Deragh Campbell in Sofia Bohdanowiczâs Measures for a Funeral (2024)
Every September, Canadian cinema puts its best face forward during the Toronto International Film Festival, and this year, that face is Deragh Campbellâs. In 2019, the actor and filmmaker worked with two of Canadaâs most distinctively original directors when she starred in Sofia Bohdanowiczâs MS Slavic 7 and Kazik Radwanskiâs Anne at 13,000 Ft. Sheâs reunited with both this year, appearing in two films screening in Torontoâs Centerpiece, the program known up until last year as Contemporary World Cinema.
Beginning with her first feature, Never Eat Alone (2016), Bohdanowicz has worked closely with Campbell to cocreate the evolving character of Audrey Benac, a deeply curious researcher delving into the life stories of poets, artists, and musicians that often have a real-life connection to Bohdanowiczâs own family history. Audreyâs investigations have taken us through the 2018 short film Veslemøyâs Song; MS Slavic 7, a full-length feature; and another short, Point and Line to Plane (2020).
All of these filmsâand a few moreâare featured in our Criterion Channel program Directed by Sofia Bohdanowicz. In 2022, Audrey reappeared, somewhat lost and lonely in Paris, in A Woman Escapes, a multiformat collaboration between Bohdanowicz, Burak Ăevik, and Blake Williams. The deepest roots in this yearâs Measures for a Funeral, though, reach back to Veslemøyâs Song and Audreyâs fascination with Canadian violinist Kathleen Parlow, whose soaring career was cut short by the outbreak of the First World War. Parlow wound up teaching, and one of her students was Bohdanowiczâs grandfather, who played with the Toronto Symphony.
In an engaging interview for the filmâs press kit, Bohdanowicz tells Beatrice Loayza that the Audrey films leading up to Measures for a Funeral are âabout a kind of detective work; about trying to shape things into language or a form that feels whole and legible. Yet thatâs a goal thatâs never really achieved in any of these films, and thatâs intentional. I tried to keep things very loose and open, whereas Measures for a Funeral is a departure from that approach. I decided to continue Audreyâs journey because I felt she needed to officially end her odyssey; finally finish her work and put a cap on all of her research. We go on this journey with her where we really feel her suffering and deep isolation and disconnection from others, but also see that sheâs succeeding in something marvelous. Sheâs finally able to hear the voice and output of this incredible artist who was long forgotten.â
Radwanskiâs films are âfreedom in its purest form, or the purest this particular medium can contain,â wrote Savina Petkova at the Film Stage when Matt and Mara premiered in Berlin earlier this year. âBeing the opposite of prescriptive, they sculpt themselves according to interpersonal dynamics that can otherwise be invisible, and by doing so, give shape to parallel emotional worlds, extensions of a protagonistâs psyche. That goes for Derek (Derek Bogart), the impulsive lead in Tower (2012), sleep-deprived gamer dad Erwin (Erwin van Cotthem) from How Heavy This Hammer (2015), and for the chaotic Anne (Deragh Campbell) whose quarter-life crisis makes a delightful whirlpool out of Anne at 13,000 Ft.â
Campbellâs Mara in the new film once had aspirations to write and has wound up settling down with her husband (Mounir Al Shami), an experimental musician, and their baby daughter (Avery Nayman). Sheâs teaching a writing class in Toronto when an old friend pops up, Matt, played by another strikingly singular Canadian filmmaker, Matt Johnson, who is probably best known now for BlackBerry (2023). Matt left Toronto years ago for New York, where heâs published a well-received collection of short stories.
As Matt and Mara bumble around Toronto, âthe pair fall back into an easy friendship, bickering like no time has passed at all,â writes Hannah Strong at Little White Lies. âRadwanskiâs charming, well-observed dialogue reflects the experience of plenty of elder millennials, caught between the unrealistic expectations of aging parents and the realization that creative possibility under the constraints of capitalism is harder and harder to achieve. Matt briefly represents the possibility of another life to Maraâone where she feels more creatively compatible with her partner. But while Matt is charismatic, heâs also selfish and patronizing, stuck in a state of arrested development. Perhaps it isnât so much Matt, but what he represents, that Mara finds enticing.â
Galas
Torontoâs forty-ninth edition opens tonight with David Gordon Greenâs Nutcrackers, a comedy starring Ben Stiller as a dedicatedly single real-estate developer who suddenly finds himself in charge of his sisterâs four unruly boys. Other Gala Presentations include Better Man, which IndieWireâs David Ehrlich calls âa long-overdue corrective to the wave of fully authorized, insufferably generic rise-fall-recover storiesââMichael Gracey (The Greatest Showman) tells the story of British pop star Robbie Williams, whoâs played by a CGI monkeyâand two films that premiered in Cannes to little fanfare despite the unimpeachable status of their directors.
