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VIFF Experiencing a Time of Renewal While Bringing in New Audiences

In 2025, VanRamblings makes our 44th annual foray to the Vancouver International Film Festival, where the regulars we’ve attended the festival with all these years once again find themselves in attendance to enjoy the best in world cinema.

As you might well imagine, like VanRamblings, a few of us are getting on in age, despite looking young, vital and, as long has been the case, committed to VIFF: Eileen broke both her knees three months ago, requiring emergency restorative surgery; Ed’s wife (who worked for the festival for many years) passed on, as did former volunteer David who chose MAID as a way to leave this life; Lorne is here once again, as is VIFF  VanCentre programmer Tom Charity, looking all hail and hearty (both Lorne and Tom are on the younger side of the regular attendee contingent); in his 80s, former CBC producer and film critic Volkmar has made his way to VIFF once again, as have Barbara and Len (who told us The Ivy, which screens on Tuesday for a second time, is his favourite film of all the films he’s attended at VIFF this year).

Unlike VanRamblings, each member of the group above has attended five screening each and every day since the commencement of VIFF 2025 this past Thursday.

Although seniors make up about 20% of those in attendance at the 44th annual VIFF, the majority of audience members at each screening that we’ve attended would seem to range in age from approximately 25 to 45 years of age, some younger than that (university students in the main), some a wee bit older.

VanRamblings experiences this new, vibrant and younger VIFF audience as a hopeful sign that culture and love of international cinema still exists in this city, which means that even in these meanest of post-pandemic times would seem to mean that it is entirely likely VIFF will persevere through the troubling social and economic times many of us are experiencing, long, long into VIFF’s illustrious future.

Clicking on the underlined title links below will take you to the VIFF webpage for the film, and will allow you to order tickets, if you are a mind to do so.

Orphan. B+. Set in Budapest in 1957, one year after the failure of the Hungarian Revolution at the hands of a brutal Soviet regime, a young Jewish boy, Andor, whose mother has raised him to believe that his father will return from the death camps, where Andor’s father was taken near the end of the Holocaust, as  locals hid Andor and his mother — has his hopes shattered when a brutish stranger appears on the doorstep claiming to be his father. The film’s powerful earth-toned, sepia-drenched visual style, including its desaturated colour palette and dynamic camerawork recalls director László Nemes earlier work on the Oscar-winning Son of Saul. Hungary’s nominee for a Best International Feature Film Oscar.

John Candy: I Like Me. A-. A major audience pleaser, this moving-picture, sentimental love letter to one of Canada’s greatest comedians, as directed by Colin Hanks offers an unabashed celebration of John Candy’s life and work in a tale told by friends, reinforcing Candy’s reputation as a prodigious talent and kind-hearted soul, who, in spite of a deep insecurity, was still ultimately a great and loving man. Make no mistake, this is not a hagiography. While the assessment of Candy’s life and legacy provides ample cause for laughter, it also provokes plenty of tears. Residing just beneath that easygoing, eager-to-please, every man exterior was a chronic anxiety that reached a crippling peak during his final years. John Candy passed much too early at age 43. Set to screen a final time at VIFF, at the Cineplex International Village, on Wednesday, October 8th, at 12:45pm in Cinema 10. Arrive early to guarantee yourself a seat.

Sentimental Value. A. Here’s what VanRamblings wrote on social media after the screening of Sentimental Value

Not hard to see why people are going gaga over Joachim Trier’s latest film, this Grand Prix winner at Cannes in every way a triumph, both Renate Reinsve and Stellan Skarsgård’s performances each a revelation, although the whole cast is simply beautiful and humanely perfect. Sentimental Value — about an estranged father and daughter really resonated with us — opens wide on November 14th, on its way to a raft of well-deserved Oscar nominations. It’ll be so good to see Mr. Trier, Ms. Reinsve and Mr. Skarsgård as fixtures on the upcoming Oscar campaign trail. If you don’t know much about them now, you soon will.

A guaranteed lock for the following Oscar nominations: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress, Best Actor, Best Screenplay, and Best International film, for which Norway, in respect of the latter, has submitted the film for a Best International Feature Film Oscar nomination. Set to screen one last time at the Vancouver Playhouse, on Wednesday, October 8th at 5:30pm. At this point, standby only.

