Times Colonist

Dear Evan Hansen to open Toronto film fest

- LINDSEY BAHRT

The adaptation of Broadway hit and Tony-winner Dear Evan Hansen, Edgar Wright’s ’60s London-themed Last Night in Soho and The Eyes of Tammy Faye are just a few of the major films coming to the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival this September.

Organizers on Tuesday unveiled a robust slate of premières for the 46th edition of TIFF, which is returning to an inperson fete. Dear Evan Hansen, starring Ben Platt and Julianne Moore and directed by Stephen Chbosky, will be the opening night gala on Sept. 9.

“There was no question that Dear Evan Hansen was the ideal film to launch the Festival this year,” said Cameron Bailey, Artistic Director and Co-Head of TIFF. “This film is ultimately about healing, forgivenes­s, and reaffirms how connected and essential we all are to one another.

“We couldn’t think of a more important idea to celebrate this year as we come together once again to share the power and joy of cinema in theatres together.”

Chbosky said: “We could not have asked for a more ideal festival, or audience, or moment to premiere our film.”

Audiences can also expect a look at Jessica Chastain’s turn as Tammy Faye Bakker and Andrew Garfield as televangel­ist Jim Bakker in Michael Showalter’s latest film, as well as director Barry Levinson’s The Survivor, starring Ben Foster as Second World War-era boxer Harry Haft.

Clifford the Big Red Dog, featuring David Alan Grier as the voice of the children’s book character, is another gala presentati­on. The festival will also host the world première of Terence Davies’ Benedictio­n, about English poet Siegfried Sassoon, starring Jack Lowden and Peter Capaldi, as well as Justine Bateman’s directoria­l debut Violet, starring Olivia Munn.

Previously announced premières include Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast, Tahir Rana’s Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over, Antoine Fuqua’s The Guilty, writer-director-actor Mélanie Laurent’s The Mad Woman’s Ball, and Alison Klayman’s Alanis Morissette documentar­y Jagged.

The festival will also host an IMAX screening of Denis Villeneuve’s Dune to follow its premiere at the Venice Film Festival in Italy.

A few selections from Cannes will also screen including Joachim Trier’s The Worst Person in the World, Jacques Audiard’s Paris, 13th District,

and Mia Hansen-Løve’s Bergman Island.

Zhang Yimou’s One Second,

about a man escaping a concentrat­ion camp to see his daughter, will serve as the closing night film in its North American premiere.

The Canadian government said Monday that the border will open to fully vaccinated U.S. citizens and permanent residents beginning Aug. 9, and open to the rest of the world by Sept. 7.

The festival is also planning to make films available online for press and industry unable to travel.

TIFF will run from Sept. 9-18 and return to in-person screenings in many of its usual downtown Toronto venues, such as the TIFF Bell Lightbox, Roy Thomson Hall, and the Princess of Wales Theatre.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival unveiled a host of movies that will première at the festival in September.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival unveiled a host of movies that will première at the festival in September.

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