Roméo Dallaire greeted his admirers, signed autographs and posed for pictures on the red carpet this weekend at the Toronto International Film Festival, as he attended the world premiere of Shake Hands with the Devil.
It took retired Canadian Lt-General Roméo Dallaire seven years to write the book Shake Hands with the Devil, an account of the insurmountable odds he faced leading an ill-fated UN peacekeeping force into the dark heart of Rwanda’s 1994 genocide. It also took nearly seven years for producers Michael Donovan and Laszlo Barna to bring Dallaire’s biopic to a world premiere at TIFF.
Brad Pitt says it felt good to be back in Alberta to shoot The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, and had kind words for the picture’s Canadian crew.
Just hours before the world premiere of his Eastern Promises, David Cronenberg adopted the persona of a comedy night host, joking that red-hot Viggo Mortensen, leading man of his grim crime thriller, was not equipped for its bath house fight scene.
Michael Moore has had a special relationship with the Toronto International Film Festival, dating back to winning the People’s Choice Award for his breakthrough Roger & Me in 1989. So, it was only fitting that he would use Toronto as the launch pad for his latest, Captain Mike Across America, which preemed Friday night.
Opening night film Fugitive Pieces, a big-screen adaptation of the lyrical novel by Anne Michaels, appears to have been a labor of love by all who tackled the less-than-uplifting material that begins in the depths of the Holocaust and extends to the 1970s in examining the long term after-effects of such trauma.
Stars including Gorgeous George and Brad Pitt arriving on the red carpet in handpicked Audis, looking to boost next month’s rollout of its first-ever mid-engine sports car. Penn, Foster, Caine also in on the deal
What do you get when you cross 22 emerging Canadian filmmakers with directors John Sayles and Don McKellar and select TIFF guests for four days?
The eight Canadian films in Contemporary World Cinema are all looking for international distribution, with subject matter ranging wildly from gun addiction to gay ex-hockey players
SRC’s melancholic drama about night club bouncers took another seven wins at Sunday night’s French TV awards. Academy boss calls on Ottawa for funding, while René Lévesque star Emmanuel Bilodeau wins best dramatic lead and calls for Quebec independence
A newly formed lobby group wants the province to offer at least 50% back on labor costs, and is pleading its case directly to Premier Rodney MacDonald