The Burrowers Intro & Q&A

1 Comments POSTED: September 10, 2008 08:14 | By: Sanjay Rajput

Karl Geary, JT Petty, Colin, & Clancy Brown keeping the streets free of any Burrowers

 

MM Scorecard:

Screenings Attended: 27/47

Screenings Missed: 0

Average Hours Slept Per Night: 4.1

 

Apparently JT Petty wasn?t done creeping me out in 2006 with S&MAN. This year he came back, along with Clancy Brown and Karl Geary, to freak me out with ants. Yeah, that?s right, he scared me with ants.

 

Normally, ants don?t bother me? much. Of course normally I sleep more than 4 hours a night. So when JT Petty kills off a bunch of old west settlers then shock cuts to a bunch of normal looking ants just crawling around? It creeps me out.

 

These aren?t just your standard Hollywood offscreen monster kills either. These are blood spurting, limb ripping, midnight madness cheer inducing super kills by monsters Todd McFarlane needs to turn into a figure I can buy and then have my wife throw in our attic with the rest of my Movie Maniac figures (thanks sweetie :P ) While this was a great midnight flick, if your squeamish it sounds like Colin was looking out for you cuz he scheduled a second screening of it at 3:30 pm, believe me, you?ll be glad to see the daylight.

 

Here?s the intro & Q&A and we?ll see you tomorrow for a little film called Martyrs. Perhaps you?ve heard of it?

 

 

A brief encounter with greatness

0 Comments POSTED: September 7, 2008 09:14 | By: Jesse Wente
Last night, after an emotional screening of Rodrigue Jean's moving Lost Song there was a party held at one of the local festival hotspots.  There, Rodrigue, one of this country's best filmmakers, introduced me to two cinematic geniuses, thus causing this supposed experienced broadcast professional to lose his ability to form a coherent sentence.  The Dardenne brothers, who are here with their latest piece of awesome Le Silence de Lorna (pictured), were gracious and polite in meeting this starry eyed programmer.  It's in these moments that I wish life was scripted, because I'm pretty sure I would have said something better than - "I love your movies" - I mean c'mon, who doesn't?  Hopefully I'll have something better to say next time I meet heroes of mine.

See you in the theatre.


Deadgirl Intro & Q&A

3 Comments POSTED: September 7, 2008 03:41 | By: Sanjay Rajput

 

Colin with Deadgirl leads Shiloh Fernandez and Noah Segan... Has anyone seeen Colin since this picture was taken? 

 

MM Scorecard:

Screenings Attended: 11/47

Screenings Missed: 0

Average Hours Slept Per Night: 4.2

 

Deadgirl? A movie about, (SPOILER ALERT)? A dead girl! Well, a mostly dead girl? Trust me, you want to see this movie!  Both directors and nearly the entire cast were on hand for yet another rockin? evening at the Ryerson. I?d write more but it?s been 7 hours since I drank my last shot of 6 hour energy so vital body functions are starting to shut down? Dammit, there goes the left hand? Enjoy the Intro & Q&As. See ya?ll in line for Not Quite Hollywood.

Deadgirl Intro & Q&A

0 Comments POSTED: September 6, 2008 18:55 | By: Sanjay Rajput

MM Scorecard:

Screenings Attended: 11/47

Screenings Missed: 0

Average Hours Slept Per Night: 4.2 (4+4+4.5)

 

Deadgirl? A movie about, (SPOILER ALERT)? A dead girl!  Both directors were on hand for yet another rockin? evening at the Ryerson. I?d write more but it?s been 7 hours since I drank my last shot of 6 hour energy so vital body functions are starting to shut down? Dammit, there goes the left hand? Enjoy the Intro & Q&As. See ya?ll in line for Not Quite Hollywood.

Detroit Metal City Intro & Q&A

1 Comments POSTED: September 6, 2008 15:24 | By: Sanjay Rajput

 

MM Scorecard:

Screenings Attended: 7/47

Screenings Missed: 0

Average Hours Slept Per Night: 4

 

This 4 hours of sleep a night is killing me. Like Danny Glover always said ?I?m getting? to old for this!? BTW, did I mention my birthday was September 10th? Caffeine pills would be greatly appreciated.

 

Big shoutout to Karen Shute for the awesome red carpet pics posted in the Facebook Midnight Madness Group.  Wait, you aren't a member?!!? Don't make me send Johannes Krauser II after you!

