TIFF 2021: Dune's IMAX debut, return of in-person screenings - Action News
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TIFF 2021: Dune's IMAX debut, return of in-person screenings

On Wednesday, organizers announced that this year's festival, which is scheduled to take place Sept. 9-18, willbe an in-person affair again.

Night Raiders, Alanis Morissette documentary and more to show at Sept. 9-18 hybrid film festival

Timothe Chalamet, left, appears as Paul Atreides in this still from Denis Villeneuve's upcoming adaptation of the Frank Herbert novel Dune. The film will have its IMAX premiere at this year's Toronto International Film Festival, which will see a return of in-person screenings. (Chia Bella James/Warner Bros. Entertainment/The Associated Press)

After a pandemic-savaged year, The Toronto International Film Festival is back.

On Wednesday, organizers announced that this year's festival, which is scheduled to take place Sept. 9-18, willbe an in-person affair again. That means showings at indoor theatres including the Princess of Wales Theatre, Roy Thomson Hall and the Cinesphere Theatre at Ontario Place coupled with outdoor cinemas and the drive-ins largely used duringlast year's event.

The number of movies included has also increased from 2020. While they haven't returned to pre-pandemic numbers, TIFF 2021 will have 100 films in its official selection doubling the amount from last year's drastically scaled-backslate.

On Wednesday, organizers announced some of the films that will be showing at the festival. They includethe Alanis Morissette documentary Jaggedand Danis Goulet's sci-fi thriller Night Raiders, which ispartially inspired by the history of Canada's residential school system.

Also, Denis Villeneuve's long-delayed Dune will have a screening in IMAX for the first time, roughly a week after its scheduled world premiere at the Venice Film Festival.

Other films announced include:

  • ric Warin and Tahir Rana's Charlotte.
  • Dave Wolley and David Heilbroner's Dionne Warwick: Don't Make Me Over.
  • Crime-thriller The Guiltyby director Antoine Fuqua.
  • The Naomi Watts-led thriller Lakewood.
  • The British psychological horror Last Night in Soho.
  • Kenneth Branagh's Belfast,starring Judi Dench.
  • Petite Maman, directed by Cline Sciamma.
  • And the comedy-drama The Starling.

Strong reliance on digital platform

Work byAbenakifilmmakerAlanis Obomsawinwill also be celebrated at the festival, through the retrospectiveCelebrating Alanis.Obomsawin, 88, is often described as an activist filmmaker, whose documentary films focus on issues of colonization, injustice and Indigenous strength and dignity.

Still, the 100-film slate is a far cry from the roughly 250 films seen at TIFF pre-COVID.And in an interview with CBC News, festival co-heads Cameron Bailey and Joana Vicente said a number of changes added in 2020 will continue into 2021.

That means reduced-capacity theatres, though there will be a higher capacity limit than the 50 audience members allowed at the TIFF Bell Lightbox last year. In-person audiences will also have to be masked, and there will be a return of TIFF's digital screening platform allowing cinephiles outside Ontarioto watch showings online.

"We're inviting every film to present to audiences, both in person and on the digital platform," Bailey said. "And we hope and we encourage them all to to make sure that they're able to just give that access to audiences, whether they're in cinema in Toronto or across Canada."

"It is a hybrid festival, but we love the word hybrid It doesn't have to be a bad word," Vicente added. "We actually think there will be a hybrid component there of the festival that will continue for years to come so that's here to stay."

Additionally, Vicente and Bailey teased the festival'sinaugural Coast to Coast Screenings series, which will see some movies shown in select venues across the country. Locations and films will be announced closer to the festival.

No plans for vaccination requirement

Vicente said there's currently no planto require vaccinations for audience members, though organizerswill "wait and see" whether that situation changes. There will also be a strict "no popcorn" component, as concession services won't be available at any screenings.

And while they confirmed the return of the red carpet, it, too, will likely look different. Due to border restrictions that still haven't been fully hammered out, Vicente said they would have to see "which talent is in Canada" at the time, and the carpet itself will have social distancing and mask requirements.

Vicente also said that, departing from its traditional location outside of the Princess of Wales Theatre, the red carpet may take place inside to avoid large crowds gathering.

TIFF's 2021 return comes off of what Vicente described as an "incredibly challenging" year. Despite a record year in film sales and attendance when factoring in those who participated digitally the festival saw half of its revenue drop, andplanning itsreturn also proved incredibly difficult with changing restrictions and guidelines. Because of that, aspects of the festival are still subject to change.

It's "tricky to plan when you don't know all the answers," Vicente said. "Things are uncertain. You're learning every day and you just need to be nimble and adapt."