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35th Toronto International Film Festival |OT|

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Grimmy

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DevelopmentArrested said:
I heard it was terrible.

No it is not. It is far from terrible. However, if you don't speak French you won't understand most of it. And if you've never seen an experimental film then its style will totally turn you off.

There were way worse films in the festival. I saw 39 overall and walked out of 12. I think that's a record.
 
Grimmy said:
No it is not. It is far from terrible. However, if you don't speak French you won't understand most of it. And if you've never seen an experimental film then its style will totally turn you off.

There were way worse films in the festival. I saw 39 overall and walked out of 12. I think that's a record.
was it ever cleared up whether or not the director Godard removed the subtitles on purpose?
 

Grimmy

Banned
DevelopmentArrested said:
was it ever cleared up whether or not the director Godard removed the subtitles on purpose?

Yes. But he didn't remove it really, just shorten it to the point of incomprehension. Long sentences are reduced to 3-word translations like "Water. Surface. Plane." It's obvious JLG isn't particularly interested in a foreign audience for this film, and I can see why - a whole section is devoted to the folly of the French electorial system.

Still, I enjoyed it.
 
my wrap-up:

The 35th Toronto International Film Festival has come to an end. 11 days, 30.5 films, 1 hostel, 1 hotel, one trip to Buffalo, and thousands upon thousands of written words later it is over.

It was my fourth year attending, but first as press. I got to meet and hang out with some incredible people, an experience I'll never forget. This year also marked the launch of the TIFF Bell Lightbox, located down in the entertainment district. With programming running year around, it nearly made me want to move to Toronto. They polled Toronto filmgoers and gathered the "Essential 100" films of all-time, which they have a piece of each on exhibit, as well as screening them all throughout the year. It is a fascinating building and has unlimited potential. I urge anyone to check it out when they are in Toronto.

We still have a few reviews coming, but I'd like to wrap-up our coverage thus far and let you know our overall thoughts. I only saw about 10% of the entire 300+ TIFF line-up, but I tried to catch all the major ones. Check out my thoughts below with links to any reviews.

Hated:

The Ward

Disliked:

Henry's Crime
Vanishing on 7th St.

What's Wrong With Virginia

Mixed:

Cave of Forgotten Dreams
The Conspirator
The Debt
Easy A
Hereafter
The High Cost of Living
I'm Still Here
Let Me In
Repeaters
Stake Land

Liked:

Ceremony
Everything Must Go
It's Kind of a Funny Story
Last Night
Never Let Me Go
Trigger

Loved (Top 10):

10. The Town (dir. Ben Affleck)



9. Beginners (dir. Mike Mills)



8. Tabloid (dir. Errol Morris)



7. Rabbit Hole (dir. John Cameron Mitchell)



6. Armadillo (dir. Janus Metz Pedersen)



5. Meek's Cutoff (dir. Kelly Reichardt)



4. 127 Hours (dir. Danny Boyle)



3. The King's Speech (dir. Tom Hooper)



2. Submarine (dir. Richard Ayoade)



1. Black Swan (dir. Darren Aronofsky)



More Coverage:

Armadillo (James B.)
Boxing Gym (John F.)
Bunraku (James B.)
Confessions (Raffi A.)
Easy A (John F.)
Guest (John F.)
How To Start Your Own Country (James B.)
Jack Goes Boating (Kristy P.)
NEDS (John F.)
The Pipe (John F.)
Super (James B.)

...and that's a wrap. NYFF/NYCC next!
 
DevelopmentArrested said:
the Lightbox is fucking awesome so much so that I may check out the classic movies on occasion.

black swan #1 yeaaaaaah

Yeah, I'm getting all these twitter updates on what they are showing. So fucking jealous, makes me want to move to Toronto.
 
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