Fall Film Festival Recap: The Best & Worst of TIFF, Telluride and Venice
and Keith Kimbell, Metacritic Film Editor – September 17, 2017
The fall film season kicks off each year with a trio of prestigious festivals: the just-completed Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF), the Venice Film Festival (now in its 74th year), and the smaller but no less interesting Telluride Film Festival in Colorado. It is at these festivals where many of the year's Oscar contenders typically make their debuts. (Last year, five best picture nominees—including eventual winner Moonlight—had their world premieres at one of these festivals.) And this year's crop includes promising upcoming releases from Guillermo del Toro, Greta Gerwig, Aaron Sorkin, Joe Wright, and Armando Iannucci ... as well as more divisive films from the likes of Alexander Payne, George Clooney, and Louis CK.
Below, learn more about the critical response to these and other notable films (and TV shows) debuting at the three festivals in 2017.
Actor Andy Serkis’ disappointing directorial debut is a “stirring true story marred by simplistic, sentimental treatment,” according to Stephen Dalton of THR. Andrew Garfield and Claire Foy star as Robin and Diana Cavendish, whose love and marriage endured for over 40 years despite Robin contracting polio at age 28 and being paralyzed from the neck down. Defending the film, Indiewire’s Eric Kohn writes, “Breathe may not be a realistic document of its subject, but as a celebration of his legacy, it does the trick.”