I'm telling you for the last time

A friend emailed me recently asking how one goes about attending the Toronto International Film Festival. I wrote a long email explaining how it works, especially the quirky advanced lottery process, and realized that it’s probably the third time I’ve explained it in such detail. I decided to strip out names and details and post my response here, so that I can just point to it next time someone asks.

“We’re thinking of attending TIFF this year – being newb’s, what do we need to know? Was just at tiff08.ca and gave them my email address – looks like ticket info hasn’t yet been established. Can you describe the general process of acquiring tickets and picking films to attend?”

OK, well…there’re a few different ways. Being that you’re in another city some of those options become more difficult, but hardly impossible. The link isn’t active yet, but the TIFF website should soon have a section called “How to Festival” which explains it in detail, but it’s a little hard to follow for first-time attendees.

The first thing to figure out is how many movies you want to see. If you want to see less than five films, it makes sense to wait until late August / early September when the single tickets go on sale. A couple of days before the first screening (Fri Sep 5 this year) the tickets for all films still available (some sell out during the advanced draw…more on that in a minute) go on sale on the website. They’ll be about $21 each at that point, if I remember right.

If you want to do five or more, I’d recommend going into the advanced draw. What that means is that some time in July (I think) packages will go on sale on the website for 10 films, 30 films, 50 films, etc. When you buy those you don’t choose your films, you just reserve a place in the advanced draw for n screenings. In late August they publish the list of films, and then the schedule; on the day they publish the schedule — the last Tuesday, usually — you go to the box office here in Toronto and pick up your selection forms. If you’re from out of town, I believe they FedEx it to you.

Let’s say you buy a 10-film package and your package arrives on Wednesday. You make a 1st choice and 2nd choice for all 5 films (assuming you want 2 tickets for each screening). You do this in case your first choice is already sold out. Try to keep the 1st and 2nd choice in the same time slot; it’s easier to keep track of your schedule and you avoid time conflicts. You fill out the submission form using their crazy little colored highlighter system and FedEx it back to Toronto. When it arrives it goes, in order of arrival, into a numbered box for the advanced lottery; Friday noon is the cutoff time. Let’s say your envelope lands in box #55. On Friday afternoon the TIFF announces the box that’s drawn in the lottery. Let’s say there are 60 boxes in all, and they draw box #8.

What this means is they start in box #8 and give everyone there their first choice of screenings. They continue on to box #9, and so on, in order. When they get to someone who’s requested a screening that’s sold out, they go to that person’s second choice. If that second choice is also sold out, that person gets nothing for that slot…more on that in a minute. When they get to the last box (#60, for this example), they go back to box #1 and continue from there. I’ve been very close to the drawn box, and I’ve been very far away. Even the year that I figured I was screwed, I still went 14 for 15 with either my 1st or 2nd choice. Of course, it also depends which screenings you choose: if you’re out for the hot tickets with the big stars, your chances are worse in the crunch than if you went for slightly more obscure titles.

Some time on Saturday or Sunday you’ll get an email telling you what movies you got, and whether you have any that came up empty. On Monday — Labour Day — you line up at Yonge & College to pick up your tickets and, if you missed out on any of your choices, to select a new screening. I’ve only had to do this once, and if you go prepared (i.e., knowing your schedule) it’s no trouble. I’m not sure how out-of-towners do this, to be honest, but I’m sure there’s an existing process. They deliberately make it complicated, I think, to weed out the casually interested movie-goer. It sounds complex, but we’ve walked other people through it.

The other alternative, and it’s a pretty good one for first-timers, is the Visa Screening Room. You need a Visa (obviously) and I think it has to be a gold card, but here’s how it works: when the packages go on sale on the website you can get two Visa Screening Room packages (there are two options, the early screenings and the late screenings…two different films each night). It gives you eight films in eight nights at the same theatre, at the same time each night. You have no choice over what you see — you won’t know the lineup until later — but they tend toward “bigger” films as the Elgin (aka, Visa Screening Room) is one of the best theatres. Obviously if you’re not planning to spend eight nights here, this won’t work for you, but it takes out all the guesswork and scheduling and rushing between theatres. The catch is that you have to move fast: these packages sell out the same day they go on sale, probably within hours.

General tips:

  • Stars/directors usually only show up for the first screening of a film (or, in some cases, the screening at a big venue). If seeing the stars or asking the director questions is important to you, aim for earlier screenings and/or screenings at venues like the Elgin or Ryerson.
  • Sorting through 500+ films can be tough; I, being a geek, tend to put the schedule into Excel right away and start filtering by what I want to see, what my wife wants to see, what times just don’t work, short films, etc., etc. Then it’s just down to juggling the schedule and deciding between two films you really want to see. If you go the single-ticket route and skip the advanced draw, then it’s quite easy.
  • Every year you get the option to buy the ‘Bible’, the giant catalog of films. It’s $40, but I like to get it because 1) it’s a nice memento, and 2) it’s somehow easier to be captivated by the description of a film in this book than on the website. Don’t ask, I don’t know why, it just is. Must be the fresh, chemical-y ink.
  • I’ve found the films I enjoyed the most were the ones that I didn’t see coming. Really memorable ones like Day Night Day Night, Requiem or Blindsight didn’t have a single actor I recognized, but there was just something about the description that grabbed me. I’ve had reasonable success, I think, because I don’t go for either the really big OR the really obscure.
  • Skip screenings at Roy Thompson Hall. They’re gala events, very expensive, always sold out and really only interesting if you’re press or a starfucker. The film will always play, sans star & red carpet, at another theatre. Also, Galas generally come out in theatres two weeks after the festival ends, so I tend to skip ’em. Again, this comes down to whether you’re drawn to star power or the films themselves.
  • Leave time between screenings. While the website tells you exactly how long the film is, there’s always an intro, there’s often a Q&A afterward, delays are frequent, some theatres are far apart, and if you want a good seat you’ll be in line at least 30 minutes before the showtime. I always build at least 90 minutes between when I expect movie A should finish and movie B should begin.
  • This blog is pretty good: he’s an out-of-towner and describes every detail of the advanced lottery process. No 2008 update as yet.

Hope that helps.

57.060%

Tennessee used their electric chair for the first time in 47 years. Granted, they used it on a monstrous psychopath, but is that really a habit they want to revive?

.:.

Reading all the news about the film festival is just killing me. It’s like the biggest party of the year is happening the house next to mine and I have to study. However, at times like this I find solace in the immortal words of GB: “Suck it up, princess.”

.:.

I’m feeling a lot better this morning. I actually got to bed during The Daily Show last night and fell asleep just after the show ended. I woke up at 5:30 — my body just doesn’t know what to do with more than six hours of sleep — but I’m still in better shape than I was earlier in the week. Got some substantial work done last night too. Ooh, and my new shirt from m0851 is the most comfortable thing EVER.

That’s right, friends, things are almost coming up Milhouse…

[tags]tennessee, execution, electric chair, tiff, tiff07, daily show, lack of sleep[/tags]

The fake empire

.:.

Met up with T-Bone today for lunch at Volo before our movie. Our screening was at the Ryerson theatre at 3:00, and we figured if we left around 2:10 we’d get in line with lots of time to spare, so we met at 1:00. Lots of time, right? Not so much. Just like the last time I was there they were short-staffed, and 45 minutes after ordering our food still hadn’t arrived. It showed up a few minutes after 2:00…but they brought me the wrong dish. Fortunately it only had salmon in it (and it wasn’t half bad) but T-Bone’s food wasn’t great. They knocked the price of my meal off the bill and forgot to charge me for my first drink, but I didn’t feel too bad about it. We wouldn’t have had time to correct it anyway. As it was we had to scarf down food and drink, and got to the Ryerson just in time to join the end of the line entering the theatre. Too bad; T-Bone’s first experience at Volo wasn’t a very good one, and it’s gone from being one of my favourite places to being a little sketchy.

The movie we saw, however, pretty much made up for it. I was kind of worried about Battle In Seattle (imdb | rotten tomatoes)…the title seemed corny (it was later explained in the film), it was a director’s debut film, I’m not typically a big fan of either Charlize Theron or Woody Harrelson…I’d kind of set it up in my mind to be rather bad. However, it turned out to be the great film festival movie. Not a great film…a great film festival movie. I’ll explain.

This was, according to Noah Cowan, the world premiere of the film. As such the director Stuart Townsend was there, as were some of the actors: Woody Harrelson, Martin Henderson, Michelle Rodriguez, Andre Benjamin and Charlize Theron, Townsend’s girlfriend. This is one of those experiences you have at the festival that you don’t get when watching a movie normally, when a director is living or dying with his cast and crew, surrounded by hundreds of movie fans. You get to see a visceral, engaged audience react to a film, and you get to see the director absorb that reaction. For Townsend today, it was quite a reaction indeed.

The film was about the 1999 WTO protests in Seattle, and the violent confrontations that resulted…dramatic and emotional subject matter, to be sure, and particularly interesting to me as the issue of WTO patent regulation was the topic of my big paper last year. At the end of the film, as The National sang “Fake Empire”, the crowd stood, turned to Townsend and applauded. They stood and clapped for five minutes as he waved, thanked the crowd and hugged a weeping Theron. That, that moment is what you get at a film festival and nowhere else…seeing a man who has worked for five years to perfect a vision, and is witnessing for the first time the realization of that vision. It was pretty moving; not quite like seeing Hotel Rwanda a few years ago, but emotional nonetheless.

I’ll be interested to see how the film is received outside of that situation. Was it a great film, technically speaking? Not really. But for two hours this afternoon, it was a classic.

[tags]brian mulroney, volo, battle in seattle, stuart townsend[/tags]

I can't believe it's already half over

We just got home from our first (and, in Nellie’s case, only) festival film. Since we’re only seeing two this year there wasn’t a lot of room for error, and I felt some pressure on tonight’s pick. Fortunately we lucked out. Starting Out In The Evening (imdb) was a great film.

It was fitting that we sat in the same theatre as last year’s opening night (when we saw Requiem: my review), another pleasant surprise. It was even a surprise in the same mould…a story told with no effects, no devices or gimmicks, just sharp writing and superb acting. The director described star Frank Langella as a giant. You’d need no further proof of that than to watch this film.