 

Detroit Metal City had it?s international premiere last night and a select few fans got the opportunity to hang with the director and his entourage on the Red Carpet and sit in the coveted reserved section with the entourage. Let?s see that happen at the Elgin or Roy Thompson! After the reception Ken'ichi Matsuyama & Toshio Lee got it?s no surprise why cast and crew make the 10+ hour journey from Japan to greet their fans across the pond. Midnight Madness fans are an eclectic bunch, but it?s safe to say that Madness fans of Asian cinema are the loudest & most dedicated group in the bunch.

 

As a former 7 year resident of the Detroit area I was glad to see our city so well represented? If at least only in the title, Detroit needs whatever good press it can get. Check out the Intro & Q&A below to learn fascinating things about Takeshi Kitano?s Puppet Master & what working with Rock Legend Gene Simmons was like. Catch y?all later?

 

 

JCVD Intros & Q&As

1 Comments POSTED: September 5, 2008 14:30 | By: Sanjay Rajput

Colin & JCVD Direct Mabrouk El Mechri Preparing to Kick Butt!

MM Scorecard:

Screenings Attended: 2/47

Screenings Missed: 0

Average Hours Slept Per Night: 4

 

JCVD? How can I explain it? I?ll take ya? frame by frame it. We?ll have y?all jumpin?, shoutin? sayin? it. J is for Jean C is Claude scratch your temple? The VD well that?s not that simple Check it? Read to the tune of OPP by Naughty by Nature. Gotta have a iconic 90s tune to lead off a post about a 90s iconic action star.

 

This was the easily the best Midnight Madness flick that has screened at the festival so far this year. It helps that it has so far been the onlyh one that has screened, but hey that's the way it goes.

 

Of the various Midnight Madness types of fans out there (Gore Hounds, Anime Fans, Adrenaline Junkies, Etc.) I happen to be a hardcore chop socky action fan. With all the younger, stronger, faster, butt kickers out there I was surprised JCVD got one of the coveted madness action film slots.

 

But like Arnold in T3, Willis in Die Hard 4, and Stallone in Rocky 6 one of the staples of 90s action cinema showed that age can?t slow down the aged masters. In the first 10 minutes JCVD mowed through stuntmen half his age, it truly was a site to behold and the sold out crowd loved every minute of it. The biggest shocker was a poignant monologue by JC in the last 20 minutes that covers everything from his struggle to make it Hollywood through his battles with drugs. This is one flick you gotta see to believe.

 

Also hanging out at the screening last night were directors Toshio Lee, JT Petty, & Marcel Sarmiento (directors of Detroit Metal City, The Burrowers, & Deadgirl respectively). Only at the madness folks, only at the madness! Just in case you missed it (shame on you!) here?s video of the intro & Q&A.

 

 

Drawing from the Pontypool

0 Comments POSTED: September 4, 2008 17:38 | By: Michael Yarde
Pontypool, two hours North East of Toronto is infected by words. The movie was shot in May and June and completed just in time for TIFF '08. 

Set in the basement of a radio station, (part of the movie was actually shot in a Toronto church basement) it amplifies the strangeness of everyday words, an honest exploration of words and the human condition, how we view what is true and what is imagined.  At a time when Terrorporn and Celebutaunts are assaulting the senses on a daily basis, diving into Pontypool is a refreshing change.

Tonight Thursday September 4th (7-10p) legendary director Bruce McDonald and renowned artist John Coburn will celebrate the launch of  Pontypool "On Location: Drawings by John Coburn" at Milli, one of Yorkville's elite women's boutique. 

The drawings will be on display until the end of the festival on September 13th.

A huge part of John's success is predicated on collaboration.  Created outside the box, this artful collaboration happened over a cup of coffee.  Back in March John observed Bruce scribbling notes and chatting about his project.  

"A lot of wonderful surprises happen in a coffee shop" says John Coburn, as he beams with pride poring over todays (Thursday September 4th)  National Post (Avenue section) featuring one of his inspired drawings. 


Flash Point: no longer just an overlooked Rolling Stones live album

0 Comments POSTED: September 15, 2007 11:52 | By: Shane McNeil

So, just to keep everyone rolling in fresh material, our good friend Bob was nice enough to send us some stills from the Flash Point screening the other night.

Wilson Yip was blown away by the response, and we were just plain blown away by Wilson Yip.  Also we have a great shot of the true star of the night... Colin's laptop!  His mac has been the underappreciated star of this year's fest, and were it not for that computer, we'd never know that we're all on a first name basis with Donnie.

