♫musicjinni

LIVING Q&A with Oliver Hermanus | TIFF 2022

video thumbnail
The team behind LIVING in conversation with TIFF in advance of its premiere at the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival. In a luscious and textured remake of Kurosawa’s 1952 classic Ikiru, a British bureaucrat (Bill Nighy) questions his life choices after receiving a terminal diagnosis.

The 47th Toronto International Film Festival runs September 8 to 18, 2022. For more, visit http://tiff.net.

In this exquisitely realized remake of Akira Kurosawa’s 1952 film Ikiru, director Oliver Hermanus teams with Nobel- and Booker Prize–winning author Kazuo Ishiguro to renew a classic. Mr. Williams (Bill Nighy) is a buttoned- down, pinstripe- and-bowler hat–clad stereotypical English gentleman in 1952, with a mid-level bureaucratic job in a post- war London county council. Through his taciturn manner, Mr. Williams lets his staff (which includes Aimee Lou Wood, Sex Education) know that maintaining the status quo on files is more important than progress. One day Williams receives a dire diagnosis from his doctor and soon the tightly held reins of his very prosaic life begin to loosen. We discover he is a widower, estranged from his only son, with few friends and fewer interests. Williams realizes that he isn’t facing death; he’s been living it. And so, in the clumsy manner of one who is unpracticed in these things, he begins putting work aside for new experiences. In charmingly awkward sequences, Nighy beautifully captures that specific lead-up to the end of life and the inevitably accompanying questions: did I accomplish anything? Will I leave anything behind? While the heart of the film is Nighy’s understated lead performance, equally as masterful is the profound sense of time and place created by the craft elements, notably production design by Helen Scott (Mothering Sunday, TIFF ’21; Small Axe) and costume design by the multiple Oscar–winning Sandy Powell. It’s all captured on screen by cinematographer Jamie Ramsay (Mothering Sunday), who deeply impresses with his creation of beautiful images filled with light. Mr. Williams would be pleased.

Oliver Hermanus was born in Cape Town. He worked as a press photographer in South Africa before completing his master’s degree at the London Film School. His features Shirley Adams (09), Beauty. (11), and The Endless River (15) played the Festival. Living (22) is his latest film.

Highlights from the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival | TIFF 2023

What's New in May & June at digital TIFF Bell Lightbox | TIFF 2022

HOME | TIFF Bell Lightbox | TIFF 365

Festival Wrap-up | TIFF 2022

Welcome to Festival | TIFF 2022

Celebrating Canadian Film | TIFF 2022

A day at the Toronto International Film Festival 🎥 #TIFF #vlog #movies #films

digital TIFF BELL LIGHTBOX Trailer | TIFF 2020

TAYLOR SWIFT | In Conversation With… | TIFF 2022

Welcome to Festival | TIFF 2023

TIFF Bell Lightbox Trailer | TIFF 365

TIFF 2022 Toronto International Film Festival Saturday Downtown, King Street toronto Canada

Sadie Sink arriving at the Bell Lightbox Theater in Toronto for #AllTooWellTheShortFilm at #TIFF22

TIFF #tiff #bell #tiff2022 #torontointernationalfilmfestival

Snow on Screen | TIFF 2023

TIFF 2022 | TORONTO INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL 2022

VIOLET GAVE WILLINGLY Trailer | CANADA'S TOP TEN | TIFF 2022

4K🇨🇦 Discover CANADA - Toronto International Film Festival TIFF Toronto Entertainment Life 4K

Promo Toronto international Film Festival tiff

Happy Birthday Darren Aronofsky | TIFF 2023

This is TIFF Cinematheque | TIFF 2022

Rosie Trailer | CANADA'S TOP TEN | TIFF 2022

THE SON Intro with Hugh Jackman | TIFF 2022

TIFF NEXT WAVE 2022 Trailer | TIFF 2022

Toronto International Film Festival 2023 - TIFF Film Line Up

TIFF 2022 #tiff #tiff2022 #torontointernationalfilmfestival

TIFF - Toronto International Film Festival

MUNICIPAL RELAXATION MODULE Trailer | CANADA'S TOP TEN | TIFF 2022

THUNDER Q&A | TIFF 2022

LAY ME BY THE SHORE Trailer | CANADA'S TOP TEN | TIFF 2022

Disclaimer DMCA