Tag Archives: Toronto International Film Festival

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TIFF 2011: Midnight Madness Lineup

August 3, 2011

After teasing us with a series of images last night, the official Midnight Madness Twitter account revealed three of the midnight films set to play at the 2011 Toronto International Film Festival – the UK thriller Kill List, the Canadian post-apocalyptic romp The Day and the twisted Japanese body disposal flick Smuggler.

This morning, TIFF announced the full slate of Midnight Madness titles, and it’s an extremely exciting line-up featuring films from newcomers and returning vets alike. Some of the highlights include Lovely Molly – a psychological horror from the director of The Blair Witch Project, God Bless America - scathing social commentary by way of Bobcat Goldthwait, The Raid – bone-crunching martial arts action from Indonesia, and more!

Midnight Madness is where you’ll find world premieres of some of the best genre flicks of the year. This programme is for your inner dork; the place to be if you don’t feel up for the stuffiness and pretension found elsewhere in the festival. Crime, action, horror, sci-fi – it’s all here.

Check out the full line-up courtesy of TIFF.

The DayDoug Aarniokoski, Canada (World Premiere)

The Day - Doug Aarniokoski, Shawn Ashmore, Dominic Monaghan

In a post-apocalyptic future, an open war against humanity rages. Five survivors wander along rural back-roads, lost, starving and on the run. With dwindling food stocks and ammunition, an attempt at seeking shelter turns into a battleground where they must fight or die. Starring Ashley Bell, Dominic Monaghan and Shannyn Sossamon.

Watch the trailer for The Day here.

God Bless America – Bobcat Goldthwait, USA (World Premiere)

God Bless America - Bobcat Goldthwait

Loveless, jobless and possibly terminally ill, Frank has had enough of the downward spiral of America. With nothing left to lose, Frank takes his gun and decides to off the stupidest, cruellest and most repellent members of society with an unusual accomplice: 16-year-old Roxy, who shares his sense of rage and disenfranchisement. From stand-up comedian and director Bobcat Goldthwait comes a scathing and hilarious attack on all that is sacred in the United States of America.

The Incident – Alexandre Courtes, France (World Premiere)

The Incident - Alexandre Courtes

George, Max and Ricky are in a rock band and waiting for their big breakthrough. Between small gigs and rehearsals they work in the kitchen of a high-security asylum for good pay at minimum risk – they have no physical contact with the inmates. One night just before dinnertime, a big storm shuts down the security system, the doors open and the lunatics break loose. Help is on its way and should soon arrive… they just have to survive until it does.

Kill List – Ben Wheatley, United Kingdom (Canadian Premiere)

Kill List - Ben Wheatley

Eight months after a disastrous job in Kiev left him physically and mentally scarred, ex-soldier-turned-contract-killer Jay is pressured by his partner Gal into taking a new assignment. As they track their prey, they descend into a disturbing world that is darker and more depraved than anything they experienced on the battlefield.

Watch the trailer for Kill List here.

Livid – Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo, France (World Premiere)

Livid - Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo

The directors of 2007’s Midnight Madness hit A L’Interieur (Inside) return with a twisted gothic nightmare. A young woman and her friends break into a decrepit mansion looking for treasure, only to unlock a dark secret of unspeakable horror ready to dish out bloody punishment for their greed.

Lovely Molly – Eduardo Sanchez, USA (World Premiere)

Lovely Molly - Eduardo Sanchez

When newlywed Molly Reynolds returns to her long-abandoned family home, frightful reminders of a nightmarish childhood begin seeping into her new life. She soon begins an inexorable descent into evil that blurs the lines between psychosis and possession. From the director of The Blair Witch Project.

The Raid – Gareth Evans, Indonesia (World Premiere)

The Raid (Serbuan Maut) - Gareth Evans, Iko Uwais

Deep in the heart of Jakarta’s slums lies an impenetrable safe house for the world’s most dangerous killers and gangsters. Until now, the run-down apartment block has been considered untouchable to even the bravest of police. Cloaked under the cover of pre-dawn darkness and silence, an elite swat team is tasked with raiding the safe house in order to take down the notorious drug lord that runs it. But when a chance encounter with a spotter blows their cover and news of their assault reaches the drug lord, the building’s lights are cut and all the exits blocked. Stranded on the sixth floor with no way out, the unit must fight their way through the city’s worst to survive their mission. Starring Indonesian martial arts sensation Iko Uwais.

Watch the trailer for The Raid here.

Sleepless Night – Frederic Jardin, France/Belgium/Luxembourg (World Premiere)

Sleepless Night - Frederic Jardin

When Vincent, a double-dealing cop, steals a big bag of cocaine from some drug dealers they counter by kidnapping and threatening to kill his son if the bag isn’t returned – fast. The swap is to go down at their headquarters in a big nightclub on the outskirts of Paris, but Vincent gets caught in a spiral of deception and betrayal and must fight his way through packed dance floors and dark corridors of the labyrinth-like club.

