“Last Night” will serve as the closing-night film at the 35th Toronto Film Festival, which announced special presentations, late-night genre films and galas on Tuesday.
TIFF also announced that Istanbul will serve as the next entry in the “City to City” program, with 10 features and 17 short films from the Turkish city showcased over the course of the festival.
“Last Night,” which stars Keira Knightley, Sam Worthington and Eva Mendes, is the debut feature from director Missy Tadjedin. An American-French co-production bought by Miramax, the film follows a married couple encountering temptations on a weekend apart.
Danny Boyle’s “127 Hours” and Clint Eastwood’s “Hereafter,” recently announced as the closing-night attractions at the London Film Festival and the New York Film Festival, respectively, will also screen at Toronto, as will “What’s Wrong with Virginia?,” the directorial debut from “Milk” screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, and Casey Affleck’s documentary (or mock documentary?) about Joaquin Phoenix, “I’m Still There.”
Newly announced bookings also include the Will Ferrell film “Everything Must Go,” based on a Raymond Carver short story; “Let Me In,” the remake of the Swedish horror film “Let the Right One In”; John Sayles' "Amigo"; and Mitch Glazer's "Passion Play," with a cast that includes Mickey Rourke, Megan Fox and Bill Murray.
The Midnight Madness program, which focuses on horror and genre films, will include John Carpenter’s “The Ward,” Guy Moshe’s “Bunraku,” Wu Ershan’s “The Butcher, the Chef and the Swordsman,” Dante Lam’s “Fire of Conscience,” James Wan’s “Insidious,” Julien Carbon’s and Laurent Courtiaud’s “Red Nights,” Jim Mickle’s “Stake Land,” Brad Anderson’s “Vanishing on 7th Street” and James Gunn’s “Super.”
According to tweets from festival co-director Cameron Bailey, Istanbul was chosen from a shortlist that also included Berlin, Bucharest, Buenos Aires and Manila.
Organizers, he said, briefly reconsidered their decision to focus on Istanbul after a May raid that killed eight Turkish nationals and one Turkish-American.
Despite that, Bailey said in the press release announcing the selection, Istanbul won out. “Over the past five years, filmmakers from this vibrant metropolis have been winning awards at Cannes and Berlin,” he said. “Now, some are making the leap to festivals outside of Europe. We’re so pleased to feature films from Istanbul this year: audiences will have access to strong emerging filmmakers, at the moment just before they're sure to be discovered somewhere else.”
Last year’s City to City choice, Tel Aviv, proved to be hugely controversial. At least three films pulled out of the festival, and more than 50 actors and filmmakers signed a letter protesting the choice of Tel Aviv so soon after the Gaza war, and accusing the festival of being “complicit in the Israeli propaganda machine.”
Among those speaking out against the choice were Viggo Mortensen, Julie Christie, Ken Loach and Jane Fonda, the last of whom called the letter “unnecessarily inflamatory.”
A counter letter headed “We don’t need another blacklist” was signed by Natalie Portman, Sacha Baron Cohen and Jerry Seinfeld, among others.
