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Toronto Adds Over 60 New 2012 Titles Including Documentaries, Midnight Madness and TIFF Kids

Toronto Adds Over 60 New 2012 Titles Including Documentaries, Midnight Madness and TIFF Kids
Toronto Adds Over 60 New 2012 Titles Including Documentaries, Midnight Madness and TIFF Kids

The Toronto International Film Festival has announced over sixty new titles for its 2012 edition, including its TIFF Docs, Midnight Madness, Vanguard and TIFF Kids programs. The announcement comes a week after the festival set their initial batch of titles, bringing the lineup’s total to over 120 titles (check out the entire list of announced titles here).

Among the incredibly diverse list of filmmakers helming films announced today are Don Coscarelli, Martin McDonagh, Barry Levinson, JT Petty and Rob Zombie (all in the Midnight Madness section). The Vanguard roster, meanwhile, features works from director Soi Cheang (“Accident”), musician Ben Drew, Canadian singer-songwriter Peaches, Hong Kong’s Johnnie To and Ben Wheatley (“Kill List”).

The TIFF Docs lineup includes Alex Gibney’s “Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God” — an investigation into the abuse of power in the Catholic Church; Ken Burns, David McMahon and Sarah Burns’ “The Central Park Five,” which sheds light on a case of wrongful conviction; “9.79*,” Daniel Gordon’s look at the infamous 100-metre men’s final at the 1988 Seoul Olympics; “London – The Modern Babylon,” Julien Temple’s epic time-travelling voyage to the heart of his hometown; and Janet Tobias’ “No Place on Earth,” the story of the longest uninterrupted underground survival in recorded human history. 

These come in addition to docs on moon lovers, extreme surfers and disco dancers, as well as films exploring  hot button issues like Joshua Oppenheimer’s “The Act of Killing,” Matthew Cooke’s “How to Make Money Selling Drugs,” Marina Zenovich’s “Roman Polanski: Odd Man Out,” and a number of films dealing with the conflict in the Middle East: Dror Moreh’s “The Gatekeepers,” Dan Setton’s “State 194” and Mahdi Fleifel’s “A World Not Ours.”

“There is great satisfaction in discovering films from new voices in non-fiction filmmaking,” said Thom Powers, lead Festival programmer for documentaries. “Some of the most powerful stories being told are from these bold and original emerging filmmakers whose work stands strongly side by side documentary filmmaking greats Alex Gibney and Ken Burns.”

Also announced this morning were the TIFF Kids and City To City programs. The former will notably feature the world premieres of both Genndy Tartakovsky’s “Hotel Transylvania” and the 3-D version of Pixar’s “Finding Nemo,” while the latter — as announced earlier this year — will spotlight the city of Mumbai.

“Mumbai’s cinema today is entirely different from what it was even a few years ago. The rise of independent cinema has shifted the terrain, probing into previously taboo subjects and adopted styles that were earlier unpalatable to the Indian audience,” said TIFF Artistic Director Cameron Bailey. “Mumbai’s film industry is going through a significant change and a strong group of new filmmakers has emerged. They’re representing the evolution of their city in an interesting way. Toronto audiences are in for a treat this fall.”

A complete list of all announced films in every program can be found here.

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