Donnie!

Enjoy the snaps!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Take My Picture

0 Comments POSTED: September 13, 2007 11:38 | By: Shane McNeil

Well, our good friend Suzie Maynard (whom you may remember recently narrowly escaped the clutches of many zombies after they accosted her at a Yonge St. bus stop) has provided us with some stellar shots from the duration of the Madness program.

I especially appreciate this because in my struggle to man two cameras at once, I often end up screwing up the photos, for the sake of video documentation.  I know, inept isn't the word we're looking for, but it's frighteningly close to accuracy, no?

Anyway, again a reminder that if you wish to share pictures with Kool & the Gang here at the blog, send them off to our email, ultra8pictures@gmail.com.

Thanks again, Suzie.

Photos: (Top) Mena Suvari and Russel Hornsby at the Stuck premiere

Stuart Gordon at the Stuck Q&A with Colin Geddes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Colin Geddes doing one of his many famous introductions.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And that would be me with a tiny rendering of Colin Geddes through my camcorder's viewfinder.

Time to Relax and Mingle

0 Comments POSTED: September 11, 2007 12:49 | By: Heidy Morales

Discovery Films arranged for a party to celebrate the launch of Werner Herzog's (shown here) latest documentary Encounters at the End of the World, screening at this year's festival.

Herzog's latest project takes him to the depths of the South Pole in Antarctica. It appears there is a lot of interest in this documentary. We will have to see where his journey will take us.

The soiree also allowed other filmmakers (director Scott Hicks pictured here) to enjoy each other's company, perhaps talk a little film but I think mostly, a chance to catch up and take a breather. It was a different perspective, for me, to see everyone enjoy a glass of wine while conversing with each other. I think we forget that filmmakers and those in the industry also need time to relax from the hustle that is TIFF.

Stuck: or as I like to call it, R.Kelly's 'Trapped in a Windshield'

1 Comments POSTED: September 11, 2007 09:04 | By: Shane McNeil


First off, much thanks to Sanjay Rajput for the video,  This does set a record for time on getting this video in.  The intro is in the first clip, the three following this post maked up the entire Q&A.  We thank you for opting to help us over the possibility of actually getting to bed before 4 a.m.

"What's wrong with you?" 

No, not you Sanjay. 

That one line seemed to be wedging itself in everyone's mind last night like Stephen Rea's face through our collective dashboards as we sat in awe of our first look at Stuart Gordon's Stuck.

Why did we all laugh so much at such horrifying acts of inhumanity?  Oh, that's right... we're all a little mad.  Nevertheless guys, that was easily the best audience reaction we've had thus far at Midnight Madness.  I don't know if everyone was just trying to forget it was a Monday, but we all got it.

We laughed.  We cried.  Then we just laughed some more.

That's the genius of Stuart Gordon.  He showed us horrifying acts of indifference towards humanity, but made the motivation for these acts so selfish that we couldn't help but see it as caricature, which I think was the only way a story like this could sell to an audience.  We can't accept that there are people that would go through such lengths to save themselves unless we think it's fantasy.

The trouble is, as hyperbolic as a lot of the main characters' actions are (especially that cruel, cruel Mena Suvari) we never forget that this actually happened.  Everything in Stuck is unbelieveable because what we see in the opening credits of the movie- inspired by a true story- forces us to believe it.

Stuart ran that show (the movie and the screening) like nothing I've ever seen, and for those that missed the screening, I am deeply sorry.  He was gracious and candid and open about everything from working in Canada to his hopes to do another Re-Animator sequel starring George Wendt as Dick Cheney and afterwards he stayed long enough to shake everyone's hand and give an autograph to anyone that wanted.

And as if the high tension, action and horrifying comedy of Stuck weren't enough last night, THAT was Stuart Gordon's world class performance.

The next screening is Wednesday at Scotiabank Theatre 4 at 4:00... do yourselves a favour and be there if you weren't there last night.







Diary of The Diary of the Dead

5 Comments POSTED: September 9, 2007 13:08 | By: Shane McNeil

What do you get when you add screaming fan-boys, 50 live zombies and acute social commentary?

 

Naturally, you get a George A. Romero premiere.  He unleashed The Diary of the Dead onto the world last night and returned to the form that first put his name in horror history.  The film is a sharp, biting criticism on the information age and how much technology has come to govern our lives.

