Toronto Film Fest pays tribute to Streep, Phoenix

In a gala dinner held yesterday [Macau time] amid the Toronto International Film Festival’s unspooling premieres, the festival paid tribute to Joaquin Phoenix, Meryl Streep, filmmaker Taika Waititi and cinematographer Roger Deakins.
With the city teaming with stars in town for the festival, TIFF this year added a star-studded fundraising dinner that coincided with some of its most anticipated premieres. Streep stopped by just as her financial industry satire “The Laundromat” was screening. Phoenix’s “Joker” was simultaneously making its North American debut just blocks away.
Phoenix, who rushed up to the stage before Willem Dafoe had finished his introduction to the actor, said he had intended just to “make a bunch of tasteless jokes at my expense.” But Phoenix said he was moved by the clip reel of his films that played before his speech.
“When I was 15 or 16 my brother River (Phoenix) came home from work and he had a VHS copy of a movie called ‘Raging Bull’ and he sat me down and made me watch it,” said Phoenix of his brother who died in 1993. “And the next day he woke me up, and he made me watch it again. And he said, ‘You’re going to start acting again, this is what you’re going to do.’”
“He didn’t ask me, he told me. And I am indebted to him for that because acting has given me such an incredible life,” said Phoenix.
“Joker” arrived in Toronto fresh off its Golden Lion win Saturday at the Venice Film Festival. Earlier in the day, Phoenix visited painted wall murals advocating for veganism at a Toronto subway station.

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