The Toronto International Film Festival will mark its 50th edition from 4 to 14 September with a lineup that blends prestige debuts and crowd‑pleasers across its Galas and Special Presentations programmes. Organisers confirmed that Colin Hanks’s documentary John Candy: I Like Me, produced by Ryan Reynolds, will open the celebration, a choice TIFF chief Cameron Bailey said honours “a hometown legend” while setting “a tone of warmth and wit” for the anniversary year.
Among 50 world premieres, Angelina Jolie headlines Alice Winocour’s fashion‑week drama Couture; Saoirse Ronan stars in the comedy‑thriller Bad Apples; and Keanu Reeves joins Aziz Ansari and Seth Rogen in Ansari’s body‑swap comedy Good Fortune. Sydney Sweeney steps into the boxing ring for David Michôd’s biopic Christy, while Matthew McConaughey leads Paul Greengrass’s survival tale The Lost Bus.
Rian Johnson’s Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery arrives as one of several tent‑pole titles slated to ignite awards chatter alongside Steven Soderbergh’s ensemble piece The Christophers, Brendan Fraser’s Japan‑set drama Rental Family, and Channing Tatum’s epic heist picture Roofman. Other high‑profile entries include Chris Evans‑led action comedy Sacrifice and the romantic comedy Eternity, both angling for commercial buzz.
Actors stepping behind the camera add further intrigue: James McAvoy’s Los Angeles road caper California Schemin’, Brian Cox’s Highland family saga Glenrothan, and Maude Apatow’s poetry‑infused coming‑of‑age picture Poetic License will each test fresh directing chops. The festival also spotlights biographical narratives such as Franz, centred on Kafka, and Swiped, charting Bumble founder Whitney Wolfe Herd’s tech ascent.
Bailey emphasised that the slate “reflects cinema’s boundless curiosity,” highlighting venues ranging from Roy Thomson Hall to TIFF Bell Lightbox as the city braces for an influx of global talent and industry deal‑making. Trade analysts note that TIFF’s position in the early‑autumn calendar keeps it a vital launchpad for awards hopefuls while offering audiences the first glimpse of potential box‑office hits. With milestone fanfare, a hometown salute to Candy, and premieres spanning couture runways to boxing rings, the 2025 edition aims to reaffirm Toronto’s role as North America’s busiest red‑carpet crossroads.





















