[tags]starting out in the evening, tiff, tiff07[/tags]

Better than nothing

Despite server problems (seriously, they’re hosted by Bell…you’d think they could put together a decent webserver or two) I managed to grab a couple of TIFF tickets this morning. Tomorrow night Nellie and I will see Starting Out In The Evening and on Saturday I’ll see Battle In Seattle with T-Bone.

[tags]tiff07[/tags]

There will be no rocket science

This is all the detail my brain can muster today:

  • The Matador (imdb | rotten tomatoes) was ok, but not great.
  • I think it’s time for The Ex (the Canadian National Exhibition, for those of you not living in Toronto) to just close up shop. It’s looking it’s age.
  • If you know use an RSS reader and you have some basic technical skill, you should really check out Yahoo Pipes. I’ve been playing around with it since it came out, but now I’m finding it useful and not just kind of cool. For example, I aggregated all my various Montreal Canadiens news sites into one feed, and I found a patched Pitchfork feed so that I don’t keep seeing the same stories over and over.
  • I hope the film festival puts more tickets on sale. The few that I have a chance to see and that look interesting are already sold out after the advanced draw.

[tags]the matador, the ex, cne, yahoo pipes, tiff07[/tags]

All the goodness I'll be missing

I’ve gone through the film festival book and picked out the films I want to see. Of course, I’ll only be able to get tickets to maybe 1 or 2 of them this year, but the rest will go on the list and wait for release dates.

Here they are, all 77:

  • 4 months, 3 weeks and 2 days
  • amal
  • atonement
  • battle in seattle
  • before the devil knows you’re dead
  • bill
  • body of war
  • breakfast with scot
  • cassandra’s dream
  • cleaner
  • closing the ring
  • control
  • darfur now
  • death defying acts
  • disengagement
  • eastern promises
  • emotional arithmetic
  • encounters at the end of the world
  • everything to gain: a conversation with jimmy and rosalynn carter
  • frontière(s)
  • fugitive pieces
  • garage
  • honeydripper
  • i’m not there
  • in bloom
  • in the valley of elah
  • into the wild
  • it’s a free world…
  • jar city
  • joy division
  • juno
  • just buried
  • king of california
  • l’ âge des ténèbres
  • l’ ennemi intime
  • lars and the real girl
  • lust, caution
  • man from plains
  • margot at the wedding
  • married life
  • michael clayton
  • my enemy’s enemy
  • new york city serenade
  • nightwatching
  • no country for old men
  • normal
  • nothing is private
  • one hundred nails
  • operation filmmaker
  • paranoid park
  • ploy
  • rails & ties
  • redacted
  • rendition
  • reservation road
  • romulus, my father
  • run, fat boy, run
  • sleuth
  • smiley face
  • starting out in the evening
  • stuck
  • the assassination of jesse james by the coward robert ford
  • the babysitters
  • the brave one
  • the dictator hunter
  • the home song stories
  • the orphanage
  • the passage
  • the savages
  • the stone angel
  • the time is now: a conversation about darfur
  • the tracey fragments
  • the visitor
  • the world unseen
  • those three
  • weirdsville
  • young people fucking

My schedule limitations and the popularity of some films during the advanced draw should make my choices pretty straightforward.

[tags]tiff07[/tags]

Everything be broken

The recent radio silence is due to a couple of things:

  1. Our den (aka, the BlogCave*) is being painted and my computer is piled in the middle of the room under a tarp. Because of my broken wrist I’m trying to avoid shlepping my laptop home at night, which means I’m forced to use Nellie’s laptop now, and I’m trying not to hog it too much.
  2. The TIFF bible came out yesterday, so I spent most of the night going through to see which films catch my eye, even though I can’t go to any this year. This essentially becomes half of my wishlist for the upcoming few years. After two hours I was only halfway through the book so I have another night’s work ahead of me yet. There’s no rush, really; I’d just much rather read about movies than study.

.:.

It occurred to me this morning that I am not at all prepared for my trip in a couple of weeks. I’m not talking prepared-but-not-up-to-my-usual-clinical-standards. I mean I’m not ready at all. I should get on that.

* note: I don’t really call it that. But I might, starting right now.

[tags]painting, tiff07, trip planning[/tags]

MBA: DO NOT WANT!!!1!

Had a nice, quiet little birthday dinner last night at Fieramosca. Perfect way to end a nice, relaxing birthday: good food, good wine, good friends and perfect patio weather.

Before dinner Nellie took me to Bay Bloor Radio and bought me my birthday present: some outdoor speakers so I can get my music fix on the balcony. Thanks baby!

.:.

It’s almost torture to see the film festival lineup announcements appear in my inbox and feed reader. This year I have a course right smack in the middle of festival week, and we leave on vacation immediately after my course ends, so the best we can do this year is one or two films on opening weekend. No frantic schedule-wrangling this year, which is always half the fun.

Next year, when I’m done this freaking MBA, I’m taking a week off and watching 30 films, even if it kills me.

[tags]fieramosca, birthday, tiff07, toronto international film festival[/tags]