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TIFF Presents Films That Push Cinematic Boundaries In Vis...

TIFF Presents Films That Push Cinematic Boundaries In Visions And Vanguard Programmes

Toronto – The 35th Toronto International Film Festival announces another stellar line-up of films in this year’s Visions and Vanguard programmes. Works presented under the Visions banner are films from around the world by filmmakers who push the boundaries and challenge notions of mainstream cinema. Vanguard films are young and irreverent, always on the cutting edge.

VISIONS PROGRAMME

The Autobiography of Nicolae Ceausescu Andrei Ujica, Romania
North American Premiere
Culled from one thousand hours of archival footage and four years in the making, this spellbinding epic montage unfolds as if from the memory of former Romanian ruler Nicolae Ceausescu, after his reign was brought to an abrupt and tumultuous end in December 1989.                 

Brownian Movement Nanouk Leopold, The Netherlands/Germany/Belgium
World Premiere
Acclaimed Dutch filmmaker Nanouk Leopold explores a young mother's desires and needs in this langorous and atmospheric film.                   

The Ditch Wang Bing, France/Belgium
North American Premiere
A political ghost story that gives voice to atrocious memories, The Ditch draws from Wang Bing's experience as a documentary filmmaker and lays bare a dramatic hidden chapter of China's communist history. It recounts the harrowing story of life at one of Mao's camps, at the end of the fifties, where "rightists" were sent to be "re-educated through labour."

The Four Times Michelangelo Frammartino, Italy/Germany/Switzerland
Canadian Premiere
Inspired by Pythagoras’s belief in four-fold transmigration – by which the soul is passed from human to animal to vegetable to mineral, until completely purified – The Four Times is a genre-defying work of cinematic transcendence that follows the journey of an elderly shepherd through the afterlife. 

k.364 A Journey by Train Douglas Gordon, United Kingdom/Germany/France
North American Premiere
Two musicians return to a haunted landscape and play the concerto of their lives.

Moscow 11:19:31 Michael Nyman, United Kingdom
North American Premiere
In this short film, when legendary composer Michael Nyman fails to answer an interview question, music takes over.

Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow Sophie Fiennes, U.K./France/The Netherlands
North American Premiere
Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow profiles major contemporary artist Anselm Keifer in the style of his work.

Promises Written in Water Vincent Gallo, USA
North American Premiere
Shot in black and white, this fiercely independent film traces the steps a young photographer takes to fulfill the dying wishes of a beautiful young woman, including getting a job in a funeral parlour so he can oversee her cremation.

Summer of Goliath Nicolàs Pereda, Mexico/Canada/Netherlands
North American Premiere
Toronto resident Nicolas Pereda explores the boundaries between fiction and documentary to evoke the atmosphere of the place in his latest feature, Summer of Goliath. It's a hot summer in the rural Mexican community of Huilotepec and the townspeople are tense and suspicious of one another.

A Useful Life  Federico Veiroj, Uruguay
International Premiere
Jorge has been working at the Cinematheque in Montevideo, Uruguay, for 25 years. Its imminent closing forces him to take drastic steps and become the star of his own life. Shot in black and white, A Useful Life is an entertaining homage to a life of film.

Previously announced Visions titles include Trois Temps Apres La Mort D’Anna (Catherine Martin) and Curling (Denis Côté).

VANGUARD PROGRAMME

At Ellen’s Age  Pia Marais, Germany
North American Premiere
A German flight attendant falls into increasingly bizarre adventures when she leaves her husband, quits her job and joins a radical group of animal activists.

The Christening  Marcin Wrona, Poland
International Premiere
Michal (Wojciech Zielinski) hopes to change his luck and escape his criminal past. But when he’s pursued by a violent gang, he desperately tries to find a way to save his family.

Cold Fish  Sion Sono, Japan
North American Premiere
Equal parts black humour and bloody dementia, and based on a true story, this film is a portrait of a Japanese tropical fish dealer responsible for more than 40 murders.

Confessions Tetsuya Nakashima, Japan
Canadian Premiere
Tetsuya Nakashima's Confessions is one of Japan's most important films of the year. A stylized mixture of cruelty and compassion, the film spins the dark tale of vengeance of a teacher whose little daughter has been killed by two of her students. 

