The Toronto International Film Festival returned in September 2022 for its 47th edition — 11 days of international and Canadian cinema; special events featuring some of the biggest names in film; and TIFF’s Industry Conference, which offered diverse and innovative perspectives on the art and business of film.
Thank you to all who attended and shared everything that was #TIFF22.
Become a TIFF Member today to get first access to tickets, special events, and exclusive opportunities for TIFF 2023.
Individual tickets to TIFF 2022 films and events will become available starting August 25, by Membership level.
Emails with package redemption instructions were sent at 5pm on Monday, August 22. If you purchased a package and have not received an email, please check your spam folder.
Tickets and packages can be purchased online; by phone 10am–7pm ET daily via 416.599.2033 or 1.888.258.8433; or in person at the Steve & Rashmi Gupta Box Office inside TIFF Bell Lightbox, 3pm–10pm ET Tuesdays and 10am–10pm ET Wednesday through Sunday.
2022 ticket prices have increased at a rate of 2% per year over 2019 prices based on inflation.
A long-standing tradition at TIFF, the People’s Choice Awards are marking their 45th year. The awards consist of the People’s Choice Award, the People’s Choice Documentary Award, and the People’s Choice Midnight Madness Award. Audiences watching films at TIFF Bell Lightbox, Roy Thomson Hall, Royal Alexandra Theatre, the Visa Screening Room at the Princess of Wales Theatre, Scotiabank Theatre Toronto, and at home on digital TIFF Bell Lightbox will have the opportunity to vote online this year. All feature films in TIFF’s Official Selection are eligible. The winners of the People’s Choice Awards will be announced on Sunday, September 18.
The Fabelmans
dir. Steven Spielberg
First Runner Up: Women Talking, dir. Sarah Polley
Second Runner Up: Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery, dir. Rian Johnson
Black Ice
dir. Hubert Davis
First Runner Up: Maya and the Wave, dir. Stephanie Johnes
Second Runner Up: 752 is not a Number, dir. Babak Payami
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story
dir. Eric Appel
First Runner Up: Pearl, dir. Ti West
Second Runner Up: The Blackening, dir. Tim Story
Named after Jia Zhang-ke’s groundbreaking film, Platform spotlights films with high artistic merit and strong directorial vision. All films in the Platform program are eligible for this award, which will be selected by an international jury. The winning filmmaker will receive a $20,000 CAD cash prize.
Riceboy Sleeps
dir. Anthony Shim
After earning a Bachelor of Arts in philosophy, Patricia Rozema established herself with her internationally celebrated first feature I've Heard the Mermaids Singing, which debuted at the Directors’ Fortnight in Cannes. There, it won the Prix de la Jeunesse, the first of many recognitions including being voted one of Canada’s Top 10 Films. Other highlights: writing and directing the lesbian love story When Night is Falling and Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park, as well as co-writing HBO’s Grey Gardens starring Drew Barrymore and Jessica Lange (PEN Screenwriter's Award, an Emmy Nomination, and a Golden Globe nomination). Her film Six Gestures earned her a Grammy nomination and an Emmy. She adapted & directed the apocalyptic thriller Into The Forest with Elliot Page and Evan Rachel Wood. For the small screen, In Treatment, Anne with an E, Mozart in the Jungle and the pilot for Netflix’s hit series Sex/Life. Rozema is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
Iram Haq is a Norwegian Pakistani filmmaker. Haq began writing and directing in 2004. Her first short Trofast premiered at the 2004 Venice Film Festival. In 2009, she wrote and directed Skylappjenta, later selected at Sundance Film Festival. Her feature debut I Am Yours (2013) and her second feature What Will People Say (2017) both premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.
Chaitanya Tamhane is an independent filmmaker based in Mumbai. Tamhane’s debut feature film Court premiered at the Venice Film Festival in 2014, where it was awarded the Best Film - Orizzonti and the Lion of the Future award. It went on to win several awards at film festivals worldwide and was India’s official entry for the 2016 Oscars.
In 2016, Tamhane was selected to be mentored by Alfonso Cuarón as part of the Rolex Mentor-Protégé Arts Initiative. His second film, The Disciple, had its World Premiere in 2020 at the Venice Film Festival in competition, where it was awarded the Golden Osella for Best Screenplay and the FIPRESCI award. The film was released as a Netflix Original and was globally acclaimed as one of the best films of the year.
Presented by Canada Goose, the Amplify Voices Awards celebrate three best feature films made by under-represented filmmakers. Canada Goose embraces diversity in all of its forms and definitions, including technique and passion that transports storytelling to screen. All feature films in Official Selection with a 2022 premiere date by emerging BIPOC creators and all Canadian features are eligible for this award, and the three winners will receive $10,000 each.
To Kill A Tiger
dir. Nisha Pahuja
Special Mention: Viking, dir. Stéphane Lafleur
Leonor Will Never Die
dir. Martika Ramirez Escobar
While We Watched
dir. Vinay Shukla
Special Mention: Buffy Sainte-Marie: Carry It On, dir. Madison Thomas
Ann Marie Fleming is an award-winning Canadian filmmaker, writer, and artist. Coming from a peripatetic, multi-racial heritage, her themes often involve family, history, and memory. She has had 16 films premiere at TIFF and won Best Canadian Short twice. Her last feature, Window Horses, was on the TIFF Top Ten List, and You Take Care Now is on the TIFF list of Essential Canadian Cinema.
