The Province

TIFF, Venice picks foreshadow awards

The Oscar race is about to get very interestin­g as the film festival season gets set to roll

- ROBBIE COLLIN

To comprehend the state of Western film culture today, you need to decode the quietly extraordin­ary roles Venice and Toronto play in shaping the Oscar race. The two festivals are by no means obvious bedfellows. Venice, the oldest festival around (it predates Cannes by 14 years), is La Dolce Vita incarnate — films at the Palazzo del Cinema til dusk, then rippling laughter and the pop of Prosecco corks. Toronto, meanwhile, is almost certainly the busiest: it’s a bustling Where’s Wally? tableau of modern movie-going, with an annual attendance approachin­g half a million, and the most exhaustive approach to programmin­g I’ve ever seen.

The 2017 edition offers 305 features and shorts across 14 themed strands — and that’s a thin year. Yet between them, the two seem able to predict what’s about to be hot in cinema. Of the last 10 films to win best picture at the Oscars, from No Country For Old Men to Moonlight, every one of them played Venice or Toronto first — and in three cases, both. Certain berths have taken on a kind of talismanic significan­ce: five out of the last 10 opening-night films at Venice have gone on to be nominated for best picture, and one, Birdman, won outright, while Toronto’s audience award has prefigured three best picture wins and a further five nomination­s in the last decade.

An example was La La Land last year: the Venice opening-night film and the winner of the Toronto audience award, it was the presumed best picture front-runner right up until Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway tore open the envelope, and arguably for a few minutes after that. True, it may not have actually won, but its commercial performanc­e, built on its must-see status forged at Venice and Toronto, presumably went some way toward making up for it.

A shortlist of serious players is about to snap into focus. This year’s Venice opening film is Downsizing, a comedy from Alexander Payne, the director of Sideways and Nebraska. Starring Matt Damon, Kristen Wiig and Christoph Waltz, it’s about a married couple who have themselves shrunk to pocket size.

Opening Toronto has historical­ly been a less auspicious gig, but this year’s sporting biopic Borg/McEnroe might change that — though I gather Battle of the Sexes, with Emma Stone and Steve Carell as Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs, is the 2017 tennis film to beat. (It’s directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, who made Little Miss Sunshine, and was written by Simon Slumdog Millionair­e Beaufoy.)

The films screening at both festivals are often the ones that have awards-watchers bristling with anticipati­on, and none look bristlier than Mother! — a thriller from Darren Aronofsky, with Jennifer Lawrence as a housewife whose home is invaded by a series of odd visitors, seemingly with the consent of her husband, who’s played by Javier Bardem.

Striking a different tone, you’d imagine, is Stephen Frears’ Victoria and Abdul with Judi Dench reprising her Bafta-winning role as Queen Victoria, now platonical­ly besotted with her young attendant, Abdul Karim.

Andrew Haigh will bring the follow-up to his superb 45 Years, a horse-training drama titled Lean on Pete, to both festivals — and Martin McDonagh, the British-Irish director of In Bruges, will do likewise with Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, featuring Frances McDormand as a grieving mother who goes to war with her local police.

Joe Wright’s Churchill biopic Darkest Hour, Andy Serkis’s Breathe, Clio Barnard’s Dark River and Armando Iannucci’s political comedy The Death of Stalin are all Toronto-only as is The Breadwinne­r, the latest animated feature from the Irish studio Cartoon Saloon, whose previous film, Song of the Sea, also surfaced at the Canadian festival. Both Barnard and Iannucci’s films will play in the Platform strand, which last year burnished its credential­s by playing host to Moonlight.

One of the presumed-heftiest Oscar contenders-in-waiting, Steven Spielberg’s Nixon-era newsroom thriller The Papers, seems unlikely to screen anywhere until December. Paul Thomas Anderson’s Fifties fashion-world drama Phantom Thread, another December release, features Daniel Day-Lewis’s final screen performanc­e.

Christophe­r Nolan’s Dunkirk has already set a high bar for best picture. But few things are less gripping than a foregone conclusion, and the race is about to get interestin­g.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? Matt Damon, left, Kristen Wiig, Hong Chau and director Alexander Payne appear at The Venice Film Festival in support of Downsizing, which will open the prestigiou­s festival.
— GETTY IMAGES Matt Damon, left, Kristen Wiig, Hong Chau and director Alexander Payne appear at The Venice Film Festival in support of Downsizing, which will open the prestigiou­s festival.
 ?? — THE CALGARY INTERNATIO­NAL FILM FESTIVAL ?? Shia LaBeouf and Sverrir Gudnason star in Borg/McEnroe, which will open the Toronto Film Festival.
— THE CALGARY INTERNATIO­NAL FILM FESTIVAL Shia LaBeouf and Sverrir Gudnason star in Borg/McEnroe, which will open the Toronto Film Festival.

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