The Telegram (St. John's)

Star power

Bradley Cooper, Julia Roberts films among titles bound for Toronto film fest

- BY VICTORIA AHEARN

Bradley Cooper’s directoria­l debut featuring Lady Gaga, a Julia Roberts family addiction drama, and Ryan Gosling’s turn as astronaut Neil Armstrong are among the projects bound for the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival.

On Tuesday, organizers unveiled the galas and special presentati­ons set for this year’s fest, which runs Sept. 6-16.

The list includes Cooper’s romantic drama “A Star is Born,” which the four-time Oscarnomin­ated actor co-wrote and stars in, playing an alcoholic country musician who falls in love with a singer played by Gaga.

In Peter Hedges’ “Ben is Back,” Roberts plays a mother whose son (played by Lucas Hedges of “Manchester by the Sea”) returns home for the holidays with substance abuse issues.

The theme of recovery continues with Felix van Groeningen’s “Beautiful Boy,” starring Steve Carell and Timothee Chalamet as his son who’s battling a methamphet­amine addiction.

Meanwhile, Gosling teams up with his “La La Land” director Damien Chazelle for “First Man,” about Armstrong’s life and legacy walking on the Moon. Steven Spielberg is an executive producer.

While the bulk of the Canadian titles have yet to be revealed, some major homegrown films have been locked in, including “Through Black

Spruce” by Toronto director Don Mckellar. It’s based on the acclaimed novel by Canadian author Joseph Boyden, whose claims of Indigenous ancestry were questioned last year and sparked online debates after an investigat­ion by the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network.

Emmy-nominated writerdire­ctor Patricia Rozema of Kingston, Ont., returns to the fest with “Mouthpiece.”

Montreal filmmaker Kim Nguyen, whose previous features include the Oscar-nominated “Rebelle,” recruited an A-list cast for “The Hummingbir­d Project.” Jesse Eisenberg, Alexander Skarsgard and

Salma Hayek star in the 1990sset story of high-frequency trading.

And while “The Sisters Brothers” is not a Canadian film, it is based on the acclaimed comic western novel by Vancouver Island native Patrick dewitt. “Rust and Bone” filmmaker Jacques Audiard directed and co-write the adaptation, which stars John C. Reilly, Joaquin Phoenix, and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Other heavy-hitting projects include David Lowery’s bankrobber biopic “Old Man & the Gun,” which is said to be Robert Redford’s final onscreen performanc­e before his planned retirement from acting. Costars

include Casey Affleck, Danny Glover, Tom Waits and Sissy Spacek.

Steve Mcqueen will be at the fest with the heist thriller “Widows,” which is loaded with stars including Viola Davis, Colin Farrell, and Liam Neeson.

In “What They Had” by Elizabeth Chomko, Blythe Danner plays a mother with Alzheimer’s disease. Co-stars include Hilary Swank and Michael Shannon.

Emilio Estevez makes a longawaite­d return to filmmaking with “The Public,” in which he also stars alongside a cast including Alec Baldwin, Christian Slater, and Gabrielle Union.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Bradley Cooper, director/cast member/co-writer of the upcoming film “A Star is Born,” discusses the film during the Warner Bros. Pictures presentati­on at Cinemacon 2018, the official convention of the National Associatio­n of Theatre Owners, at Caesars...
AP PHOTO Bradley Cooper, director/cast member/co-writer of the upcoming film “A Star is Born,” discusses the film during the Warner Bros. Pictures presentati­on at Cinemacon 2018, the official convention of the National Associatio­n of Theatre Owners, at Caesars...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada