Category Archives: VIFF 2025

TIFF Award Winners / Runners Up That Will Screen at VIFF 2025

The 50th Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) wrapped yesterday, handing out awards to the winners and runners up that screened at TIFF50.

Clicking on the italicized, underlined titles of the films below will take you to the VIFF web page, where you can learn more about the film, and purchase tickets.

Five of TIFF’s award winning films will screen at VIFF 2025. They are …

Park Chan-Wook’s No Other Choice. Winner of the TIFF People’s Choice International Award. Adapted from a novel by Donald E. Westlake (The Ax), this incisive, darkly comic satire from Park Chan-wook (VIFF ’22’s Decision to Leave) follows a newly unemployed man who, desperate to land a coveted position, hatches a ruthless plan to dispatch his competition.

Presenting present-day South Korea, where seniority counts for little and looking for employment proves to be a cutthroat business.

Man-soo (Lee Byung Hun) had it all: a loving wife, two talented children, two happy dogs. He even bought the beautiful forest-enclosed house where he grew up. Then, after 25 years of dedicated work for Solar Paper — where he was awarded Pulp Man of the Year in 2019 — Man-soo is suddenly given the axe.

Soon he is falling behind on his mortgage payments and his wife Mi-ri (Son Yejin) insists they put the house up for sale. Man-soo is desperate to scoop a coveted position with Moon Paper, but he knows there are other job seekers who match his pedigree. So he hatches a plan: invent a phony paper company, reach out to each of his rivals, lure them into a meeting … and dispatch his competition.

Brilliantly scripted by Park Chan-wook, Lee Kyoung-mi, Jahye Lee, and Canada’s own Don McKellar, No Other Choice is a chilling satire on workplace politics. In Park Chan-wook’s world, given the right set of circumstances, anyone can be driven to murder. It’s a tough job, but someone’s got to do it.

Saturday, October 4th
9:00 pm
Vancouver Playhouse
Thursday, October 9th
8:45 pm
Vancouver Playhouse

Zacharias Kunuk‘s Uiksaringitara (Wrong Husband). Winner, Best Canadian Film,  TIFF50. A strange death, village upheavals, and swarming suitors lead to a love story gone awry in acclaimed Inuk filmmaker Zacharias Kunuk’s latest enthralling imagining of ancient Inuit stories.

Seamlessly blending the supernatural with verité realism, Uiksaringitara (Wrong Husband) follows a boy, Sapa (Haiden Angutimarik), and a girl, Kaujak (Theresia Kappianaq), whose union in marriage is promised by their families from birth.

In their village, time passes as they hunt and prepare food, eventually becoming known as “future husband” and “future wife.” Their peaceful existence, however, is soon to be disrupted. Vivid dreams foretell a battle, and an ominous troll-like creature lurks by the waterfront, attempting to pull someone from the village away.

Long-gone elements of Inuit culture, like arranged marriages, sit alongside enduring components like shamanism and drum dancing. Nicknames and namesakes are a large part of Uiksaringitara — there’s a “Wifeless Buddy” in the film, and Kaujuk calls her mother “Younger Sister” because it’s an inherited name — and the importance of naming continues in Inuit culture today.

With arresting imagery, his trademark humour, and a cast of mostly non-professional actors, Kunuk has again created a world that not only builds upon Inuit stories and legends to enthrall audiences but works to preserve these re-imagined stories for generations to come. Born from oral traditions, and committed to authenticity, Uiksaringitara (Wrong Husband) is a unique feat of both cultural conservation and engrossing cinema.

Wednesday, October 8th
9:00 pm
SFU Woodwards
Friday, October 10th
3:00 pm
SFU Woodwards

Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie. Part of VIFF’s Galas & Special Presentations programme at VIFF 2025, Matt Johnson’s Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie won TIFF’s People’s Choice Midnight Madness Award.

