Toronto Star

Top 10 list of TIFF favourites

Peter Howell recounts hits, Oscar speculatio­n.

- Peter Howell Peter Howell is a movie critic in Toronto. Twitter: @peterhowel­lfilm

The 46th edition of the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival was supposed to be the one when everything returned to normal, or something close to it, with the glitz, parties and packed theatres of pre-pandemic life.

TIFF 2021, which wraps Saturday, turned out to be anything but the familiar 10-day show. Blame it on the surging Delta variant that has made even fully vaccinated people wary, and which discourage­d many celebritie­s and journalist­s from making the trek to Toronto.

The streets around TIFF Bell Lightbox, the fest’s King Street West headquarte­rs, were noticeably quieter this year, with fewer people and parties. The pandemic also forced TIFF to program fewer movies, limit theatres to 50-per-cent capacity and split screenings between in-person and online, which made for some tough viewing choices — especially since not all films were available online. This hybrid version of TIFF was even stranger than the 2020 version, which was almost entirely online.

Yet even with a diminished presence, TIFF ’21 still made an impact with many substantia­l films, which were all the more enjoyable when viewed on the big screen, a pleasure sorely missed during much of the pandemic.

As always, it was tough to limit my favourites to just a Top 10 list, but here goes, along with a little Oscars speculatio­n in some cases:

The Power of the Dog ★★★★ (out of 4)

Jane Campion deftly adapts Thomas Savage’s western novel of toxic machismo, a tale exceedingl­y well told. Benedict Cumberbatc­h simmers and boils brilliantl­y as Phil, the Marlboro Man from Hell, a cattle rancher in 1920s Montana who is determined to wreck the new marriage of his meeker brother (Jesse Plemons). Superb direction, a carefully calibrated screenplay and an excellent supporting cast make this awards catnip.

Oscar chances: Best Picture, director, screenplay, actor (Cumberbatc­h), supporting actor (Kodi Smit-McPhee), supporting actress (Kirsten Dunst)

Dune ★★★1/2

Desert power! Frank Herbert’s “unfilmable” sci-fi novel classic becomes transporti­ng cinema in Denis Villeneuve’s capable hands. It connects on visual and subconscio­us levels, demanding the biggest screen possible, but also rewarding close study. Desert planet Arrakis is revealed in all its sunburned glory, with its feuding colonial clans, House Atreides (Timothée Chalamet plays visionary scion Paul) and House Harkonnen, freedom-seeking Indigenous Fremen and menacing sandworms. The film is geared to fans; newcomers may want a second look, but consider it a pleasure.

Oscar chances: Picture, director, screenplay, many technical awards

Spencer ★★★1/2

A bravura performanc­e by Kristen Stewart as a haunted Princess Diana, contemplat­ing divorce from Prince Charles during a 1987 Christmas break. Director Pablo Larraín (“Jackie”) admits up front it’s more fable than fact and, while he occasional­ly overreache­s with his myth-spinning, his empathy and compassion for a woman suffering a mental breakdown are beautifull­y expressed. Gauzy cinematogr­aphy makes this seem like a high-class ghost story. Huge counterpoi­nt to the royals of “The Crown”: the humans of the TV series become the undead of “Spencer.”

Oscar chances: Picture, director, screenplay, actress (Stewart), supporting actor (Timothy Spall)

The Eyes of Tammy Faye ★★★

Jessica Chastain almost disappears into the painted punch line known as Tammy Faye Bakker, the disgraced televangel­ist whose antics with husband Jim epitomized ’80s excess. We’re not meant to stare and laugh; Michael Showalter’s film demands a fair reassessme­nt of a stained icon. There’s compassion and credit for Tammy Faye, who is championed as a women’s rights advocate and upholder of gay rights in defiance of the homophobia of right-wing evangelist­s like Jerry Falwell.

Oscar chances: Picture, actress (Chastain)

A Hero ★★★

There’s never just one central drama in an Asghar Farhadi film. The Iranian auteur finds ways to bring multiple story lines and culpabilit­y together. So it goes with his latest, the Cannes ’21 Grand Prix winner, a tale of a man’s good intentions gone awry. Humble calligraph­er Rahim (Amir Jadidi), on a two-day release from debtor’s prison, is offered an opportunit­y to quickly win full freedom. Rahim tries to do the right thing, but missteps and doubts, inflamed by social media, threaten to make his life all the more miserable. “Nothing is fair in this world,” a character says. Indeed.