 

One of the key lines in the film, just as everything?s falling to pieces is: ?keep shooting, we have o document this for whatever remains when it?s over?.  With shots at the 24/7 news media, myspace, and blogging (blogger hangs head), Diary takes dead aim at how we consume and manufacture information in the digital age.

 

While many shots taken are a direct result of the Katrina debacle in New Orleans (?We could call the National Guard?? ?The National Guard?  Really??) Romero?s themes of every man and woman for themselves have not changed and, sadly have gained resonance in the forty-odd years since his first film.

 

The audience, though, was equally impressed with the film?s devotion to zombie lore as it was with the social commentary.  Romero always seems to find new ways of dispatching the undead, while still maintaining (as he confirmed in the Q&A) that ?the best way to kill a zombie is still a good, old-fashioned shotgun?. 

 

Romero seems to be okay with self-reference, dropping nods to his prior films with shopping carts appearing occasionally and to the genre itself.  The film starts with students making an independent zombie picture and the main criticism the director has after one take is simply; ?Zombies don?t run, they?re undead.  If you ran you would break your ankles?.

 

While Romero denied that he saw self-referential film as a genre, he would concede that he?s proud to still be making these kinds of pictures after so long and that sometimes the tributes he inspires (ie. Shaun of the Dead and NOT the Dawn of the Dead remake) are flattering and actually help develop the zombie film.

 

All in all the film takes a comment that needs to be made and places it, again, in the framework of a film the general wouldn?t usually be inclined to take seriously.  It is well-crafted, intelligent, culturally relevant, entertaining cinema- and for that George A. Romero should be applauded.

 

I'll get video of zombies on the red carpet up as soon as possible, but for now I'll leave you with Romero's final words of advice on what to do if zombies were to invade Toronto?

 

?Just don?t take the D.V.P.?

 

Photos (from top):

George A. Romero and Colin Geddes during Q&A at the Diary of the Dead premiere.

Diary star Amy Ciupak Lalonde on the red carpet.

George A. Romero at the Diary fo the Dead pre-party.

Zombies walking the red carpet at the Diary of the Dead premiere.

I'll show you mine...

1 Comments POSTED: September 9, 2007 11:51 | By: Shane McNeil

If you show me yours. 

Pictures and videos, that is.

This is just a slice of what goes on every night at the Madness.  I'd love to see what all of you have captured on your phones, cameras, etc.

If any of you out in the Midnight Wilderness have pictures or videos from any of our midnight screenings feel free to send them to us at ultra8pictures@gmail.com and we'll try to get some of the best of them up here soon.

We look forward to your submissions.

As Promised...

0 Comments POSTED: September 7, 2007 18:31 | By: Shane McNeil

The videos may still ahve to wait a bit, I'm sorry to say.  However, here are some excellent shots from the Mother of Tears party, held before last nights' premiere.

First off is the man of the evening, Mother of Tears director Dario Argento.

 

 

 

 

 

Argento greets Diary of the Dead director and Dawn of the Dead co-conspirator, George A. Romero with a great big hug.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

L to R: George A. Romero poses with Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright and Midnight Madness Programmer Colin Geddes (lucky devil!)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mother of Tears star Asia Argento shares a candid laugh with Romero.

Opening Night Wrap-Up

1 Comments POSTED: September 7, 2007 09:37 | By: Midnight Madness Blog Reporter

I promise that this post will have exclusive pics and video later on, but for now here's a quick wrap on all that went down around our premiere of Dario Argento's Mother of Tears.

The night kicked off with a launch party for the film where basically everyone you'd ever want to meet showed up.  Naturally, Dario and Asia Argento stole the night away, but that only scratches the surface.  Also on hand to revel in the rapturous gore that was Mother of Tears were Diary of the Dead director George A. Romero and a surprise appearance by Shaun of the Dead director Edgar Wright.

Shifting to the screening itself, the red carpet was fairly tame.  While autograph hounds and journalists alike tried their hardest to get a piece of Asia, the one she listened to most was, of course, her father (Dario Argento, naturally)- who was eventually able to call her into a photo shoot with a simple "Asia, andiamo!"

Inside the audience was pumped and ready for some gruesome witch action and Mother of Tears did not disappoint.  I'll not spoil the great details for those of you that missed out, but we get a disembowelment within the first 20 minutes or so.  Argento crafted an excellent batch of suspense with some big-time fright moments and one of the most realistic renderings of a sliced Achilles tendon I've ever seen.  He also name drops in the film, overtly referencing Suspiria a couple of times.  As for the characters themselves, the arch-villain only got the second loudest cheer of the night.  The loudest cheer during the film was given to a monkey. 

