* Now Updated with more reviews and features! See the links below in bold. *
Another crazy and wonderful year of the Toronto International Film Fest has come to a close and again ScreenAnarchy's coverage has been second to none. How's that, you ask? Just take a gander at the incredible list of features and reviews below. Once you're done there, click through the gallery below where we chat about our favorite films of the fest and reveal a few disappointments as well. As always, your comments on our festival coverage are very much appreciated.
Previews
10 Big Launches
14 Far East Faves
13 Slices of Big Screen Reality
12 Fantastic Genre Offerings
16 Features Seeking the Big Sale
13 Flicks That Have Lit Up Previous Festivals
Twitch Picks Our Top 15 Festival Flicks
Reviews
12 YEARS A SLAVE Gracefully Examines Our Troubling Past by Ryland Aldrich
ALL CHEERLEADERS DIE Lets The Good Times Load by Ryland Aldrich
ALL IS BY MY SIDE Is A Momentously Audacious Musical Biopic Fitting of The Jimi Hendrix Experience by Ryland Aldrich
THE ARMSTRONG LIE Expertly Explores One of Sports' Most Fascinating Stories by Ryland Aldrich
BAD WORDS, Jason Bateman's Dark And Funny Debut by Jason Gorber
BREAK LOOSE Doesn't Quite Hold Together by Jason Gorber
CANNIBAL, A Beautiful And Minimalist Study Of Love by Shelagh M. Rowan-Legg
CANOPY Is An Interesting But Flawed Experience by Todd Brown
COLD EYES Looks To The Best For Inspiration by Pierce Conran
DEVIL'S KNOT Adds Little To Tragic Story by Jason Gorber
THE DOG, An Engrossing Look At The Real Guy Behind DOG DAY AFTERNOON by Jason Gorber
DOM HEMINGWAY, A Cheeky, If Slight, Gangster Character Study by Kurt Halfyard
THE DOUBLE Confirms Aoyade As A Potent, Fresh Voice by Todd Brown
ENEMY Explores Villeneuve's More Unique Side by Jason Gorber
ENOUGH SAID Simply Falls Flat by Jason Gorber
In THE F WORD, F Is For Fresh by Jason Gorber
FELONY Cops Out In The End by Kurt Halfyard
A FIELD IN ENGLAND Is A Terrifying Headtrip Into The British Countryside by James Marsh
THE FIFTH ESTATE Showcases Benedict Cumberbatch by Jason Gorber
GRAVITY, An Experience Like No Other by Jason Gorber
The Devil Is In The Details In HORNS by Kurt Halfyard
HOW I LIVE NOW Does Young Adult Better Than Most by Ryland Aldrich
INTRUDERS Proves The Power Of Perspective by Todd Brown
iNUMBER NUMBER Brings Reservoir Dogs To South Africa by Kurt Halfyard
JOE Paints a Searing Portrait of Rural Torment by Ryland Aldrich
KILL YOUR DARLINGS Presents A Woefully Clumsy And Shallow Hagiography Of The Beat by Todd Brown
MAN OF TAI CHI Plays It Down The Middle by Jason Gorber
MANAKAMANA Transcends The Simplicity Of Its Journey by Kurt Halfyard
MCCANICK Brings Old-School Grit To Screen by Jason Gorber
METALHEAD Offers A Searing Portrait Of Grief by Todd Brown
NIGHT MOVES is a Tense Showcase of Guilt and Paranoia by Kurt Halfyard
OCULUS Isn't Just A Great Midnight Film, It's A Great Film, Period by Jason Gorber
ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE Brings A Cosmopolitan Maturity to the Ailing Vampire Genre by Kurt Halfyard
PALO ALTO Ushers In A New Generation Of Angst by Ryland Aldrich
PARKLAND, A Refreshingly Original Take On The Death Of JFK by Jason Gorber
PRISONERS Is a Tense Thriller With a Few Nagging Problems by Ryland Aldrich
R100 Is Another Mind Bending Trip From Japan's Savant Of The Strange by Todd Brown
Kurosawa's REAL Is A Bland Disappointment by Todd Brown
RHYMES FOR YOUNG GHOULS Is A Must See Debut by Jason Gorber
RUSH Burns Rubber, Makes Hearts Race by Jason Gorber
THE SACRAMENT Will Make You Want To Drink The Kool-Aid by Ryland Aldrich