For the uninitiated, Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol’s Nirvanna The Band The Show was a cult web series where its two creators portrayed hyperactive, hap-witted versions of themselves as a musical duo desperately failing to book a gig at the storied Toronto venue The Rivoli. Their hilarious misadventures continued a decade later across two seasons of a Spike Jonze–produced television series, and both iterations brilliantly blended Matt and Jay’s fictional exploits with hysterically incredible real-world public interactions. Every episode further contained a potpourri of irreverent pop-culture references and nebulous copyright violations, but always culminated in a sweet-hearted expression of friendship and perseverance.

Now in a critically acclaimed major motion picture that harmonizes with the series but stands alone, “Nirvanna the Band” are older, but none the wiser. When Matt presses Jay to partake in a death-defying publicity stunt, it goes spectacularly sideways, and the fallout inspires Jay to strike out on his own. But thanks to Matt’s inadvertent intervention with a short-lived Canadian novelty beverage (remember Orbitz?), the boys find themselves traveling through time where they risk compromising their very own origin story.

Utilizing meticulous visual effects, costuming, and the judicious integration of archival footage to recreate Toronto’s not-so-distant past, Johnson and his collaborators polish a satirically sobering and riotously funny cultural mirror that reflects just how much (and how little) things have changed, all the while celebrating the infectious joy of living for your dreams …  with a little help from your friends.

Friday, October 3rd
6:00 pm
The Rio Theatre
Sunday, October 5th
2:30 pm
The Rio Theatre

Sophy Romvari’s Blue Heron. Winner of the Best Canadian Discovery Award, TIFF 50. Sophy Romvari‘s graceful, singularly heartsore début feature has a sharp understanding of how memories form and age: Often it’s the incidental, ambient details you recall as vividly as the more significant events at hand. A film whose quietly flooring opening frames of a vast landscape becoming home to a compassionate story of a Hungarian-Canadian family navigating an uncertain world together already signal it as a major, incisive and intimate work.

Blue Heron only grows even greater from there.

Heartbreaking barely begins to describe it, although the terms masterful and transcendent also apply. If you’ve ever imagined how you’d try comforting your younger self or your family about the uncertain future ahead of them, Blue Heron may be the most emotionally devastating film of the year — and also perhaps the most comforting.

Saturday, October 4th
6:00 pm
The Cinematheque
Sunday, October 5th
1:00 pm
The Cinematheque
Sunday, October 5th
3:30 pm
Fifth Avenue Cinema

100 Sunset. Honourable Mention, for Best Canadian Film, TIFF 50. In this mesmerizing film by Kunsang Kyirong, the deepening bond between two young women threatens to have repercussions throughout a community of Tibetan immigrants living in an apartment complex in west Toronto.

Indeed, one of the most impressive aspects of this fully realized first feature is Kyirong’s ability to combine a detailed portrait of this wider network of intersecting lives with a similarly specific and empathetic look at two people resisting the roles they’ve been assigned.

Those deft shifts between macro and micro perspectives are mirrored by the activities of Kunsel (Tenzin Kunsel), the taciturn introvert at the film’s centre. Kunsel’s fascination with others manifests in her two primary pursuits: spying on her neighbours with a newly acquired video camera and committing petty thefts. But after she meets Passang (Sonam Choekyi) — an enigmatic newcomer with a much older husband — Kunsel must venture beyond her comfortable position as a wary, watchful outsider.

Working in collaboration with members of Toronto’s Tibetan-Canadian community, along with some of the city’s sharpest film talents — including cinematographer Nikolay Michaylov, whose many films at TIFF include TIFF ’24 selections Measures for a Funeral and Matt & Mara — Kyirong establishes herself as one of Canadian cinema’s most exciting new filmmakers in her stunning feature début. In her hands, this noirish tale of mystery and desire becomes a means to capture an under-represented corner of Toronto in all its richness, exploring her characters’ feelings of cultural dislocation and, even more poignantly, their desires for escape.

Friday, October 3rd
6:15 pm
The Cinematheque
Sunday, October 5th
3:30 pm
International Village 7

VIFF 44’s Galas & Special Presentations Programme, Pt. 4

VanRamblings returns today with a continuing look at the Galas & Special Presentations programme at this year’s 44th annual Vancouver International Film Festival. Click on the underlined link for each film title below to be taken to the VIFF web page for the film, which will both provide you with more information on the film, and allow you the opportunity to purchase a ticket for each award winning film (pleasing the VIFF folks no end), if you are of a mind to do so.

Father Mother Sister Brother. Winner of the Golden Lion, the top prize, at the Venice Film Festival this past weekend. Hollywood Elsewhere’s Jeffrey Wells in his review called the film inert and threadbare, also writing, “Jim Jarmusch’s new film is easily his weakest, least nourishing film ever, which is why Cannes Film Festival artistic director Thierry Fremaux declined to début the film four months ago.”

Clearly, American director Alexander Payne (Nebraska, The Descendants, Election, Sideways) who headed up the jury in Venice that chose Jarmusch’s film for the award had an entirely different take from Wells on the worthiness of the film.

The Hollywood Reporter’s David Rooney writes of the film, “For a three-part piece, it gains a gorgeous fluidity from the gossamer ribbon of melancholy threaded through it. Like Paterson, it’s a film whose simplicity, sweetness and unvarnished ordinariness make it seem almost a miracle,” while Variety’s Jessica Kiang calls the film “consistently beautiful.’ The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw: “it is a film to savour.”

Are you are Jarmusch fan? Then Father, Mother, Sister Brother is a must-see.

Friday, October 3rd
5:45 pm
The Rio
Sunday, October 12th
6:30 pm
Vancouver Playhouse

Rental Family. A smash hit at the Toronto International Film Festival, with critics suggesting that Rental Family is a lock for a Best Picture Oscar nomination, and Brendan Fraser a Best Actor Oscar nomination, and maybe even another win.

Writes The Hollywood Reporter’s Frank Scheck …

“Oscar winners, especially those coming from left field, don’t always find worthy successors to their award-winning roles. But Brendan Fraser has come up with a beaut in his first starring part since The Whale. Playing an American actor living in Tokyo who finds a unique way to practice his craft, the actor delivers a superlative performance in Rental Family, a dramedy that proves a charming surprise balancing poignancy and humour with rare delicacy.”

Want a good cry in a darkened movie theatre? Then Rental Family is for you.

Saturday, October 4th
6:00 pm
The Rio Theatre

The Secret Agent. When far right conspiracy theorist, Trump acolyte and danger to humanity Jair Bolsonaro was President of Brazil (more’s the pity), Kleber Mendonça Filho — Brazil’s most acclaimed film director ever, and one of VanRamblings’ favourite directors dating back to 2012’s Neighbouring Sounds (a film we absolutely loved), Kleber Mendonça Filho was persona non grata, having to leave the country for fear of arrest (that’s what fascists do to prominent members of the arts community), but now that Lula is President (again) Kleber Mendonça Filho is back in the good graces of Brazil’s federal government. Thank goodness.

Allow a few prestigious film critics to weigh in on The Secret Agent

“Visually and dramatically superb in every way, moving with unhurried confidence across the screen, pausing to savour every bit of bizarre comedy or erotic byway, or note of pathos, on its circuitous path to the violent finale,” says The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw.

Says The Film Stages’ Leonardo Goi, “The Secret Agent doesn’t just exist in conversation with the genre films from the decade in which most of it unfurls; it also testifies, time and again, to the director’s unwavering belief in cinema’s capacity to disquiet and mesmerize.”

Time Out’s Dave Calhoun, “The Secret Agent is vicious and vivid in its sense of place and danger, but also has a streak of weirdness, as it offers a very human take on the political-crime thriller genre.”

Slant Magazine’s Mark Hanson writes: “More broadly appealing than Kleber Mendonça Filho’s past films, The Secret Agent is still unmistakably the work of an artist who’s deeply fascinated with the ways in which cinema, politics, and personal history co-mingle.”

Destined for a Best International Feature Film Oscar nomination. See it now.

Monday, October 6th
9:00 pm
Vancouver Playhouse
Saturday, October 11th
2:00 pm
Vancouver Playhouse

For Part One of our VIFF Galas & Special Presentations columns click here.

For Part Two of our VIFF Galas & Special Presentations columns click here.

For Part Three of our VIFF Galas & Special Presentations columns click here.

VIFF 44’s Galas & Special Presentations Programme, Pt. 3

Today on VanRamblings we wrap up our look for the week at the Galas and Special Presentations programme set to screen between Thursday, October 2nd and 12th, as part of the Vancouver International Film Festival’s 44th annual edition.

By clicking on the underlined titles below, you will be taken to the VIFF web page for the film, providing you with the opportunity to purchase tickets, if you wish.

Orphan. Set in the aftermath of the 1956 Hungarian Uprising, Orphan is the heart-wrenching and ultra-realist latest from Oscar-winning filmmaker László Nemes (Son of Saul, VIFF#34, 2016 Oscar for Best International Feature Film). Set amongst the ruins of the violently suppressed Hungarian Revolution of 1956, in which thousands of anguished citizens challenged the USSR-backed dictatorship and were met with Soviet tanks and troops, the resultant violence and high death tolls led to nearly a quarter of a million Hungarians fleeing the country.

Living with his stoic and forbearing mother, Klára (Andrea Waskovics), in Budapest, Andor (12-year-old newcomer Bojtorján Barabas) is desperately searching for his identity. Although 11 years have passed since the liberation of the camps, his father has not returned. The family of two are members of the close-knit Jewish community, which — under the thumb of the Axis-aligned regime that preceded Soviet occupation — languished at the best of times and at the worst times disappeared. Although settled in their historic family home, they are under close observation by the current regime, which suspects their connection to at-large members of what remains of the underground resistance. Meanwhile, the family receives visits from Berend Mihály (Grégory Gadebois), a pompous and brutish man from the nearby countryside, linked to Klára’s mysterious past, who Andor begins to suspect holds the key to the true story of his mother’s survival during World War II.

Not to be missed.

Thursday, October 2nd
8:45 pm
Fifth Avenue Cinemas
Saturday, October 4th
6:30 pm
Cineplex International Village 9

Jay Kelly. Noam Baumbach’s latest is about a man (George Clooney) looking back at his life and reflecting on the choices, the sacrifices, the successes, the mistakes he’s made. When is it too late to change the course of our lives? Jay Kelly is an actor and as such the movie is about identity. How we perform ourselves. Who are we as parents, children, friends, professionals? Are we good? Are we bad? What is the gap between who we’ve decided we are and who we might actually be? What makes a life? Jay Kelly is about what it means to be yourself.

Jay Kelly follows famous movie actor Jay Kelly and his devoted manager Ron (Adam Sandler) as they embark on a whirlwind and unexpectedly profound journey through Europe. Along the way, both men are forced to confront the choices they’ve made, the relationships with their loved ones, and the legacies they’ll leave behind. A lock for multiple Oscar nominations. Another VIFF must-see.

Friday, October 10th
5:30 pm
Vancouver Playhouse

Sirât. Sergi López plays Luis, a man desperately searching for his missing daughter Marina throughout the harsh southern deserts of Morocco, along with his young son Esteban (Bruno Núñez Arjona) and their dog Pipa. At the film’s beginning — a pulsating open-air rave — the trio drifts through throngs of entranced and sweaty partygoers, handing out flyers with photos. As soldiers move in to shut down the festivities, father and son follow and ultimately join a motley bunch of roving ravers (memorably played by non-professionals) who set out in their van in search of the next party — and hopefully Marina — as hints of impending war multiply.

With swirling dust storms and solar flashes alighting the cinematic landscapes — all stunningly enhanced by director of photography Mauro Herce’s exquisite Super 16mm — and an award-winning, low end–heavy score by techno stalwart Kangding Ray, the gruelling expedition increasingly transforms into a sensorial and hypnotic experience that tests physical and psychological limits.

Simultaneously explosive and introspective — a film in which spirituality and altered states of consciousness exist alongside raw, sober humanity — Sirât, which means “path” in Arabic, explores the ways loss, grief, and violence can imbue life with both intensity and clarity. While many have evoked Mad Max, Zabriskie Point, and The Wages of Fear as cinematic touchstones, the film emerges cult-ready from the singular vision of Laxe, known for his mystical sensibility in probing truths.

