The Prince George Citizen

Indigenous films, French zombie flick on annual list of top Canadian movies

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TORONTO — The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival’s annual list of top Canadian movies includes Indigenous stories, a French-language zombie film, and the directoria­l debut of two Montreal brothers starring Evan Rachel Wood.

The selection is part of TIFF’s Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival, which includes 10 days of screenings and events in Toronto and a cross-country tour.

It kicks off Jan. 12, 2018 in Toronto with the comedy Adventures in Public School by Kyle Rideout, while other movies include Sadaf Foroughi’s Tehranset drama Ava by and Simon Lavoie’s The Little Girl Who Was Too Fond of Matches.

Indigenous issues are explored in the documentar­ies Our People Will Be Healed by Alanis Obomsawin and Rumble: The Indians Who Rocked the World by Catherine Bainbridge. Obomsawin will also partici- pate in an on-stage discussion about her career.

Wood will also discuss her wide-ranging career, which includes a starring role in the psychologi­cal thriller Allure by sibling photograph­ers Carlos Sanchez and Jason Sanchez.

Other films on the list are Robin Aubert’s Quebecset zombie flick Les Affames, which won the best Canadian feature film award at TIFF in September, and Luk’Luk’I by Wayne Wapeemukwa, which won TIFF’s best Canadian first feature film award.

Also making the cut are Never Steady, Never Still by Kathleen Hepburn and Unarmed Verses by Charles Officer.

The Canada’s Top Ten Film Festival also includes screenings of 10 Canadian short films and 10 short films by Canadian film students. The Toronto-based event will be followed by a tour to Edmonton, Montreal, Ottawa, Regina, Saskatoon, Vancouver and Winnipeg.

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