleak Street (La calle de la amargura)
Arturo Ripstein, Mexico/Spain North American Premiere
Mexican maestro Arturo Ripstein (Deep Crimson) directs this
true-crime story about the bizarre 2009 murders of midget-wrestling brothers
Alberto and Alejandro Jiménez. Starring Patricia Reyes Spíndola, Nora Velázquez
and Sylvia Pasquel.
Blood Of My Blood (Sangue Del Mil Sangue)
Marco Bellocchio, Italy
International Premiere
Italian master Marco
Bellocchio (Fists in the Pocket, Vincere) returns with this haunting, enigmatic
tale that takes us from the 17th century to the present day as it traces the
dark history of a cursed monastery.
Cemetery of Splendour (Rak Ti Khon Kaen)
Apichatpong Weerasethakul,
Thailand/United Kingdom/France/Germany/Malaysia North American Premiere
A young medium and a middle-aged hospital volunteer
investigate a case of mass sleeping sickness that may have supernatural roots
in the gorgeous, mysterious, and gently humourous new film from Palme d’Or
winner Apichatpong Weerasethakul (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past
Lives).
Every Thing Will Be Fine
Wim Wenders, Germany/Canada/France/Sweden/Norway North
American Premiere
A winter evening. A car on a country road. It’s snowing,
visibility is poor. Out of nowhere, a sled comes sliding down a hill. The car
comes to a grinding halt. The driver is Tomas, a writer. He cannot be blamed
for the tragic accident. It's also not young Christopher’s fault, who should
have taken better care of his brother. Tomas falls into a depression. The film
follows Tomas and his efforts to give meaning to his life again. Starring James
Franco, Charlotte Gainsbourg and Rachel McAdams.
Francofonia
Alexander Sokurov,
Germany/France/Netherlands North American Premiere
Master filmmaker
Alexander Sokurov (Russian Ark) transforms a portrait of the Louvre museum into
a magisterial, centuries-spanning reflection on the relation between art,
culture and power.
In the Shadow of Women
Philippe Garrel, France North American Premiere A Parisian
documentary filmmaker becomes embroiled in a romantic triangle in this luminous
love story from the great director Philippe Garrel (Frontier of Dawn, Regular
Lovers).
Jafar Panahi's Taxi
Jafar Panahi, Iran Canadian Premiere
Internationally acclaimed director Jafar Panahi (This is Not
a Film) drives a yellow cab through the vibrant streets of Tehran, picking up a
diverse (and yet representative) group of passengers in a single day. Each man,
woman, and child candidly expresses his or her own view of the world, while
being interviewed by the curious and gracious driver/director. His camera,
placed on the dashboard of his mobile film studio, captures a spirited slice of
Iranian society while also brilliantly redefining the borders of comedy, drama
and cinema.
Our Little Sister (Umimachi Diary)
Hirokazu Kore-eda, Japan North American Premiere
Three sisters — Sachi, Yoshino and Chika — live together in
a large house in the city of Kamakura. When their father — absent from the
family home for the last 15 years — dies, they travel to the countryside for
his funeral, and meet their shy teenage half-sister. Bonding quickly with the
orphaned Suzu, they invite her to live with them. Suzu eagerly agrees, and a
new life of joyful discovery begins for the four siblings. Starring Haruka Ayase,
Masami Nagasawa, Kaho and Suzu Hirose.
The Pearl Button (El Botón de Nácar)
Patricio Guzmán, Chile/France/Spain North American Premiere
The great Chilean filmmaker Patricio Guzmán (The Battle of
Chile, Nostalgia for the Light) chronicles the history of the indigenous
peoples of Chilean Patagonia, whose decimation by colonial conquest prefigured
the brutality of the Pinochet regime.
Rabin, The Last Day
Amos Gitaï, Israel/France North American Premiere
Lauded director Amos Gitaï (Kippur) delves into the prelude
and aftermath of the 1995 assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
in this gripping docudrama.
Right Now, Wrong Then
Hong Sang-soo, South Korea North American Premiere
The delightful new film from Festival favourite Hong Sang-soo
(In Another Country) presents two variations on a potentially fateful romantic
encounter between a filmmaker and a painter, tracing each to its own very
distinct outcome.
