Windsor Star

TIFF touts CanCon lineup

Festival to screen 19 Canadian movies, including films by Arcand and Baichwal

- VICTORIA AHEARN

Contempora­ry anxieties and Indigenous issues are among the themes in the Canadian lineup for this year’s Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, which includes works by directors Denys Arcand and Jennifer Baichwal. In all, 19 Canadian titles were announced Wednesday, including Arcand’s The Fall of the American Empire, which has already screened in French in the Oscar winner’s home province, Quebec. In the film, Alexandre Landry stars as a lonely man who finds two bags filled with money after witnessing a deadly armed robbery. “I think it’s one of his more pointed political films in quite some time,” senior programmer Steve Gravestock said. “In a weird way, even though it looks at all sorts of corruption, it’s also quite hopeful.” Baichwal explores environmen­tal issues with Anthropoce­ne, the final title in a trilogy with producer Nicholas de Pencier and photograph­er Edward Burtynsky after Manufactur­ed Landscapes and Watermark.

“It’s quite stunning to look at but also I think, in some ways, this is quite painful to watch because it is very much about extinction, what we’re doing to animals,” said Gravestock, who worked on the lineup with Danis Goulet, the TIFF Canadian features programmer. Other docs exploring a feeling of unease include Astra Taylor’s What is Democracy? Starting in Greece, it looks at the history of democracy and the dangers facing it. Sharkwater: Extinction is the final work by the late filmmaker and conservati­onist Rob Stewart, and Barry Avrich’s Prosecutin­g Evil: The Extraordin­ary World of Ben Ferencz is about the United States’ chief prosecutor during the Nuremberg trials.

Ron Mann looks at gentrifica­tion in the documentar­y Carmine Street Guitars, about a Greenwich Village shop that makes custom guitars out of material from historic sites and torn-down buildings. The lineup also has world premières of three films that showcase Indigenous talent, including Gwaai Edenshaw and Helen Haig-Brown’s Edge of the Knife. It’s billed as the first feature-length film made in Haida, which UNES - CO classifies as an endangered language. Renowned Metis actor Tantoo Cardinal stars in Darlene Naponse’s Falls Around Her. And Anne with an E executive producer Miranda de Pencier makes her feature directoria­l debut with The Grizzlies, a collaborat­ion with Inuit producers Alethea Arnaquq-Baril and Stacey Aglok MacDonald.

The lineup also has several fantasy stories, including Clara by Akash Sherman, starring Patrick J. Adams of Suits fame as a depressed astronomer who gets a new outlook on life after meeting a woman. Supernatur­al tales are found in The Great Darkened Days by Maxime Giroux, Fausto by Andrea Bussmann and The Stone Speakers by Igor Drljaca. Stories featuring teens and young adults include Keith Behrman’s Giant Little Ones, Thom Fitzgerald’s Splinters, Firecracke­rs by Jasmin Mozaffari, and Sebastien Pilote’s The Fireflies Are Gone.

TIFF says 40 per cent of the Canadian film slate this year is directed by women. Previously announced Canadian features include Giant Little Ones as well as Kim Nguyen’s The Hummingbir­d Project, Patricia Rozema’s Mouthpiece, and Don McKellar’s Through Black Spruce. “There are a lot of films (that) really look at people’s resiliency,” Gravestock said.

 ??  ?? Denys Arcand
Denys Arcand

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