At the time, Filmmakerâs Vadim Rizov posted sober assessments of both Paul Schraderâs Oh, Canada and David Cronenbergâs The Shrouds, weighing what he perceived as the strengths against the weaknesses within each of these âvery Late Styleâ works. In the former, Richard Gere plays a dying documentarian coming to terms with the mistakes heâs made, and at Slant, Chuck Bowen finds that âthe warmth of Oh, Canada renders it even trickier than many of Schraderâs more âon brandâ stories of vigilantes who write and speak in the clipped tones of the characters from the transcendentalist films that he treasures.â The Shrouds features Vincent Cassell as a tech magnate mourning the loss of his wife, and for Little White Liesâs David Jenkins, Cronenbergâs âplay for the heartstringsâ makes for âone of the most nakedly moving and revelatory films within his canon.â
Special Presentations
The first trailers are out for two highly anticipated films that will see their world premieres as Special Presentations, Mike Leighâs Hard Truths and Marielle Hellerâs Nightbitch. Two other films in the program will arrive straight from Telluride.The End, a musical directed by Joshua Oppenheimer (The Act of Killing) and starring Michael Shannon, Tilda Swinton, and George MacKay, is âa fascinating and demanding intellectual exercise about what happens to a family who, after contributing to the worldâs demise, shields themselves from the effects of disaster,â writes Lovia Gyarkye in the Hollywood Reporter. âDo they grieve or regret? Do they reflect on their actions? Or do they simply march forward, lulled into complacency by the avoidant and revisionist stories they tell themselves? In Oppenheimerâs striking feature narrative debut, itâs a combination of all the above.â
In the Los Angeles Times,Joshua Rothkopf calls The End âsome kind of bleak masterpiece that most viewers will find too upsetting.â At Slant, Mark Hanson finds that the film âbecomes somewhat tedious over the course of its two and a half hours, but in spite ofâindeed, perhaps because ofâit feeling like its moving toward a familiar climax, its bleakly funny and existentially haunting conclusion packs a wallop.â
Edward Bergerâs All Quiet on the Western Front turned out to be more of an awards magnet than many might have guessed it would be when it premiered in Toronto in 2022. Bergerâs follow-up is Conclave, an adaptation of Robert Harrisâs 2016 novel written by Peter Straughan (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy) and starring Ralph Fiennes, Stanley Tucci, and John Lithgow as high-ranking cardinals and Isabella Rossellini as a nun with secrets. Joshua Rothkopf suggests that âfor a movie about the Vaticanâs solemn electing of a new pope,â Conclave âfeels a lot closer to the trashy fun of an episode of The West Wing.â
The Gamut
Well over two hundred films will screen in more than a dozen programs in Toronto this year, and anyone looking for guidance might turn to recommendations from Ty Burr in the Washington Post, the Guardianâs Benjamin Lee, or the contributors to Filmmaker and Hammer to Nail. At the Film Stage, C. J. Prince has picked out eleven âmust-seeâ short films. A late addition to the TIFF Docs program is The Bibi Files, an investigation into the charges of corruption leveled against Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu incorporating never-before-seen leaked footage, directed by Alexis Bloom, and produced by Alex Gibney.
Preparations for the Platform competition were humming along smoothly until Mongolian herders Davaasuren Dagvasuren and Otgonzaya Dashzeveg, the cowriters and subjects of Gabrielle Bradyâs documentary The Wolves Always Come at Night, were denied visas. Canada wonât grant them until the couple promises to leave after the festival, but as producer Rita Walsh tells the Hollywood Reporterâs Etan Vlessing, with their children remaining in Mongolia, they have no incentive to stay.
Wavelengths will offer the latest âlastâ films from Jean-Luc Godard, the final two features in Wang Bingâs Youth trilogy, and Dimitris Athiridisâs outstanding fourteen-episode state-of-the-art-world documentary, exergue - on documenta 14. And Midnight Madness will open tomorrow with Coralie Fargeatâs The Substance, starring Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley as incarnations of the same woman. The extreme body-horror satire divided critics in Cannes, where Fargeat won the award for Best Screenplay.
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