Entertainment

TIFF announces its top 10 Canadian films of 2014

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) organization has tipped its hat to 10 films it has selected as Canada's best of 2014.

The films will also tour the country and audiences can vote for their favourite

TIFF's top 10 Canadian films of 2014

10 years ago
Duration 2:40
The flicks are selected for the 14th annual Canada's Top Ten Film festival, which runs Jan. 2-11 at TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) organization has tipped its hat to 10 films it has selected as Canada's best of 2014.

The flicks were selected for the 14th annual Canada's Top Ten Film festival, which runs January 2 to January 11, 2015 at TIFF Bell Lightbox in Toronto. The festival also includes a top 10 for short films and student films.

The festival will also tour the country, making stops in Vancouver, Edmonton, Calgary, Winnipeg and Montreal -- so audiences can vote to crown the festival's People's Choice Award. 

"Canadian movies and Canadian talent have proven themselves among the best in the world,” said Cameron Bailey, TIFF's artistic director. "Now it’s our chance to get together and celebrate our best."

In addition to Q&A with filmmakers, festival goers have a chance to chat with stars like Keanu Reeves and Sandra Oh, who will be making appearances.

While some of this year's picks are already famous and have received critical acclaim, others are less known. Take a look at TIFF's Canadian top 10 of 2014:

Mommy, Xavier Dolan

Director Xavier Dolan won the Jury Prize, and an extended standing ovation, at Cannes for his latest feature. (Yves Herman/Reuters)

A feisty, widowed single mother finds herself burdened with the full-time custody of her explosive, ADHD-afflicted 15-year-old son. As they struggle to make ends meet, a peculiar new girl from across the street benevolently offers her help. Together, they find a new sense of balance and a chance to regain hope. Starring Anne Dorval, Suzanne Clément, and Antoine-Olivier Pilon.

Corbo, Mathieu Denis

Montréal, 1966. Jean Corbo, an idealistic 16-year-old of Québécois and Italian descent, befriends two far-left political activists and joins the FLQ (Front de libération du Québec), an underground movement determined to spark a socialist revolution. Jean thus begins an inextricable march toward his destiny. Starring Anthony Therrien, Antoine L'Écuyer, Karelle Tremblay and Tony Nardi.

Félix et Meira, Maxime Giroux

Félix is an eccentric and penniless French Canadian whose wealthy father is dying. Meira is a married Hasidic woman with a family, searching for something new. They were not meant to meet, let alone fall in love. Felix & Meira tells the miraculous love story between two strangers from two distinct communities, who attempt to love each other despite what separates them. Starring Hadas Yaron and Martin Dubreuil.

In Her Place, Albert Shin

A mysterious woman from a big city arrives at a rural farm in South Korea, where she’s taken in by an old woman and her odd teenage daughter. The three women remain in isolation and, as they begin to fall into a new rhythm of life together, work to fill a void within their lives. But soon enough, their arrangement becomes more than what they bargained for. Starring Yoon Da-kyung, Ahn Ji- hye and Kil Hae-yeon.

Maps to the Stars, David Cronenberg

David Cronenberg's Maps to the Stars features Mia Wasikowska and Julianne Moore. (eOne Films)

With this tale of a secret-filled Hollywood family on the verge of implosion, director David Cronenberg forges both a wicked social satire and a very human ghost story from today’s celebrity-obsessed culture. Maps to the Stars tours the seductive allure and the tender, darkly comic underbelly of contemporary success. Starring Julianne Moore, Mia Wasikowska, Olivia Williams, Sarah Gadon, John Cusack and Robert Pattinson.

Monsoon, Sturla Gunnarsson

Monsoon takes a look the vast weather system that permeates and unifies the varied culture of India. (Van Royko)

Part road movie, part spectacle, part drama, Monsoon is Sturla Gunnarsson’s meditation on chaos, creation and faith, set in the land of believers. The subject is the monsoon, the incomparably vast weather system that permeates and unifies the varied culture of India, shaping the conditions of existence for its billion inhabitants.

The Price We Pay, Harold Crooks

Director Harold Crooks (Surviving Progress) blows the lid off the dirty world of corporate malfeasance with this incendiary documentary about the dark history and dire present-day reality of big-business tax avoidance, which has seen multinationals depriving governments of trillions of dollars in tax revenues by harbouring profits in offshore havens.

Sol, Marie-Hélène Cousineau and Susan Avingaq

When Solomon Uyarasuk, a young Inuk man filled with talent and promise, is found dead while in RCMP custody, the police claim suicide but the community suspects murder. Sol is a riveting and emotional documentary that explores the underlying issues of youth suicide in Canada’s North while investigating the truth behind Solomon’s tragic death.

Tu dors Nicole, Stéphane Lafleur

Twenty-two-year-old Nicole is adrift after college graduation, working a dead-end job, making the most of the family home while her parents are away, enjoying peaceful evenings with her best friend, Véronique. When Nicole’s older brother shows up with his band to record an album, their summer takes an unexpected turn and the girls’ friendship is put to the test. Amidst a rising heat wave, Nicole’s insomnia — and romantic misadventures — mount each day. Tu dors Nicole takes a humorous look at the beginning of adulthood and all its possibilities. Starring Julianne Côté, Juliette Gosselin, and Marc-André Grondin.

Violent, Andrew Huculiak

A catastrophic event sparks a young Norwegian woman’s memories of the five people who loved her most, in the visually stunning feature debut of west coast musician and filmmaker Andrew Huculiak. Starring Dagny Backer Johnsen.