The famous
Midnight Madness screenings at the Toronto Film Festival are known to be a fun event, with an enthusiastic crowd soaking up the energy of the late night festivities.
Even
the Midnight Madness screenings have red carpets now, if a movie as star - studded as Seven Psychopaths is playing.
And
the Midnight Madness screenings are still the most fun you can have in a Toronto theatre, though I have yet to recapture the electricity of that Braindead screening in 1992, when Quentin Tarantino clapped me on the shoulder on the way out of the Bloor at 2 AM, most of his exhausted Reservoir Dogs cast trailing behind him.
Not exact matches
What You Need To Know: A sensation at
Midnight Madness at TIFF way back in 2011, we'll finally get to see low - budget horror «You're Next» on
screens late this summer.
Midnight Madness is a blast — a real party, packed to the gills with rowdy and receptive genre fans, which makes it a fun alternative to the more polite, reserved vibe of a standard festival
screening.
Last night I was at
Midnight Madness, the fevered late night cult
screening strand that has legendary status worldwide for genre fans.
The Inwood Theatre's
Midnight Madness feature for this week is a 20th anniversary
screening of Kevin Smith's debut indie comedy Clerks (1994) on February 28 and March 1, at the theater.
The atmosphere in the
screening rooms are terrific (don't even get me started on
Midnight Madness) and I haven't once encountered a problem where someone was acting obnoxious during a
screening.
Even the writing on this film was campy beyond anything Disney had ever put on
screen (including Trenchcoat and
Midnight Madness):
Screen Gems is producing Gareth Evans» intense action - thriller just won the
Midnight Madness audience award at the Toronto Film Festival.
After a rousing
screening in the
Midnight Madness program at TIFF, Big Game is starting to roll out to commercial audiences.