TORONTO, ONT ā The Toronto International Film Festival is the clean-up hitter of the fall festival circuit. Coming on the heels of Venice and Telluride, Toronto tends to pull together many of the top films from those festivals, as well as a whole bunch more.
But itās been a few years since TIFF was quite itself. The pandemic stretched across several editions and, last year, the actors strike left Torontoās red carpets unusually bare.
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This yearās festival, running through Sept. 15, is opening Thursday with the premiere of David Gordon Greenās āNutcrackers,ā starring Ben Stiller as a workaholic forced to care for his rural Ohio nephews.
More than most years, itās hard to say whatās likely to stand out the most at this yearās TIFF. But with more than 200 feature films set to unspool, the festival is sure to offer up many of the fallās top films. Here are five questions heading into North Americaās largest film event.
What will pop?
Last yearās TIFF was a diminished one but it still launched a bona fide hit and eventual Oscar-winner in Cord Jeffersonās āAmerican Fiction.ā Not many were buzzing about that film before it debuted in Toronto ā a reminder that TIFF can surprise.
This year, some of the top movies debuting in Toronto include Marielle Hellerās āNightbitch,ā starring Amy Adams; āHard Truths" by the British master Mike Leigh; John Crowley's years-spanning melodrama āWe Live Inside,ā starring Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield; the Scott Beck and Bryan Woods thriller āThe Heretic,ā with a diabolical Hugh Grant; cinematographer Rachel Morrison's directorial debut āThe Fire Inside"; the DreamWorks animation āThe Wild Robotā; and the Anthony Robles true-life tale āUnstoppable,ā with Jharrel Jerome and Jennifer Lopez.
What will maintain the buzz?
Aside from the movies making a first impression in Toronto, many films will be trying to build off of their receptions in Venice, Telluride or Cannes. At this early point, the Oscar race feels wide open ā particularly compared to last year, when āOppenheimerā and āBarbieā were, by September, already frontrunners. Nothing has yet ascended to favorite status, though some movies ā like Sean Bakerās Palme dāOr-winning āAnora,ā Jacques Audiardās trans drug lord musical āEmilia Perezā and the Vatican drama āConclaveā ā come in with a lot of momentum.
What will sell?
Many of Torontoās premieres are more focused on buyers than the awards race. That's partly by design. In two years, TIFF will officially launch a sales movie market, similar to the one operated during the Cannes Film Festival. This year, the many movies on offer include Ron Howard's āEden,ā starring Jude Law, Vanessa Kirby and Sydney Sweeney; the Stephen King adaptation āThe Life of Chuck,ā with Tom Hiddleston; Rebel Wilson's directorial debut āThe Debā; āThe Last Showgirl,ā starring Pamela Anderson; David Mackenzie's āRelay,ā starring Riz Ahmed; and āOn Swift Horses,ā with Jacob Elordi and Daisy Edgar-Jones. Studios and streamers will kick the tires on those, and many more.
What will win the Peopleās Choice award?
You can count on little in life as much as the predictive powers of TIFFās Peopleās Choice award. While countless Oscar stats get trotted out annually, this one is virtually always true: The winner of Torontoās top prize will be nominated for best picture at the Academy Awards. Thatās been the case every year since 2012. It was true when āGreen Bookā emerged a surprise hit in Toronto, and it was true last year when āAmerican Fictionā won. Because TIFF gathers together so many of the fallās movies, and because it boasts big audiences made up not just of industry professionals but regular moviegoers, what goes over gangbusters in Toronto usually does with the academy, too.
What will show up a year later?
While the majority of Torontoās selections will be heading to theaters or streaming services sometime in the next few months, some movies ā including some very good movies ā may not show up for a year or more. Azazel Jacobsās āHis Three Daughters,ā a standout at last yearās festival, just arrived in theaters. Anna Kendrickās directorial debut, āWoman of the Hour,ā will land on Netflix next month, more than a year after bowing at Toronto. For some of Toronto's top titles, patience may be required.