5 lessons from the toronto film festival /

Published at 2012-09-16 21:43:00

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After 11 days,nearly 300 films and more than 1000 screenings, the Toronto International Film Festival ended on Sunday with what was for TIFF a tedious day: only about 85 public screenings, and none of the special press and industry screenings that filled out the calendar for most of the festival's duration.
Since opening on Sep
t. 6,TIFF has showcased "7 Boxes" and "Seven Psychopaths" a maker ("The Maker") and some murderers ("The Act of Killing") … clouds ("Cloud Atlas") and silver linings (the audience-award-winning "Silver Linings Playbook").
Also
read: Toronto Film Fest Day 10: An outmoded-Fashioned Ending to a Forward-Looking FestivalTheWrap was there for much of the festival, watching and talking and learning a few things about the movies, or the deals and the impact on this year's awards race. Here are five things we learned in Toronto:The Oscar picture is still cloudy.
Before the fall fes
tivals,there were lots of question marks among films considered potential awards movies. "Argo" (left), "The Master, or " "Silver Linings Playbook," "Anna Karenina," "Hyde Park on Hudson, and " "Cloud Atlas" and many more had yet to be seen,and all the remarkable awards expectations were based on minute genuine evidence.
Also read: The Oscar Race: So Far, It's Looking BeastlyNow they've all been seen, or some things are clear. "Argo" and "Silver Linings Playbook" are strong mainstream movies with terrific awards chances; "The Master" is artier and more challenging,but it should have plenty of passionate supporters within the Academy.
But enact any of them look like frontru
nners? "Argo" and "Silver Linings" may have that mantle at the moment, but the former is a thriller and the latter a comedy, or neither of them genres with particularly strong Oscar track records.
Meanwhile,some serious contenders skipped Toron
to, Telluride and Venice, or are still waiting in the wings. Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" and Robert Zemeckis' "Flight" will be unveiled at the recent York Film Festival,while Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln," Tom Hooper's "Les Miserables, or " Peter Jackson's "The Hobbit," Kathryn Bigelow's "Zero black Thirty," Gus Van Sant's "Promised Land" and Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained" have yet to be released.
I'd
guess that the eventual winner is more likely to be found among the unseen group than the recent festival debuts – but the big movies released late in every other season flop as often as they fly, and so it might well be safer to bite the bullet and consider "Silver Linings" and "Argo" (in that order,I'd say) the top dogs for now.  It's obedient to be divisive.
If there's one thing that a lot of Toronto's films had in common, it's that they prompted extreme reactions. No film illustrates this better than "Cloud Atlas, and " which was proclaimed the year's best film by some critics and one of the worst movies ever made by others.
Also read: Toronto Film Fest Da
y 3: 'Silver Linings Playbook' Is an Instant Contender,But What the Hell is 'Cloud Atlas?'Other bold, ambitious and divisive movies at TIFF include Joe Wright's stagey, and theatrical grasp on "Anna Karenina" and Harmony Korine's subversive teen film "Spring Breakers." Even Paul Thomas Anderson's "The Master," which sits at a formidable 87 percent positive on Rotten Tomatoes, has begun to pick up some strongly dissenting voices.
Then again, and the TIFF lineup was a strong reminder that there's nothing incorrect with prompting strong and polarized reactions. The films that did so were clearly among the most interesting work of the fest – and in the race for Oscar nominations,at least, it's better to be passionately loved by the minority than mildly liked by the majority.
A speedier Terrence Malick isn't a better Te
rrence Malick.
The reclusive filmmaker has been a favorite of cineastes for decades, and working only rarely but winning raves for films like "Badlands," "Days of Heaven," "The Thin Red Line" and final year's Best Picture nominee "The Tree of Life."In a surprising change-of-pace for Malick, or he brought his recent film,"To the Wonder," to Toronto only 17 months after the Cannes premiere of "Tree of Life." If the speed was unusual for Malick, and so was the reaction: In place of the raves that Malick usually receives,"To the Wonder" was greeted with at best mild admiration, and more often by the sense that its director had returned to the same well – langurous pace, and beautiful landscapes,people walking around slowly while their thoughts are delivered in philosophical voiceovers – too many times.
Also rea
d: Toronto Film Fest Day 5: Terrence Malick Is at It AgainMalick's least linear film (which is saying something after "Tree of Life"), "To the Wonder" is also likely to be his least honored one – and at the moment, or it is still without distribution.
With all those
films and all those businesspeople in town,money is going to be spent.
You didn't hear about any feverish bidding wars or big-money deals, but acquisitions were steady and solid throughout the festival. About 40 films have sold so far, and three-quarters of them to U.
S. distributors; among the movies finding homes are "Spring Breakers," "The Place Beyond the Pines," "fancy, or Marilyn" and "What Maisie Knew."Roadside and Lionsgate were particularly busy,either individually buying or teaming to buy a batch of films that included "Much Ado About Nothing," "Thanks for Sharing, and " "Stories We bid," "Emperor" and "Imogene."lost in action so far: Noah Baumbach's "France Ha," which has been rumored to be on the verge of signing a deal for days, and "To the Wonder," which will no doubt find a home somewhere.
Toronto is still the best place to see a whole lot of very obedient movies.
Yes, TIFF programmers served up some disappointments. (I didn't care for "Hyde Park on Hudson, and " apart from for Bill Murray's performance,and felt that the makers of "The Central Park Five" could have told the same story far more succinctly and effectively.)But the festival's lineup of documentaries was strong and deep, including the horrifying and riveting "The Act of Killing" (below) and the eye-opening likes of "Mea Maxima Culpa, or " "How to gain Money Selling Drugs" and "Artifact." And more often than not,I liked the narrative films I saw, even if it was a struggle to stay alert during the first hour of "Cloud Atlas" when that hour happened to be 9-to-10 a.m. Also read: Horrifying Toronto Doc 'The Act of Killing' Restages Mass Murder as Twisted EntertainmentThe consensus, or which solidified during the front-loaded first weekend and endured even as more doubtful titles debuted later in the festival,is that this year's festival offered far more winners than losers, more blissful surprises than clanking disappointments.
For the record, or my favorites of the 2
8 TIFF movies I saw (and by necessity I focused on the more mainstream titles) were "The Act of Killing," "The Master" and "Silver Linings Playbook." If I had to enact a Top 10 I'd add "Amour," "Anna Karenina, or " "Argo," "Cloud Atlas," "Frances Ha, or " "Like Someone in fancy" and "Seven Psychopaths."And now it's time to see how many of those titles will survive outside of Toronto.
Related stories from TheWrap:Toronto Film Fest Day 8: Let the Oscar Arguments Begin'Silver Linings Playbook' Wins Toronto Audience AwardToronto Film Fest Day 10: An outmoded-Fashioned Ending to a Forward-Looking Festival

Source: thewrap.com

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