The Toronto International Film Festival wrapped up over this past weekend, with the Grolsch People’s Choice Awards going to Lenny Abrahamson’s adaptation of Emma Donoghue’s novel Room, and — in the "Midnight Madness" category — Ilya Naishuller’s hyperactive first-person action picture Hardcore. (The runners-up in the respective categories were Tom McCarthy’s ripped-from-the-headlines newsroom drama Spotlight and Jeremy Saulnier’s brutal hostage thriller Green Room.)
But TIFF has never really been about awards. Over its 40 years of existence, the fest has built a reputation as the place where cinephiles get to keep up with the latest from the world’s best filmmakers, while the showbiz press tracks the movies that stand the best chance of being players in the various year-end awards races.
The 2015 edition of TIFF was a weird one in both regards. The art films were a little off this year, with few new directors breaking out and no consensus masterpieces from world cinema’s old guard. And while the mainstream fare was unusually strong, a lot of potential Oscar candidates took a pass on the festival circuit this fall, which left the press in Toronto to speculate on the prospects of a batch of long shots.
Nevertheless, at least once a day during its first week, the fest turned a spotlight on something magnificent. The 18 titles below — some flawed but interesting, some mostly good with a few outstanding elements, and a few truly great — are all the kind of movies that critics and film buffs gather in Toronto hoping to see every fall.
About half of these will be out by the end of the year, either in limited Oscar-qualifying runs or in multiplexes around the country. The rest will be playing a few more festivals before they get more widely distributed. But they’re all worth knowing about, and seeing whenever they start making their way around the country and the world.















