The 10 films we can't wait to see at TIFF 2021
From Kristen Stewart as Diana to a woman who gets impregnated by her car (yes, you read that right)
It might not quite feel the same, but the Toronto International Film Festival is gearing up for its second pandemic edition, running September 9–19. With considerably more films and in-person events than last year's subdued but impressively executed edition, there are many reasons to be excited this year. So the team at CBC Arts put together a list of 10 films in particular they can't wait to see — even if they have to wear a mask to see it.
All My Puny Sorrows
At the centre of All My Puny Sorrows, Miriam Toews's 2014 novel, is a pair of adult sisters, Elfrieda and Yolandi Von Riesen, who've each left their small Mennonite town for a life in art. The two are magnetic poles, opposites inescapably drawn to one another: Elfi a renowned concert pianist, beautiful, brilliant and suicidal; and Yolandi, a YA writer and frustrated literary novelist who would do anything to save her sister. The book — based in part on Toews's own tragic family story — is heartbreaking and warm and wise. But it's also much funnier than it has any right to be, especially about death (I will never forget the toddler who climbs on stage during a Mennonite memorial service and casually sifts through the departed's ashes).
In Michael McGowan's adaptation, which premieres this Friday at TIFF, Sarah Gadon and Alison Pill play Elfi and Yoli, respectively. If they manage to capture a small part of the riotous, maddening and fiercely loyal bond between these two sisters, it will be a sight to behold. — Andrew D'Cruz, managing editor
Arthur Rambo
After the release of his debut novel, Karim D. became France's hottest young literary celebrity and a rare brown face in the otherwise overwhelmingly white Parisian literary scene. That success is quickly threatened, though, when it's revealed that as a teenager, he was a prolific, mindlessly offensive, flagrantly homophobic and anti-semetic internet troll who went by the name Arthur Rambo.
Here's what has me interested in this film:
1) As Millennials and Gen Z get deeper and deeper into adulthood, we're going to keep confronting this question: how hard should we come down on adults who were shitty, or outright hateful, online as teenagers five or 10 or 15 years ago? I don't have the answer and I'm going to guess Arthur Rambo won't either, but it's good to keep pushing the discussion forward.
2) Director Lauret Cantet — who you may remember from the brilliant Entre les murs (The Class), as well as his lone English film, a crucially underrated adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates's novel Foxfire — has a great talent for telling the stories of outsiders. I expect the story of Karim, a guy from the banlieues suddenly having to find his feet in the insular world of French celebrity intellectuals, to be told with empathy and nuance.
3) It's just under 90 minutes. Being excited because a movie is short sounds like some philistinic nonsense, but the idea that long-winded=profound and important is trash and tiresome, and the idea of someone telling an important story at a pace that moves is exciting.