Who were the big awards season winners and losers from this year's Toronto International Film Festival? - Los Angeles Times
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Who were the big awards season winners and losers from this year’s Toronto International Film Festival?

Richard Jenkins, Octavia Spencer, Doug Jones, director Guillermo del Toro, Sally Hawkins and Michael Shannon from the film “The Shape of Water.”
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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Toronto Mayor John Tory had just introduced Guillermo del Toro’s lush movie monster love story “The Shape of Water” at its Toronto International Film Festival premiere, ending with a couple of sentences in stilted Spanish, which Del Toro, taking the stage, translated for the audience: “He said, ‘Guillermo Del Toro has gonorrhea.’” Del Toro paused for the laughter. “That is not true.”

It wasn’t the only time Del Toro used Toronto’s mayor for comic effect. Bounding back on the Elgin Theater’s stage (the film uses the historic venue to fine effect in a couple of key scenes), Del Toro told the adoring audience after the premiere: “As the mayor said, ‘Vote early and often.’”

Del Toro was referring to the Toronto festival’s top prize — the People’s Choice Award — which audiences determine by dropping their tickets in ballot boxes held by volunteers at the exits.

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FULL COVERAGE: Toronto International Film Festival 2017 »

But the cinematic showman could well be directing his sales pitch in the coming months to Oscar voters who have been taking in the buzz from the Toronto, Telluride and Venice festivals in the past week and making mental notes about which movies to prioritize this awards season.

As has been the case for the past few years, Toronto offered a confirmation of the acclaim audiences had bestowed on movies that had already played at Telluride and Venice.

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Two world premieres — “The Current War,” a lifeless drama about the rivalry between Thomas Edison and George Westinghouse, and the rambling Denzel Washington legal thriller “Roman J. Israel, Esq.” — met with tepid response. Benedict Cumberbatch, who plays Edison in “The Current War,” seemed to sense as much, noting the rather ironic failure of his microphone during a Q&A that began after most people had left the building.

Other Toronto premieres will likely do better, evolving into showcases for their leads and filling out the slates in the acting races.

Actress Jessica Chastain, from the film "Woman Walks Ahead," is photographed at the L.A. Times HQ at the 42nd Toronto International Film Festival.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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Aaron Sorkin’s directorial debut, “Molly’s Game,” stars Jessica Chastain as a real-life underground “poker princess,” giving the two-time Oscar nominee her best role since “Zero Dark Thirty.” If voters count words delivered per minute, Chastain’s a shoo-in this year.

Two other fact-based dramas drew decent notices for their casts too. David Gordon Green’s “Stronger,” starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a survivor of the Boston Marathon bombing, neatly sidesteps many of the recovery genre’s tropes on its journey toward uplift.

Craig Gillespie’s tragic-comic Tonya Harding biopic, “I, Tonya,” manages to generate empathy for the infamous figure skater within its first five minutes, no small feat. Margot Robbie looks nothing like Harding, but she gives it her all, and Allison Janney is properly monstrous as Harding’s abusive redneck mom. You never bet against Janney in any awards race.

“I, Tonya” sold to Neon midway through the festival, turning it into a hot ticket. One movie flying under the radar, at least until its Sunday premiere, was Cannes sensation “The Florida Project,” an unforgettable, immersive film about itinerant families (particularly their mischievous children) living in the cheap motels in Disney World’s shadow.

Willem Dafoe, who anchors this beautiful movie as the big-hearted manager of one of the budget motels, told me people at the sprawling InStyle/HFPA party kept asking him why he was in Toronto.

Willem Dafoe, left, Bria Binaite, Brooklynn Prince, and director Sean Baker from the film "The Florida Project."
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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“They’re like ‘Aquaman’? ‘Murder on the Orient Express’? Nobody had heard of ‘The Florida Project,’ ” Dafoe said.

That undoubtedly changed after its Sunday premiere. Of course, many in the industry already knew how special Sean Baker’s follow-up to “Tangerine” is.

“When I saw it, nobody wanted to leave after it was done,” said South by Southwest film director Janet Pierson. “It’s so engaging … you don’t want to leave and break the spell.”

A24 Films — the company behind last year’s best picture winner “Moonlight” — bought “The Florida Project” at Cannes. It’s an unconventional awards season movie, starring two pint-sized girls — Brooklynn Prince, 7, and Valeria Cotto, who is 6.

But “Moonlight,” with its microbudget and restrained storytelling, defied the conventions of what a best picture winner (and nominee) can be. Who’s to say “The Florida Project” won’t do the same?

A24 has another remarkable film in contention too. Greta Gerwig’s “Lady Bird,” a coming-of-age tale about a free-thinking high school senior (Saoirse Ronan) looking to escape Sacramento (or as she calls it “the Midwest of California”), earned raves at Toronto following a rousing Telluride debut.

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Odeya Rush, Beanie Feldstein, Marielle Scott, Jordan Rodrigues, Laurie Metcalf, Lois Smith, Greta Gerwig, and Tracy Letts from the film "Lady Bird."
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

At a party following the premiere, Gerwig told me she sees “Lady Bird” as a love story between a strong-willed mother (impeccably played by Laurie Metcalf) and her equally fierce-minded daughter.

That mother-daughter relationship is one of the many sharply drawn aspects of “Lady Bird” that is winning audiences’ hearts. Gerwig says she has talked to scores of women after screenings who have told her they have been that mother or that daughter depicted in the film or that they hope their daughters do a better job of raising their girls than they did.

“I just want to hug everybody … and I do,” she said, laughing. “I probably hug more people than is appropriate.”

Certainly, that’s life in the film festival bubble. At the “Shape of Water” premiere, Del Toro apologized for repeatedly cursing, saying it’s not very Canadian of him to do so.

“But I’m really emotional right now,” added the Mexican-born director, who has lived in Toronto for the past few years.

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“The Shape of Water,” a romantic fantasy about the relationship between a mute cleaning woman (Sally Hawkins) and a creature straight out of a B-movie, recently won the Golden Lion for best film at the Venice Film Festival. That prize isn’t much of an Oscar bellwether and the academy has even less of a track record about recognizing movies featuring a merman in a prominent role.

But Del Toro’s extravagantly mounted fairy tale also possesses the kind of deep love for movies — in this case, Golden Age musicals, ’50s horror, big biblical dramas — that Oscar voters adore.

I believe there’s art and beauty and power in the images of fantasy and parable.

— Guillermo del Toro

“I believe there’s art and beauty and power in the images of fantasy and parable,” Del Toro said at the premiere.

Who would argue with that? There’s plenty of room at the inn for this year’s Oscar best picture race, the most wide-open contest in years. Contenders include movies that tell two sides of the same slice of history (“Dunkirk” and “Darkest Hour”), an achingly intense story of first love (“Call Me by Your Name”), another love story in which one of the participants spends most of the movie in a coma (“The Big Sick”) and a stinging horror movie that confronts race with humor and fury (“Get Out”).

It’s a mixed bag, in the best possible sense of the term.

And that’s just what’s been unveiled.

“I love this time of year,” Gerwig said.

See the most-read stories this hour »

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Twitter: @glennwhipp

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