ScreenRant’s Coverage of Toronto International Film Festival


More Reviews Added!

This piece has been updated with every TIFF review that was published on ScreenRant on Saturday, September 6, including the Cillian Murphy drama Steve and the whodunit sequel Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery.

ScreenRant‘s team of critics has reviewed a wide variety of movies while attending the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. The festival, which is also known as TIFF, is one of the most prestigious in the world and is currently celebrating its 50th anniversary.

A number of Toronto International Film Festival movies have gone on to huge success. A wide variety of Oscar-nominees and winners have premiered at TIFF, including 127 Hours, Slumdog Millionaire, Precious, The Fabelmans, Silver Linings Playbook, and The King’s Speech.

While it remains to be seen which movies from this year’s festival (which runs through September 14) will achieve such high honors, ScreenRant‘s reviews of some of the biggest titles that have already screened at TIFF 2025, which can be found below, can offer some insight into the way the tide is turning.

Blue Moon

Ethan Hawke gazing up at Margaret Qualley, who stands next to him, in Blue Moon
Ethan Hawke gazing up at Margaret Qualley, who stands next to him, in Blue Moon

Richard Linklater’s new biopic stars Ethan Hawke as Lorenz Hart, the former writing partner of Richard Rodgers, who attempts to deal with his feelings at a bar on the opening night of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Oklahoma!. It earned a solid score of 7 out of 10 from Rachel Labonte. Read an excerpt from her Blue Moon review below:

As a character study, Blue Moon is imperfect, but its smart framing of a pivotal moment in Hart’s life elevates it. I may not have been on board with every moment, but the ending has lingered in my brain since I first saw it, and for that reason alone, I think Linklater has pulled off something almost remarkable.

Carolina Caroline

Samara Weaving points a gun while Kyle Gallner stands behind her in Carolina Caroline
Samara Weaving points a gun while Kyle Gallner stands behind her in Carolina Caroline

This new romantic crime thriller features director Adam Carter Rehmeier reuniting with his Dinner in America collaborator Kyle Gallner, who co-stars with Ready or Not‘s Samara Weaving. It earned a score of 7 out of 10 from Graeme Guttman. Read an excerpt from his Carolina Caroline review below:

[Tom] Dean’s script often gestures as to the ways this story is relevant to our times, even if the film itself feels like it takes place outside of time. But that’s the thing about Carolina Caroline — stories are told time and time again, but when they’re told this well and with this much passion, it doesn’t matter how many times you’ve heard it.

Christy

Sydney Sweeney as Christy Martin baring her teeth in Christy
Sydney Sweeney as Christy Martin baring her teeth in Christy

This anticipated sports biopic stars Euphoria and Anyone But You actor Sydney Sweeney as boxing legend Christy Martin, who is a member of the International Boxing Hall of Fame. The movie earned 5 out of 10 from Rachel Labonte. Read an excerpt from her Christy review below:

Rather than being a well-rounded look at Martin’s life, Christy offers a shallow, unbalanced perspective. It’s light on its feet in some parts and heavy-handed in others, and though Sweeney gives a strong performance, I can’t help but feel like she deserved a better showcase for her talents.

Driver’s Ed

The cast of Driver's Ed posing around a driver's ed car
The cast of Driver’s Ed posing around a driver’s ed car

Driver’s Ed, which was directed by Bobby Farrelly (There’s Something About Mary), stars White Lotus season 3 breakout Sam Nivola as a teenager who decides to go on a road trip using a car he stole from his driver’s ed teacher. It earned a score of 6 out of 10 from Rachel Labonte.

Read an excerpt from her Driver’s Ed review below:

Driver’s Ed hardly reinvents the wheel when it comes to the YA world, and it’s far from perfect. Still, with its string of solid laughs and a very game cast, it makes for an entertaining adventure that goes down easy.

The Lost Bus

The Lost Bus, which takes place during the devastating 2018 Camp Fire in Paradise, California, was directed by Paul Greengrass (The Bourne Supremacy, Captain Phillips) and follows a school bus driver (Matthew McConaughey) and a teacher (America Ferrera) attempting to evacuate a stranded elementary class.

The movie earned a score of 6 out of 10 from Mae Abdulbaki. Read an excerpt from her The Lost Bus review below:

What it lacks is more than made up with a great cast, distressing moments, and some well-shot action. The Lost Bus is a reminder that there are always people in the world who are willing to put their lives on the line to keep others safe, especially in situations they have no control over, and Greengrass’ film is a heartwarming reminder of that.

The Man In My Basement

Willem Dafoe and Corey Hawkins toasting one another in The Man in My Basement
Willem Dafoe and Corey Hawkins toasting one another in The Man in My Basement

Nadia Latif’s feature directorial debut follows a down-on-his-luck Black man (Corey Hawkins) who receives an offer to rent the basement of a mysterious older businessman (Willem Dafoe). The movie, which also stars Anna Diop and Tamara Lawrance, earned 5 out of 10 from Mae Abdulbaki. Read an excerpt from her The Man in My Basement review below:

The Man in My Basement isn’t the most riveting film, and it’ll struggle to maintain your attention. Its themes have been better tackled in other films but it has its merits. A great cast and patience will prove only somewhat rewarding, even if the journey to get there is shaky and more than a bit confusing.

Mile End Kicks

Barbie Ferreira working on her laptop in Mile End Kicks
Barbie Ferreira working on her laptop in Mile End Kicks

This romantic comedy about a young woman named Grace (Barbie Ferreira) getting a job as a music critic at a male-dominated publication also stars Jay Baruchel, Devon Bostick, and Juliette Gariépy. Read an excerpt from Mae Abdulbaki’s unscored Mile End Kicks review below:

Grace is a great protagonist and, though the romance element of her life could have been played up a tad more, there’s so much baked into her story that’s worth investing in. Filled with heartfelt moments and hardships amidst Grace’s growing young adulthood pains, [director Chandler] Levack’s film plays like a new music album that is familiar yet exciting.

No Other Choice

Man-su holds a potted plant over the edge of the building in No Other Choice
Man-su holds a potted plant over the edge of the building in No Other Choice

The new thriller from BAFTA winner Park Chan-wook (Oldboy, The Handmaiden) stars Squid Game‘s Lee Byung-hun as a man who is fired after 25 years and makes a desperate choice to target his competition for a new position. It earned a glowing 8 out of 10 from Graeme Guttman. Read an excerpt from his No Other Choice review below:

No Other Choice is a sprawling epic, one that feels like it’s threatening to burst at any second. Through sheer force of will, though, Park and Lee hold the proceedings together. It’s bleak and hysterical and violent — everything you’d want from a Park film. But it’s also devastatingly intimate and intensely relevant, both in the ways it tackles questions of identity and our place within an increasingly dangerous system, one that could feasibly lead people to murder.

Poetic License

Andrew Barth Feldman and Cooper Hoffman and Leslie Mann walking and tallking on a college campus in Poetic License
Andrew Barth Feldman and Cooper Hoffman and Leslie Mann walking and tallking on a college campus in Poetic License

This comedy about a love triangle between two college friends and an older woman is the feature directorial debut of Euphoria star Maude Apatow. Like many directorial efforts by actors, Poetic License boasts a star-studded cast. In this case, the gathered ensemble includes Leslie Mann, Andrew Barth Feldman, and Cooper Hoffman.

The movie, which also stars How to Train Your Dragon‘s Nico Parker and My Old Ass breakout Maisy Stella, earned 8 out of 10 from Rachel Labonte. Read an excerpt from her Poetic License review below.

Poetic License has a classic sort of feel that makes it a very enjoyable watch. It keeps a good pace, mixes the heart with the hilarious, and spotlights an incredible collection of performers. Apatow clearly knows what she’s doing here, and I’ll be excited to see what she does next behind the camera.

Steve

Cillian Murphy walking down a hallway with students in Steve
Cillian Murphy walking down a hallway with students in Steve

This upcoming Netflix movie, which follows a day in the life of a harried headteacher at a school for troubled boys, is Cillian Murphy’s second movie after winning the Best Actor Oscar for Oppenheimer. The tense drama earned 6 out of 10 from Mae Abdulbaki. Read an excerpt from her Steve review below:

It’s a film where the characters are especially memorable, and that’s what makes it pop. It highlights the difficulties facing these schools, as well as the often tumultuous feelings that come with both being a student and a teacher there. Its focus may have needed some more fine-tuning, but Steve proves meaningful regardless.

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

Daniel Craig is looking behind in Wake Up Dead Man
Daniel Craig is looking behind in Wake Up Dead Man

Rian Johnson’s third installment in the Knives Out franchise is one of the most anticipated debuts at TIFF. The whodunit stars Daniel Craig returning as detective Benoit Blanc, opposite a new star-studded ensemble cast that includes Josh O’Connor, Josh Brolin, Thomas Haden Church, Andrew Scott, Mila Kunis, Jeremy Renner, Kerry Washington, and Glenn Close.

The movie earned a middling 6 out of 10 from Mae Abdulbaki. Read an excerpt from her Wake Up Dead Man review below:

Despite its pitfalls, Wake Up Dead Man is still enjoyable. It has its charming moments, there’s a lot to think about in terms of the story, and the cast is good, if not great, overall. It’s just hard to watch the movie and realize the mystery and excitement have waned.

The Wizard Of The Kremlin

Paul Dano holding a phone to his ear in The Wizard of the Kremlin
Paul Dano holding a phone to his ear in The Wizard of the Kremlin

The Wizard of the Kremlin is the latest film from Clouds of Sils Maria director Olivier Assayas. The satirical political thriller stars Paul Dano as Vadim Baranov, an artist turned corrupt politician in the 1990s Soviet Union whose story intersects with the rise of Vladimir Putin (Jude Law).

The Toronto International Film Festival movie, which also stars Alicia Vikander, Tom Sturridge, and Jeffrey Wright, earned a score of 4 out of 10 from Graeme Guttman. Read an excerpt from his The Wizard of the Kremlin review below:

With Assayas’ clinical approach, there’s a stiffness that runs through the entire film that undercuts the energy of the director’s vision. There are moments that really click (Vikander singing while walking a naked man on a leash stands out). But just when it feels like it’s going to hit the gas, The Wizard of the Kremlin holds back, all the way up to its confounding, out-of-left-field ending that is both abrupt and fittingly bleak.

Toronto International Film Festival custom poster
Toronto International Film Festival custom poster

Location

Toronto, Canada

Description

The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) is a major film event held annually in Toronto, Canada. It showcases a diverse selection of films from around the world, including premieres and indie films. Known for its influence on the awards season, TIFF attracts filmmakers, celebrities, and film enthusiasts globally. TIFF 2024 runs from September 5-15.

Dates

September 5-15, 2024

Website

https://www.tiff.net/




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