Sirât. A. Spain’s submission to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences for a Best International Feature Film Oscar, and earlier this year, winner of the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film Festival, about 15 minutes in, we thought we might leave the screening to go home and spend time with our dog. We’re glad we didn’t. As the film moves along, Sirât turns out to be outstanding cinema, unsettling, tragic, violent, humane, explosive, empathetic and completely unexpected at every moment, Óliver Laxe’s new film is a lightning bolt of a film. The film’s narrative summary: a father (Sergi López) and his son arrive at a rave deep in the mountains of southern Morocco. They’re searching for Mar — daughter and sister — who vanished months ago at one of these endless, sleepless parties. Surrounded by electronic dance music and a raw, unfamiliar sense of freedom, they hand out her photo again and again. Hope is fading but they push through and follow and eventually join a group of ravers heading to one last party deep in the Moroccan desert. As they venture deeper into the burning wilderness, the journey brings unexpected, heart-breaking tragedy. A kind of contemporary, grimly sublime Wages of Fear, Sirât is at all times visually transportive as it focuses on simple plots and conflicts that provide ample space for philosophical and existential contemplation. Laxe’s most fully realized film to date, Sirât folds in the visceral pleasures of contemporary genre and blockbuster cinema. Set to screen at The Rio Theatre on East Broadway at Commercial Drive, on the last day of VIFF, 8:45pm Thanksgiving Sunday evening, October 12th.

Young Mothers. A+. Winner of Best Screenplay at Cannes back in May, and Belgium’s submission for a Best International Film Feature Oscar, Young Mothers is yet another tour-de-force from multiple Cannes winners, the Dardennes’ brothers, Jean-Pierre and Luc, and our favourite film thus far that we’ve screened at the 44th annual Vancouver International Film Festival. Deeply moving from beginning to end, this is the brothers’ best film in more than a decade, captivating when it’s simply taking in the quotidian responsibilities of new parenthood — feeding, diaper changing, bathtime — or when it catches an expression of wonder or joy as a mother gazes into the tiny face of the child she has created. With dignity and intelligence on screen in every scene and every character portrayal, Young Mothers is  another fine addition to the Dardennes’ film canon, with a comfort in the familiarity of their methodology, and their ability to coax tremendous performances from even the youngest of actors — the cast of Young Mothers is uniformly excellent. Young Mothers screens twice more at VIFF, on Thursday, October 9th, 12:30pm at Fifth Avenue Cinema, and Sunday, October 12th at 8:30pm at Alliance Francaise.

Nouvelle Vague. B+. The opening night film at VIFF 2025, director Richard Linklater’s latest film is filmed in exquisite black and white, the dialogue almost entirely in French, clearly a labour of love and a product of considerable craft chronicling the making of Jean-Luc Godard’s Breathless, the film a valentine to the French New Wave. There’s so much joy in this telling, so much sophistication of craft on display, and such a delightful ode to this exemplary era of creativity, Nouvelle Vague is nothing less than a bold, muscular act of caring, a shout of joy and a call to arms. As Owen Glieberman writes in Variety

The film reminds you that the real salvation of cinema will always come from those who understand that making a movie should be a magic trick good enough to fool the magician himself into believing it.

A cinephile’s film through and through, Nouvelle Vague is also breezy and entertaining, never taking itself too seriously while highlighting an extremely serious moment in film history. A film that delights in its characters’ rule-breaking and playfulness and experimentation, for devoted film lovers, Nouvelle Vague is a must-see — a joyful homage to the art of cinema that should have you queuing up at the Vancouver Playhouse for the film’s final screening at VIFF, on Saturday, October 11th, at 11am. One final note: we thought Zooey Deutsch was a revelation as Jean Seberg, her performance reason enough to see Nouvelle VagueArrive early.

No Other Choice. A-. South Korea’s Oscar submission this year, No Other Choice isn’t just director Park Chan-wook’s funniest film, but his most humane, too — and that’s quite something for a comedy as violent as this one, the film a masterful work of cinema, bleak, brilliant, and mordantly hilarious. The film’s summary: After being unemployed for several years, a man devises a unique plan to secure a new job: eliminate his competition.