SALINGER Promises Secrets And Insights, Delivers Research And Interviews by Peter Martin
SEX, DRUGS & TAXATION Is A Gonzo Biopic So Strange It Has To be True by Todd Brown
SIDDHARTH Is A Beautifully Tragic Portrait Of India by Todd Brown
SOUTHCLIFFE Collapses Under Its Own Weight by Todd Brown
Tahrir Doc THE SQUARE Is A Modern Masterpiece by Jason Gorber
THE STAG Works Its Comedy Formula To Perfection by Todd Brown
STARRED UP, A Gritty And Intense Morality Play by Jason Gorber
THE STATION Aims For Creature Feature Greatness But Misses The Mark by Todd Brown
THE STRANGE COLOUR OF YOUR BODY'S TEARS Will Break Your Brain by Todd Brown
SUNSHINE ON LEITH Supplies Musical Warmth by Jason Gorber
TIM'S VERMEER Is Magical Art by Jason Gorber
A TOUCH OF SIN Is A Touch Too Slight by Jason Gorber
TRIPTYCH Is Intoxicating, Accessible Art Cinema by Jason Gorber
UNDER THE SKIN, Brilliant Cinema Of Alienation by Kurt Halfyard
UNFORGIVEN, A Remake That Acts As Love Letter Rather Than Redux by Jason Gorber
THE UNKNOWN KNOWN Is A Zen Koan by Kurt Halfyard
WE GOTTA GET OUT OF THIS PLACE Is A Smart Slice Of Small-Town Noir by James Marsh
WHEN JEWS WERE FUNNY, A Serious (And Funny) Testament To A Lost Age by Jason Gorber
Sono's WHY DON'T YOU PLAY IN HELL Brings The Madness To Midnight by Todd Brown
WITCHING & BITCHING Is Vulgar Auteurism At Its Most Manic by Kurt Halfyard
Music Doc Dispatch: 12.12.12 And MADE IN AMERICA by Jason Gorber
Features
TIFF 2013: Our Complete Coverage (So Far) by Ben Umstead
Short Film YOUNG WONDER Just Described My Entire Childhood! by Andrew Mack
CANNIBAL Director Manuel Martín Cuenca Talks About Representing Evil by Shelagh M. Rowan-Legg
Twitch Talks R100 With Matsumoto Hitoshi by Jason Gorber
Twitchvision: Jason Gorber Talks TIFF13, GRAVITY, 12 YEARS A SLAVE, And THE SQUARE
Twitchvision: Jason Gorber Wraps Up TIFF 2013
Click through the gallery as we answer some questions about the hits and misses of TIFF 2013.
What was your favorite film of the fest?
Todd Brown: There were a lot of really great genre fare and more typically 'Twitch-y' titles to choose from this year, but I think my pick would have to go to Siddharth. It's just such an incredibly finely crafted film, filled with amazing performances, incredibly heartfelt and really emotionally powerful.
Ryland Aldrich: This is such a difficult question but it's really impossible not for me to say Gravity. It's the first time I've seen a film twice at the same festival (in both IMAX and non-IMAX – see it big but IMAX isn't necessary). As everyone is about to discover when the film hits theaters in the next few weeks, this is so much more than just a film. Gravity is an adventure experience.
Kurt Halfyard: Jonathan Glazer’s long overdue Under The Skin was my most anticipated film of this year's Festival. Somehow, with all that expectations (fan of the book, the director, and the star), it still managed to deliver on the impossible-to-adapt promise of an ambiguous science fiction head-scratcher. From its 2001: A Space Odyssey styled opening overture (which depicts the fabrication of a human eye) to its poetic and memorable final sequence, this film is delivering bonafide new cinematic language and challenges its audience towards a curious empathy. It may not leave everyone coming out happy, but there is no denying the ambition on display here, not to mention the trust it puts in its audience, while sustaining a delicate and disturbing mood. The movie is a venus fly trap, that you slowly, slowly sink into the murk to be digested by its strangeness.
