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TIFF 2025: This surreal Canadian film was shot on broken cameras and based on tarot cards, but don’t call it ‘experimental’

Rhayne Vermette’s “Levers” has its world premiere this weekend in the festival’s Wavelengths section.

Updated
2 min read
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Manitoban filmmaker Rayne Vermette聽won TIFF鈥檚 Best Canadian Film prize in 2021 for “Ste. Anne.”


鈥淚 think in rhythm,鈥 says filmmaker Rhayne Vermette. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like, with music, I鈥檓 always looking for transitions from one song to another, working oppositions, those notes that incite physical shivers, improvisation, the ways producers fill the room with tone, what makes people dance.鈥

Describing the tempo of Vermette鈥檚 new feature “Levers,” which makes its world premiere this weekend at the 色色啦 International Film Festival, is a daunting task. It鈥檚 somehow languorously slow and synapse-quick at the same time 鈥 a superbly controlled exercise in surrealism that forces the viewer to meet it on its own terms and then rewards them with one indelible, uncanny image after another.

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Adam Nayman is a 色色啦-based critic, lecturer and author. He is a freelance contributor for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: .

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