Dario on the monkey: "I loved the monkey.  They are not as predictable as humans.  They are all anarchists".

The second best quote of the night followed shortly thereafter with "All witches are lesbians".

As I said, pics and video will be up here later on.  Feel free to leave a comment and tell us what you thought of the film.

TIFF picks from True/False's David Wilson

0 Comments POSTED: August 14, 2007 11:24 | By: Thom Powers
David Wilson, who collaborates with Paul Sturtz to program the plucky True/False Film Festival in Columbia, MO, weighs in with three picks from the Real to Reel titles announced so far. In this photo from TIFF 06, he appears with Blindsight director Lucy Walker at the aforementioned Summercamp! party (snapped by Indiewire). David says:

One of the great things about seeing the film lineup from a fest like Toronto is knowing that, as a viewer, you're in capable hands.  Each of these films has beat out hundreds of others for its slot, and each has earned its place through a combination of great story AND great storytelling.  Which is all to say that at a fest like Toronto, I'm more willing than I might normally be to place myself in the capable hands of the programmer/tour guide. Digging past the obvious hits, here's my attempt at sussing out some lower profile films that still manage to tell their stories with a high degree of verve and creativity.  

HEAVY METAL IN BAGHDAD Suroosh Alvi and Eddy Moretti
The title is hooky as all get out, and still my programmer's prejudice against well-trod topics almost made me miss this.  Looking closely, though, reveals some interesting details. Alvi co-founded Vice Magazine, a publication that I love to read and hate to love.  Their Iraq issue (which inspired this film, I think) was one of the best overall magazines I've read in the last few years, and offered perspectives on that country that no other magazine has even touched.  Moretti is running (I think) VBS.tv, which is Vice's foray into web tv, and has started to turn out some of the most compelling viewing I'm seeing anywhere.  I'm counting on this film to put politics in the background, aesthetics in the foreground, and, in doing so, offer more depth and dimension on Iraq than most other efforts.  

VERY YOUNG GIRLS
David Schisgall, USA
Ok, yes, you know it's about teen prostitutes.  And that alone may decide whether you want to spend 90 minutes with this film or not.  But maybe you're not remembering/imdbing that Schisgall also directed the decidedly unprurient yet revealing The Lifestyle.  And worked on True Life, which gets no respect despite being one of the best doc series on television.  So I've got a good feeling about this film.

PLEASE VOTE FOR ME Weijun Chen, China
This is probably the film that my co-conspirator Paul most wanted to have at True/False, and failed (despite extensive and heroic efforts) to get.  Well, life's not fair.  But at least I get to see it in Toronto.  And, fwiw, Paul's very rarely wrong about these things.  


Memories of Summercamp! at TIFF 06

0 Comments POSTED: August 13, 2007 15:48 | By: Sarah Price
Last year's TIFF was a blast for us--we literally tried to bring summercamp to the festival. As if dressing up like camp dorks and whipping the audiences into a frenzied round of Baby Shark (a camp song favorite) wasn't enough, we had a party where they served camp food, had an illegal bonfire in the parking lot of the bar, and the Flaming Lips did an acoustic sing-a-long.  All with blinking disco visors and whistles (pictured). Summercamp! is currently being released theatrically through Argot Pictures (we opened in NYC at the IFC Center in July, with 20 more cities to go) and airs on the Sundance Channel in '08. Thank you Thom, Fionnuala, and TIFF for a great time!

Celebrating Office Tigers

0 Comments POSTED: September 14, 2006 16:12 | By: Thom Powers
Producer Lawrence Elman and director Liz Mermin celebrate the world premiere of their film Office Tigers at a party for the film on Saturday night, held at the Tribute Lounge at the Century Room. For the film's second screening on Monday, the audience sang "Happy Birthday" to Mermin.

Yesterday, Lorrie Goldstein of the Toronto Sun praised Office Tigers in a warm review, excerpted here:

Employees working for big corporations everywhere will identify with Office Tigers harried staff as they cope with long hours, demanding bosses, early deadlines, constant retraining, jargon-filled motivational speeches and awkward award presentations to bolster morale. They can be forgiven for wondering if globalization isn't in fact forcing all of them into a race to the bottom when it comes to their quality of life.

