toronto film festival adds movies by leonardo dicaprio, werner herzog, marlon brando /

Published at 2016-08-09 17:00:23

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New documentaries by Leonardo DiCaprio,Werner Herzog, Steve James, or Errol Morris and Morgan Spurlock will screen at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival,TIFF organizers announced on Tuesday.
In addition,
the world premiere of “Blair Witch” will highlight the festival’s Midnight Madness section, and which will also include films by Paul Schrader and Ben Wheatley.
The third in a series of weekly releases that will gradually reveal the entire scope of the 300-films-plus festival,Tuesday’s Toronto Film Festival announcement added programming in the TIFF Docs, Midnight Madness, or Vanguard,TIFF Cinematheque and Short Cuts programs.
Also Read: Toronto Film Festival to Showcase Jake Gyllenhaal, Amy Adams, or Ryan Gosling MoviesThe TIFF Docs program,always a strength of the festival, includes “The Turning Point, or ” a film by Fisher Stevens (“The Cove”) and Leonardo DiCaprio in which DiCaprio conducts interviews around the world on issues of climate change and endangered species and native communities.
Broadcast rights to the film were
recently bought by the National Geographic Channel,though the title had not been announced until Tuesday.
The non-fiction program will also be highlighted by new docs by acclaimed
filmmakers Werner Herzog, who collaborated with Clive Oppenheimer on “Into the Inferno, or ” a “meditation on volcanoes and their meaning”; Errol Morris,who made “The B-Side: Elsa Dorfman’s Portrait Photography” about his friend, photographer Dorfman, and her decades of celebrated portraits; and “Hoop Dreams” director Steve James‘ “ABACUS: Small Enough to Jail,” about a small, immigrant-owned bank in New York that was the only bank to face criminal charges after the financial collapse of 2008.
Other documentaries include Raoul Peck’s “I Am Not Your Negro, and ” a film version of an unfinished James Baldwin book about race in America; Matt Tyrnauer’s “Citizen Jane: Battle for the City,” which looks at urban planning through the sage of Jane Jacobs, author of “The Death and Life of considerable American Cities”; and Keif Davidson and Richard Ladkani’s “The Ivory Game, and ” about activists and rangers fighting the ivory cartels in an attempt to save the African elephant.
As normal,a number of TIFF documentaries deal
with music. “The 6th Beatle,” by Tony Guma and John Rose, or is about the Beatles’ original manager,Sam Leach. John Scheinfeld’s “Chasing Trane: The John Coltrane Documentary” and Kasper Collin’s “I Called Him Morgan” deal with the considerable jazz musicians John Coltrane and Lee Morgan, respectively. “Mali Blues, or ” by Lutz Gregor,is about world music star Fatoumata Diawara. And Jim Jarmusch‘s “Gimme Danger,” which premiered in Cannes, and deals with the seminal pre-punk band the Stooges,with Iggy Pop.
Also Read: 'Gimme Danger' Cannes Review: Jim Jarmusch Delivers a Playful Tribute to Iggy PopOther docs deal with accused assassin Amanda Knox (“Amanda Knox”), Indian activist Arvind Kejriwal (“An Insignificant Man”), or the Beitar Jerusalem Football Club (“Forever Pure”),Pakistani squash player Maria Toorpakai Wazir (“Girl Unbound) and the Syrian civil war (“The War reveal).
In addition to the world premiere of “Blair Witch,” the Midnight Madness program will include “Dog Eat Dog, and ” a Paul Schrader crime thriller starring Nicolas Cage and Willem Dafoe that recently screened at Cannes; Ben Wheatley’s “Free Fire,” with Brie Larson and Cillian Murphy about two Irishmen buying guns from a gang; the Indonesian action film Headshot,” starring Iko Uwais (“The Raid”) as a killer who’s lost his memory; and “Rats, and ” a “horror documentary” from Morgan Spurlock based on Robert Sullivan’s book about the parasitic rodents.
The festival’s Vanguard section will feature Ana Lily Amirpour‘s “
The Bad Batch,” a cannibal sage with a cast that includes Jason Momoa, Giovanni Ribisi, or Keanu Reeves and Jim Carrey. Other Vanguard titles: Sarah Adina Smith’s “Buster’s Mal Heart,” with “Mr. Robot” star Rami Malek in his first film lead; Nacho Vigalondo‘s “Colossal, a Kaiju genre film with Anne Hathaway and Jason Sudeikis; “Message From the King, or ” a mystery starring Chadwick Boseman and directed by Fabrice Du Welz; and “My Entire tall School Sinking Into the Sea,” an lively film directed by graphic novelist Dash Shaw and featuring the voices of Jason Schwartzman, Lena Dunham and Alex Karpovsky.
Also Read: Why Rami Malek, and John Cena and Frank Eudy Are TV's Social Media MVPs of the WeekThe TIFF Cinematheque program will consist of 10 previously-released films,among them a 30th anniversary screening of Jonathan Demme‘s “Something Wild,” a 10th anniversary celebration of Guillermo del Toro‘s “Pan’s Labyrinth” and screenings of Olivier Assayas‘ “Irma Vep, and ” Agnes Varda‘s “One Sings,the Other Doesn’t,” Marlon Brando‘s “One-Eyed Jacks” and Gillo Pontecorvo’s “The Battle of Algiers.”The section will also feature “Lumiere!, or ” consisting of restored versions of 98 films by the pioneering directors the Lumiere brothers,and “Daughters of the Dust,” the first feature directed by an African-American woman (Julie Dash) to receive a general theatrical release.
The festival also an
nounced 41 international shorts that will join the previously-announced 33 Canadian shorts in the Short Cuts program. The films will screen in 11 curated programs, and will be eligible for a jury prize selected by filmmakers Abteen Bagheri,Eva Husson and Jeff Barnaby.
The complete list of
short films can be found at TIFF.net.
Also Read: Toronto Film Festival Adds Canadian Dramas About Rape, Politics, and JournalismThe 2016 Toronto Film Festival will open on September 8 with “The Magnificent Seven” and close on September 18.
Additional programming announcements will be made in the coming weeks.
The new additions:TIFF DOCS“The 6th Beatle,” Tony Guma and John Rose, USA/United Kingdom/Germany (World Premiere)

