The Bell Lightbox is a wonderful new addition to Toronto, especially for film buffs like Rich who like the old classics. It has 5 regular movie screening theatres and an entire floor of smaller theatres to be used for educational purposes.
The ground floor is currently hosting an exhibit called "Essential Cinema Top 100 Movies" where the movies were selected in a very unique fashion - TIFF program directors were polled to pick their top 100 films, while at the same time the general public was asked for their picks. The public list is as to be expected with Citizen Kane, Casablanca, etc at the top. The expert list was vastly different with Citizen Cane being #15 and most of the 14 previous movies were ones I've never heard of before! The two lists were combined to form the Essential Cinema Top 100, and the Bell Lightbox is showing all of them between September and December. Some will have special commentaries before or after the film and some of the silent films will be accompanied by live musicians. The exhibit, which is on display until Oct 23, 2010, has movie posters and other memorabilia from the 100 movies. There are also selected videos, movie artifacts such as Darth Vadar's helmet and the dresses from the Leopard and some other movie, the model ship from Videodrome, toy tank from Life is Beautiful, etc. Iconic soundclips from movies such as Jaws and The Good, The Bad and The Ugly play occasionally.
As one of the free events for Cultures weekend (Sept 25/26), there was a showing of the 1924 Buster Keaton silent film called Sherlock Jr, about a young film projection operator who wants to be a detective. While courting his girlfriend, he is framed for a burglary by a rival suitor and is unable to solve the case since he is a bungling inept dectective. Back at his real job, he shows a movie about Sherlock Holmes and dreams himself into the role. There was a 6 piece live band who composed a brand new modernized score and played it in time with the movie. It was rather surreal to watch, since we were watching a movie with a live band, that depicted the showing of a movie with a live band.
In addition to the Essential Cinema series, upcoming showings at the Bell Lightbox include a Tim Burton festival and a special Halloween series of movie showings. For Nuit Blanche, they held sing-a-long movie clips all night. There are several hot new eating spots within the Lightbox including The Canteen for casual dining/quick meals and Luma for more upscale dining. The Bell Lightbox is quickly establishing itself as a happening place in Toronto and will probably be the new central location for future Film Festivals.
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