Deccan Chronicle

Toronto film fest: Diversity with incredible grace

Canadian city includes 34% of films made by women; 136 films at festival have female leads

- SUPARNA SHARMA | DC TORONTO, SEPT. 7

JUST ONE half of Toronto is white, the other half a rainbow of colours and ethnicitie­s

MEDIA IN Toronto projected Jagmeet Singh Jimmy Dhaliwal as a challenger to Justin Trudeau

UNDER-REPRESENTE­D GROUPS - “Women, people of colour, people with disabiliti­es, and people from the LGBTQ communitie­s” got more access the film festival this year

As the 42nd edition of the 10-day-long Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival 2018 (Tiff 2018) kicked off on Thursday with the Scottish drama, Outlaw

King, production behemoth Netflix must have felt warm after the cold shoulder it experience­d at Cannes. In May this year, the high-brow Cannes had banished Netflix from its sight for not adhering to its rule of having a theatrical release of all its films showing at the festival in France.

But then, warm embrace of the outlier, the other, the refugee is in Toronto’s DNA.

Just one half of Toronto is white, the other half a rainbow of colours and ethnicitie­s. Out of every 100 people in Toronto 12 are South Asian, 11 Chinese, 5 Filipinos, 9 Blacks, 2 Arab, and at least 1 Korean, Japanese, Latin American each… and most are foreign born.

As if that’s not enough, there’s much excitement in one section of the press in Toronto that the man who could be a real challenger to Justin Trudeau for the post of Prime Minister in 2019 national elections is Jagmeet Singh Jimmy Dhaliwal.

The 39-year-old leader of the New Democratic Party, Canada’s third largest party in terms of MPs, is the son of immigrant parents — his mother is from Ludhiana and father from Barnala — and at this year’s meet the press, he took to the stage after Mr Trudeau mostly to show him how to do bhangra right. That he did it in a room full of journalist­s, with his turban tied high with pride, and his kirpan bouncing with his bhangra steps seems to have only added to his charm.

Given this very unique behaviour for a city, by now Toronto should have acquired a reputation on its own — for being the most diverse city in the world. The BBC says it is.

That it hasn’t, tells another story, perhaps. Of Toronto, and Canada’s, grace with which it embraces diversity, without flaunting or bragging.

In a post-Harvey Weinstein era and a year when the world’s oldest film festival is still grappling with old world problems — just recently Venice Film Festival has had to defend its decision for having just one film in the competitio­n section out of 21 by a woman — 34 per cent of films showing at Tiff 2018 are made by women, and 136 films showing at the festival have female leads.

That graceful inclusivit­y is visible not just in the choice of films, but also in the press room and the journalist­s still arriving from all over the world to cover the festival.

This year Tiff decided to expand its accredited media list by 20 per cent, but it decided that the new lot of writers will come from under-represente­d groups — “women, people of colour, people with disabiliti­es, and people from the LGBTQ communitie­s”.

“Change like this is always a collective effort. We will accredit almost 200 new journalist­s from underrepre­sented groups. It’s fantastic news, but access is only the first step,” Cameron Bailey, artistic director of Tiff, said.

The questionna­ire Tiff sent out to journalist­s attending the festival reflected its gentle determinat­ion to foster diversity. Writers, bloggers, journalist­s, critics were asked to indicate the gender and sexual orientatio­n they identified with — transgende­r (male), transgende­r (female), non-binary, male, female, two-spirited, gay, lesbian, bi-sexual, queer, heterosexu­al. Or anything else Tiff may have missed out.

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