The above capsule written by Andrea Picard for TIFF 50, which begins next week.

Friday, October 3rd
9:15 pm
Vancouver Playhouse
Sunday, October 12th
6:45 pm
The Rio Theatre

VanRamblings will be back next week to provide further insight into the breadth and depth of this year’s 44th annual Vancouver International Film Festival.

VIFF 2025 Galas & Special Presentations, Pt. 2

VIFF Executive Director Kyle Fostner, and VIFF’s Chief Programmer, Curtis Woloschuk, attended the 77th annual Cannes Film Festival this past May, and were able to secure — for the first time ever — commitments to bring every Cannes’ awarding winning film, in the Main Selection, Un Certain Regard, and Directors Fortnight to the 44th annual Vancouver International Film Festival, placing those films in this year’s Galas & Special Presentations programme.

In Day 2 of VanRamblings’ peek at VIFF #44’s Galas & Special Presentations programme, we’ll begin with the 2025 Cannes’ Palme d’or winner. Clicking on the underlined title will take you to the VIFF web page, which will enable you, if you are of a mind, to purchase tickets to the films listed below.

It Was Just An Accident. In his latest film, a 24-hour narrative, Iranian film director Jafar Panani welds scorching social critique to a masterful command of form: a devastating cry for justice, the film also emerging as as a superb thriller. Film Comment calls the film, “A towering achievement.”

For Panahi, It Was Just an Accident marks a return to a more classic style of filmmaking, the film about anger, violence, revenge and empathy, felt as deeply by the characters whose lives unspool in front of the camera as by the filmmaker who sits behind it.  Organically taking shape when Vahid encounters him who he believes tortured him in prison years earlier — Eghbal a former Iranian intelligence officer — Vahid tracks Eghbal to a repair shop, and abducts Eghbal, driving him out to the desert, where he digs a hole with the intent of burying him alive.

A certain Oscar nominee for Best International Feature Film in next year’s Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences, here’s your opportunity to get an early peek at one of the best films of the year, brought to you by the good folks at VIFF.

Thursday, October 2nd
9:30 pm
Vancouver Playhouse
Thursday, October 9th
2:45 pm
Vancouver Playhouse

Young Mothers. The Dardennes brothers are back again with their latest multiple Cannes award winning film, Young Mothers. Says Variety’s Peter Debruge, “Deeply moving but never manipulative, Young Mothers amounts to the brothers’ best film in more than a decade.” Immersive, observational, Dardennes’ engaging ensemble drama dedicates quality time to a quartet of young women — girls, really — under the care of a maternal assistance home in Liège.

Pregnancy is the common thread between these four teens, who otherwise represent very different instances of children bringing children into the world. Jessica (Babette Verbeek) anxiously waits beside a bus stop, hoping to recognize the birth mother who put her up for adoption. It’s not until the camera steps away that we see this young girl is pregnant herself. She’s already picked out the name for her baby, Alba, and swears she’ll never abandon her — a commitment to breaking the cycle by someone who desperately craves her own mother’s embrace.

Ariane (Janaina Halloy Fokan) has practically the opposite problem: Her welfare-dependent single parent Nathalie (Christelle Cornil) pressures her to deliver, promising to help raise the child, but Ariane wants a better life for her baby.

A tender look at women at a crossroads, with stripped-down aesthetic principles, compassionate humanism and naturalistic purity, the Dardennes return to their roots as documentary filmmakers, in Young Mothers expanding the scope of their work while create gorgeous moments of empathy in the lives of the four teens, whose bare-bones existences on the fringes of society deserve our recognition.

Sunday, October 04th
3:00 pm
Vancouver Playhouse 

Sunday, October 09th
12:30 pm
Fifth Avenue Cinemas

Thursday, October 12th
8:15 pm
Alliance Francaise

Tomorrow on VanRamblings, we’ll complete our look at VIFF 44’s Galas and Special Presentations programme. See you here then.