TIFF taps Athens for City to City spotlight - Action News
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Entertainment

TIFF taps Athens for City to City spotlight

City to City, the Toronto International Film Festival's focus on one "cinematic hotspot" a year, will turn its spotlight on Athens this fall.

Film festival to spotlight young directors reviving troubled nation's cinema

A woman holds Greek and small Cypriot flags during a May 1 rally in front of the Parliament in Athens. The Greek capital is the focus of TIFF's 2013 City to City program, inspired by young filmmakers who have reinvigorated the troubled country's movie scene. (Thanassis Stavrakis/Associated Press)

City to City, the Toronto International Film Festival program thathighlightsone "cinematic hotspot" a year, will turn its spotlight on Athens this fall.

The Greek capital was unveiled as this year's choice by TIFF artistic director Cameron Bailey and TIFF international programmer Dimitri Eipides on Wednesday.

"We want to introduce our audience to new generations of filmmakers unafraid to rewrite the rules. When we started thinking about the startlingly original films emerging recently from this ancient and contemporary city, the perfect choice for us this year was Athens," Bailey said in a statement.

"After a long period of hibernation, Greek cinema has finally found its way back to the forefront," said Eipides, a film programmer, lecturerandfestival director who has worked withfilm organizations worldwide.

"A number of young filmmakersmost of them fresh out of film school or, at best, with a couple of shorts to their name turned things around. Where others saw devastation, they saw inspiration."

Greece has been grappling withcomplex cultural, financial and societal challenges amid its current recession and the government's severe economic reforms and austerity measures.

Recent, strong, innovative filmsa priority

City to City typically features about 10 titles and though this year's exact selections won't be announced until July, Bailey and Eipides shed some light on what they're considering during an afternoon conference call.

Recently madefilms will be a priority, as opposed to Greek movies and filmmakers of the past.

'Wherever there is enthusiasm and desire to make good cinema, people will succeed. We've had wonderful, active, vibrant film productions coming out of very difficult circumstances. I think Greece is going through something similar' TIFF programmer Dimitri Eipides

"We may go back a little while [e.g. three or four years] but not that far," Bailey said.

"We'll be looking for a diversity in the selection," he added.

And while there has been a wave of "quite stylized art house dramas" emerging from Greece, "we'll be looking at a range" of styles andgenres,from strong fiction tales to documentaries.

The country's film industry has been remarkably active in the last few years, with many movies being made or in progress despite the economic crisis, according to Athens-based Eipides, whose 26 years with TIFF makes him the festival's longest serving programmer.

Today's new batch of Greek filmmakers are a determined group, he said.They share resources, take multiple roles on a production, sometimes work without getting paid and produce films despite limited meansall so they can share their cinematic stories, some of which naturally explore current economic conditions in Greece.

"Wherever there is enthusiasm and desire to make good cinema, people will succeed," he said. "We've had wonderful, active, vibrant film productions coming out of very difficult circumstances. I think Greece is going through something similar [now]."

Athens is the fifth city chosen for the annual program, which screens movies by filmmakers currently at work in the selectedcity during the Toronto International Film Festivalin September. Past cities have includedTel Aviv, Istanbul, Buenos Aires and Mumbai.