TIFF Press Release

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February 21  |  2012 Film Festival, Films, News  |   staff

 

January 5, 2012

NEWS RELEASE

 

 

 

HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH FILM FESTIVAL RETURNS FOR ITS NINTH YEAR TO SHINE SPOTLIGHT ON PRESSING SOCIAL ISSUES

 

Themes include the struggle of refugees, sex trafficking and bullying

Toronto – The ninth annual Human Rights Watch Film Festival opens on February 29, 2012 at TIFF Bell Lightbox with Fernand Melgar’s documentary Special Flight, a portrait of the legal limbo that faces thousands of detainees in Switzerland’s Frambois detention centre as refugees anxiously await confirmation of their requests for asylum. The festival is a co-presentation between TIFF and Human Rights Watch, and will run until March 9.

 

Festival highlights include Jon Shenk’s The Island President (2011), winner of the Cadillac People’s Choice Documentary Award at the Toronto International Film Festival 2011, which follows Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed as he tries to save his country from being inundated by rising sea levels – the result of global warming; Pamela Yates’ Granito: How to Nail a Dictator (2011), a haunting tale of genocide and delayed justice that spans four decades, two films, and director Yates’ own career; Mimi Chakarova’s The Price of Sex (2011), a startling exposé of sex trafficking in Europe and the Middle East; and Sundance and Emmy Award-winning director Lee Hirsch’s The Bully Project (2011), which acts as a catalyst for change by confronting the prejudices which spark bullying and giving voice to those who work tirelessly to protect the vulnerable.

 

“The lineup of timely films in this festival inform and remind audiences of human rights issues being faced around the world,” said Helga Stephenson, chairperson of the festival. “The themes that emerge this year – the plight of refugees, the trafficking of young women, bullying among teens – are extremely relevant. We hope the films will provide a springboard for discussion and increase awareness of human rights issues – both locally and globally.”

The full line-up of films follows.

 

Special Flight (Vol spécial) Dir: Fernand Melgar

Wednesday, February 29 at 8pm *OPENING NIGHT*

In Switzerland’s Frambois detention centre, refugees anxiously await confirmation of their requests for asylum while living in fear of the “special flights” that face those who are rejected, returning them to their countries of origin and crushing their dreams of a new life. Fernand Melgar’s film is a deeply affecting portrait of the legal limbo that faces thousands of detainees every year. Melgar evocatively captures the atmosphere of agonizing tedium and sudden, shocking rupture that characterizes these institutions: deportation notices arrive swiftly, with no option for appeal, and the physical removals from the centre are even more harrowing as the wardens often develop deep connections with the detainees.

 

Habibi Dir: Susan Youssef

Thursday, March 1 at 8pm

While shooting her documentary Forbidden to Wander, Susan Youssef travelled the Gaza Strip and observed how restricted access impeded development and stability, deepened poverty and radicalized the political conflict, with the resulting violence and despair permeating communities and individual psyches alike. This experience informed the making of Habibi, a tragic romance about Layla (Maisa Abd Elhadi) and Qays (Kais Nashef), university students whose blossoming passion is interrupted when they are forced to return home to their families, their student visas having been revoked during the latest wave of restrictions. The young lovers find themselves trapped between the physical barriers of political oppression and the restrictive, patriarchal ideology of the oppressed.

 

The Bully Project Dir: Lee Hirsch

Friday, March 2 at 8pm

News stories across North America attest to the destructive impact of bullying, as dozens of teens every year commit suicide following histories of emotional and physical violence from their peers that went unchecked and unchanged. Sundance and Emmy-award winning director Lee Hirsch spent a year documenting the lives of tormented teens and their families, exposing shocking scenes of verbal and physical abuse and vividly depicting bureaucratic indifference or impotence, parents who are powerless to help, and innocent kids on the cusp of adulthood who desperately cling to the slim hope that “things will get better.” The Bully Project acts as a catalyst for change by confronting the prejudices which spark bullying and giving voice to those who work tirelessly to protect the vulnerable.

