Frontmezzjunkies reports: The first wave of Gala Presentations and Special Presentations signals another unforgettable September at the Toronto International Film Festival
Every summer it begins the same way. One announcement arrives, then another, and suddenly September no longer feels far away. The Toronto International Film Festival slowly comes into focus, calendars begin filling with impossible scheduling decisions, and the annual exercise of wondering how to be in three theatres at once officially begins. For film lovers, this is when the excitement becomes real.
The Toronto International Film Festival has unveiled the first titles for its 51st edition, offering an early glimpse at what promises to be another extraordinary eleven days of cinema across the city. Running September 10 through 20, TIFF (from now on referred to as TIFF51) returns after welcoming approximately 700,000 attendees during last year’s landmark 50th edition, bringing back its familiar mix of world premieres, international filmmakers, red carpets, celebrity appearances, audience conversations, Festival Street, and the communal thrill of discovering films, like last year’s People’s Choice winner, “Hamnet“, together before the rest of the world.

Leading this first announcement is the Opening Night Film, “Being Heumann“, the latest feature from Academy Award-winning director Siân Heder following her Oscar-winning “CODA“. Premiering at Roy Thomson Hall on September 10, the Apple Original Film stars Ruth Madeley as pioneering disability rights advocate Judy Heumann, whose work transformed accessibility all around the world.
Joining Opening Night in the Gala Presentations programme are two additional World Premieres. British director Susanna White brings “Prima Facie“, featuring Cynthia Erivo in a new stage-to-screen adaptation of the acclaimed legal drama, while acclaimed Korean filmmaker Hur Jin-ho returns to Toronto with “The Assassin(s)“, reuniting with superstar Lee Min-ho for a thriller that is already certain to attract significant attention when it premieres at the Festival.

Festival CEO Cameron Bailey described the first announcement as only the beginning, promising much more to come in the weeks ahead. Those additional reveals are already underway, with TIFF51 also announcing five Special Presentations that further expand the Festival’s Official Selection.
Among them are David and Nathan Zellner’s “Alpha Gang“, premiering internationally after generating considerable anticipation, along with four World Premieres: Benjamín Naishtat’s “Glaxo“, Rachel Morrison’s “Love of Your Life“, Ben Shirinian’s “The Housewife“, and Bassam Tariq’s intriguingly titled “Your Mother Your Mother Your Mother“. Together, the selections offer an early indication of the breadth TIFF continues to champion, balancing established filmmakers with emerging voices and ambitious new work from around the world.
Beyond the films themselves, many of the Festival traditions that define a Toronto September will once again return. Festival Street transforms King Street West into a celebration of cinema during opening weekend with free public programming, food trucks, activations, and the inevitable possibility of unexpectedly crossing paths with filmmakers and stars between screenings. Live post-screening Q&As, the popular In Conversation With… series, the TIFF Tribute Awards, and the recently introduced TIFF: The Market will all contribute to another Festival that extends well beyond what appears on screen.
This year also introduces a new official screening venue, the John Bassett Theatre at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, joining Roy Thomson Hall, TIFF Lightbox, the Princess of Wales Theatre, Scotiabank Theatre Toronto, Cinema Park, and the Royal Alexandra Theatre as Festival homes across the city.
The announcements are only beginning. TIFF‘s annual Takeover programming reveals continue throughout late July and early August before the complete Festival schedule is released on August 11. Ticket sales begin for TIFF Members on August 21 before opening to the general public on August 31, marking the moment every attendee starts juggling wish lists, screening grids, and impossible choices.
That may be my favourite part of every TIFF season. Before a single film has been seen, before the first standing ovation, before the People’s Choice Award launches another awards campaign, the Festival begins with possibility. A handful of titles become dozens, dozens become hundreds, and for eleven days in September, Toronto once again becomes the centre of the film world. If these first announcements are any indication, the countdown to TIFF 2026 is officially underway.


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