Toronto International Film Festival | Ambitious programming, despite the strike of American actors

(Los Angeles) Seth Rogen, Robert De Niro, Alexander Payne… the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) unveiled Monday a program with many American headliners, despite the strike of actors and screenwriters which is currently paralyzing Hollywood.


A usual springboard for many Oscar contenders, the event will be held from September 7 to 17, but this year must deal with major uncertainties, because American stars may not walk its red carpet.

During the strike, the actors’ union SAG-AFTRA prohibited its members from promoting films from major studios and streaming platforms, with which negotiations to raise salaries and regulate the use of artificial intelligence failed.

Only actors working in independent films will be able to benefit from a “provisional agreement” in order to promote their production, explained Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, the chief negotiator of SAG-AFTRA, in an interview with the specialized site Deadline.

Several potentially Oscar-winning films must be unveiled during this new edition of TIFF.

Among them, we find in particular Dumb Moneywith Seth Rogen and Paul Dano, who looks back on the rebellion of thousands of stockbrokers in 2021 to boost the action of GameStop video game stores in the face of investment funds betting on its fall.

Robert De Niro embodies him in ezra a father who sees his son return to live under his roof, after the wreckage of his career and his marriage.

The festival announces other world premieres, including those of the drama The Undesirables by French director Ladj Ly, sports comedy A Dream Team by Taika Waititi, and Seven Veils by Atom Egoyan with Amanda Seyfried.

The international premiere of The Holdovers, by American director Alexander Payne, is also planned. The film tells the story of a teacher (Paul Giamatti) in charge of supervising the students of a boarding school who cannot return home for the Christmas holidays.

TIFF chief executive Cameron Bailey said in a statement that the programming featured a “rich mosaic of talent, vision and storytelling”.

Along with Venice and Telluride, Toronto is a key stop for fall festivals, where many of the contenders for American awards reveal themselves in first millimeters.

Its audience award has established itself as an important barometer in the race for the Oscars: in recent years, two of its winners, nomadland And Green Book: On the roads of the southwon the Best Picture Oscar after being noticed in Toronto.


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