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SPOTTED: Ivan Reitman comes to Hogtown in head-to-toe velour

Esteemed hometown producer-director (and Bell Lightbox land benefactorIvan Reitman, the man behind comedic gold like Ghostbusters and Animal House, has arrived for TIFF. Of course, he was also the criminal mastermind behind Kindergarten Cop and Space Jam (no, really)—but who are we to judge? Outfit of choice: what appears to be a dark velour (yes, velour) track suit and sneakers.

Find this story on our Star Spotting Map, where we plot the locations of celebrities spotted around Toronto.

The Hype

TIFF Talk

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TIFF PHOTO GALLERY: Dan Aykroyd, Jason Reitman at the dedication of Reitman Square

Ivan Reitman at the Reitman Square dedication held at TIFF Bell Lightbox (Image: Sonia Recchia/Getty Images)

Yesterday wasn’t quite TIFF, but it was the perfect occasion to get some buzz for a homegrown project before the celebrities arrive. Piers Handling, Dan Aykroyd and Adam Vaughan were on hand for the dedication of Reitman Square, named after Leslie and Clara Reitman, the parents of Ivan (and grandparents of Jason), who once owned a car wash at this site. Ivan, along with his sisters Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels, donated the $22-million plot of land that now houses the Bell Lightbox.

The Hype

TIFF Talk

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King West city block named after Reitman family

Ivan Reitman and his sisters Agi Mandel and Susan Michaels might have been a little emotional when they handed over the $22-million turf where their parents, Leslie and Clara, bought a car wash when they came to Canada after the Second World War, but the Bell Lightbox is looking swell, and to thank the family for their generosity, they’re going to get their own square.

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The Hype

TIFF Talk

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Bell Lightbox to host free street party, concerts by Polaris Prize nominees

(Image: Bell Lightbox)

Most star-struck Torontonians will be turned away from film festival parties by burly bouncers, but TIFF’s Bell Lightbox, affirming our resounding approval of the new film house, is hosting a free block party to give locals a taste of the festival action. The event is happening on King between John and Peter Streets September 12 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. and will feature free admission to the building to check out the Essential Cinema exhibit and Atom Egoyan’ Screens installation.

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The Hype

TIFF Talk

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Quoted: the latest TIFF talk

We’ll update Quoted regularly before and during the festival. Check back often.

“Taking the Toronto Transit Commission’s whisper-quiet subways from one film festival screening to another earlier this week, a Chicagoan couldn’t help but notice that the sound levels are a major shock to the El-conditioned system. The civility is relentless in Toronto. The taxi drivers, whatever their ethnicity or whatever sort of day they’ve had, display a startling lack of aggression behind the wheel.”—critic Michael Phillips [Chicago Tribune]


“King and Queen Streets in Toronto are all by themselves reasons for the city to exist.”—Roger Ebert [Twitter]


“Do I look like Jake Gyllenhaal? If you want, I could tell you his workout regime. I had to hear about it for half an hour—half an hour I’ll never get back.”—Jay Baruchel [CBC]


“Toronto is America’s most important film festival, even though it takes place in Canada.”—Adam Dawtrey [Guardian]


“This city just gets more beautiful all the time.”—Uma Thurman [CTV]


“The reason I’m wearing this jacket is because I’m sweaty and I can’t take it off.”—Nicole Kidman at the Rabbit Hole press conference [Toronto Sun]


“Why would any kid want to come and see thousands cheer their parents? They’d rather see thousands boo their parents!”—Bruce Springsteen on the absence of his kids at his shows [Toronto Star]


“Everybody loves Jon [Hamm]. I was so attracted to him. I had to work with him because he’s so handsome.”—Ben Affleck [Toronto Star]


“TIFF’s wonderful new Bell Lightbox is one swell place to see a movie.”—Roger Ebert [Twitter]


“Each time we told Natalie [Portman] we had to push another three weeks, she’d say, ‘Another three weeks of eating carrot sticks and almonds? I am going to kill you.’”—Darren Aronofsky on filming Black Swan [Globe and Mail]


“The Toronto audience is the festival’s charm. It is smart, open-minded and eager to find the best in films that are seldom perfect but almost always have something to say.”—Michael Cieply [New York Times]


“It’s fucking great.”—Darren Aronofsky on Black Swan [Twitter]


“[Passion Play] is a movie that says, ‘You know what? I have the money to hire Mickey Rourke to play a washed-up saxophonist and Bill Murray to be a New Mexico gangster. I have the cash to have them fight over Megan Fox, who I’ll make an angel—not one of those Victoria’s Secret angels, but, like, one at a carnival freak show. What I don’t have the budget for are effects that make the wings seem real. I know they look like cartoons, but who cares?’”—critic Wesley Morris [Boston Globe]


