Toronto Star

Festival reflects cultural shifts

Starting with opening film, lineup tackles trending topics

- VICTORIA AHEARN THE CANADIAN PRESS

The Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival kicks off Thursday by diving into the past while also reflecting the present.

Antoine Fuqua’s remake of the1960 western The Magnificen­t Seven makes its world premiere to open the 11-day fest. It offers a contempora­ry, relevant take on the genre with a multicultu­ral cast not usually seen in westerns.

With stars including Denzel Washington and South Korea’s Lee Byunghun among the seven gunslinger­s, the film speaks to one of the muchdiscus­sed elements of current cinema: diversity.

“In a funny way, this is a strong metaphor for what’s going on in America right now,” says Piers Handling, director and CEO of TIFF.

“As so many great westerns do, they speak to the present, even though they’re set in the past, and I think this is a microcosm of America: the stresses it’s undergoing right now, a community under duress and a group of people very multi-ethnic coming together to save this community.”

Then there are the political biopics that bring to mind the current U.S. presidenti­al election. Barry looks at U.S. President Barack Obama’s college days in New York City; Jackie stars Natalie Portman as Jacqueline Kennedy before and after the assassinat­ion of U.S. president John F. Kennedy; and LBJ stars Woody Harrelson as U.S. president Lyndon B. Johnson.

“In one way, movies are always of the moment, they’re always products of the time they’re made in,” says TIFF artistic director Cameron Bailey. “But it feels like this year, filmmakers are going a little deeper in terms of exploring the volatility of what’s happening around us right now.

“There’s so much change happening, there’s so much instabilit­y in the world, people are asking big questions maybe about how we get along with each other and we see that in the film.”

Several other big films also look back while reflecting on the ongoing topic of racial tensions. The Birth of a Nation looks at a slave rebellion; A United Kingdom and Loving feature interracia­l couples; and Queen of Katwe profiles a Ugandan chess champion.

“This is, I think, a part of overall larger conversati­ons that we’re having about shifts in the culture and I think especially about audience expectatio­ns,” says Bailey.

“I think now, more than ever, audiences are looking to see their own experience­s, their own histories reflected back at them from the movie screen. And so I think we are beginning to see more films by and about people of African descent, of Asian descent, of Arab descent and of LGBT identity.”

Also relevant to the times is Oliver Stone’s Snowden. Joseph GordonLevi­tt stars as NSA whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden in the real-life political thriller that reflects the growing issue of online privacy.

And don’t forget Leonardo DiCaprio’s climate-change doc Before the Flood.

Other much-anticipate­d titles include La La Land, a song-and-dance romance starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone. Quebec director Denis Villeneuve delves into sci-fi with the aliens drama Arrival. Actor Ewan McGregor makes his directoria­l debut on American Pastoral. And Dev Patel, Rooney Mara and Nicole Kidman star in the true orphan story Lion.

Nearly 400 films from 83 countries are in the lineup, which closes with The Edge of Seventeen.

Almost 140 of the films are world premieres while most have already made their debuts at other fests.

Going to TIFF after premiering at another fest still has great value, notes Oscar-nominated filmmaker Baz Luhrmann, director of the new Netflix series The Get Down.

“Strictly Ballroomwa­s discovered at Cannes, but it was discovered by America at the Toronto film festival,” he says. “That is a great festival and it’s a festival that says, ‘You’ve arrived.’ You get embraced there, you’ve arrived in North America, you’ve arrived in this part of the world.”

Winning the TIFF People’s Choice Award also gets distributo­rs “very excited,” he adds. “They go, ‘Oh, audiences actually respond to this movie.’ That’s very meaningful.”

Oscar-nominated filmmaker Werner Herzog, who will be at TIFF with Salt and Fire, says the fest has been a good launching pad for his films.

“I prefer festivals where there’s a market attached, meaning that there’s real business transactio­n done, real distributo­rs acquiring a film and then distributi­ng your film in theatres and Toronto is very, very good for that.”

 ?? SCOTT GARFIELD/SONY PICTURES ?? Vincent D’Onofrio, Martin Sensmeier, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Ethan Hawke, Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt and Lee Byung-hun in The Magnificie­nt Seven.
SCOTT GARFIELD/SONY PICTURES Vincent D’Onofrio, Martin Sensmeier, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Ethan Hawke, Denzel Washington, Chris Pratt and Lee Byung-hun in The Magnificie­nt Seven.
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