Tag Archives: Toronto International Film Festival

TIFF 2011 Review: Intruders Review

September 22, 2011

Juan Carlos Fresnadillo’s new horror film Intruders seems to be an attempt to bridge British and Spanish horror motifs: the haunted house of the former, and the significance of children of the latter. Unfortunately, it doesn’t quite succeed. The premise is fairly strong: parallel stories are told, one of young Juan in Spain, who invents the story of Hollowface, a creature that is trying to take Juan away to steal his face. The other is of Mia, a young British girl who finds the story of Hollowface and begins to expand it, and then believes this creature inhabits her closet. The first scene is extremely frightening, and the threat and fear is maintained in the Spanish section. But it isn’t quite maintained for the British section. This could be because the Hollowface rendering of the Spanish section was is physically insubstantial enough to be frightening, the rendering in the British section it too corporeal for what it is alleged to represent.

It could be seen as a meditation on storytelling and the effect of a child’s imagination on adult life, and from that perspective the film has more success. The fears we have as children often remain with us or resurface through traumatic events. But the film just isn’t consistently frightening enough, tips its hand too early, and makes it difficult hard to emotionally invest in the characters for whom there is little fear.

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TIFF 2011 Review: ALPS

September 22, 2011

Yorgos Lanthimos’s film Dogtooth disturbed and impressed a lot of people, and I doubt his new film ALPS will receive a different reaction. Following a similar narrative line, about a strange situation between a group of people that is revealed … Continue reading

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TIFF 2011 Review: Wuthering Heights

September 21, 2011

Andrea Arnold’s Wuthering Heights is going to anger a lot of people. Which is a shame, because it is brilliant. As an interpretation, not an adaptation, Arnold take a different route, exploring certain themes and characters within the text from … Continue reading

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TIFF 2011: Edwin Boyd Review

September 19, 2011

We Canadians are often stereotyped as nice and polite, and even our bank robbers follow this pattern. Edwin Boyd is a biopic of Canada’s most famous thief, and it is a solid first feature, written and directed by Nathan Morlando. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011 Picks Part Four: Last Days

September 16, 2011

The last weekend of TIFF 2011 is upon us. For many, the festival ended when the celebrity circus packed up and left town, but that doesn’t mean that there aren’t plenty of great films playing between now and Sunday. Here is a list of ten films (in no particular order) that might have escaped you during the festival proper that are getting encore screenings this weekend. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011: Outside Satan Review

September 15, 2011

Everyone, from the most devout Catholic to effusive evangelist, has a concept of Jesus and Satan, and what he or she would look like if they ever manifested in human form. But there is no concept, and the devil, or Jesus, could be a rich man or a strange drifter. Award-winning French director Bruno Dumont ‘s new film Outside Satan is a strange, disquieting and disturbing film about a drifter who could be Jesus or Satan, or perhaps both. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011: Twixt Review

September 12, 2011

Twixt is not a blockbuster, but it is certainly a genre piece; a dream-inspired, Dan Deacon scored, Poe-themed vampire ghost murder story genre piece. The film is a weird stand out even in the Francis Ford Coppola portfolio. It’s definitely nowhere near Apocalypse Now, it’s not even Rumble Fish, but Twixt, for all of its uneasy flaws, is incredibly fun to watch. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011: Sarah Palin – You Betcha! Review

September 12, 2011

In Sarah Palin – You Betcha! British documentarian Nick Broomfield and his tiny team cozy up in Wasilla, Alaska to try to gather opinions and footage from Palin’s friends, colleagues and even Palin herself. Two thirds of those goals do not go very well at all, and for some bizarre reason Broomfield lets you in on every production misfortune. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011 Picks Part Three: Hidden Gems

By Dork Shelf
September 9, 2011

Lost in a sea of major Hollywood releases and hyped international films are the hidden gems of the Toronto International Film Festival. Andrew Parker has picked three films that are defintely not your typical fare, but that he believes are nonetheless worthy of your time and attention. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011: The Skin I Live In Review

September 9, 2011

The Skin I Live In is a hypnotizing feat, a contemporary reflection of The Brain That Wouldn’t Die resulting in a Frankenstein tale making sweet, Spanish love to body politics. Almodóvar is gently taking us by the hand down and leading us down a trail of science gone mad, and it feels as classically minded as it does completely original.- Continue reading

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Toronto International Film Festival Kicks Off

September 8, 2011

Despite the glamour and glitz associated with the TIFF, there are few things more lovingly dorky than a major film festival. This doesn’t necessarily extend to people who work within the industry (the talent, the buyers, the movers, the shakers) or the people who have to deal with the industry types, but for film lovers a festival is no different than playing video games for hours on end or obsessively collecting action figures. Continue reading

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TIFF 2011 Picks
Part One

By Dork Shelf
September 7, 2011

The 2011 edition of the Toronto International Film Festival kicks off tomorrow and will run until September 18th. Now you’re going to hear a lot about the celebrities in town, the parties going down and the massive queues, but at the end of the day TIFF is about the movies. And with over 330 movies playing this year, there’s definitely no shortage of films to choose from. Continue reading

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