Orah: Nigerian Canadian Revenge Thriller Tantalizes but Doesn’t Satisfy
By Chris Knight
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Going In: Sharp New Crime Dramedy Plays Like an 1980s Classic Unearthed
By Chris Knight
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ReviewJim SlotekGoing In, Evan Rissi, Ira Goldman, Victor D.S. Man, Canadian feature debut, Toronto, 1980s, Crime, Drama, Comedy
FUBAR: Arnold’s Back in Action… and We Missed Him!
ReviewJim SlotekFUBAR, Nick Santora, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Monica Barbaro, Fortune Feimster, Travis Van Winkle, Fabiana Udenio, Milan Carter, Gabriel Luna, Jay Baruchel, Scott Thompson, Netflix, Filmed in Canada, Toronto
Original-Cin Q&A: Alice, Darling Star Anna Kendrick on Learning to Trust Her Gut
By Bonnie Laufer
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Revival69: New Doc Gives Fabled, Forgotten Toronto Concert Its Due
ReviewJim SlotekChuck Berry, Little Richard, Jerry Lee Lewis, Bo Diddley, Gene Vincent, The Doors, John Lennon, Yoko Ono, The Plastic Ono Band, Eric Clapton, Alice Cooper, Chicago, Revival69, 1969, documentaries, Revival69: The Concert that Rocked the World, Ron Chapman, John Brower, Klaus Voormann, Anthony Fawcett, Robby Krieger, Robert Christgau, Geddy Lee, Toronto
Falling: Viggo Mortensen’s Triple-Threat Family Drama Just Too Raw to Handle
By Karen Gordon
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Review, PreviewJim SlotekDrama, Falling, TIFF 2019, Viggo Mortensen, Lance Henriksen, Laura Linney, David Cronenberg, Toronto, Movies about dementia, Directorial debut
Inside Out and Toronto Japanese Film Festival Rise to Pandemic Challenges
Preview, ReviewJim SlotekInside Out, Toronto Japanese Film Festival, Shiva Baby, Jump Darling, It Feels So Good, Stardust, The Obituary of Tunde Johnson:, Keyboard Fantasies: The Beverly Glenn-Copeland Story, Breaking Fast:, LBGTQ, The Journalist, To the Ends of the Earth, Tora San: Wish You Were Here, Pandemic movies, Film Festivals, Toronto, Atsuko Maeda
Shoot to Marry: Toronto Filmmaker’s Madcap Search for Love Yields Laughs… and Gravity
Tammy’s Always Dying: Hamilton-Shot Dramedy Explores Filial Love in a Time of Crisis
ReviewTammy's Always Dying, Amy Jo Johnson, Felicity Huffman, Anastasia Phillips, Clark Johnson, TIFF 2019, Hamilton, Canadian movies, Toronto, Dramedy, Black comedy
The Drawer Boy: Celluloid Take on Acclaimed Stage Play Registers Hits and Misses
Original-Cin video Q&A: Toronto and pizza talk from the stars and director of Little Italy
By Bonnie Läufer
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Little Italy: Dreadful, Awful Really Bad Rom-Com Benefits None (Except Maybe Pusateri’s)
Breakthroughs Film Festival: Sharp Shorts from Women of the World