There are all kinds of ways to experience TIFF.
When I worked in TV, I spent the festival inside a hotel suite doing interviews or press screenings, away from the crowds, away from public reactions.
I never experienced the TIFF lineup where the best kind of geeks lives.
Have you seen anything good?
Everyone wants to share.
This year, I have met a charming couple from Ohio, retired travellers who have been coming to TIFF since 1998. They see 30 films, visit favourite eateries and store up amazing stories to share with curious line chums like me. Their film knowledge was astounding, and the hour I spent in line went by in a movie minute. One of them taught American studies for 30 years and told me he had often used film clips in his class. Did I ever have a teacher so savvy?
Then there was the sweet young filmmaker from LA who told me to skip seeing Cloud Atlas as he had seen an early cut that he felt was garbage. I’m glad I didn’t listen to him, but I loved hearing about his burgeoning career and repeated attempts to score the rights to an obscure novel. He told me he had hoped to hobnob with more directors while here but found that most parties were closed shops. Ah, yes, the pop-up parties where no one sees the films but knows how to talk about them! I assured my new BFF that he would find entrance one fine day.
Today I met an Entertainment Weekly writer on the Oscar beat, ready to share what he considered front runners for the Academy Awards.
“Argo and Silver Linings Playbook” are a lock, he assured me. “Look for Jennifer Laurence and Joaquin Phoenix as sure bets.”
We shared our favourite moments and discovered we had fallen for the same films thus far ( Amour, Rust and Bone, Place Beyond the Pines) before he was whisked away, saved by a press freebie at the stage door.
When I am fortunate to have my favourite TIFF partner along, the Friendly Greek himself, we both dish with our fellow film fans, pondering over perplexing endings (The Master) or hidden plot lines. We will soon have our very own TIFF party right there in the back of the lineup, twisting around the block.
We’re an hour from the start, but who’s counting the time?
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