2006 The 1st Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 20–24, 2006. The inaugural festival was held at the
Bloor Cinema in
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The 2006 Toronto After Dark Film Festival Official Feature Film Selections include 13 films from around the world, and 15 short films from Canada. Some of the films screened at the festival included
Special, directed by
Hal Haberman and
Jeremy Passmorewhere, the
J-horror film
Retribution from cult director
Kiyoshi Kurosawa, the North American premiere of the Thai action-horror film
Vengeance, and
Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon, which won the festival's first Audience Award. Other films included
The Beach Party at the Threshold of Hell,
Shinobi: Heart Under Blade,
Night of the Living Dorks,
Re-cycle,
Mad Cowgirl,
Slaughter Night, and
Naisu no mori: The First Contact. The festival also featured a "Make Your Own Damn Movie!" masterclass taught by
Lloyd Kaufman. Festival attendance was 4,350.
2007 The 2nd Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 19–25, 2007. The second annual festival was held from October 19–25, 2007, at the Bloor Cinema. The festival expanded to fifty films: fourteen features and 36 short films from around the world, including 15 Canadian shorts. Festival highlights included
The Tripper, directed by
David Arquette; director
Shinya Tsukamoto's
Nightmare Detective; the premiere of
Troma Entertainment's
Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead;
Uwe Boll's
In the Name of the King: A Dungeon Siege Tale; the zombie-western short film
It Came From The West; the world premiere of
John Bergin's
From Inside;
Mulberry Street, which went on to win the festival's After Dark Spirit Award; and the Thai horror film
Alone from directors
Banjong Pisanthanakun and
Parkpoom Wongpoom, which won the festival's annual Audience Award. Festival attendance was 6,500. Other films included
Blood Car,
Wolfhound,
The Rebel,
Audience of One,
Aachi & Ssipak, ''
Ambassador's Day, Murder Party, Operation Fish, Terror On The 3918, Simon Says'', among others.
2008 The 3rd Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 17–24, 2008. The third annual festival expanded to eight nights and was held from October 17–24, 2008, at the Bloor Cinema. Highlights of the third Annual Festival included sell-out screenings of
Let the Right One In,
Repo! The Genetic Opera,
Tokyo Gore Police, and the North American Premiere of
I Sell The Dead; over 30 attending filmmakers on stage to introduce their films, including
Larry Fessenden (
The Last Winter) and
Angus Scrimm (
Phantasm); packed nightly social events; positive reviews for the films programmed; and a
Zombie Walk. Other films included
Trailer Park of Terror, Mirageman,
Idiots and Angels,
Who is KK Downey?,
4bia,
Brain Dead,
Donkey Punch,
Mutant Chronicles, and
Home Movie. The festival also featured a Make Your Own Damn Movie! masterclass taught by
Lloyd Kaufman. Festival attendance was over 8,500. Over 3,500 votes were cast for the Audience Award for Best Feature Film and the Gold winner was Swedish vampire film
Let the Right One In. Silver went to cult sci-fi horror musical
Repo! The Genetic Opera, and Bronze was awarded by fans to the Thai supernatural anthology movie
4bia (
Phobia). Awards were also handed out for Best Independent Feature Film, where the big winner was the grave-robber comedy,
I Sell The Dead, and in the short film categories, winners included the Christmas tree exploitation film
Treevenge.
2009 The 4th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place August 14–21, 2009. The fourth annual festival made the move to summer, once again at the Bloor Cinema with over 9,000 fans attending the festival. Highlights included screenings of the Norwegian Nazi zombie horror-comedy
Dead Snow, the horror anthology ''
Trick 'r Treat and the cult blaxploitation action-comedy Black Dynamite, which won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively in the Audience Choice Awards. The festival also hosted its first ever world premiere, Strigoi, an offbeat Romanian vampire comedy that was awarded by the fest Gold in the Best Independent Feature Film category. Silver and Bronze honours went to the dark comedy The Revenant and the zombie thriller, Grace'', respectively. Other films included
Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl,
The Warlords (starring Jet Li, Andy Lau and Takeshi Kaneshiro),
Black (starring MC Jean Gab'1),
Rough Cut,
Franklyn (starring Ryan Phillippe and Eva Green),
The Forbidden Door,
Must Love Death, ''
Someone's Knocking at the Door, The Children, Embodiment of Evil (the third film in the Coffin Joe trilogy), and The Dark Hour. Shorts After Dark (International Short Film Snowcase)
comprised eleven new horror, sci-fi, action, and cult short films from around the world, including a number of international award winners. Canada After Dark (Canadian Short Film Snowcase)'' featured 17 "home-grown" short films (and are the opening acts for the feature films).
2010 The 5th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place August 13–20, 2010. The fifth annual festival, once again at the Bloor Cinema with over 9,300 fans attending. Highlights included the festival's first-ever red carpet premiere for
The Last Exorcism, with producer Eli Roth, stars Ashley Bell and Patrick Fabian attending, the horror film
The Human Centipede, and the 2010 remake of the 1978 exploitation film
I Spit On Your Grave. These three films won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively, in the Audience Choice Awards. Other films included
The Last Lovecraft: Relic of Cthulhu,
Doghouse,
Evil In the Time of Heroes,
Robogeisha,
Alien vs Ninja,
Phobia 2,
Cargo,
Centurion,
Black Death,
All About Evil,
High School and
Rubber.
Shorts After Dark (International Short Film Snowcase) comprised 10 new horror, sci-fi, action, and cult short films from around the world, including a number of international award winners and premieres. 2010's Best International Short Film award winners included
Off Season (Gold),
Pumzi (Silver), and
Deus Irae (Bronze).