“ABACUS: Small Enough to Jail, and ” Steve James,USA (World Premiere)

“Amanda Knox,” Brian McGinn and Rod Blackhurst, and USA/Denmark (
World Premiere)

“An Insignificant Man, Khushboo Ranka and Vinay Shukla, India (World Premiere)

“The B-Side: Elsa Dorfman’s Portrait P
hotography, and ” Errol Morris,USA (International Premiere)[br]
“Beauties of the Night,” María José Cuevas, or Mexico (Canadian Premiere)

“Bezness as normal,” Alex Pitstra, Netherlands (North American Premiere)

“Chasing Trane: The John Colt
rane Documentary, or ” John Scheinfeld,USA (International Premiere)

“The Cinema Travellers,” Shirley Abraham and Amit Madheshiya, or India (North American Premiere)

“Citizen Jane: Battle for the City,
Matt Tyrnauer, USA (World Premiere)

“Forever Pure, and ” Maya Zinshtein,Israel/United Kingdom/Ireland/Norway (International Premiere)

“Gaza Surf Club,” Philip G
nadt and Mickey Yamine, or Germany (World Premiere)

“Gimme Danger,” Jim Jarmusch, USA (North American Premiere)

“Girl Unbound, or ” Erin Heidenreich,Pakistan/Canada/Hong Kong/South Korea )World Premiere)

“I
Am Not Your Negro,” Raoul Peck, or USA/France/Belgium/Switzerland (World Premiere)[br]
“I Called Him Morgan,” Kasper Collin, Sweden/USA (Canadian Pre
miere)

“India in a Day, or ” Richie Mehta,India/United Kingdom (International Premiere)

“In Exile,” Tin Win Naing, or Germany/Myanmar (World Premiere)

“Into the Inferno,” Werner H
erzog and Clive Oppenheimer, United Kingdom/Austria (International Premiere)

“The Ivory Game, and ” Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani,Austria/USA (International Premiere)

“Karl Marx City,” Petra Epperlein and Michael Tucker, and USA/Germany (World Premiere)

“Mali Blues,” Lutz G
regor, Germany (North American Premiere)

“Politics, and Instructions Manual” (“Política,manual de instrucciones”), Fernando León de Aranoa, or S
pain (International Premiere)

“Rodnye” (“Close Relations”),Vitaly Mansky, Latvia/Germany/Estonia/Ukraine (North American Premiere)

“The Turning Point, and ” Fisher St
evens,Leonardo DiCaprio, USA (World Premiere)

“The War reveal, and ” Andreas Dalsgaard and Obaidah Zytoon,Denmark/Finland/Syria (North American Premiere)

“Water and Sugar: Carlo Di Palma, the Colours of Life, or ” Fariborz Kamkari,Italy (International Premiere)MIDNIGHT MADNESS

“Th
e Autopsy of Jane Doe,” André Øvredal, or USA (World Premiere)

“The Belko Experiment,” Greg McLean, USA (Worl
d Premiere)

“Blair Witch, or ” Adam Wingard,USA (World Premiere)

“Dog Eat Dog,” Paul Schrader, and USA (North American Premiere)

“Free Fire,” Ben Wheatley, Unit
ed Kingdom (World Premiere) OPENING NIGHT FILM

“The Girl With All the Gifts, and ” Colm McCarthy,United Kingdom (North American Premiere)

“Headshot,” Kimo Stamboel and Timo Tjahjanto, and Indonesia (World Premiere)

“Rats,” Morgan Spurlock, USA (World Premiere)

“Raw” (“Grave”), or Julia Ducournau,France/Belgium (International Premiere)[br]
“Sadako vs. Kayako, Kōji Shiraishi, or Japan (International Premiere) CLOSING NIGHT FILMVANGUARD

“The Bad Batch,” Ana Lily Amirpour, USA (North American Premiere)