Smuggler – Katsuhito Ishii, Japan (World Premiere)

Smuggler - Katsuhito IshiiAfter his dreams of becoming an actor go nowhere, 25-year-old Kinuta does nothing but gamble every day. Broke, framed and now neck-deep in debt, he is recruited as a smuggler – an underground mover of everything from dead bodies to illegal goods – but one cargo triggers the rage of a psychotic gangster hellbent on revenge. By acclaimed cult director Katsuhito Ishii of Shark Skin Man and Peach Hip Girl and Funky Forest fame.

Watch the trailer for Smuggler here.

You’re Next – Adam Wingard, USA (World Premiere)

You're Next - Adam Wingard

From the director-writer team that brought TIFF audiences A Horrible Way To Die in 2010 comes a new experiment in tension. A family comes under a terrifying and sadistic attack during a reunion getaway. Barricaded in their secluded country home, they have
to fight off a barrage of axes, crossbows and machetes from both inside and outside the house. Unfortunately for the killers, one of the victims proves to have a talent for fighting back.

Watch the trailer for You’re Next here.

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TIFF announces Gala & Special Presentation Line-up

July 26, 2011

It’s that time of year again! With the 2011 edition of the Toronto International Film Festival just around the corner, the festival group today announced the first batch of special presentations and galas. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
Fubar II Review

September 29, 2010

As much as I always loved the first Fubar movie, I was very skeptical when I found out they were premiering the sequel at this year’s festival. To mix metaphors, I thought they were returning to the well to milk a dead cow. Fortunately there was enough water left in the well to keep the cow alive and ready to be milked for our viewing pleasure once again! Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
The Butcher, the Chef
& the Swordsman

September 29, 2010

Director Wuershan’s feature debut, The Butcher, the Chef, and the Swordsman is pretty much the epitome of a Midnight Madness film. A combination of period film, slapstick comedy, food film, love story, martial arts film and revenge thriller, with objects, images, and a contemporary soundtrack constantly being thrown at the audience, this is a film that should not work, but somehow it does. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
Detective Dee Review

September 28, 2010

In a strange alternative past set during China’s Tang Dynasty, a woman is about to ascend to the Emperor’s throne. She has ordered that a great Buddha statue be built in her likeness, and it must be ready for her coronation. But on a tour for a visiting dignitary, a high-ranking official mysteriously burns from the inside out. The soon-to-be-empress, Wu Zetian, tells her most trusted warrior, the beautiful lady Shangguan Jing’er, to bring back Detective Dee, who has been jailed by Wu for daring to oppose her, to solve the mystery. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
The Illusionist Review

September 28, 2010

The Illusionist is director Sylvain Chomet’s follow-up to the hugely successful The Triplets of Belleville, and while he is able to top his previous efforts’ aesthetic beauty and craftsmanship, the story is perhaps too subtle and minimal to really draw viewers in. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
Stake Land Review

September 27, 2010

A recent trend in horror and science fiction films is examining the world not in the midst of disaster, but once it has begun to adjust to the aftermath of a disaster. This can lead to some very interesting examinations of contemporary issues. Winner of the Cadillac People’s Choice Midnight Madness Award, Jim Mickle’s Stake Land is set in a future that includes vampires. But these are not sparkly vampires, nor ones that have souls. These are vampires are little more than animals, and like George A. Romero’s zombie film series, society must adapt to the new world order. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
I Saw the Devil Review

September 25, 2010

Korean cinema has churned out its fair share of revenge thrillers, chief among them being Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and Oldboy. Kim Ji-Woon’s I Saw the Devil might not be as good as these films, but it is a solid revenge thriller that abandons any pretence of satisfaction and keeps piling on the tragedy. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
You Are Here Review

September 25, 2010

Quirky and original new film from Canadian director and screenwriter Daniel Cockburn. Its plot is certainly hard, if not impossible, to summate, as a traditional plot as such does not exist. But that certainly doesn’t mean the film has no story; far from it. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
Kaboom Review

September 24, 2010

What do you get when you cross a Hollywood-style college sex comedy with a bizarre sci-fi-demon-cult adventure mystery? You get the latest film from Gregg Araki, Kaboom. Returning to the form of his earlier films such as The Doom Generation, Araki takes the audience on a strange ride through one teenager’s search for his sexual identity and investigation of a possible demon cult. Continue reading

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TIFF 2010
I’m Still Here Review

September 24, 2010

When Joaquin Phoenix announced he was retiring from acting to pursue a music career in 2008, people were right to be suspicious. Even if substance abuse or mental health issues had been involved, the actor’s transformation from clean-cut talent to aloof hobo-chic seemed too drastic and too sudden to stomach. It was sad to see a person self-destruct so publicly, but we watched him do it anyways, and that’s where the brilliance of Casey Affleck’s mockumentary I’m Still Here comes in. Continue reading

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