Director-screenwriter Anne Émond lives and works in Montreal. Since the beginning of her career, all of her films were well received and acclaimed — she has presented seven short films, among them Naissance and Sophie Lavoie. She directed her first feature film, Nuit #1 (2011), followed by Our Loved Ones (2016), Nelly (freely adapted from the life and work of Quebec writer Nelly Arcan, 2016), and her most recent, Young Juliet (2019).
Currently, Émond is working on her next feature film, La Meute.
Nathan Morlando is an award-winning Toronto-based film and television director.
Most recently he executive produced and directed the full final season of the International Emmy Award winning series Cardinal. His most recent film Mean Dreams received its World Premiere at the Cannes Film Festival Directors’ Fortnight and made its North American premiere as a Special Presentation at TIFF. His debut feature Citizen Gangster premiered at TIFF as a Special Presentation and won TIFF’s Best Canadian First Feature Award.
Morlando graduated from the Philosophy and Religious Studies program at the University of Toronto.
Albert Shin is an award-winning Korean Canadian filmmaker based out of Toronto. He co-founded the production company Timelapse Pictures along with fellow filmmaker, Igor Drljaca. His work as a writer-director includes In Her Place and Disappearance at Clifton Hill. His work as a producer include The White Fortress, The Stone Speakers, and The Waiting Room.
Jennifer Holness is a happy workaholic. A writer, producer, and director, she is the first Black woman in Canada to win a CSA (Gemini) for best writing. She is also the 2021 Indiescreen Producer of the Year and a 2022 WIFT Creative Excellence Award winner.
Her recent feature doc, Subjects of Desire, has won numerous festival awards and was a 2021 TIFF top 10 film.
Her narrative feature films include Home Again and Love, Sex and Eating the Bones, with the latter winning a Best First Feature award at TIFF.
Luisa Alvarez Restrepo is a Colombian Canadian film executive, cultural programmer, and filmmaker. Her work focuses on representation, inclusion, and access in the industry. She has previously worked for major organizations like TIFF and WarnerMedia with a focus on spotlighting underrepresented talent. She is currently at ACTRA Toronto as Manager: Diversity, Equity, Inclusion & Belonging.
Films in the Short Cuts programme are eligible for three jury-selected IMDbPro Short Cuts Awards: Best Short Film, Best Canadian Short Film, and the Share Her Journey Award for best short film by a woman filmmaker. These awards build on IMDbPro’s nearly 20-year history of empowering entertainment professionals to discover new talent and projects, and on its ongoing commitment to supporting and collaborating with organizations that create greater diversity, equity, and inclusion in the entertainment industry. IMDbPro will provide each of the three winners with a bursary of $10,000 CAD and a one-year membership to IMDbPro, the essential resource for entertainment industry professionals, to help them continue achieving success in their careers.
Snow in September
dir. Lkhagvadulam (Dulmaa) Purev-Ochir
Honourable Mention: Airhostess-737, dir. Thanasis Neofotistos
Simo
dir. Aziz Zoromba
Honourable Mention: Same Old, dir. Lloyd Lee Choi
Nanitic
dir. Carol Nguyen (2022 TIFF Filmmaker Lab)
Lisa Haller has worked in film-festival programming and strategy for more than 10 years. She is currently the Senior Short Film Programmer at the Whistler Film Festival. Previously, she worked on the Toronto International Film Festival programming team as the Canadian film manager, as well as a programmer for TIFF, TIFF Kids, and Canada’s Top Ten. Haller holds a BA (Hons) in Film Studies and History from Queen’s University, and a master’s degree in Communication and Culture at York University and Toronto Metropolitan University (formerly Ryerson). She lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia with her husband and rambunctious twin toddlers.
Sally Lee is the Executive Director of the Canadian Independent Screen Fund for BPOC Creators, as well as a Board member at the CONTACT Photography Festival and Wavelength Music. Formerly the executive director of the Reel Asian Film Festival and artists’ rights group CARFAC Ontario, she has also held staff, board, and advisory positions at TIFF, Soulpepper Theatre, LIFT, Canadian Filmmakers Distribution Centre, Images Festival, Coalition of Canadian Independent Media Arts Distributors (VUCAVU.com), Workman Arts, Toronto Arts Council Visual and Media Arts Committee, and Access Copyright.
Thyrone Tommy is an award-winning filmmaker and alumnus of the Canadian Film Centre’s Directors Lab and TIFF Talent Lab. Thyrone’s films have been celebrated internationally at over 30 festivals, including his short Mariner, which premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival, won the Lindalee Tracey Award, and was named one of TIFF Canada's Top Ten shorts of the year before premiering online as a Vimeo Staff Pick. Learn to Swim, his debut feature, premiered at TIFF 2021 and was chosen as one of Canada’s Top Ten Films of the year.