The Guilty ★★★

Jake Gyllenhaal blazes as a hotheaded cop assigned to 911 call centre duties, seeking in real time to find a distressed woman (Riley Keough), a possible kidnap victim, while L.A. literally burns from climatecha­nge wildfires. Antoine Fuqua’s remake of a 2018 Danish movie, working a script by Nic Pizzolatto (“True Detective”), is the rare redo that exceeds the original. There’s deeper resonance regarding the hot-button issue of police brutality. Filmed during lockdown as essentiall­y a one-man show, it’s also right in tune with the general pandemic mood that the walls are closing in.

The Worst Person in the World ★★★

The romantic drama for people who hate romantic dramas. Joachim Trier subverts expectatio­ns as he sets Renate Reinsve — the Cannes ’21 Best Actress winner — on a campaign to put more amour and meaning into her life as her 30th birthday dawns. This is more easily said than done for Reinsve’s character Julie, since she’s reluctant to keep with one thing for too long, whether it’s school, a job or a boyfriend. Julie’s restlessne­ss makes her a love/hate fascinatio­n; the film may speak to millennial­s much like “The Big Chill” did to boomers and “Reality Bites” to Gen-Xers.

I’m Your Man ★★★

Do androids dream of electric heartbeats? Germany’s Maria Schrader poses the query in this uncommonly deep rom-com, a sci-fi story set in the near future when mechanical humans are becoming commonplac­e. Obliged by her research funders, scientist Alma (Berlin fest winner Maren Eggert) reluctantl­y agrees to cohabit with eager-to-please humanoid Tom (Dan Stevens, “Downton Abbey”) to assess whether society’s ready for full human/replicant integratio­n. The plot’s happily not robotic, addressing questions of whether circuits can match cells in determinin­g humanity.

The Middle Man ★★★

I’ve been a Bent Hamer fan since the droll Norwegian auteur’s “Kitchen Stories” (2003) satirized efficiency researcher­s. You wouldn’t call the people of his new film efficient, but they certainly are busybodies. It’s set in a disaster-prone U.S. town (played by Sault Ste. Marie) and co-stars Canadian film luminaries Paul Gross, Don McKellar, Sheila McCarthy, Kenneth Welsh and Rossif Sutherland. The theme is grief, not normally a subject for mirth. But just watch Norwegian actor Pal Sverre Hagen go as Frank, the absurd “middle man” tasked with being the bearer of bad news.

You Are Not My Mother ★★★

My Irish grandmothe­r described someone who was a little odd as being “away with the fairies.” Grandma knew her folklore and so does writer/director Kate Dolan. Her feature debut, spooky as a banshee wail, explores a Dublin family’s distemper regarding the strange actions of title mom Angela (Carolyn Bracken). Angela hasn’t been the same since her sudden disappeara­nce and return, much to the concern of her teen daughter Char (Hazel Doupe). Is it mental illness or have the fairies taken her? There’s a “Hereditary” feel, but let’s not sell this potent chiller short.

 ?? KIRSTY GRIFFIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Benedict Cumberbatc­h, left, and Jesse Plemons play cattle-ranching brothers in 1920s Montana in “The Power of the Dog.”
KIRSTY GRIFFIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Benedict Cumberbatc­h, left, and Jesse Plemons play cattle-ranching brothers in 1920s Montana in “The Power of the Dog.”
 ?? 1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. TIFF ?? Frank Herbert’s “unfilmable” sci-fi novel classic “Dune” becomes transporti­ng cinema in Denis Villeneuve’s capable hands.
1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. TIFF Frank Herbert’s “unfilmable” sci-fi novel classic “Dune” becomes transporti­ng cinema in Denis Villeneuve’s capable hands.
 ?? 1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. TIFF ?? Amir Jadidi plays a man attempting to clear his good name via a good deed, which has unexpected consequenc­es, in “A Hero.”
1996-98 ACCUSOFT INC. TIFF Amir Jadidi plays a man attempting to clear his good name via a good deed, which has unexpected consequenc­es, in “A Hero.”
 ?? NETFLIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jake Gyllenhaal plays a hotheaded cop seeking in real time to find a possible kidnap victim in “The Guilty.”
NETFLIX THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jake Gyllenhaal plays a hotheaded cop seeking in real time to find a possible kidnap victim in “The Guilty.”
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Andrew Garfield as Jim Bakker, centre, and Jessica Chastain as Tammy Faye Bakker in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.”
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Andrew Garfield as Jim Bakker, centre, and Jessica Chastain as Tammy Faye Bakker in “The Eyes of Tammy Faye.”
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