TIFF CINEMATEQUE
Adieu
Philippine Jacques Rozier, France/Italy
Set under the looming
shadow of the Algerian war, Adieu Philippine follows a young television
cameraman who meets and attempts to seduce two beautiful, inseparable young
women. The trio’s frolicking fun takes them from the streets of Paris to a
Corsican holiday tinged with melancholy.
Harlan County, USA
Barbara Kopple, USA
Harlan County, USA chronicles a fiercely contested labour
battle in Kentucky during the early 1970s. The strike began when the miners
working for the Eastover Mining Co. joined the UMW, and its corporate parent,
Duke Power, refused to sign the standard union contract. By living with the
180-odd families involved in the strike, Kopple shows the backbreaking burdens
of the miners’ life in the best of times and the looming fear of destitution in
the worst. While the film is unabashedly partisan, it’s worth remembering that
the company’s refusal to sign a contract was condemned by the National Labor
Relations Board and that the corporation agreed to sign only under heavy
pressure from federal mediators.
The Mask (Eyes of Hell)
Julian Roffman, Canada
Newly restored by
TIFF and the 3-D Film Archive, director Julian Roffman’s deliciously creepy
tale about a haunted tribal mask was the first feature-length horror movie and
first feature-length 3-D film produced in Canada.
-Using elements from the best
remaining 35mm prints, TIFF and the 3-D Film Archive have digitally restored
the film’s original cut in both anaglyph and polarized 2K 3D. The Mask was
restored with the support of TIFF's donors and members, who contributed to a
crowd-sourced fundraising campaign to launch the project.
The Memory of Justice
Marcel Ophüls, United Kingdom/USA/Germany
This epic documentary by Marcel Ophüls (The Sorrow and the
Pity) meditates on Western society's concepts of justice through comparisons of
war crimes in Vietnam, Algeria, and Nazi Germany.
-
Restoration by the Academy Film Archive in
association with Paramount Pictures and The Film Foundation. Restoration
funding provided by The Material World Charitable Foundation, Righteous Persons
Foundation, and The Film Foundation.
River of Grass
Kelly Reichardt, USA
Shot on 16mm, the story follows the misadventures of
disaffected housewife Cozy, played by Lisa Bowman, and the aimless layabout
Lee, played by indie legend Larry Fessenden, who also acted as a producer and
the film's editor. Described by Reichardt as “a road movie without the road, a
love story without the love, and a crime story without the crime,” River of
Grass introduces viewers to a director already in command of her craft and
defining her signature themes.
Preserved by UCLA Film &
Television Archive in conjunction with Oscilloscope Laboratories and Sundance
Institute. Preservation Funding provided by Oscilloscope Laboratories, Sundance
Institute, TIFF, and a number of very generous Kickstarter backers.
Rocco and His Brothers (Rocco e i Suoi Fratelli)
Luchino Visconti, Italy
Luchino Visconti's
magisterial family saga — about an impoverished Sicilian clan who arrive in
Milan in search of a better life — returns in this glorious new restoration,
featuring two previously censored scenes.
Restored by Cineteca di Bologna
at L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory in association with Titanus, TF1 Droits
Audiovisuels and The Film Foundation. Restoration funding provided by Gucci and
The Film Foundation.
The Round-Up (Szegénylegények )
Miklós Jancsó, Hungary
The first of Hungarian master Miklós Jancsó's historical
epics is set in an isolated concentration camp in the 1860s, where imperial
authorities use brutal methods to discover the nationalist rebels hiding within
the ragtag group of prisoners.
A presentation of the Hungarian
National Film Fund and the Hungarian National Digital Film Archive and Film
Institute (MaNDA). Restoration 2K image and sound by the Hungarian Filmlab from
35mm negative.
Titicut Follies
Frederick Wiseman, USA
Titicut Follies is a stark and graphic portrayal of the
conditions that existed at the State Prison for the Criminally Insane at
Bridgewater, Massachusetts. The film documents the various ways the inmates are
treated by the guards, social workers and psychiatrists.
Please visit www.tiff.net for more info
The 2015 Toronto
International Film Festival runs Sept. 10-20.