Entertainment

TIFF announces Mary Harron's Salvador Dali biopic as closing night film

The Toronto International Film Festival is rounding out its Canadian slate with titles including a film by Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq, an Indigenous romance and a documentary about the downing of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 in Iran.

Latest additions to TIFF's Canadian lineup revealed at an industry event in Toronto on Wednesday

TIFF's closing night film is Daliland, directed by Ontario-raised director Mary Harron and starring Ben Kingsley, left, as Salvador Dali. (Embattled actor Ezra Miller portrays the surrealist artist in his younger years.) (Rekha Garton and Marcel Zyskind/TIFF)

The Toronto International Film Festival is rounding out its Canadian slate with titles including a film by Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq, an Indigenous romance and a documentary about the downing of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752 in Iran.

Homegrown talent is also behind TIFF's closing night film Daliland, directed by Ontario-raised director Mary Harron, which stars Ben Kingsley as Salvador Dali, with embattled actor Ezra Miller portraying the surrealist artist in his younger years.

TIFF revealed the latest additions to its Canadian lineup at an industry event in Toronto on Wednesday.

Tagaq's film Ever Deadly, co-directed by Chelsea McMullan, shows how the singer's improvisational performances connect to the land where she grew up in Nunavut.

Inuk throat singer Tanya Tagaq performs on stage during the Pathway To Paris concert for climate action at Carnegie Hall in New York City on Nov. 5, 2017. A documentary film by the Nunavut-raised artist, called Ever Deadly, will premiere at this year's TIFF. (Kevin Kane/UNDP/Getty Images)

Anishinaabe filmmaker Darlene Naponse, who won TIFF's Air Canada Audience Choice Award in 2018 for Falls Around Her, is vying for another hit at this year's festival with Stellar. The film stars Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and Braeden Clarke as star-crossed lovers who share a cosmic encounter at a bar in northern Ontario.

Buffy Sainte-Marie: Carry It On, a documentary about the life of the legendary Cree artist and activist directed by Madison Thomas, was announced, along with Babak Payami's 752 Is Not A Number, about the 2020 downing of a Ukrainian passenger airliner in Tehran that killed 176 passengers.

Other Canadian titles on offer

Tamil-Canadian writer and film director V.T. Nayani is shown at a TIFF industry event on Thursday. Nayani's film, This Place, is a Toronto-set queer love story between a half-Iranian and half-Mohawk woman and a Tamil woman. (Lisa Xing/CBC)
  • Tamil-Canadian writer and director V.T. Nayani's feature debut This Place, starring Devery Jacobs and Priya Guns, is a queer love story about a Tamil woman and an Iranian and Kanienʼkehá꞉ka woman who meet at a Toronto laundromat.
     
  • Canadians Patrick J. Adams of Suits and Douglas Smith of Big Love star in the Ontario-shot musical romance The Swearing Jar, alongside Adelaide Clemens of Rectify and acclaimed stage and screen actor Kathleen Turner.
     
  • Katherine Jerkovic, who won the Best Canadian First Feature Award at TIFF in 2018 for her debut feature, Roads in February, is back at the festival with Coyote, about a cook-turned-cleaner in Montreal whose hopes of returning to the kitchen are dashed when he's asked to look after his grandson.
     
  • Colombian-Canadian musician and artist Lido Pimienta is turning her talents to the small screen with Lido TV, which CBC bills as a "variety show with a mission: to help people cope with life in a world that sometimes feels like it's falling apart."
     
  • Toronto-raised director Nisha Pahuja's documentary, To Kill a Tiger, follows a farmer in Jharkhand, India, as he fights for justice after the gang rape of his 13-year-old daughter.
     
  • Edmonton-born, Toronto-based filmmaker Graham Foy continues to make waves on the festival circuit with The Maiden, about a trio of teenagers whose summer fun takes a turn for the surreal.