Toronto International Film Festival People's Choice Award

Canadian annual film award From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Toronto International Film Festival People's Choice Award is an annual film award, presented by the Toronto International Film Festival to the movie rated as the year's best film according to TIFF audience.[1] Past sponsors of the award have included Cadillac and Grolsch.[2]

The winners of this award have often later earned Academy Award nominations, to the point that the award is now considered to be effectively the "starting gun" of the Academy Award nominations race.[3]

In 2009, the festival introduced separate People's Choice Awards for Documentaries and Midnight Madness.[4] In 2015, it also introduced a People's Choice Award for its satellite Canada's Top Ten festival,[5] which was discontinued after 2018 due to TIFF's decision to switch the Canada's Top Ten program from a dedicated festival to a series of week-long theatrical screenings.

For the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival, TIFF announced plans to introduce a new International People's Choice Award for films from outside North America, while reserving the original People's Choice Award for films from Canada and the United States.[6]

Process

At each film screening, attendees are invited to vote for the film as People's Choice after the show.[7] Formerly conducted in the lobby of the theatre after the show, People's Choice voting is now conducted principally online, with voters' e-mail addresses cross-referenced against ticket registrations to ensure that the vote cannot be manipulated by people who have not actually seen the film at TIFF.

However, to ensure that the voting process does not bias the award toward films that screened in larger theatres and that a film's own cast and crew cannot stuff the ballot box, the overall number of votes received is also weighted against the size of the screening audience.[7] For example, a film which screened in a smaller theatre, but had a highly passionate fan base, can have an advantage over a film that had a larger number of raw votes but a more mixed or uneven reception.[7] Because each film is screened multiple times over the course of the entire festival, the process also enables the organizers to evaluate which films are generating more audience buzz, by virtue of a significant increase in attendance and/or People's Choice votes at the follow-up screenings.[7]

Films that are in strong contention for the People's Choice Award will often, although not always, have extra screenings added to the program toward the end of the festival,[8] although this does not necessarily guarantee that a film with added screenings will always make the top three.

After the award is announced, the festival offers several repeat screenings of the winner at the TIFF Bell Lightbox on the final day of the festival.

Winners

The table below shows the People's Choice winners of past years. Prior to 2000, only the overall winner was named each year; in that year, the festival began announcing the first and second runners-up for the award as well.[7] At the 2004 festival, no first or second runners-up were officially named for the People's Choice Award; however, festival director Piers Handling did provide the media with a list of numerous other films that had been in the running, including Crash, Gunner Palace, I, Claudia, Up and Down, 3-Iron, Ma Mère, The Holy Girl, Red Dust, Brides, Saving Face and Sideways.[9] The festival named four runners-up rather than two in 2005, and only one runner-up in 2010, but has otherwise always named two runners-up for the award.

The table notes whether films have been winners or nominees for the Academy Award for Best Picture, Best Screenplay, Best Foreign Language Film or Best Documentary Feature.

Prior to the creation of the separate People's Choice Award for Documentaries, the main award was won by two documentary films, Best Boy in 1979 and Roger & Me in 1989.

On four occasions to date, the award has been won by a Canadian film. Two of those films, The Decline of the American Empire in 1986 and The Hanging Garden in 1997, were also named as the winners of the juried award for Best Canadian Film, although the 2007 winner Eastern Promises and the 2015 winner Room were not. All four films were also Best Picture nominees at the Genie Awards or the Canadian Screen Awards, which The Decline of the American Empire and Room won.

To date, Chloé Zhao is the only director ever to have won the top award twice, winning in 2020 for Nomadland and in 2025 for Hamnet.[10]