 

Color of the Ocean (Die Farbe des Ozeans) Dir: Maggie Peren

Saturday, March 3 at 8pm

Located off the coast of northwest Africa, the Canary Islands are both a tourist paradise and a purgatory for refugees. Border guard José (Alex González) is cynical about his work, but his weary attitude is put to the test when he encounters Nathalie (Sabine Timoteo), a German tourist assisting a boatload of refugees she discovered landing on the coast. When one of the refugees, a Congolese man named Zola (Hubert Koundé), is placed in an internment camp with his son, Nathalie determines to help them escape – but the two soon find themselves in yet another precarious situation, in which they are dependent on nefarious smugglers.

 

Burma Soldier Dirs: Nic Dunlop, Annie Sundberg & Ricki Stern

Sunday, March 4 at 8pm

Myo Myint’s decision to enlist in the Burmese army at the age of seventeen was not motivated by ideology, but simply because it was the only path to employment, respect and security. In this capacity he supported the brutal military junta that dominated the nation for nearly half a century until he lost a limb to a mortar explosion, and emerged from this trauma as an activist determined to bring democracy to his country. Speaking from the Umpeim Mai refugee camp in northern Thailand as he awaits refugee status, Myint gives a sobering record of his experiences and his suffering at the hands of the military regime he once served, including over a decade in solitary confinement for voicing his disapproval of the junta. Myint’s story, illustrated by archival footage smuggled out of Burma, is a vivid account of an individual’s sacrifice to help change the lives of millions.

 

This Is My Land… Hebron Dirs: Giulia Amati & Stephen Natanson

Monday, March 5 at 8pm

The largest city in the occupied West Bank and the site of one of the first Israeli settlements there, Hebron is populated by 160,000 Palestinians and 600 Israeli settlers who require a garrison of 2,000 Israeli soldiers for protection. For these unwilling neighbours, conflict has become a way of life, and directors Giulia Amati and Stephen Natanson capture this charged situation through the multiple, interweaving narratives of residents and observers. Featuring interviews with ordinary Israelis and Palestinians living in the city, activists on both sides, prominent Ha’aretz journalists and members of the Israeli parliament, This Is My Land… Hebron is a vivid portrait of a chasm between cultures.

 

The Price of Sex Dir: Mimi Chakarova

Tuesday, March 6 at 8pm

Award-winning photojournalist Mimi Chakarova delves into the world of international sex trafficking in this startling exposé, revealing the cruel conditions that have forced thousands of women into a life defined by fear, shame and violence. With brutal honesty and courageous perseverance, these young women relate how they were bought, sold, and taken far from home to toil in brothels across Eastern and Western Europe and the Middle East. The culmination of an eight-year investigative journalism project that took Chakarova through Moldova, Bulgaria, Turkey, Greece and Dubai, The Price of Sex boldly brings this ever more pressing issue into stark relief, and was awarded Human Rights Watch International’s 2011 Nestor Almendros Award for Courage in Filmmaking.

 

Granito: How to Nail a Dictator Dir: Pamela Yates

Thursday, March 8 at 8pm

Part political thriller, part memoir, Granito takes us through a haunting tale of genocide and delayed justice that spans four decades, two films, and director Pamela Yates’ own career. While filming in Guatemala, then under the harsh military dictatorship of General Efraín Ríos Montt, to make her 1982 documentary When the Mountains Tremble, Yates managed to capture the only known footage of the Guatemalan army as it carried out its genocidal campaign against the indigenous Mayan population. Twenty-five years later, this footage becomes evidence in an international war crimes case against the very army commander who permitted Yates to film. Conducting new interviews with activists, witnesses and forensic experts, Yates herself joins this disparate movement of truth-seekers, each of them contributing their own granito, or grain of sand, to the reconstruction of collective memory and the pursuit of justice.