Easy Money  Daniel Espinosa, Sweden
North American Premiere
The worlds of a mob enforcer, an escaped convict and an ambitious young business student collide in an explosive and white-knuckled thriller based on the 2006 bestselling Swedish novel by Jens Lapidus.

A Horrible Way to Die  Adam Wingard, USA
World Premiere
When a serial killer escapes from prison, he pursues his ex-girlfriend, who has fled to start a new life in a small town.

Kaboom  Gregg Araki, USA/France
North American Premiere
Smith’s everyday life in the dorm – hanging out with his arty, sarcastic best friend Stella, hooking up with a beautiful free spirit named London, lusting for his gorgeous but dim surfer roommate Thor – all gets turned upside-down after one fateful, terrifying night.

L.A. Zombie  Bruce LaBruce, Germany/USA/France
North American Premiere
Corpse-eating meets poverty politics in this pornographic art film set on the streets of Los Angeles, where an alien zombie brings dead men back to life.

Microphone Ahmad Abdalla, Egypt
World Premiere
A bold example of new North African cinema, Microphone mixes and remixes fiction and cinema verité as it follows an Egyptian expatriate's return to Alexandria, where he dives into a thriving underground music and arts scene.

Monsters Gareth Edwards, United Kingdom
Canadian Premiere
Six years after a probe carrying alien life samples crashes in Mexico, a photojournalist must escort his boss' daughter through the "Infected Zone" back to the safety of her home in the U.S.

Our Day Will Come Romain Gavras, France
World Premiere
The highly anticipated debut by French director Romain Gavras (director of M.I.A.’s video Born Free) focuses on two outcast redheads – a bullied teen (Olivier Barthelemy) and a psychologist (Vincent Cassel) – who embark on a hallucinatory journey to Ireland in a quest for freedom.

 

The Festival’s Official Film Schedule was released today. It is available at the TIFF Festival Box Office, at select BLOCKBUSTER® stores across Canada and by visiting tiff.net. Copies will also be distributed via Toronto’s EYE Weekly on Thursday, August 26. Thursday’s issue of the Toronto Star will contain a 24-page section on the Festival and includes the full film schedule.

Ticket packages for the Festival are available for purchase by cash, debit or Visa. Purchase online at tiff.net/thefestival, by phone at 416-968-FILM or 1-877-968-FILM (Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.,) or in person at the TIFF Festival Box Office at 363 King St W, at Peter St (Monday to Friday: 10 a.m. - 7 p.m.) The 35th Toronto International Film Festival runs September 9 to 19, 2010.

About TIFF Bell Lightbox:
Currently under construction, TIFF Bell Lightbox, a breathtaking five-storey complex located in downtown Toronto, will provide a permanent home for film lovers to celebrate cinema from around the world and will propel TIFF forward as an international leader in film culture. Designed by innovative architecture firm KPMB, TIFF Bell Lightbox’s fluid structure encourages exploration, movement and play. The campaign to build TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by founding sponsor Bell, the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada, the City of Toronto, the King and John Festival Corporation - consisting of the Reitman family and the Daniels Corporation – RBC as major sponsor and official bank, Visa†, the Copyright Collective of Canada, the Slaight Family Foundation, NBC Universal Canada, the Brian Linehan Charitable Foundation, the Harbinger Foundation, CIBC and BMO. The Board of Directors, staff and many generous individuals and corporations have also contributed to the campaign. For more information on the TIFF Bell Lightbox campaign, visit belllightbox.ca.

About TIFF:
TIFF is a not-for-profit cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world through film. Its vision is to lead the world in creative and cultural discovery through the moving image. TIFF generates an annual economic impact of $170 million CAD and currently employs more than 100 full-time staff and 500 part-time and seasonal staff, and counts upon the largesse of over 2,000 volunteers year-round.

The Toronto International Film Festival is generously supported by Lead Sponsor Bell, Major Sponsors RBC and BlackBerry, the Government of Ontario, Telefilm Canada, and the City of Toronto.

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For information, contact the Communications Department at 416-934-3200 or email proffice@tiff.net.

 
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