Jason Gorber: I'm totally going to cheat here - I saw some 65+ films for TIFF, and there's no way I'm going to narrow it down to one. Gravity and 12 Years A Slave are magnificent, but hardly a surprise. Rush was better than I could have hoped, and I spent much of the fest convincing people of this fact. If I had to pick one feature film that nobody had heard of pre-fest it'd be iNumber Number, an absolute delight, and totally worth seeking out.
What title disappointed you the most?
Jason Gorber: This is harder, since I try to go in with moderate expectations to everything (there are, of course, exceptions). Still, I was kind of surprised how little The Fifth Estate worked. There was a chance to make a great film there, and they kind of blew it.
Kurt Halfyard: Here we have a tie. Guillaume Canet's Blood Ties and Kurosawa Kiyoshi's Real failed hard for spectacularly different reasons. The former is a cops 'n family drama that pulls every cliché out of the book, combines even less imaginative musical choices, and even fails in the modest ambition of recreating gritty seventies American cinema. Kurosawa's science-fiction slash horror slash psychological mind-fuck ends up being pitched at the 14 year old girl level of sophistication that not even a 30 foot CGI Plesiosaur can save it from its own convoluted melodrama. Considering the past resumes of both directors, their 2013 films can be considered career low-points.
Todd Brown: Based on how it turned out relative to expectations going in to it, probably The Station. That's not to say it's the worst film I saw (which it definitely wasn't), but it's the one that missed expectations by the largest margin.
Ryland Aldrich: It's a really bad sign when you're watching Owen Wilson and Zach Galifianakis banter for 30 minutes before you even utter a chuckle. Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner's first foray into feature filmmaking You Are Here is an utter failure. I walked out after 45 minutes to go watch Gravity again.
Who gave the best performance?
Ryland Aldrich: When Nic Cage is given a meaty role to work with, there are few better. The title role of Joe is a porter house steak and Nicolas Cage tears it apart like an angry dog. Perhaps it's not a performance we'll hear much about come Awards time, but it deserves its recognition.
Todd Brown: Rajesh Tailang in Siddharth. He's the soul of the film, in pretty much every shot, and he's exceptional.
Jason Gorber: It's hard to not see Chiwetel Ejiofor's turn in 12 Years A Slave as anything less than a star making turn.
Kurt Halfyard: Donald Rumsfeld. After 90 minutes of questioning from director Errol Morris, as well as his own reading of policy memos ("Snowflakes") and we are still no closer to understanding the former Defense Secretary outside of the context of 'career-ist' and 'spin-meister.' Rumsfeld's cadence is mesmerizing, almost sleep inducing, which should be familiar to anyone watching the news after September 11th until his own resignation just before the Obama administration. I cannot remember much of what he actually said for the duration of The Unknown Known, but I want to see it again, if only to look into those calculating eyes and hear the wordplay issued from his snake-like tongue.
What was the best documentary you saw?
Kurt Halfyard: Jodorowsky's Dune - For the past few years at TIFF there has been a real renaissance of quality documentaries. There were more ambitious docs (The Unknown Known), and were more cinematic docs (Watermarks) than this straightforward 'talking head' entry. But when your principal talking head is Alejandro Jodorowsky, who at 84 is showing not a hint in waning energy or madness, well, the whole thing is electric. Animating the storyboards to the Chilean director's enthusiastic description of the now 40 year old project that never was, along with the context provided by Richard Stanley and Nicolas Winding Refn and coupled that with my inner-Dune nerd, and the legend of his never produced fever-dream adaptation of the novel: Dork-bliss! Plus, I want someone issue a re-print of the massive storyboard and production tome (of which only two are left in existence). I'd pay real money for a copy of that.
Jason Gorber: Again, a tie - The Square won the Doc award, and I couldn't be more pleased. It's a film that's in desperate need of a wide audience. I for one will be pleased when both it and The Act of Killing are likely to vie for Oscars, making their prominence even higher, thus garnering more viewers. On a much lighter note, Tim's Vermeer really is quite an astonishing feat, and beyond the built in star power of its director, it's a tremendous accomplishment and one to be celebrated.