 

The Island President Dir: Jon Shenk

Friday, March 9 at 8pm *CLOSING NIGHT*

Cadillac People’s Choice Documentary Award, Toronto International Film Festival 2011

Mohamed Nasheed spent two decades leading a pro-democracy movement against a cruel dictatorship in the Maldives, suffering imprisonments and torture until groundswell support elected him president at age 41. Suddenly he found himself facing a new crisis: the possible extinction of his own country. If ocean levels continue to rise at their current rate, over a thousand coral islands of the Maldives will be submerged like a modern Atlantis. Obtaining remarkable access to Nasheed during his first year in office, director Jon Shenk offers both an inspiring personal story and an insider’s look at the dirty business of political deal-making during the 2009 climate change summit at Copenhagen. Featuring stunning cinematography and a haunting score by Radiohead, The Island President is one of the year’s most essential documentaries.

 

The Festival’s Opening Reception will be held at 6pm on Wednesday, February 29th at Malaparte (330 King Street West, TIFF Bell Lightbox, 6th Floor) prior to the 8pm screening of Special Flight. Cost is $100 per person (includes reception and film ticket). For tickets to the Reception, please call (416)322-8448 or email thornta@hrw.org.

The Closing Reception is a co-presentation between Human Rights Watch, the HRW Toronto Network and TIFF. It will be held on Friday, March 9th prior to the 8pm screening of The Island President. For tickets to the Reception, please call (416)322-8448 or email thornta@hrw.org.

Tickets to the Human Rights Watch Festival are currently on sale to TIFF Members, and are available to non-members on January 11. Tickets are $12 ($6 for Contributor Members and up, $9 for Individual + Family/Dual Members, $5 for students). Tickets can be purchased online at tiff.net, by phone 416-599-TIFF (8433) and 1-888-599-8433 or in person at the Steve & Rashmi Gupta Box Office, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, Toronto.

 

About Human Rights Watch

Human Rights Watch is one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. By focusing international attention where human rights are violated, we give voice to the oppressed and hold oppressors accountable for their crimes. Our rigorous, objective investigations and strategic, targeted advocacy build intense pressure for action and raise the cost of human rights abuse. For over 30 years, Human Rights Watch has worked tenaciously to lay the legal and moral groundwork for deep-rooted change and has fought to bring greater justice and security to people around the world.

 

About TIFF

TIFF is a charitable cultural organization whose mission is to transform the way people see the world through film. An international leader in film culture, TIFF projects include the annual Toronto International Film Festival in September; TIFF Bell Lightbox, which features five cinemas, major exhibitions, and learning and entertainment facilities; and innovative national distribution program Film Circuit. The organization generates an annual economic impact of $170 million CAD. TIFF Bell Lightbox is generously supported by contributors including Founding Sponsor Bell, the Province of Ontario, the Government of Canada, the City of Toronto, the Reitman family (Ivan Reitman, Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels), The Daniels Corporation, Major Sponsor and official bank RBC, and BlackBerry. For more information, visit tiff.net.

 

TIFF is generously supported by Lead Sponsor Bell, Major Sponsor RBC, and Major Supporters the Government of Canada, the Government of Ontario, and the City of Toronto.

 

For more information and/or press interviews, please contact:

TIFF Communications Department : 416-934-3200 or proffice@tiff.net

Human Rights Watch: Alison Thornton – (416) 322-8448 or thornta@hrw.org

2012 Guest Speaker List

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February 21  |  2012 Film Festival, Films, HRWFF Closing Reception, HRWFF Opening Night, HRWFF Special Guests, News  |   staff

 

Each of the amazing films to be screened at this year’s Festival will be accompanied by equally outstanding guest speakers who will provide our audiences with unique insight into the critical issues represented in each of the films.

 

Special Flight

Executive Producer Elise Shubs.

 

Habibi

Actress Maisa Abd Elhadi via Skype and Bill Van Esveld, Researcher, Middle East & North Africa Division, HRW.

 

The Bully Project

Dr. Claire Crooks, Assoc. Dir. CAMH Centre for Prevention Science.

 

Color of the Ocean

Director Maggie Peren via Skype.

 

Burma Soldier

Director Nic Dunlop via Skype and Elaine Pearson, Deputy Director, Asia Division, HRW.

