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He was an actor and writer, known for Rob Ford's Words in the Mouth of a Child (2014), Toronah (2015) and WingMen (2016). Tollman is flanked on both sides by key cast members: Platt, who plays Bram, the reporter unsuccessfully chasing the crack video Scott Speedman, who plays Bram’s editor at a fictional Toronto newspaper and Mena Massoud and Nina Dobrev, who play Ford office aides struggling to keep the mayor’s behaviour in check. He vividly remembers a Friday in April of 2013, sitting in the car with Doolittle, straining to watch a video playing on a cellphone. Look what’s happening in America. TIFF just revealed the list of movies screening at the 2020 festival "It is a priority for CBC to create a website that is accessible to all Canadians including people with visual, hearing, motor and cognitive challenges.Closed Captioning and Described Video is available for many CBC shows offered onDamian Lewis, the star of Billions and Homeland, is set to portray the late Toronto mayor Rob Ford in a film called Run This Town.Ford is actually a fairly minor character in the story of a young wannabe journalist and other millennials who struggle to make a living in a post-recession economy, writer-director Ricky Tollman says. We showed the film to reporters and politicians who remember Ford to get their review.What the Rob Ford movie Run This Town gets right — and what it gets wrongReporters and colleagues who worked with and investigated Toronto mayor Rob Ford share their reactions to watching the film Run This Town.
Toronto shopping mall is transforming its parking lot into a drive-in movie theatre The former councillor sees the film as a missed opportunity to understand "how he was the right man for a political culture [built] on people's alienation. “I’m actually intrigued by that.”Platt’s Bram acknowledges his privilege but also makes a peculiar argument that white men struggle, too.“We need to acknowledge that everybody should be able to feel feelings,” says Tollman, when I inquire about what Bram is saying in a monologue addressing his privileges. He was a really well-off white man. It’s about struggling millennials.”The movie is about a whole whack of things, including millennial alienation, the shift in journalism toward clickbait and listicles and (much to my surprise) white male privilege. SXSW review: Rob Ford movie Run This Town is funny, furious and surprisingly accurate "As a Toronto native, I was excited to shoot a film about our city that I love and I'm so proud of coming from, and I think it's an important story," "Both Rob's story as well as millennials, and that fact that they're having such an issue finding work after college. “But you have to know the context of those feelings and where your privilege puts you in a room so that you can address other people’s feelings as well.”If this conversation about white male privilege is a tad confusing, it’s not all that clear in the movie, either. And this was a guy with demons. We just wait for a phone call to come in and we're not doing the legwork. It’s easy to tell the story of the person who broke the story. Robert Bruce Ford was a Canadian politician and businessman who served as the 64th mayor of Toronto from 2010 to 2014. “I would love to go see it.”But that sentiment is disingenuous – the chances anyone will make another movie about Rob Ford are slim to none given Tollman depicts all the main plot beats and gives Doolittle’s moves to his fictional reporter.The meetings, the compromises and the leads could have been lifted from Doolittle’s reporting.“That’s not my story to tell,” says Tollman, adding his movie was instead inspired by his brother, a disillusioned white male who made it through j-school only to end up writing onscreen ticker headlines for a 24-hour news channel before being laid off.“It was actually ballsy of Ricky to tell this story,” Massoud adds. Cineplex asks Ontario to loosen restrictions on movie theatre capacity Perhaps I’m partly to blame. ""The film is a completely fictional drama," Platt's tweet reply to Doolittle reads.
He was an actor and writer, known for Rob Ford's Words in the Mouth of a Child (2014), Toronah (2015) and WingMen (2016). Tollman is flanked on both sides by key cast members: Platt, who plays Bram, the reporter unsuccessfully chasing the crack video Scott Speedman, who plays Bram’s editor at a fictional Toronto newspaper and Mena Massoud and Nina Dobrev, who play Ford office aides struggling to keep the mayor’s behaviour in check. He vividly remembers a Friday in April of 2013, sitting in the car with Doolittle, straining to watch a video playing on a cellphone. Look what’s happening in America. TIFF just revealed the list of movies screening at the 2020 festival "It is a priority for CBC to create a website that is accessible to all Canadians including people with visual, hearing, motor and cognitive challenges.Closed Captioning and Described Video is available for many CBC shows offered onDamian Lewis, the star of Billions and Homeland, is set to portray the late Toronto mayor Rob Ford in a film called Run This Town.Ford is actually a fairly minor character in the story of a young wannabe journalist and other millennials who struggle to make a living in a post-recession economy, writer-director Ricky Tollman says. We showed the film to reporters and politicians who remember Ford to get their review.What the Rob Ford movie Run This Town gets right — and what it gets wrongReporters and colleagues who worked with and investigated Toronto mayor Rob Ford share their reactions to watching the film Run This Town.
Toronto shopping mall is transforming its parking lot into a drive-in movie theatre The former councillor sees the film as a missed opportunity to understand "how he was the right man for a political culture [built] on people's alienation. “I’m actually intrigued by that.”Platt’s Bram acknowledges his privilege but also makes a peculiar argument that white men struggle, too.“We need to acknowledge that everybody should be able to feel feelings,” says Tollman, when I inquire about what Bram is saying in a monologue addressing his privileges. He was a really well-off white man. It’s about struggling millennials.”The movie is about a whole whack of things, including millennial alienation, the shift in journalism toward clickbait and listicles and (much to my surprise) white male privilege. SXSW review: Rob Ford movie Run This Town is funny, furious and surprisingly accurate "As a Toronto native, I was excited to shoot a film about our city that I love and I'm so proud of coming from, and I think it's an important story," "Both Rob's story as well as millennials, and that fact that they're having such an issue finding work after college. “But you have to know the context of those feelings and where your privilege puts you in a room so that you can address other people’s feelings as well.”If this conversation about white male privilege is a tad confusing, it’s not all that clear in the movie, either. And this was a guy with demons. We just wait for a phone call to come in and we're not doing the legwork. It’s easy to tell the story of the person who broke the story. Robert Bruce Ford was a Canadian politician and businessman who served as the 64th mayor of Toronto from 2010 to 2014. “I would love to go see it.”But that sentiment is disingenuous – the chances anyone will make another movie about Rob Ford are slim to none given Tollman depicts all the main plot beats and gives Doolittle’s moves to his fictional reporter.The meetings, the compromises and the leads could have been lifted from Doolittle’s reporting.“That’s not my story to tell,” says Tollman, adding his movie was instead inspired by his brother, a disillusioned white male who made it through j-school only to end up writing onscreen ticker headlines for a 24-hour news channel before being laid off.“It was actually ballsy of Ricky to tell this story,” Massoud adds. Cineplex asks Ontario to loosen restrictions on movie theatre capacity Perhaps I’m partly to blame. ""The film is a completely fictional drama," Platt's tweet reply to Doolittle reads.