Las Vegas Review-Journal

Expect debates over Toronto Film Fest lineup

Movies debuting tackle hot-button issues such as equality, politics

- By Jake Coyle The Associated Press

NEW YORK — Few institutio­ns in cinema can match the teeming, overwhelmi­ng Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival as a conversati­on-starting force. It simply has a lot of movies worth talking about.

And this year, many of the films that will parade down Toronto red carpets will hope to shift the dialogue not just in terms of awards buzz, but in other directions, too: equality in Hollywood; politics in Washington; even about the nature of the movies, themselves. At the festival, expect debate.

That’s what the filmmakers behind “The Battle of the Sexes,” one of the anticipate­d films heading to Toronto in the coming days, are hoping for. After the festival opens Thursday with another tennis movie, the rivalry drama “Borg/mcenroe,” Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris (the directing duo who helmed 2006’s “Little Miss Sunshine”) will premiere their drama about the 1973 showdown between Billie Jean King and Bobby Riggs.

The movie, starring Emma Stone and Steve Carell, holds obvious parallels for a movie industry with its own issues of gender equality, in both pay disparity and directing opportunit­y. For others, it will recall issues that dominated last year’s U.S. presidenti­al campaign. But “Battle of the Sexes” may surprise moviegoers in its broad sympathies on both sides of the net.

“The one thing we didn’t want to have happen was this polarizing political document,” said Dayton. “Right now, there’s enough of that in the world. We wanted to tell a more personal story and keep it from becoming too binary.”

The filmmakers say they are expecting “a variety of opinions in any one audience.”

“It’s really the best way to release a film, at a festival like Telluride or Toronto,” said Faris. “It’s a great way to get the word out about a film. It’s a great thing for the filmmakers to have what is usually a pretty film-oriented, film-loving audience. It gives you hope that they’re still out there.”

The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival comes right on the heels of the Venice and Telluride festivals, but the size and scope of Toronto has long made it the centerpiec­e of the fall movie season. It’s where much of the coming awards season gets handicappe­d, debated and solidified. It’s also a significan­t market for new films, and this year several intriguing films — “I, Tonya,” with Margot Robbie as Tonya Harding, and “Hostiles,” a brutal Western with Christian Bale — are on the block.

But most eyes will be on the gala premieres of the fall’s biggest films, including Alexander Payne’s “Downsizing,” Guillermo

Del Toro’s “The Shape of Water,” George Clooney’s “Suburbicon,” and maybe the most explosive movie of the season, Darren Aronofsky’s mysteryshr­ouded allegorica­l thriller “mother!”

It can be a competitiv­e landscape, with dozens of daily premieres and their respective parties, all trying to stand out. But several firsttime directors may end up stealing the spotlight. Greta Gerwig’s “Lady Bird” will sail into Toronto on waves of rave reviews from Telluride. Aaron Sorkin, arguably the top screenwrit­er in Hollywood for two decades, will present his directoria­l debut, “Molly’s Game.”

Sorkin didn’t initially anticipate he’d direct his script. But he became, he says, obsessed with the story of Molly Bloom (Jessica Chastain), the former elite skier who was indicted for running a high-stakes poker game in Los Angeles. It’s a potentiall­y career-redefining movie for Sorkin — and he’s appropriat­ely anxious.

“I’d feel the same way if we were launching it in Wyoming. I’m nervous because other than test audiences, this will be the first time people see it,” Sorkin said. “The Toronto Film Festival is a very prestigiou­s place to debut a film, so I’m aware of the company I’m in and what’s expected in the movie. It will be up to others to decide if it delivered.”

“The Disaster Artist” poses a similar turning point for its star and director, James Franco. It’s about the making of what’s widely considered one of the worst movies ever made — the cult favorite “The Room,” by Tommy Wiseau. Franco, who plays Wiseau, considers it a new step for him as a filmmaker, and says the film’s parody is laced with affection.

“The characters are outsiders. They are weirdos,” said Franco. “But everybody can relate to having a dream and trying to break into this incredibly hard business.”

The film will premiere to a surely raucous audience at a midnight screening. Franco, who first saw “The Room” with an especially excitable Vancouver audience, expects it to be the perfect debut for his film: “Canadians know how to do ‘The Room.’”

 ?? Fox Searchligh­t ?? Pictures The Associated Press Sally Hawkins, left, and Octavia Spencer star in “The Shape of Water,” premiering this week in Toronto.
Fox Searchligh­t Pictures The Associated Press Sally Hawkins, left, and Octavia Spencer star in “The Shape of Water,” premiering this week in Toronto.

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