As the VIFF guide says …

After giving the best years of his life to a paper mill, Man-soo (Squid Game star Lee Byung Hun) has been axed. Standing to lose everything and fearing too much competition in his niche sector, Man-soo hits on an ingenious scheme to guarantee the kind of position he so richly deserves: He will invent a fictitious paper company, invite his peers in for a meeting, and dispatch of his rivals, one by one.

Park’s filmmaking is as elegant as ever, in a wildly enjoyable picture that balances psychological tension against giddily hilarious comic set pieces, in this stunningly energetic and endlessly creative film that delights the mind and the eyes. One more VIFF screening: Thursday, October 9th, 8:45pm at the Vancouver Playhouse.

VIFF 2025 About to Get Underway in Just Days From Now – 44th Edition

The 44th annual Vancouver International Film Festival (VIFF) kicks off later this week, on Thursday, October 2nd and is set to run through Sunday, October 12th

A somewhat truncated, but still well juried, film festival as compared to pre-pandemic festivals of yesteryear, in 2025 VIFF will screen 170 films from 74 countries, spanning the globe.

As we wrote last month, commencing in late August, when the fall film festival season gets underway, movie stars, studio executives, journalists and cinephiles begin their annual trek to Venice, Telluride, Toronto and New York, crisscrossing continents to watch the latest films. Then there’s those of us who live in Vancouver, movie lovers who only need to travel short distances to experience new worlds.

The flagship event of the film year, our Vancouver International Film Festival incorporates a mix of best films the world has to offer, feature length and short, from across the globe. There are dramas, biopics, horror movies and selections that defy easy classification, like Kahlil Joseph’s BLKNWS: Terms & Conditions, a heady exploration of Black life that leaps across time, space and genres. Other selections that will light up screens and minds include Sentimental Value, a tender, tough family story from Joachim Trier (last here with The Worst Person in the World); and the giddy thriller No Other Choice, from Park Chan-wook.

In addition, among this year’s 170 features are two from the always unexpected Romanian director Radu Jude (Dracula); a shambling lark from the Italian filmmaker Francesco Sossai (The Last One for the Road); and a sui generis chronicle of the bloodstained life and times of the Portuguese explorer Ferdinand Magellan from the Filipino auteur Lav Diaz (Magellan). You may need to recalibrate your bodily rhythms for Diaz’s epic, which moves more leisurely than a Hollywood movie. Yet changing things up, including your ideas about what movies can and should do, is a reason festivals like this exist.

A number of selections in the lineup have made splashes at earlier festivals.

Among these is Jim Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother, which recently won top honours at Venice. With calm, delicacy, a steady eye and Jarmusch’s characteristic deadpan, the movie charts the inner and outer lives of different families, creating distinct pointillist group portraits through smiles, gestures, silences, ritualistic pleasantries and stinging asides. In one, a sly cool cat of a father (Tom Waits) receives a visit from his normie twins (the equally bespectacled Adam Driver and Mayim Bialik); in another, an aloof mother (Charlotte Rampling) serves tea to her nervously needy daughters (Cate Blanchett and Vicky Krieps); in the third, twins (Indya Moore and Luka Sabbat) mourn what they’ve lost.

Noah Baumbach is back in the festival with Jay Kelly, about a movie star who, ta-da, is played by George Clooney.

Established in 1981, the Vancouver International Film Festival has been an essential part of the city’s film scene since its founding and its importance has only grown.

Like other arts events, it has weathered doubts about its purpose, political storms, religious controversy, economic pressures and internal strife. It’s also emerged from the pandemic with renewed vigour because of new and younger audiences.

Nearly a third of the audience in 2024 were first-time attendees, explained the festival’s director of programming, Curtis Woloschuk. Equally notable, 62% of all the festival attendees were between 21 and 44 of age, a crucial demographic for any organization, especially one that relies as heavily on its patrons as VIFF does.

As stated above, the Vancouver International Film Festival runs October 2nd thru October 12. For more information, go to https://viff.org/festival/viff-2025/.

Here are a few columns VanRamblings has published about VIFF 2025 to date. You can look for a fresh new VIFF column on VanRamblings each day this week.


Toronto International Film Festival award winning films that will screen at VIFF

VIFF 2025 Galas and Special Presentations, Part 4

VIFF 2025 Galas and Special Presentations, Part 3

VIFF 2025 Galas and Special Presentations, Part 2

VIFF 2025 Galas and Special Presentations, Part 1

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