More information Year, Film ...
YearFilmDirector(s)Academy Award honoursGenie/CSA honoursRef
1978GirlfriendsClaudia Weill[11]
1979Best BoyIra WohlBest Documentary Feature winner[12]
1980Bad TimingNicolas Roeg[13]
1981Chariots of FireHugh HudsonBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
[14]
1982TempestPaul Mazursky[15]
1983The Big ChillLawrence KasdanBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[16]
1984Places in the HeartRobert BentonBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay winner
[17]
1985The Official Story (La historia oficial)Luis PuenzoBest Foreign Language Film winner
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[18]
1986The Decline of the American Empire (Le déclin de l'empire américain)Denys ArcandBest Foreign Language Film nomineeBest Picture winner[19]
1987The Princess BrideRob Reiner[20]
1988Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown (Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios)Pedro AlmodóvarBest Foreign Language Film nominee[21]
1989Roger & MeMichael Moore[22]
1990Cyrano de BergeracJean-Paul RappeneauBest Foreign Language Film nominee[23]
1991The Fisher KingTerry GilliamBest Original Screenplay nominee[24]
1992Strictly BallroomBaz Luhrmann[25]
1993The SnapperStephen Frears[26]
1994PriestAntonia Bird[27]
1995AntoniaMarleen GorrisBest Foreign Language Film winner[28]
1996ShineScott HicksBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[29]
1997The Hanging GardenThom FitzgeraldBest Picture nominee[30]
1998Life Is Beautiful (La vita è bella)Roberto BenigniBest Picture nominee
Best Foreign Language Film winner
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[31]
1999American BeautySam MendesBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
[32]
2000Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (卧虎藏龙)Ang LeeBest Picture nominee
Best Foreign Language Film winner
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
[33]
The DishRob Sitch
InnocencePaul Cox
Billy ElliotStephen DaldryBest Original Screenplay nominee
2001Amélie (Le fabuleux destin d'Amélie Poulain)Jean-Pierre JeunetBest Foreign Language Film nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[34]
MayaDigvijay Singh
Monsoon WeddingMira Nair
2002Whale RiderNiki Caro[35]
Bowling for ColumbineMichael MooreBest Documentary Feature winner
Bend It Like BeckhamGurinder Chadha
2003ZatōichiTakeshi Kitano[36]
Go FurtherRon MannBest Documentary nominee
The CorporationMark Achbar and Jennifer AbbottBest Documentary winner
2004Hotel RwandaTerry GeorgeBest Original Screenplay nominee[37]
2005TsotsiGavin HoodBest Foreign Language Film winner[38]
Live and BecomeRadu Mihaileanu
DreamerJohn Gatins
Brokeback MountainAng LeeBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
Mother of MineKlaus Härö
2006BellaAlejandro Gómez Monteverde[39]
My Best Friend (Mon meilleur ami)Patrice Leconte
Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and SingBarbara Kopple and Cecilia Peck
2007Eastern PromisesDavid CronenbergBest Picture nominee[40]
JunoJason ReitmanBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay winner
Body of WarEllen Spiro and Phil Donahue
2008Slumdog MillionaireDanny BoyleBest Picture winner
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[41]
More Than a GameKristopher Belman
The Stoning of Soraya MCyrus Nowrasteh
2009Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by SapphireLee DanielsBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[42]
Mao's Last DancerBruce Beresford
MicmacsJean-Pierre Jeunet
2010The King's SpeechTom HooperBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
[43]
The First GraderJustin Chadwick
2011Where Do We Go Now? (وهلّأ لوين؟)Nadine Labaki[44]
StarbuckKen Scott
A SeparationAsghar FarhadiBest Foreign Language Film winner
Best Original Screenplay nominee
2012Silver Linings PlaybookDavid O. RussellBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
[45]
ArgoBen AffleckBest Picture winner
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
ZaytounEran Riklis
201312 Years a SlaveSteve McQueenBest Picture winner
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[46]
PhilomenaStephen FrearsBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
PrisonersDenis Villeneuve
2014The Imitation GameMorten TyldumBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[47]
Learning to DriveIsabel Coixet
St. VincentTheodore Melfi
2015RoomLenny AbrahamsonBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
Best Picture Winner[48]
Angry Indian GoddessesPan Nalin
SpotlightTom McCarthyBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
2016La La LandDamien ChazelleBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[49]
LionGarth DavisBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
Queen of KatweMira Nair
2017Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, MissouriMartin McDonaghBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[50]
I, TonyaCraig Gillespie
Call Me by Your NameLuca GuadagninoBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
2018Green BookPeter FarrellyBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
[51]
If Beale Street Could TalkBarry JenkinsBest Adapted Screenplay nominee
RomaAlfonso CuarónBest Picture nominee
Best Foreign Language Film winner
Best Original Screenplay nominee
2019Jojo RabbitTaika WaititiBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[52]
Marriage StoryNoah BaumbachBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
ParasiteBong Joon-hoBest Picture winner
Best International Feature Film winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
2020NomadlandChloé ZhaoBest Picture winner
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
[53]
One Night in Miami...Regina KingBest Adapted Screenplay nominee
BeansTracey DeerBest Picture winner
2021BelfastKenneth BranaghBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay winner
[54]
ScarboroughShasha Nakhai, Rich WilliamsonBest Picture winner
The Power of the DogJane CampionBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
2022The FabelmansSteven SpielbergBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
[55]
Women TalkingSarah PolleyBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
Glass Onion: A Knives Out MysteryRian JohnsonBest Adapted Screenplay nominee
2023American FictionCord JeffersonBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay winner
[56]
The HoldoversAlexander PayneBest Picture nominee
Best Original Screenplay nominee
The Boy and the HeronHayao MiyazakiBest Animated Feature winner
2024The Life of ChuckMike Flanagan[57]
Emilia PérezJacques AudiardBest Picture nominee
Best International Feature Film nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
AnoraSean BakerBest Picture winner
Best Original Screenplay winner
2025HamnetChloé ZhaoBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
[58]
FrankensteinGuillermo del ToroBest Picture nominee
Best Adapted Screenplay nominee
Wake Up Dead ManRian Johnson
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