Because the Toronto International Film Festival offers nearly 300 feature films within a concentrated 11-day span, its impossible to view more than a fraction of the free-wheeling, there-has-to-be-something-for-everyone event. That said, over the course of a week, I watched nearly 40 films, not counting the nearly two dozen movies seen earlier, mostly at Cannes. So, having viewed roughly 20 percent of what Toronto has to offer, heres a sliver of what to anticipate afterward (though there are many left to see, as a few high-profile films dont appear on this list):
Most recommended upcoming releases:
- Arrival (opening in the U.S. on November 11)
- Elle (November 11, review)
- The Handmaiden (October 21, review)
- I, Daniel Blake (to be determined, review)
- Jackie (December 9)
- La La Land (December 16, review)
- Manchester by the Sea (November 18)
- Paterson (December 28)
- Old Stone (November 30)
- The Red Turtle (November 18 and nationwide in 2017, review)
- Toni Erdmann (December 25, review)
The best films that dont have North American distribution thus far and for festivalgoers to look out for:
- Barakah Meets Barakah, a social comedy/romance from Saudi Arabia (review)
- Heal the Living, a low-key, beautifully-filmed drama of death and second chances, starring an all-star French-language cast
- In Between, three single Palestinian women living together in the big city, Tel Aviv
- Karl Marx City, a documentary that journeys back to the surveillance state of East Germany as its co-director investigates whether her father was an informer for the state
- The Rehearsal, an absorbing adaptation of Eleanor Cattons debut novel, brilliantly acted by a young cast
- The War Show, a remarkable documentary of the Syrian civil war, told through the on-the-scene footage of a close-knit group of activists
- White Sun, from Nepal, a family drama and a microcosm of the country, post-civil war
Best director:
- Maren Ade: Toni Erdmann
- Damien Chazelle: La La Land
- Ken Loach, I, Daniel Blake
- Jim Jarmusch: Paterson
- Paul Verhoeven: Elle
- Denis Villeneuve: Arrival
- Thomas Vinterberg: The Commune (review)
- Johnny Ma: Old Stone
Noteworthy new filmmaker:
- Andreas Dalsgaard and Obaidah Zytoon: The War Show
- Johnny Ma: Old Stone, which proves the film noir lives on (and takes place in China)
- William Oldroyd: Lady Macbeth, a lean adaptation of the novel by Nikolai Leskov, featuring one of the coldest, most calculating female antagonists in years
- Fien Troch: Home, a daring Belgian film of sex, drugs, and smartphones, and where teens and their parents fall under the cameras scrutiny
Best actress:
- Amy Adams in Arrival
- Trine Dyrholm in The Commune
- Sandra Hüller in Toni Erdmann
- Natalie Portman in Jackie
- Florence Pugh in Lady Macbeth
- Emma Stone in La La Land
Best actor:
- Casey Affleck in Manchester by the Sea
- Hisham Fageeh as the aw-shucks single Saudi Arabian looking for a girlfriend in Barakah Meets Barakah
- Chen Gang in Old Stone, as a Good Samaritan who gets screwed
- Jason Sudeikis in Colossalan average Joe-turned-psychopath
- Ryan Gosling in La La Land
Best ensemble:
- Heal the Living
- In Between
- La La Land
- Lady Macbeth
- Manchester by the Sea
- Toni Erdmann
Best screenplay:
- Arrival
- Elle
- Heal the Living
- Old Stone
- Manchester by the Sea
- Toni Erdmann
Best documentary:
- Karl Marx City
- The War Show
The best scenes:
- The waterfall encounter between Paterson (Adam Driver) and a Japanese tourist in Paterson
- Michelle Williamss characters apology in Manchester by the Sea
- The date at the Griffith Observatory in La La Land
- The climactic, bloody showdown in Old Stone
Best opening sequences:
- The unforgettable opening credits in Nocturnal Animals
- Surfing at dawn in Heal the Living
The Erin Brockovich crusader award:
- Actress Sidse Babett Knudsen in 150 Milligrams, based on a real-life doctor, Irène Frachon, who took on French Big Pharma, and without a push-up bra
Best cameo:
- Andy Warhol (Rhys Bevan-John) as a spirit animal in the 1970s-set, Canadian coming-of-ager Weirdos
The Kama Sutra prize:
- Clair Obscur, the most sexually explicit film Ive seen from Turkey
Most moving film
- Heal the Living
Biggest disappointments:
- Nocturnal Animals, Tom Fords second feature film, in which the art direction and cinematography outweigh the direction and script
- The scattershot Planetarium, starring Natalie Portman, though set in the fascinating time period of late 1930s France
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