Presented by the Shawn Mendes Foundation, the 2022 Changemaker Award is awarded to an emerging filmmaker at the Festival whose work tackles issues of social change. The winning short or feature film is selected by TIFF’s Next Wave Committee, a group of young film lovers who recognize cinema’s power to transform the world. The Shawn Mendes Foundation is making an annual contribution in support of TIFF Next Wave, helping TIFF deliver key initiatives to elevate young voices. The winning filmmaker will receive a $10,000 CAD cash prize.
Something You Said Last Night
dir. Luis De Filippis
Presented by the Network for the Promotion of Asian Pacific Cinema, the NETPAC Award recognizes films specifically from the Asian and Pacific region. The jury consists of three members of the international community selected by TIFF and NETPAC, who award the prize to the best Asian film by a first or second-time feature director.
Sweet As
dir. Jub Clerc
Ida Yoshinaga, an assistant professor of science-fiction film at the Georgia Institute of Technology, teaches cultural screenwriting; science-fiction film and TV; and the transmedia cinematic work of Indigenous directors, scripters, and producers. Raised on Maui, the sansei feminist helps produce Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander films and serves as secretary of NETPAC/USA. MIT Press will publish her co-edited collection of thinkpieces, Uneven Futures: Strategies for Community Survival from Speculative Fiction, in December 2022.
Diana Ashimova is a festivals programmer, NETPAC member, film producer, artistic director of BASTAU IFF. Born in 1984 in Kazakhstan, she graduated inn 2006 from Ablai Khan Kazakh University of International Relations and World Languages. In 2009, she took filmmaking at the New York Film Academy in LA. In 2019, she graduated from Turan University with an MA degree in filmmaking. Ashimova has worked as a program director and program consultant for many international film festivals in Kazakhstan and abroad. In 2019, she founded A Team, a film production company to support young filmmakers in Central Asia produce and promote their films to the international film festivals. The company produced several films that were in the official selection of many major film festivals and wonseveral awards.
The FIPRESCI Prize is presented by an international jury selected by the International Federation of Film Critics. Founded in 1930, the Federation is an organization of professional film critics and film journalists for the promotion and development of film culture and the safeguarding of professional interests. The Federation awards the prize at international film festivals and film festivals of particular importance to promote film art and to encourage new and young cinema.
A Gaza Weekend
dir. Basil Khalil
For more than four decades, Andrea Crozzoli has been the director of Cinemazero and the editor of CinemazeroNotizie. In 1982, he co-founded Le giornate del cinema muto (Pordenone Silent Film Festival). He has been a member of the SNCCI (National Film Critics Union) since 1986, and collaborates as a film critic for the daily Il Piccolo of Trieste. For five years he was the artistic director of Ambiente-Incontri (Environmental Film Festival). He has edited various monographs, including 8 1/2 Fellini’s Journey. In 2019, Appunti Corsari published a collection of his writings.
Andrew Kendall is the Head of the Department of Language and Cultural Studies at the University of Guyana. His teaching is primarily in contemporary literature and film studies in the areas of postcolonial thought, gender, and sexuality. He is also a film and cultural critic with specific interest in political cinema and representations of loneliness and isolation in 21st century film.
Márcio Sallem has been a Brazilian film critic since 2010 and is also a film teacher, creator, and editor of Cinema com Critica. He is affiliated with the Online Film Critics Society and Critics’ Choice Association, and is a member of the 24th Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival’s FIPRESCI Jury and the 39th and 44th São Paulo International Film Festival’s Juries.
Marriska Fernandes is a Toronto-based entertainment reporter and film and TV critic with more than a decade of experience in the industry. She’s the host of Telefilm’s Maple Popcorn podcast and contributes to the Toronto Star, EverythingZoomer.com, Exclaim.ca, Complex.ca, SHARP, and Elle Canada. She’s a Tomatometer-approved critic and a member of the Critics Choice Association and the Toronto Film Critics Association.
Born in Finland, Max Borg currently resides in Switzerland. Borg writes about film, television, festivals, and streaming in print and online publications in Switzerland, Italy, and the United States, and also works as a translator for the Locarno Film Festival and the Berlinale. He has served on critics juries in Venice, Zurich, Gothenburg, and at Visions du Réel.
“This Festival is really stepping ahead and moving the needle by intention”
The TIFF Tribute Awards presented by Bvlgari honour the film industry’s outstanding contributors and their achievements, recognizing leading industry members, acting talent, directorial expertise, new talent, and below-the-line artists and creators. The Awards also serve as TIFF’s largest annual fundraiser to support our year-round programmes and core mission to transform the way people see the world through film. This year’s event will support TIFF’s Every Story fund to promote diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging in film, and TIFF's core mission to transform the way people see the world through film.
The TIFF Tribute Awards gala fundraiser will take place on Sunday, September 11 at the historic Fairmont Royal York.
For inquiries about the Tribute Awards or gala event and how to support, please contact development@tiff.net.
The following recipients have been honoured with TIFF Tribute Awards for their remarkable talent and contributions:
2022 TIFF Tribute Award recipients
2021 TIFF Tribute Award recipients
2020 TIFF Tribute Award recipients
2019 TIFF Tribute Award recipients
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