 

This is my Land Hebron

Director Stephen Natanson via Skype.

 

The Price of Sex

Director Mimi Chakarova and Liesl Gerntholtz, Director, Women’s Rights, HRW.

 

Granito: How to Nail a Dictator

Director Pamela Yates via Skype.

 

The Island President

Director Jon Shenk via Skype.

 

 

Closing Night: Illegal With Special Guest Barbara Jackman

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March 3  |  2011 Film Festival, HRWFF Closing Reception, HRWFF Special Guests, Illegal, News  |   julie

illegal human rights watch film festival

SOLD OUT!

Barbara Jackman, a Canadian lawyer specializing in immigration and refugee law, introduces tonight’s film, Illégal, a psychological thriller with a social commentary background.

The film revolves around Tania, a fictitious 39 year-old Russian woman who has been living illegally in Belgium for some ten years with her 14 year-old son. Although the authorities refused her application for asylum, she manages to find a job and send her son to school. One day, a police check leads to her arrest.  She is placed in a detention center while her young son manages to escape and takes refuge at a friend’s home.

Ms. received her undergraduate degree from the University of Windsor in 1972, her LL.B. from the University of Toronto in 1976, and was called to the Bar of Ontario in 1978. She has been described as being one of Canada’s most effective advocates for immigration and refugee rights.

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Tonight’s Film: Life, Above All With Guest Alexis MacDonald

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March 1  |  2011 Film Festival, HRWFF Special Guests, Life Above All, News  |   julie

life above all

Alexis MacDonald, Director of External Relations for the Stephen Lewis Foundation introduces tonight’s film, Life, Above All, the stunning adaptation of Allan Stratton’s best-selling 2004 novel Chanda’s Secrets.

Shortlisted for this year’s Academy Awards® as South Africa’s official entry, Life Above All tells the story of an African family torn apart by the AIDS pandemic.

Khomotso Manyaka plays ‘Chanda’, a young girl in a small, AIDS-ravaged South African township who struggles to maintain a façade of normal life amidst utter instability: her stepfather is an alcoholic, her newborn sister has recently died, and her mother has become afflicted with the AIDS virus. When Chanda’s mother’s illness becomes openly apparent, the community turns against the family, interpreting it as a form of retribution for their sins.

To purchase tickets for tonight’s screening of Life, Above All phone 416-599-TIFF (8433) or 1-888-599-8433. Tickets can also be purchased, in person, at TIFF Bell Lightbox Box Office, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, Toronto.

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Tonight’s Film: The First Grader With Special Guest Dickson Eyoh

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February 26  |  2011 Film Festival, HRWFF Special Guests, News, The First Grader  |   julie

kimani maruge the first grader

The First Grader, which screens tonight at 8 PM at the TIFF Bell Lightbox, will be introduced by Dickson Eyoh, Associate Professor, Political Science and African Studies at the University of Toronto. Professor Eyoh is an expert in the politics and economy of Sub-Saharan Africa.  He has co-edited several books, including Decentralization and The Politics of Urban Development in West Africa (2007); Ethnicity and Democracy in Africa (2004); and the Encyclopedia of 20th Century African History (2003).

The First Grader was inspired by the true story of Kimani Nganga Maruge, a farmer in Western Kenya who led the way in the fight for universal free education in that country. Maruge become the oldest person on record to start primary school when he enrolled in Kapkenduywa primary school, in Eldoret, at the age of 84. A veteran of the Mau Mau independence movement, Maruge never had the opportunity to go to school when he was younger.

Due to overwhelming demand The First Grader has moved to a larger cinema within the TIFF Bell Lightbox complex. Please check with the Box Office or attendants for the new location.

To purchase tickets for tonight’s screening of The First Grader phone 416-599-TIFF (8433) or 1-888-599-8433. Tickets can also be purchased, in person, at TIFF Bell Lightbox Box Office, Reitman Square, 350 King Street West, Toronto.

The First Grader is co-presented with The Institute for Contemporary Culture.

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