Current:Home > FinanceAll the best movies at Toronto Film Festival, ranked (including 'The Substance') -AdvancementTrade
All the best movies at Toronto Film Festival, ranked (including 'The Substance')
View
Date:2025-04-20 03:36:20
Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY's Watch Party newsletter has all the best recommendations, delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now and be one of the cool kids.
TORONTO – O, Canada, our home for the next week of excellent movies and Oscar-hopeful fare, including a Donald Trump biopic, a Hugh Grant horror flick and a drama where Amy Adams thinks she’s turning into a dog.
The Toronto International Film Festival, which runs through Sept. 15, for years has been a major launching pad for best picture winners like “Parasite,” “Nomadland” and “Spotlight.” And while not all of the 2024 lineup is probably headed for Academy Awards glory – yes, it would be nice to see a Stephen King adaptation such as “The Life of Chuck” make the Big Show one day – the TIFF slate is pretty stacked with high-profile projects from notable personalities (Demi Moore, Pamela Anderson and Jennifer Lopez), legendary artists (Bruce Springsteen and Elton John) and iconic directors (Francis Ford Coppola and Ron Howard).
We’re keeping a running tally on the movies we watch at Toronto, and here’s the best of the fest so far, ranked:
5. ‘The Luckiest Man in America’
From “I, Tonya” to “Richard Jewell,” Paul Walter Hauser has carved out a niche for himself in Hollywood deftly playing awkward sorts who tumble into trouble, and his take on a real-life game-show disruptor finds him playing to win. (No Whammies here.) The drama, which also features David Strathairn and the always-fab Walton Goggins, revisits a 1980s scandal, when a mercurial contestant (Hauser) steals another’s spot on “Press Your Luck” and goes on an epic run gaming the system that gives TV producers fits, though there’s real emotional depth to his competitive fire.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
4. ‘The Cut’
Orlando Bloom stars as an Irish boxer once known as the “Wolf of Dublin” who missed his chance at superstardom. A decade later, he and his love interest/trainer (Caitriona Balfe) are given a second chance against the current champ, if the pugilist can make weight – in his case, lose 25 pounds in a week. What starts as a dull series of sports-movie clichés shifts to a solid movie with some psychological horror, discussion of mental health and eating disorders, a fantastic supporting turn from John Turturro (as the no-nonsense guy who comes in to help burn serious poundage) and one haymaker of a climax.
3. ‘Bird’
English director Andrea Arnold’s coming-of-age drama tells a hardscrabble story with a whiff of dark fantasy, of a 12-year-old girl who’s had to grow up too fast. Bailey (Nykiya Adams) is irked when her unpredictable and chaotic dad Bug (Barry Keoghan) is getting married to a woman he hardly knows, and her mom lives under the thumb of a cruel boyfriend. Bailey finds escape in nature, where she meets a enigmatic sort named Bird (Franz Rogowski). He needs help finding his parents, but they ultimately look out for each other out in a thoughtful narrative about adolescence and family bonds.
2. ‘The Apprentice’
While it has nothing to do with Donald Trump’s reality TV show, it does have all to do with how a person – in this case, Trump himself – treats another in the name of fame, wealth and power. Set during his rise in New York in the 1970s and ‘80s, the engaging drama stars Sebastian Stan as a young Trump working for his father’s real estate business who comes under the tutelage of lawyer Roy Cohn (Jeremy Strong), infamous for his ruthlessness and lack of empathy. In that regard, the narrative follows the student becoming the master, with Stan and Strong both pulling off stellar character arcs.
1. ‘The Substance’
Every so often at a film fest, you see something that makes you go, “Well, that’s new.” And here that honor goes to this gloriously demented body horror, with Demi Moore just pulling out all the bonkers stops. She plays a TV fitness celebrity who signs up for a process promising to make her beautiful and perfect again. Margaret Qualley plays her younger self born as a result in a movie that gleefully goes off the tracks and keeps on going. Sure, it’s full of thought-provoking metaphors on beauty, vanity and self-worth, but you’ll also love that the it's a disturbing, hilarious and jaw-dropping hoot.
veryGood! (48)
Related
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Stanford's Tara VanDerveer becomes winningest coach in major college basketball, passing Mike Krzyzewski
- Saturday's Texans vs. Ravens playoff game was ESPN's most-watched NFL game of all time
- Canada is capping foreign student visas to ease housing pressures as coast of living soars
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- How Taylor Swift doughnuts went from 'fun joke' to 'wild, crazy' weekend for Rochester store
- Panera Charged Lemonade linked to alleged deaths, lawsuits: Everything that's happened so far
- She began to panic during a double biopsy. Then she felt a comforting touch
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- 3rd time’s the charm? Bridgeport votes again in a mayoral election marred by ballot irregularities
Ranking
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Russia clashes with US and Ukraine supporters, ruling out any peace plan backed by Kyiv and the West
- Dan Morgan hired as general manager of Carolina Panthers
- Alabama student and amateur golfer Nick Dunlap cannot collect $1.5 million from PGA Tour
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda migration bill suffers a blow in Britain’s Parliament
- Chinese state media say 20 people dead and 24 missing after landslide
- Former West Virginia health official pleads guilty in COVID-19 payment investigation
Recommendation
Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
Maine Democrats who expanded abortion access now want to enshrine it in the state constitution
What to know for WWE Royal Rumble 2024: Date, time, how to watch, match card and more
Canada is capping foreign student visas to ease housing pressures as coast of living soars
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
Biden administration has admitted more than 1 million migrants into U.S. under parole policy Congress is considering restricting
Browns general manager Andrew Berry 'would have no problem having' Joe Flacco back
US Supreme Court won’t overrule federal judges’ order to redraw Detroit legislative seats