With a return to big crowds and a penchant for buzz-building, this year's Toronto Film Festival offered a mix of world premieres and noteworthy titles from other fests.
Loosely drawn from personal experience, this gently gutting debut feature from the Scottish-born writer-director Charlotte Wells follows a father and his adolescent daughter on a summer vacation on the Turkish coast. Their sunny Mediterranean idyll soon reveals itself as a hazy glimpse into a bittersweet past, sometimes mediated by home-video footage and sometimes halted by eerie flash-forwards.
“Broker” contains the single most moving scene I’ve witnessed this year — in its own way as quietly and deeply touching as the signature moment from “Never Rarely Sometimes Always.” An atmospheric noir by one of today’s true masters, Park Chan-wook. Though the South Korean film definitely fits the Western noir form, it does not adhere to Hollywood clichés; it’s sexy without the usual devices and twisty without the customary cogs showing.
Brasil Últimas Notícias, Brasil Manchetes
Similar News:Você também pode ler notícias semelhantes a esta que coletamos de outras fontes de notícias.
Margaret Qualley and Christopher Abbott’s Sexy BDSM Thriller Heats Up Toronto'Over the course of this night-long saga, Margaret Qualley continually reveals exciting new depths of cunning, manipulation and, most tantalizing of all, potential sincerity,' writes nschager. Read the full review of ‘Sanctuary’:
Consulte Mais informação »
Perspective | At this Toronto film festival, women are doing the talkingFerocious feminism and film love were two overriding themes at the first in-person edition of Toronto International Film Festival since the coronavirus pandemic hit
Consulte Mais informação »
Zac Efron Says He 'Almost Died' After Shattering His Jaw (Exclusive)ET spoke to Efron at the Toronto International Film Festival, where he was promoting his new film, 'The Greatest Beer Run Ever.'
Consulte Mais informação »
Brian Cox is also still thinking about that Jeremy Strong interviewThe Succession star says he's too British for method acting while promoting his new film Prisoner's Daughter at the Toronto International Film Festival
Consulte Mais informação »
Succession’s Brian Cox Slams Method Acting as “American S--t” - E! OnlineOn stage at the Toronto International Film Festival, Succession's Brian Cox—who plays Logan Roy in the HBO drama—disparaged method acting, which his co-star Jeremy Strong famously uses.
Consulte Mais informação »