- Toronto International
Arts Fair
- Art Toronto
Cultural Partners
- City of Toronto
- Welcome from the City of Toronto
- Nuit Blanche
- Attend the Events
- Brochure
- Directions & Parking
- Tickets
- Special Events
- Things to See & Do
- Architecture
- Film
- Galleries
- Lively Arts
- Museums
- Neighborhoods
- Restaurants/Nightclubs
- Societies, Foundations & Institutions
- In the News
- Press Room
|
Film
National Film Board of Canada Mediatheque
The National Film Board of Canada Mediatheque is a state-of-the-art multimedia facility located at 150 John Street, in the heart of Toronto's Entertainment District. A centre for media literacy and a public access point for groundbreaking films from the NFB and around the world, the NFB Mediatheque's digital viewing stations, educational programming, screenings and special events have attracted more than 500,000 visitors since its doors opened in 2002. The Mediatheque connects Canadians with their shared past, present and future on film, bringing the community together to communicate, celebrate and create.
Address: 150 John St Toronto, ON M5V 3C3
Website: nfb.ca/mediatheque
Toronto Film School Studio
Students' films are screened at the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television.
Address: 39 John Street Toronto, ON. M5V 3G6
Website: torontofilmschool.com
Toronto International Film Festival
The Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) is a prestigious, publicly-attended film festival held each September in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The festival begins the Thursday night after Labor Day (the first Monday in September, in Canada) and lasts for ten days. Between 300-400 films are screened at approximately 23 screens in downtown Toronto venues. The TIFF is among the top film festivals in the world. In 1998, Variety magazine acknowledged that "the Festival is second only to Cannes in terms of high-profile pictures, stars and market activity." Quoted by the National Post in 1999, Roger Ebert claimed "...although Cannes is still larger, Toronto is more useful and more important...." It is the premiere film festival in North America, from which the Oscars race begins, and the world's largest festival open to the general public.
Address: various locations around Toronto
Website: tiff08.ca
|
|