The Welland Tribune

TIFF 2020 will go on

Organizers face logistical and financial challenges with the 45th running of Toronto’s iconic film festival

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO — Drive-in screenings, virtual red carpets, a scaled-down slate: The curtain will still rise on this year’s Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival but it will be a much different affair than the usual annual movie marathon, as the COVID-19 pandemic presents logistical and financial challenges.

On Wednesday organizers revealed plans for a physical and digital hybrid version of the prestigiou­s festival, one day after announcing the TIFF organizati­on has taken a financial hit from the pandemic and had to lay off 31 full-time staff and cut salaries.

The reimagined 45th edition is now slated to run Sept. 10-19, ending one day earlier than originally planned, with a lineup of 50 new feature films, five programs of shorts and an online industry conference.

It will also have physical and digital screenings, outdoor experience­s, press conference­s and Q-and-A’s with cast and filmmakers.

TIFF did not make executives available for an interview Wednesday and didn’t provide specific details on how such events will unfold.

But given pandemic restrictio­ns on venues, gatherings and travel, it’s clear this will be not be the usual extravagan­za of hundreds of films and a city crawling with stars, cinephiles and celebrity watchers.

Films on the docket include Francis Lee’s “Ammonite,” starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan, Halle Berry’s directoria­l debut “Bruised,” and “Concrete Cowboy” by Ricky Staub, starring Idris Elba, Jharrel Jerome, and Lorraine Toussaint.

Over the first five days, the full slate of films will première as physical, sociallydi­stanced screenings that adhere to safety protocols set by authoritie­s to avoid the spread of COVID-19.

Movie theatres in Toronto that where shut down due to the novel coronaviru­s, including TIFF Bell Lightbox, haven’t opened yet but are expected to when provincial and municipal health authoritie­s give the go-ahead.

TIFF hopes the event will serve “as a beacon of hope for Toronto, for filmmakers, and for the internatio­nal film industry.”

“Our teams have had to rethink everything, and open our minds to new ideas,” Cameron Bailey, TIFF co-head and artistic director, said in a statement.

TIFF has also “listened to this year’s urgent calls for greater representa­tion of under-represente­d voices,” Bailey added.

“You’ll see that this year at the festival. And we have watched as audiences have embraced cinema’s ability to transport them through screens of all sizes.”

TIFF executive director and co-head Joana Vicente said they “tapped into the original spirit of the Festival from when it began in 1976” as their “guiding light.”

The organizati­on is working with New Zealand-based Shift72 to launch a digital platform to host screenings and other events for the festival, allowing it to reach audiences beyond Toronto. It’s not clear if the digital screenings for the public will be geoblocked to a certain region, like they were in the recent online version of Toronto’s Hot Docs festival.

The online industry conference will include screenings for press and industry, access to buyers and filmmakers for interviews, and networking opportunit­ies.

“I think festivals continuing online is really healthy,” Lenny Abrahamson, the Oscar-nominated director of the new series “Normal People” that’s on CBC Gem, said in a recent interview.

“It keeps that connection with an audience and it keeps filmmakers’ work being shown. But it’s not the same ... Meeting other human beings in real spaces and making connection­s — that is irreplacea­ble.”

Toronto director Ali Weinstein, who recently debuted her documentar­y “#Blessed” at the Hot Docs online festival, said it’s possible her film reached a bigger audience virtually.

“But the thing is, because I don’t get that audience experience, I have no idea like what people thought of the film,” she said in a recent interview.

“It feels like there’s just like a total disconnect and you don’t really get the same type of like feedback.”

TIFF said the festival’s in-person version will be contingent on the province’s reopening framework, stressing its priority is the health and well-being of filmgoers and Toronto residents.

Film festivals around the world have been grappling with the pandemic, with some cancelling their events altogether and others switching to digital versions or postponing.

TIFF has been saying since April it’s been planning some type of physical festival for September. While the Venice Film Festival is now set to take place in early September, France’s Cannes Film Festival in May had to be cancelled.

Cannes still announced its 2020 lineup as a badge of honour for the films, which included “Ammonite.”

Other Cannes titles bound for TIFF include Thomas Vinterberg’s Danish drama “Another Round,” starring Mads Mikkelsen; “Spring Blossom,” the debut film by director Suzanne Lindon of France; and “True Mothers” by director Naomi Kawase of Japan.

The TIFF lineup also has the Mexico/ Canada co-production “Fauna” from director Nicolas Pereda, and “Good Joe Bell” by director Reinaldo Marcus Green of the U.S.

More titles will be announced over the summer.

The festival also said it’s planning a virtual version of its annual TIFF Tribute Awards, which launched last year and honour “outstandin­g contributo­rs to the film industry.” The 2020 honourees have yet to be announced.

Also new is a slate of designated TIFF Ambassador­s, comprising 50 filmmakers and actors, including Ava DuVernay, Taika Waititi, and Nicole Kidman. They’ll “help TIFF deliver a strong festival this year,” the organizati­on said, but didn’t elaborate on what they’ll be doing.

TIFF has also added a new component to its Media Inclusion Initiative, which is into its third year and aims to increase diversity among the festival’s press corps. This year, companies and individual­s can gift industry access to 250 under-represente­d emerging filmmakers from around the world.

As a nonprofit organizati­on offering year-round programmin­g, TIFF has corporate and government partners and generates more than $200 million in annual economic activity for the city of Toronto and the province of Ontario.

The festival is also a key market to launch Canadian film content, and is considered a springboar­d for titles that go on to Oscar glory.

When the TIFF Bell Lightbox and other venues shut down during the pandemic, TIFF launched the Stay-atHome Cinema program in partnershi­p with Bell Media’s Crave streaming platform.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The organizati­on that runs the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival says the impact of COVID-19 is forcing more layoffs and slashing expected revenues.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS The organizati­on that runs the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival says the impact of COVID-19 is forcing more layoffs and slashing expected revenues.

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