Avant-garde, thrilling, provocative, brainy and fascinating are just a few of the words used to describe films directed by several 91亚色 alumni, as well as a current student, that are screening at this year鈥檚 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) .
The 91亚色 talent among the 300 productions showing at TIFF Sept. 9 to 19 includes聽debut features by video artist Daniel Cockburn (BFA Spec.聽Hons.聽鈥99) and Ryan Redford (BFA Spec. Hons.聽鈥01), a film by veteran director Carl Bessai (MFA 鈥89) and three shorts. And more may still be announced.
Left: In Carl Bessai's film, Repeaters, a group of addicts in rehab find themselves in the same situation day after day with varying reactions
Bessai鈥檚 feature, , screening as part of the Special Presentations series, is a tense action thriller about the price of freedom and the burden of taking responsibility for our actions. It聽follows three young addicts in a rehabilitation centre, taking viewers on a provocative journey through the personal hell of trauma and addiction. It starts when the residents of a rehab centre in British Columbia are granted a rare one-day pass to venture back into the world聽to make amends with those they have wronged. But each day, the addicts relive the same events over again 鈥 a situation each responds to in radically different ways.
Right: Ryan Redford's feature debut Oliver Sherman explores the question of responsibility
, in TIFF's Canada First聽series,聽is Redford鈥檚 first full-length film (he's directed several shorts, two of which played at TIFF in previous years).聽The central question Oliver Sherman explores is: Does saving someone鈥檚 life make you responsible for them? When Sherman visits the home of Franklin, a fellow soldier who saved his life back in the war, tensions begin to rise. Franklin has long since moved on 鈥 to a wife, two children and a reliable job, but the stability he has worked so hard to establish is soon threatened by Sherman鈥檚 presence.
Left: In Daniel Cockburn's feature debut You Are Here, the characters聽find themselves trapped in bizarre social experiments of their own making
Cockburn鈥檚 feature, , also screening in the Canada First program, melds a series of intriguing and smartly crafted narratives that arise from a string of bizarre experiments. Office workers at a mysterious call centre inexplicably track the movements of several urbanites. An archivist opens a puzzling inquiry into her self-created library of found documents. A scientist constructs a working-model scenario for 鈥渨hat to do if they shove Chinese writing under the door.鈥 At the same time, it is the birthday of one of the characters who has lost his computer password and is looking for an explanation for a door that shouldn鈥檛 be there.
Showing in the Short Cut Canada program are:
Left: The short film How to Rid Your Lover of a Negative Emotion Caused By You is聽directed by Nadia Litz
, directed by former film student Nadia Litz,聽takes a look at Sadie and Dennis, a seemingly ordinary couple with issues. However, rather than confront her negative emotions with Dennis, Sadie decides to extract them. It is a breach of trust, but perhaps not an insurmountable one if Sadie decides to open up. This is Litz鈥檚 directorial debut although she is already an accomplished actor having won a Vancouver Film Critics Circle Award for best supporting actress in Reginald Harkema's Monkey Warfare, which premiered at TIFF 2006 (see YFile, ).
Right: The short film The Old Ways, directed by Michael Vass, is a black comedy and satirical look at the聽justice system
Directed by Michael Vass (MFA 鈥05), asks what it would take for a government to justify and enforce the death penalty for a child following a judge鈥檚 harsh sentence. The court then mitigates a public relations crisis with an elaborate and dubious scheme. The film offers a scathingly satirical response. It's a pitch-black comedy that frames the justice system as spectacle.
Left: 91亚色 student Cam Woykin's short film Open Window聽looks at聽the reactions of partygoers after it's revealed that the birthday boy's parents are in an abusive relationship
is directed by Cam Woykin, a current MFA student at 91亚色, who made this film earlier this year as part of his course work. It鈥檚 about a casual backyard birthday party that is consumed with tension when an abusive relationship is revealed between the birthday boy鈥檚 parents. Told through cautious glances and wandering eyes, Woykin controls the viewers鈥 gaze partly through a homemade pi帽ata which becomes a powerful focal point, symbolizing all the fear and helplessness felt by the party鈥檚 guests.
Screenings of TIFF films will take place over 10 days at a number of downtown Toronto cinemas. For more information about the festival and the complete film schedule, visit the Web site.
With files from www.tiff08.ca
