Ottawa Citizen

Enemy among TIFF’s Top 10 films of 2013

Daniel Radcliffe’s The F Word also on annual list of best films

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO Canadian films featuring internatio­nal stars including Jake Gyllenhaal and Daniel Radcliffe are among the projects making it onto the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival’s annual list of best Canuck features.

The film group’s Top 10 titles include Gyllenhaal’s surreal art film, Enemy, directed by Denis Villeneuve, and Radcliffe’s romantic comedy The F Word, directed by Michael Dowse. Both were shot and set in Toronto.

“Lots of Americans, internatio­nal stars in our films this year,” TIFF senior programmer Steve Gravestock said Tuesday after the list was revealed at a downtown bash.

“Jake Gyllenhaal stars in Enemy alongside Sarah Gadon and Melanie Laurent. It’s very sinister, disturbing, probably one of the weirdest looks at Toronto, but totally recognizab­le in a lot of ways.”

Gravestock noted the list includes two documentar­ies: Watermark, by Jennifer Baichwal and Edward Burtynsky and When Jews Were Funny, by Alan Zweig. It also includes three first features: Chloe Robichaud’s Sarah Prefers to Run; the animated Asphalt Watches, by Shayne Ehman and Seth Scriver; and Jeff Barnaby’s Rhymes for Young Ghouls.

“I really think it’s one of the most diverse and varied lists I’ve seen in quite some time, in terms of themes and formats,” he said.

There’s also a healthy contingent of Quebec features, including Tom at the Farm by Xavier Dolan; Vic + Flo Saw a Bear, from Denis Cote and Louise Archambaul­t’s Gabrielle, which is Canada’s submission to the Academy Awards for considerat­ion in the foreign-language film category.

But many big directors with projects this year did not make the list, among them Don McKellar with The Grand Seduction, Bruce McDonald with The Husband, and Alanis Obomsawin with Hi-Ho Mistahey!

“It’s a snapshot of what’s going on,” Gravestock said of the selections, made by an independen­t panel of seven filmmakers and industry profession­als. “There’s so much great talent in Canada you can’t include every good film we make.”

Zweig said he was surprised to make the cut, even though his comedian-stacked documentar­y was named best Canadian feature at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in September.

“I didn’t think this would happen, maybe even I was afraid there’d be a little backlash or something,” said Zweig, going on to compare the two achievemen­ts. “I’m proud to win that prize and somehow this seems better because I don’t really believe in best — the best — but 10 best? Yeah, you know, that’s believable. And it feels more real to be one of the best, in no particular order.”

A 10-day film festival featuring the 10 movies kicks off Jan. 3 at Toronto’s TIFF Bell Lightbox.

The short film selections also include: A Grand Canal, by Johnny Ma; An Extraordin­ary Person, by Monia Chokri; The Chaperone 3D, by Fraser Munden and Neil Rathbone; The End of Pinky, from Claire Blanchet; In Guns We Trust, by Nicolas Levesque; Noah, by Walter Woodman and Patrick Cederberg; Nous avions, by Stephane Moukarzel; Paradise Falls, by Fantavious Fritz and Yellowhead, by Kevan Funk.

 ?? TIFF ?? Jake Gyllenhaal’s art film, Enemy, directed by Denis Villeneuve, is one of TIFF’s 2013 Top 10 Canadian movies.
TIFF Jake Gyllenhaal’s art film, Enemy, directed by Denis Villeneuve, is one of TIFF’s 2013 Top 10 Canadian movies.

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