Showing posts with label Alex de la Iglesia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex de la Iglesia. Show all posts

9/10/15

The Madness is Spreading!

When I first started attending and working with TIFF back in 2002, Midnight Madness was pretty much known as the darkened corner of the Festival, the miscreant programme that featured the types of films that the other programmes wouldn’t touch.


Since then, the monster factory has brought us directors like Johnnie To, who graced the Midnight Madness screen in 2000 and 2001 with The Mission and Full Time Killer respectively. This year, To’s Office is a part of the prestigious Special Presentations programme, and this action-musical hybrid set among cubicles in an office definitely brings a little Midnight flavour with it.

With Midnight curator Colin Geddes taking the reins of the Vanguard programme, many Midnight directors jump back and forth between the two with ease - exposing their often gory and extreme visions to an audience that may not be so inclined to stay up to the wee hours. Filmmakers like Alex De La Iglesia (My Great Night, 2015) and Takeshi Miike (Over Your Dead Body, 2014), both Midnight Madness mainstays, have had films in Vanguard in the last couple of years - along with Fabrice Du Welz, Mark Hartley and others.

One of the biggest ‘graduations’ from the Midnight programme this year has to be Sarah Silverman, whose 2005 comedy Jesus Is Magic wowed the Ryerson audience for her big TIFF debut.  Since then, Silverman has become an unlikely supporting and leading actor in more serious fare--namely, 2011’s Take This Waltz and this year’s I Smile Back.


And of course, Ben Wheatley, whose organic move through TIFF started with Midnight Madness in 2011 with Kill List, continued through Vanguard in 2012 with Sightseers, brings High Rise to the Platform programme this year. Platform is a juried programme that aims to spotlight and award films from lesser-known directors (though he's already well-known to us Midnighters)--similar to the prizes awarded in Cannes or Berlin. High Rise will compete with 11 other films for the Platform award, and recognition and a big bag of cash that comes with it.

These examples are hardly the first filmmakers that have broken out from the Midnight programme - remember that Midnight Madness boasts early work from Richard Linklater (Dazed and Confused, 1993), Peter Jackson (Braindead, 1992), and so many others. But there is a palpable tectonic shift in the sorts of films that are being programmed elsewhere in the Festival, with sci-fi, horror, and the downright surreal taking high-profile spots in the more mainstream programmes. It also means that the filmmakers you're watching this year at Midnight Madness might one day be a Platform nominee, or maybe even a People's Choice winner. I, for, one, hope that the not-yet-announced A Talking Isopod?! will someday take TIFF's top prize.
A TALKING ISOPOD?!?!?!?!


9/18/13

What Did People Say About WITCHING AND BITCHING?

I think we all needed a few days to fully process what we saw at the Ryerson on Saturday for the world premiere of Alex de la Iglesia's Witching and Bitching and the final night of Midnight Madness 2013. The Spanish director's film, completed almost days before, blew the audience away and, as always, they had a lot to say about it!
































It was a wild ten days of bloody glaciers, haunted mirrors, zombie cheerleaders, and whatever Why Don't You Play In Hell was, and it was great to find out what the Midnight Madness audience thought about the lineup, screenings, and the Q&A.  And, of course, the inflatable Spider Man.

Until next year!

Pics From The Wild, Crazy World Premiere of WITCHING AND BITCHING!

One last night of Midnight Madness' 25th anniversary, and it was one of the wildest nights in a week of complete insanity. Inflatable Spider-Man made his triumphant return, we saw a frenetic, fever dream of a movie in Witching and Bitching, and Alex De La Iglesia did one hell of a Q&A.  Ian Goring brings you the highlights!

The perfect night for the last Midnight!


Alex De La Iglesia

Colin Geddes and Alex De La Iglesia

Obligatory Annual Mid-Air Carpet Photo!

Robert Mitchell chats with Alex De La Igle

Programmer Colin Geddes chats all things Midnight with SPACE!

Can you spot Spider-Man in this rowdy Midnight Madness audience?

Colin Geddes and Alex De La Iglesia on stage to kick off the final night of Midnight Madness!

Alex De La Iglesia introduces the movie he'd only completed days before - WITCHING AND BITCHING


Colin, De La Iglesia, and programmer Diana Sanchez

Alex De La Iglesia takes some questions from a still-reeling audience


Ah, so bittersweet.  These seats won't see another Midnight Madness audience until next year.
Witching and Bitching was one of the most out-of-control films ever to be screened at Midnight Madness. Keep an eye out for it!