Mira Nair’s ‘A Suitable Boy’ to close TIFF 2020 as festival opens with no crowds

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TIFF 2020 opens with no crowds and Mira Nair’s BBC series `A Suitable Boy’ to close the festival on September 19

The Canadian Bazaar

TORONTO: With corona cases once again showing a spike in Canada’s largest city, the 45th Toronto International Film festival (TIFF), one of the world’s major movie shows, opened today, with no red carpets, no celebrities and no crowds.

The 10-day festival kicked off with opening-night screening of David Byrne’s American Utopia, which is directed by Spike Lee and documents the former Talking Heads frontman’s 2019 Broadway show.

TIFF Bell Lightbox, the headquarters of the festival in Canada’s commercial and entertainment hub, is jam-packed on the opening night. But it wore a deserted look today.

Mira Nair’s BBC series ‘A Suitable Boy’ will be the closing film of the festival on September 19.

Priyanka Chopra, who is almost a regular at each TIFF, will be seen in an Instagram conversation with festival artistic director Cameron Bailey today – September 11.

TIFF usually marks the beginning of the Oscar buzz because the audiences in Toronto get to see many films which reach the rest of the world much later.

TIFF 2020 Scotia theatres
Scotiabank theatres, which show the bulk of TIFF films, are closed this year.

In normal times, the festival features over 300 full-length films, documentaries and shorts. But the TIFF 2020 line-up has been truncated to just 60 titles.

Among the major titles, Halle Berry’s directorial debut Bruised – a sports film about a mixed martial fighter facing her opponents and trying to win custody of her six-year-old son – will have its world premiere on September 12.

With all Toronto theatres closed, in-person screenings are being held only at small theatres at TIFF Bell Lightbox and four drive-in locations across the city, with mandatory masking and social distancing. Ticket buyers can also watch films and live chats on a streaming platform.

Since TIFF pumps in about $200 million each year into Toronto’s economy, the third largest city in North America this year faces a clean wipeout in terms of revenue from the event.

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