While Mermin is clearly warning us about globalization's tendency to grind down workers and homogenize cultures, her approach is subtle. She doesn't use, or need, a sledgehammer.


Killer After Party for Premiere

0 Comments POSTED: September 13, 2006 16:59 | By: doc blog reporter

One of the best draws at TIFF every year is the parties, not just for the open bar and great food, but it's a chance for the talented people that attend the festival to mix and mingle.

This afternoon, Discovery Films hosted a party at Prego restaurant to honor their film The Killer Within and their broader sponsorship of the entire Real to Reel programme. Attendees included Killer Within director Macky Alston, seen left with the film?s Executive Producer, Andrea Meditch.

Al Maysles participated in a Dialogues session with Barbara Kopple earlier in the day. He showed his first film Psychiatry in Russia from 50 years ago along with newly released outtakes from his classic doc Grey Gardens.



Director AJ Schnack and his producer/wife Shirley Moyers (Kurt Cobain About a Son) play hide and seek with their daughter.


Publicist John Murphy (left) talks to sales agent Josh Braun (right) of Submarine.

 

Docs Discussed Over Breakfast

0 Comments POSTED: September 12, 2006 14:08 | By: doc blog reporter
Doc Corner Breakfasts give directors, industry, and press a chance to mingle at TIFF. The breakfasts are running from Sunday to Wednesday, sponsored by HBO Documentary Films. Left, Shot in the Dark director Adrian Grenier discusses his film with Priya Shah from TIFF's Sales & Industry office.

Doc Directors Debate over Dinner

0 Comments POSTED: September 10, 2006 15:39 | By: doc blog reporter
One of the highlights of TIFF is directors getting to meet each other as they did last night for a dinner at Pangaea restaurant. The diverse group inspired a lot of discussion about the films at the festival and filmmaking in general. Left, Liz Mermin (Office Tigers) and Adrian Grenier (Shot in the Dark) are engaged in a heated debate about filmmaking. Other guests included Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein (The Prisoner or: How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair), Sophie Fiennes (The Pervert's Guide to Cinema), James Longley (Sari's Mother), and Sarah Price and Bradley Beesley (Summercamp!). Numerous other dinners are planned throughout the festival.

Pervert's Guide Kicks of TIFF

3 Comments POSTED: September 8, 2006 01:48 | By: doc blog reporter

Director Sophie Fiennes (left) kicked off TIFF on Thursday with the North American premiere screening of her film, The Pervert's Guide to Cinema, to a packed house at the ROM on Thursday. The three-part film features the witty and insightful Slavoj ?i?ek discussing everything from sexuality in the works of Lynch, Kubrick and Hitchcock to how film is equal to viewing shit backing up a toilet. Needless to say, Fiennes had many questions to answer in the Q & A after the screening. The director also shared anecdotes about shooting on location of such classic films as The Birds and The Conversation before attending the Pervert's Guide party hosted by Salon Jie across the street.

The plush, red carpet was rolled out at the new Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art, leading guests towards a blue, flame-twirling woman on stilts and a loinclothed man dancing with his very phallic trident, to live African drum beats. Unsuspecting gazers had their figures projected in giant shadows across the facade of the ROM. And all this before you even got inside.

If you saw the film, feel free to comment below or ask the director questions to be answered in later blog entries...

You can also visit the Pervert's Guide web site.

Jorgen Leth is in the House

0 Comments POSTED: September 6, 2006 23:58 | By: Thom Powers
The night before the Festival begins, the good folks at Cinematheque Ontario traditionally host a gathering for art house programmers from around the world. This year, the keynote speech was delivered by Danish filmmaker Jorgen Leth, who brought his documentary collaboration with Lars Von Trier The Five Obstructions to TIFF in 2003.

Afterward, Leth told me of his gratitude to museum and art house programmers for keeping his kind of cinema alive. On Saturday, Leth's son Asger will be premiering his documentary Ghosts of Cite Soleil with the proud father on hand for support.

Leth is pictured here with Cinematheque Ontario's Kajsa Erickson who will be playing hostess during events at the Doc Corner during the Festival.

Planning for the SUMMERCAMP! party...

0 Comments POSTED: September 6, 2006 15:49 | By: Sarah Price

...trying to get all our ducks in a row--planning a marshmallow roast is not as easy as it seems.  brad ordered the whistles and they're good to  go,  but now i think we may need more visors....

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