Whitney: Can I Be Me? (UK, 100 min.) Dir. Nick Broomfield and Rudi Dolezal Programme: Special Presentations (Canadian Premiere) Like Amy and What Happened, Miss Simone?, Whitney: Can I Be Me?
Keep ReadingBill Nye: Science Guy (USA, 101 min.) Dir. David Alvarado and Jason Sussberg Programme: Special Presentations (International Premiere) Bill Nye: Science Guy would be a relaxed, amiable film about an eccentric
Keep ReadingLibera Nos (Italy/France, 90 min.) Dir. Federica Di Giacomo Programme: World Showcase (Canadian Premiere) Although I’m a horror movie fan, I’ve ignored most of the relentless lurch of zombie shows because
Keep ReadingRaise Your Arms and Twist, Documentary of NMB48 (Japan, 95 min.) Dir. Atsushi Funahashi Programme: Made in Japan (Toronto Premiere) Atsushi Funahashi’s film Raise Your Arms and Twist explores the pop
Keep ReadingGilbert (USA, 96 min.) Dir. Neil Berkeley Programme: Special Presentations (International Premiere) Gilbert Gottfried has been compared to Lenny Bruce because like Lenny, he is a taboo-breaking, absurdity puncturing stand-up comic,
Keep ReadingI Am Another You (USA, 85 min.) dir. Nanfu Wang Programme: International Spectrum (International Premiere) I Am Another You is an intricately layered, visually seductive exploration of the longing for absolute
Keep ReadingKate Plays Christine (USA, 112 min.) Kate, in Robert Greene’s haunted and haunting new film, is actress Kate Lyn Sheil. Christine is Christine Chubbuck, a local TV station reporter who shot
Keep ReadingBrothers of the Night immerses you in an off-centre world offering a frank look at young men trying to stay afloat in a sea of contradictions.
Keep ReadingLike Gus Van Sant’s Elephant, Tim Sutton’s Dark Night is a trance film inspired by mass murder.
Keep ReadingPolish filmmaker Michal Marczak’s All These Sleepless Nights, which picked up the World Cinema Documentary Award at Sundance 2016, has been getting mostly favourable attention for evaporating distinctions between documentary and fiction,
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