Trans issues in spotlight at Toronto film festival

Published September 10, 2015
Actor Matt Damon is playing an astronaut stranded on the red planet in Ridley Scott’s extraterrestrial epic The Martin, which is set for world premiere at the Toronto film festival.
Actor Matt Damon is playing an astronaut stranded on the red planet in Ridley Scott’s extraterrestrial epic The Martin, which is set for world premiere at the Toronto film festival.

OTTAWA: The race for the Oscars intensifies this week at the Toronto film festival, where the issue of gender identity will be in focus, with performances from Eddie Redmayne and Elle Fanning generating major buzz.

Nearly 400 feature and short films from 71 countries will be screened at the 40th Toronto International Film Festival, the largest such event in North America, which opens on Thursday (today) and runs through Sept 20.

The event, along with festivals in Venice and Telluride, is crucial for Oscar-conscious studios and distributors, attracting hundreds of filmmakers and actors to the red carpet in Canada’s largest city.

In past years, films such as 12 Years a Slave, The King’s Speech and Slumdog Millionaire went on from winning the Toronto festival’s audience prize for best picture to take the top honour at the Oscars.

Festival boss Cameron Bailey said filmmakers often seek to address “current social or political realities, whether it’s a global conflict or a personal shift”.

“This year, they’ve started telling stories in greater numbers of trans characters,” Bailey said in an interview with AFP.

Trans issues burst into the international spotlight earlier this year when Caitlyn Jenner — the Olympic decathlon champion once known as Bruce — came out as a transgender woman.

On the big screen, depictions of trans characters — past and present — could translate into Oscars gold. Fanning will star in About Ray, the story of a girl who struggles with wanting to be a boy. The film, which will premiere in Toronto, also stars Naomi Watts and Susan Sarandon.

Redmayne — who took home a best actor Oscar last year for his portrayal of British physicist Stephen Hawking in The Theory of Everything — is in the Oscar hunt again, but this time, he is playing a woman.

The Danish Girl, which had its premiere in Venice last weekend, tells the story of transgender artist Lili Elbe, one of the first people to undergo sex change surgery.

Redmayne could see his Oscar campaign get a significant boost if his performance is well received in Canada.

Stonewall revisited

Festivalgoers will see the world premiere of Freeheld — the true story of a terminally ill female New Jersey police officer who had to battle in court to pass on her pension benefits to her female lover starring Oscar winner Julianne Moore and Ellen Page.

As well, the festival line-up includes the premiere of Stonewall, a retelling of the event surrounding the 1969 riots in New York’s Greenwich Village that became a touchstone for the LGBT rights movement.

“Filmmakers paid attention to the way that LGBT communities around the world have challenged the notion of identity and the stability of sexual identity,” Bailey said. “It’s dramatically interesting because any time you have characters undergoing profound changes, that makes for great storytelling.”

Bailey said he believes public interest in transgender issues in just the last three years has undergone “a significant shift” — crediting Jenner’s public transformation and Amazon series Transparent for changing attitudes.

“There is much more interest in these stories outside LGBT communities than there used to be,” he said.

“And I think you’ve got filmmakers who are really diving into the dramatic heart of the material,” he said. “It’s more about trying to understand what someone goes through when they begin that profound a transformation.”

Other themes to be explored in Toronto run the gamut from organised crime to drone strikes to the music of Janis Joplin and Yo-Yo Ma.

Canadian director Jean-Marc Vallee — the man behind Dallas Buyers Club and Wild — will premiere his Demolition on opening night. The film starring Jake Gyllenhaal tells the story of an investment banker coming to terms with his wife’s untimely death in a car crash.

The world premiere of Ridley Scott’s new interplanetary epic The Martian, starring Matt Damon as an astronaut stranded on the red planet, is also hotly anticipated.

Six years after his last film, Michael Moore returns with a new documentary, Where to Invade Next.

Footage of Aretha Franklin’s 1972 concert in a Los Angeles church was also scheduled to be screened in Toronto, but was reportedly blocked by the singer.

Published in Dawn, September 10th, 2015

On a mobile phone? Get the Dawn Mobile App: Apple Store | Google Play

Opinion

Editorial

When medicine fails
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

When medicine fails

Between now and 2050, medical experts expect antibiotic resistance to kill 40m people worldwide.
Nawaz on India
Updated 18 Nov, 2024

Nawaz on India

Nawaz Sharif’s hopes of better ties with India can only be realised when New Delhi responds to Pakistan positively.
State of abuse
18 Nov, 2024

State of abuse

DESPITE censure from the rulers and society, and measures such as helplines and edicts to protect the young from all...
Football elections
17 Nov, 2024

Football elections

PAKISTAN football enters the most crucial juncture of its ‘normalisation’ era next week, when an Extraordinary...
IMF’s concern
17 Nov, 2024

IMF’s concern

ON Friday, the IMF team wrapped up its weeklong unscheduled talks on the Fund’s ongoing $7bn programme with the...
‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs
Updated 17 Nov, 2024

‘Un-Islamic’ VPNs

If curbing pornography is really the country’s foremost concern while it stumbles from one crisis to the next, there must be better ways to do so.