“I’m a director. You have to do what I say.”—Paul Haggis at the Artists for Peace and Justice Party [The Hype]


“You just made me cry. You are like the Barbara Walters of ET Canada!”—Megan Fox to Rick Campanelli [National Post]


Barney’s Version film very touching, great performances, shed tears…”—Margaret Atwood [Twitter]


“He looks so good. How old is he?”—a guest at the George Christy luncheon about Anthony Hopkins [The Hype]


“SUPER premiere was a fucking BLAST! I love you, Toronto.”—Rainn Wilson [Twitter]


“This party is so boring.”—guest at the Vanity Fair bash at The Thompson


“Canadians love piercings.”—Rainn Wilson [Twitter]


“We should go to a hip-hop club.”—Steve Nash at the CBC Hazelton Takeover party [The Hype]


“Sure, the glitz of Venice and the reclusive allure of Telluride set the stage, but Toronto is where the art-house armada gathers its fleet to prepare for the invasion of Yankee shores.”—John Lopez [Vanity Fair]


“I have celebrated my birthday here in Toronto for the last 10 years.”—Colin Firth [Hollywood Reporter]


“What do you do when Ben Affleck is in the urinal behind you? Wait and pee I guess? At least he didn’t have security in there.”—critic Mohit Rajhans [Twitter]


“We shouldn’t be making 250 feature films in this country. I don’t think it can sustain. Where are those films going? I mean, are they just home movie productions done on credit cards?”—TIFF co-director Piers Handling [Toronto Star]


“I still send out scripts and get back the response ‘too Canadian,’ though I’m not exactly sure what that means.”—Canadian producer Christine Haebler [Globe and Mail]

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The Hype

Pop Art

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Michael Snow sues Festival Tower condo developer for $950,000 for turning down art

Michael Snow doesn’t take rejection lying down. The renowned artist (better known as the man behind the flying geese at the Eaton Centre) is seeking $950,000 in damages from filmmaker Ivan Reitman, Toronto condo developer Daniels Corp., and its joint venture, King John Festival Corp., after the developers abruptly withdrew from a project they’d commissioned for the Festival Tower (the condo building adjacent to the Bell Lightbox), according to a statement of claim filed by Snow July 16 and made public yesterday.

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The Hype

Awards Season

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Sarah Polley to be inducted into Canadian Walk of Fame

Hurrah (Image: Sasoriza)

Each year, the discerning minds at Canada’s Walk of Fame choose a new group of inductees. This year, Sarah Polley made the cut; so did Nelly Furtado, Eric McCormack (?!), Clara Hughes, Farley Mowat and David Clayton-Thomas. A posthumous nod went to magician Doug Henning of Spellbound—the Ivan Reitman–directed musical—fame. The ceremony will be held in October.

Latest Walk of Fame inductees unveiled [CTV]

Toronto International Film Festival 2009

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All aboard the Toronto love train: Atom Egoyan, Ivan Reitman and Julianne Moore talk Hogtown and Chloe

Julianne Moore and Atom Egoyan discuss their movie Chloe at the Toronto International Film Festival (Photo by Karon Liu)

Julianne Moore and Atom Egoyan pose for the cameras at the Chloe press conference (Photo by Karon Liu)

While it’s no secret that Chloe director Atom Egoyan loves his hometown, we were surprised that fellow Canuck Ivan Reitman needed some convincing to set the erotic thriller, a remake of 2003’s Nathalie…, in Toronto.

“The original script was set in San Francisco and we see a lot of films shot there, like Dirty Harry and Vertigo,” says Egoyan. “The challenge was convincing Ivan that Toronto can be as sexy and alluring as San Francisco. Ivan’s from here originally but hasn’t spent time here recently, so I was driving him around showing him places and he got very excited and saw the city transform itself.”

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Toronto International Film Festival 2009

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Goodbye, Yorkville, our old friend: A peek inside TIFF’s skeletal new home, the Bell Lightbox

Noah Cowan, Bell Lightbox artistic director, shows off the fourth floor of the building that will be used as a film reference library.

Noah Cowan, Bell Lightbox artistic director, shows off the fourth floor of the building that will be used as a film reference library (All photos by Karon Liu).

Although the Toronto International Film Festival won’t be settling into its new home until this time next year, last week we donned hard hats, construction boots and goggles (and signed a spooky-looking safety waiver) and took a tour of the half-built Bell Lightbox. Oh, the perils of entertainment reporting.

The five-storey tower at the corner of King and John Streets (a $22-million piece of land donated by Ivan Reitman, his sisters and the Daniels Corporation) will have five theatres with a total of 1,300 seats, learning studios for film students and two dining spaces occupied by Oliver and Bonacini. Noah Cowan, artistic director of the Bell Lightbox and a former TIFF co-director, says that the goal is to move the festival into a more central downtown location over the next three years.

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