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Entertainment|Toronto International Film Festival
When Grief Becomes a Lifelong Investigation

There Are No Words

How do you confront a silence that’s lasted over four decades? Min Sook Lee’s THERE ARE NO WORDS begins with that question and carries it with determination through every frame. It’s a documentary that refuses to look away from a family’s wounds, even when the pain is too heavy to articulate. The result is a deeply personal film that expands far beyond one individual’s story, speaking to generational trauma and the complex intersections of memory, love, and loss.

Love’s Fragility Examined Through a Fairytale Lens

The Girl Who Cried Pearls

Some short films lean on whimsy, but what makes THE GIRL WHO CRIED PEARLS compelling is how it threads the timeless qualities of a fable with the artistry of stop-motion animation. In just under twenty minutes, Chris Lavis and Maciek Szczerbowski transform grief, devotion, and temptation into a cautionary tale that feels both rooted in centuries-old storytelling and strikingly relevant today.

When the Universe Calls, Will You Answer?

U Are the Universe (Ти – Космос)

U ARE THE UNIVERSE catapults us into the not-so-distant future, where Andriy Melnyk (Volodymyr Kravchuk,) a space trucker from Ukraine, embarks on a routine cargo mission that unexpectedly turns into a desperate survival struggle. Following Earth's abrupt end, Andriy discovers he might be the last human floating through space—until a distress call from Catherine (Darya Plakhtiy,) another lone survivor on a distant station, pulls their fates together. Their interaction sparks an epic quest to explore what remains of human connection in a universe seemingly void of it.

Escaping the Urban for Alpines

Shepherds (Bergers)

SHEPHERDS takes us away to the dramatic expanse of the French Alps, where director Sophie Deraspe crafts a rugged and reflective narrative. In this cinematic journey, Félix-Antoine Duval portrays Mathyas, a Montreal executive whose disillusionment with city life drives him to seek serenity in the pastoral landscapes. However, what begins as a quest for simplicity evolves into a challenging saga of survival and self-awareness. As Mathyas faces the elemental forces of nature, the film becomes a testament to the human spirit's resilience.

A Tale of Bravery and Despair

Seven Days (Haft Rooz)

SEVEN DAYS whisks its viewers into the heart of a tension-filled drama where personal liberty and social justice clash. At the center of this emotional whirlwind is Maryam, portrayed by Vishka Asayesh, whose performance captures a woman at a crossroads. Maryam, a resilient Iranian human rights activist, must decide whether to embrace a fleeting chance at freedom or return to her oppressive imprisonment to continue her fight.