Gans» fantasy epic has been lingering in that space
between international premiere date and domestic for two years now, so there's no saying when, or even if, you'll get another chance to see it on the big screen.
Not exact matches
Between Glamour's annual Women of the Year awards, the Dior - hosted Guggenheim
International Gala and the
premiere of Tom Ford's latest film, «Nocturnal Animals,» this past week served up a lot of great fashion moments, making it pretty difficult to narrow our list of the best dressed celebrities.
«Burn Your Maps,» which
premiered in September at the Toronto
International Film Festival, will open in two New York and two Los Angeles theaters on Feb. 24 before widening to somewhere
between 350 and 600 locations.
,» Olivier Nakache, Eric Toledano, France, world
premiere «Darkest Hour,» Joe Wright, United Kingdom, Canadian
premiere «Film Stars Don't Die in Liverpool,» Paul McGuigan, United Kingdom, Canadian
premiere «Kings,» Deniz Gamze Ergüven, France / Belgium, world
premiere «Long Time Running,» Jennifer Baichwal, Nicholas de Pencier, Canada, world
premiere «Mary Shelley,» Haifaa Al Mansour, Ireland / United Kingdom / Luxembourg / USA, world
premiere «The Mountain
Between Us,» Hany Abu - Assad, USA, world
premiere «Mudbound,» Dee Rees, USA,
international premiere «Stronger,» David Gordon Green, USA, world
premiere Untitled Bryan Cranston / Kevin Hart Film, Neil Burger, USA, world
premiere «The Wife,» Björn Runge, United Kingdom / Sweden, world
premiere «Woman Walks Ahead,» Susanna White, USA, world
premiere
Beyond the inside - the - mediasphere headaches of scheduling and other logistics, the transition only served to underscore how the festival continues to be torn
between premieres of Hollywood films hitting theaters within weeks, the carefully calibrated launch of award - season hopefuls, the rediscovery of films from earlier in the festival year, and the emergence of new
international and independent titles.
The further back one goes, the more tenuous the connection
between Cannes and the Oscars becomes — the 2011 winner, Asghar Farhadi's A Separation,
premiered at the Fajr
International Film Festival in Tehran, before screening in Competition at Berlin, where it won the Golden Bear.
«The Current War,» a drama about the race
between Thomas Edison (Benedict Cumberbatch) and George Westinghouse (Michael Shannon) to determine what electrical system would power the United States, had its world
premiere at the Toronto
International Film Festival on Saturday night.
When «The Mountain
Between Us»
premieres tonight at the Toronto
International Film Festival, audiences will be treated to a romantic drama starring Idris Elba and Kate Winslet as two strangers struggling to survive after a plane crash, with cinematography by Mandy Walker.
«Marston,» which
premieres Tuesday at the Toronto
International Film Festival, is about the relationship
between Wonder Woman creator William Moulton Marston (Luke Evans), his wife Elizabeth Marston (Rebecca Hall), and their mutual love Olive Byrne (Bella Heathcote).
In
between are screenings of Michael Haneke's Palme d'Or winner Amour, Ken Loach's Cannes Jury Prize winner The Angel's Share, Thomas Vinterberg's The Hunt (Best Actor at Cannes), Cristian Mungiu's Beyond the Hills (Best Actress and Best Screenplay, Cannes), Christian Petzold's Barbara (Best Director, Berlin), Ben Lewin's Sundance winner The Sessions, Jacques Audiard's Rust and Bone, Abbas Kiarostami's Like Someone in Love, Pablo Larrain's No, Olivier Assayas's Venice
premiere Something in the Air, Raul Ruiz's final film, Night Across the Street, the
international premiere of Any Day Now (an audience - award winner at Seattle and Tribeca), and the North American
premiere of I, Anna, starring Charlotte Rampling and directed by her son, Barnaby Southcombe, just to name a few of the over 230 features playing over two - plus weeks.
Opening just weeks after the Toronto
International has closed, it offers few major
premieres but plenty of quality films shuttling
between Venice, Cannes and Toronto, before heading into wide release or traveling further onto the festival circuit.
Alongside works by leading
international artists such as Shezad Dawood, Rineke Dijkstra, Nathalie Djurberg, Joan Jonas, Karen Kilimnik and Shirin Neshat, highlights include the
international premiere of Martin Creed's new film «Work No. 1700» (2013), Kehinde Wiley's «World Stage: Jamaica» (2013), and a selection of works by Yinka Shonibare MBE exploring the interface
between music and dance.