Ryland Aldrich: Not only is the subject matter of Tim's Vermeer mountainous enough to change the field of art history, but it's told in a way entertaining enough to make this a joy to watch. This little ingredient of making the docu fun was missing from many of the documentaries at TIFF.
Todd Brown: I didn't see any. I'm a bad man.
What was your biggest discovery of the fest?
Todd Brown: Without a doubt for me, South African action film iNumber Number. It's a great flick that reminds me a lot of Europa Corp product from 10-15 years ago. Director Donovan Marsh is a huge talent that we should hopefully see a lot more from. And while it wasn't a discovery – we've been covering his short films for ages – it was pretty great to watch the Canadian press go nuts for Jeff Barnaby's debut feature, Rhymes For Young Ghouls. International press seems to have largely overlooked it, but it's pretty great. The keen eyed out there will recognize that XYZ Films (where I'm a partner) is involved as a sales rep on both of these but that's because a) I 'discovered' them and b) they're awesome.
Jason Gorber: Again, I'd like to think iNumber Number will make many people happy, but I also thoroughly adored Oculus, finding it a near perfect thriller.
Ryland Aldrich: John Ridley has a mixed track record as a writer (12 Year A Slave: good, Redtails: hrmm), but what is very clear now is that he's an incredibly talented director. His sophomore follow-up to 1997's Cold Around the Heart is the audaciously stylish and incredibly successful Jimi Hendrix biopic All Is by My Side.
Kurt Halfyard: Manakamana - While Harvard's Sensory Ethnography Lab issued one of my favourite films of last year, Leviathan, since the concept, location and directors of their second feature, Manakamana is so vastly different, I feel it qualifies as a discovery. It came darn close to edging out Under the Skin as my favourite film of the fest. Description alone is not enough to underscore just how good this film is for the observation of people. 11 cable car rides, 5 up, 6 down, to and from a temple located at the top of a verdant Nepalese mountain give further insight that it is not the destination, it is the journey. Two 90 year old women trying to scarf down ice-cream on a stick and unguardedly laughing about the futility of doing so in close quarters on a sunny day, might just be the best cinematic image I've been treated to all year.
What was the best non-movie TIFF moment?
Jason Gorber: Chatting with Teller and Tim of Tim's Vermeer for a good 45 minutes about aesthetics and epistemology was intoxicating -- as well the time spent talking with Professor Skip Gates and about 12 Years A Slave was also amazing (plus, being star-struck by Alfre Woodard). I also adored the conversation I had with Oculus' Mike Flannigan as I walked him to the Midnight Madness anniversary party as I continued to tease him about his views on Kubrick.
Todd Brown: I did precisely zero parties or other events this year, with most of my time going to business meetings and being a parent (I never even saw Ryland at the fest this year, which sucks), so my best non-movie moments would both go to interviews. I limited myself to just three this year out of time concerns but the moment where Blue Ruin's Jeremy Saulnier realized I was from ScreenAnarchy and leapt out of his seat was pretty awesome, as was landing a half hour one-on-one conversation with The Double's Richard Ayoade, who I'm PRAYING is audible on the tape given that he speaks so very softly and there was a lot of background noise in the room.
Kurt Halfyard: Wandering around a party like a breathless 13-year-old girl because I heard Shane Carruth was in attendance. The Primer/Upstream Color director remained elusive and was never discovered, but was good enough to embrace your quite non-professional inner fanboy once a year. Anything higher in frequency for a 38-year-old father of two is a bit retrograde, but I am happy for the pleasure of those moments - even if they ended fruitlessly. Equally geeky was my 10 year old son being cast in an ABCs of Death 2 segments, but that is another story for another time.
Ryland Aldrich: Toronto is always one of the busiest and most stressful festivals of the year for me. What was particularly cool this year was having so many busy and stressed out friends to share the screenings and lines with. It's always particularly cool to sit in the audience and realize you actually really like a film your friends have spent months of their lives slaving over. Congratulations to all the filmmakers!