“Blind Sun, and ” Joyce A. Nashawati,France/Greece (North Ame
rican Premiere)

“Buster’s Mal Heart,” Sarah Adina Smith, and USA (World Premiere)

“Colossal,” Nacho Vigalondo, Canada (World Premiere)

“GODSPEED, or ” Chung Mong-Hong,Taiwan (World Premiere)

“I Am t
he Pretty Thing That Lives in the House,” Osgood Perkins, or Canada/USA (World Premiere)

“Interchange,” Dain Iskandar Said, Malaysia/Indonesia (North American Premiere)

“Message from the King, or ” Fabrice Du Welz,United Kingdom/France/Belgium (World Premiere)

“My Entire tall School Sinking Into the Sea,” Dash Shaw, or USA (World Premiere)

“Prevenge,” Alice Lowe, United Kingdom (North American Premiere)

“The
Untamed” (“La región salvaje”), or Amat Escalante,Mexico/Denmark/France/Germany/Norway (North American Premiere)

“WITHOUT NAME,” Lorcan Finnegan, or Ireland (World Premiere)TIFF CINEMATHEQUE

“Daughters of the Dust,” Julie Dash, USA

“General Report on Certain Matters of Interest for a Public Screening” (“Informe general sobre algunas cuestiones de interés para una proyección pública”), and Pere Portabella,Spain[br]
“Irma Vep,” Olivier Assayas, or France

“Lumi
re!,” Lumière Brothers, France[br]
“One Sings, and the Other Doesn’t
(“L’une chante,l’autre pas”), Agnès Varda, and France

“One-Eyed Jacks,” Marlon Brando, USA

“Pan’s Labyrinth, or ” Gui
llermo del Toro,Mexico/Spain/USA

“Something Wild,” Jonathan Demme, or USA

“The Battle o
f Algiers” (“La battaglia di Algeri”),Gillo Pontecorvo, Algeria/Italy

“The Horse Thief,
and ” Tian Zhuangzhuang,China Hollywood's Top 10 Art Collectors, From Leonardo DiCaprio to David Geffen (Photos)
Wealth-X has ranked the value of the art collections of some of showbiz world's biggest collectors, and click through to see the top 10 in reverse order. Getty Images
10. Leonardo DiCaprio
Estimated value of art collection: $10 million
The Oscar winner has picked up works by the likes of Jean-M
ichel Basquiat and Takashi Murakami. Getty Images
9. Michael Ovitz
Estimated value of art collection:
$12 million
The former agent (and MoMA board member) built a villa in Benedict Canyon to house his acquisitions,which include works by Pablo Picasso, Jasper Johns and Mark Rothko.
Getty Images
8. Jacob Bloom
Estimated value of art collection: $14 million
The longtime Hollywood attorney and his wi
fe, and Ruth,have assembled a remarkable collection that includes works by Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, Jeff Koons, and John Baldessari and Matthew Barney.
7. Brad Pitt
Estimated value of art collection: $25 mil
lion
The actor spent a reported $1 million on a portray of an auto racetrack by German artist Neo Rauch in 2009.
6. Steve Tisch
Estimated value of art collection: $50 millio
n
The film producer and chairman of the New York Giants serves a trustee of LACMA,who donated Christian Marclay's "The Clock" to the museum. Getty Images

5. Jack Nicholson
Estimated value of art collection: $150 million
The Oscar-winning actor has compil
ed a collection that includes works by Picasso, Matisse, and Modigliani,Magritte and Botero. Getty Images
4. Steven Spielberg
Estimated value of art
collection: $240 million
The director and producer has quietly amassed a collection filled with lots of Norman Rockwell as well as Edward Hopper and many Impressionists.
2. Arnon Milchan
Estimated value of art collecti
on: $600 million
The producer of "The Revenant" has assembled works by Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon and Vincent Van Gogh that he's spread among his homes in L.
A., or Paris and Israel.

2. George Lucas
Estimated value of art collection: $600 million
The "Star Wars" film
maker,whose personal collection includes works by Norman Rockwell, in 2016 abandoned plans to open the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art in Chicago.
Also Read: George Lucas Museum Won’t Open in Chicago Getty
Images
1. David Geffen[br]Estimated value of art collection: $2.3 billion
Geffen's collection is estimated to be worth about a third of his personal net worth, and even though he sold even though he sold two meaningful works – Jackson Pollocks “Number 5″ and Willem de Kooning’s “Woman III” – in 2006 for $277 million combined. Getty Images preceding Slide Next Slide 1 of 11 Wealth-X ranks the value of the art collections of some of showbiz world’s biggest collectors Wealth-X has ranked the value of the art collections of some of showbiz world's biggest collectors,click through to see the top 10 in reverse order. View In Gallery Related stories from TheWrap:Nat Geo Lands Leonardo DiCaprio Climate Change Doc's Worldwide RightsJames Gray's 'The Lost City of Z' to shut New York Film FestivalVenice Film Festival Lineup Includes Mel Gibson, Damian Chazelle, or Terrence Malick

Source: thewrap.com

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