The Sound of Metal

The Sound of Metal

Making its premiere September 6th at the Toronto International Film Festival, Sound of Metal is a visceral and touching exploration of what it is like to experience hearing loss. Drummer Ruben (Riz Ahmed) is forced to confront this disability with his bandmate and girlfriend, Lou (Olivia Cooke). As first-time director Darius Marder puts it, it’s an exploration of “what happens when you strip away who you think you are.”

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Justice League (“The Snyder Cut”, 2021)

Justice League (“The Snyder Cut”, 2021)

Justice League was first released in 2017, but practically since then, the “#ReleasetheSnyderCut” campaign continually lobbied for original director Zack Snyder’s take on the film. He originally was forced to step aside after a family tragedy, with Joss Whedon (The Avengers) taking the helm. Late last year, the Twitter campaign reached a fever pitch. This, possibly in combination with the need to promote the new HBO Max streaming service as well as the punishing economics around theatre-going for the foreseeable future, has led to this special Director’s Cut being realized.

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i'm thinking of ending things

i'm thinking of ending things

By way of Charlie Kaufman (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) comes the equally-unsettling i’m thinking of ending things (sic). Based on the 2016 novel by Canadian writer Iain Reid, this adaptation stars Jessie Buckley, Jesse Plemons, and Toni Collette (the latter having starred in The Sixth Sense and Little Miss Sunshine). Although Kaufman’s previous work obviously delved into the unique and unusual, he hasn’t quite entered thriller territory until now. As a result, this trailer puts a highly artistic twist on horror and thriller trailer conventions. Usually, in horror trailers we hear ominous sound design, perhaps a creepy musical theme, and definitely one—or, more likely, multiple—jump scares, reinforced of course with a scream or sudden, loud sound of some sort. Here, we hear little of that type—instead, this trailer takes benign sounds and renders them as remarkably disconcerting.

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Inception (Re-release, 2020)

Inception (Re-release, 2020)

It’s unsurprising that Zack Hemsey’s “Mind Heist”—written when the composer was in his mid-20s—has been used again for Inception’s re-release trailer on the occasion of its tenth anniversary. So strong is the “Inception sound” cache that it’s the name of a Toronto recording studio; the origin and ongoing influence of the sound has since been profiled in multiple features, including those by Indie Wire (2013), The Hollywood Reporter (2015), and Longreads (2016). Not to mention the endless variants in trailers!

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Utopia

Utopia

Director Gillian Flynn is adapting the series for American audiences from the original British drama, which follows comic book fans of a fictional graphic novel, Dystopia. While attempting to get information about its sequel, Utopia, they enter grave danger—and then the protagonist from the aforementioned comic book series shows up.

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Black is King

Black is King

Disney shows little sign of relenting in providing reasons to sign up or stick with its streaming service Disney Plus, and post-Hamilton, that reason is Beyoncé’s latest visual album, Black is King. The choice of platform is of course not coincidental, as Black is King is heavily inspired by 2019’s live-action remake of The Lion King, to which Beyoncé contributed. It’s worth noting that the record, intended to incorporate and celebrate both African and Afro-diasporic musics, arrives at a particularly apt time as the world continues to reckon with the fact of systemic anti-Black racism.

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Greyhound

Greyhound

This weekend, a screenplay by Tom Hanks found its way not into theatres, but onto streaming services, with Apple TV+ having picked up exclusive rights. According to Hanks, those rights only came begrudgingly, as he lamented the inevitable loss in the overall quality of the experience in homes versus silver screen exhibition. Directed by Aaron Schneider, Greyhound is based on the United States’ participation in the Battle of the Atlantic in early 1942.

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Hamilton

Hamilton

After years of speculation as to when exactly the filmed version of Hamilton—complete with original cast, of course—would arrive, Disney recently announced that Disney+’s latest exclusive would premiere on July 3rd. In addition to arriving just in time for Independence Day in the U.S., of course, the release was probably also timed and decided upon as a result of the ongoing pandemic. 

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The Rental

The Rental

Dave Franco (Superbad, If Beale Street Could Talk) sits in the director’s chair for the first time with The Rental, a fairly on-the-nose horror film centred on the conceit of a vacation rental property gone awry. In the age of COVID-19, of course, it’s a bit easier to imagine such fears manifesting themselves. Musically, the trailer follows a three-part structure that’s both through-composed and is clearly purpose-built to gradually guide the dramatic arc from suspenseful to thrilling.

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The Black Experience in Trailer Music

The Black Experience in Trailer Music

In light of the ongoing protests happening in the United States, Canada and around the world under the banner of Black Lives Matter, we felt it was appropriate to pause this week and highlight a few of the film trailers we’ve covered that centre on Black lives and experiences. Hopefully you might discover something interesting and new to rent or buy—or see in theatres, perhaps eventually—as a result.

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Tenet

Tenet

Christopher Nolan returns with his latest mind- and time-bending opus, Tenet; while it claims to be coming to theatres, the obvious unknown is when that might really be. Regardless, for the time being we have its latest trailer, which musically plays on its central conceit of time inversion in a couple of subtle and clever ways.

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Beastie Boys Story

Beastie Boys Story

With 94% on the Tomatometer and a corresponding 92% audience score, music documentary Beastie Boys Story is clearly resonating with critics and fans alike. The Spike Jonze-directed live documentary (who directed many of the Beasties’ music videos) happens to arrive via streaming at a time when mass live music concerts are all but a faded memory; it feels particularly timely to drop a retrospective of one of the most bombastic acts to have come out of the hip hop world in the past few decades.

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