Canada After Dark (Canadian Short Film Snowcase) featured 16 "home-grown" short films (and are the opening acts for the feature films). 2010's Best Canadian Short Film award winners included ''Junko's Shamisen
(Gold), King Chicken
(Silver), and Fireman
and Game Night'' (tied for Bronze).
2011 The 6th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 20–27, 2011. The sixth annual festival returned to October and the Halloween season for the first time in three years, at the Toronto Underground Cinema. A record number of feature films and short film submissions were received this year. Toronto After Dark announced the first eight Official Selections of its 2011 film line-up at
Fan Expo Canada on August 25, 2011, then on its official website on August 31, 2011. The films selected included
Monster Brawl;
Exit Humanity, a zombie saga set against the back-drop of the
American Civil War; the Canadian Premiere of the Pierce Brothers'
DeadHeads, a multi-genre zombie buddy film;
Redline, a Japanese
anime set in the world of car racing;
The Theatre Bizarre, a horror anthology from such genre filmmakers as
Tom Savini and
Richard Stanley; the World Premiere of ''Father's Day
, a exploitation/grindhouse story from Astron-6 and Troma; Love'', a time-travel sci-fi drama; and
Xavier Gens's
The Divide, an apocalyptic film about the residents of a New York City apartment building. Toronto After Dark was honoured in hosting two more World Premiere screenings. The WWII action-horror-zombie film,
War of the Dead, directed by
Marko Mäkilaakso and the dark, superhero thriller,
VS, directed by Jason Trost (co-writer, director, and star of
THE FP) and starring
James Remar. Other films include the
Jack Perezs horror comedy,
Some Guy Who Kills People, starring
Kevin Corrigan, the vampire-drama,
Midnight Son, the award-winning supernatural thriller,
Absentia, the action-thriller,
A Lonely Place to Die,
Astron-6's sci-fi, action-comedy,
Manborg, the Canadian sci-fi thriller,
The Corridor,
Lucky McKee's controversial film
The Woman, and
Ti West's haunted hotel thriller,
The Innkeepers.
Astron-6's ''Father's Day
, The Divide and DeadHeads'' won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively, in the Audience Choice Awards for Best Feature Film.
2012 The 7th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 18–26, 2012. The seventh annual festival saw the Toronto After Dark Film Festival return to the Bloor Cinema, which went through new ownership and a complete renovation, reopening as the,
Hot Docs Ted Rogers Cinema. The festival also expanded one extra night, showcasing a total of twenty feature films and a wealth of Canadian and International short films. The Toronto After Dark Film Festival hosted two
Spotlight Presentation Screening Nights Summer 2012, taking place also at Bloor Cinema, Wednesday, June 27 and Wednesday, July 11. These two evenings showcased two films each night, including
Juan of the Dead,
The Pact,
Detention and the Canadian Premiere of
V/H/S. The 2012 Toronto After Dark Film Festival Official Selections included the Canadian Premiere of the body-modification thriller
American Mary, from Vancouver-based writers, producers and directors, Sylvia and Jen Soska (otherwise known as the
Soska sisters). Other selections included, the Irish alien-monster horror-comedy
Grabbers; the dark crime-thriller
Crave, directed by DVD and Blu-ray producer and filmmaker,
Charles de Lauzirika; the British horror film
Inbred; the third installment of the
REC series,
REC 3: Génesis; the British zombie-comedy
Cockneys vs Zombies;
Honor Blackman; the South Korean science-fiction anthology film
Doomsday Book; the Canadian
"LARP"-ing comedy
Lloyd The Conqueror; the latest UniSol installment,
Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning; the dark fantasy-thriller
After; the paranormal sequel
Grave Encounters 2; the Irish psychological-horror film
Citadel, from director,
Ciaran Foy; the documentary
My Amityville Horror, in which Daniel Lutz, one of the children who lived through
The Amityville Horror, is interviewed;
Resolution, directed by Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead;
Tony Todd,
Mark Hamill,
Noah Hathaway,
James Duval and newcomer,
Cortney Palm, highlight Kern Saxton's revenge crime-thriller,
Sushi Girl; Japanese director,
Noboru Iguchi's comedy-horror,
Dead Sushi; the home-invasion thriller
In Their Skin; and
Wrong, the latest film from
Quentin Dupieux (aka Mr. Oizo).
A Fantastic Fear of Everything, starring
Simon Pegg, and Juan Martínez Moreno's Spanish werewolf-comedy,
Game of Werewolves (Lobos de Arga), rounded out the closing night of the festival.
Cockneys vs Zombies,
Dead Sushi and
A Fantastic Fear of Everything won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively, in the Audience Choice Awards for Best Feature Film.
2013 The 8th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 17–25, 2013. The eighth annual edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival saw the festival partner with Canada's Cineplex Entertainment, for the first time, with the
Scotiabank Theatre being the venue host for the festival. The Toronto After Dark Film Festival hosted two pre-festival Screening Nights in the summer of 2013, also taking place at the Scotiabank Theatre, Thursday, August 29 and Thursday, September 26. These two evenings screened two films each night. They included,
Bad Milo;
V/H/S/2; the Canadian Premiere of
Europa Report and,
The Dirties. The 2013 Toronto After Dark Film Festival Official Feature Film Selections include the Opening Gala film and Toronto Premiere of
Jim Mickle's
We Are What We Are. This marked a return to Toronto After Dark for Mickle, as his 2006 film,
Mulberry Street was a previous Toronto After Dark Official Selection. Other returning Toronto After Dark alumni for 2013 included Henry Saine with
Bounty Killer and
Jesse Thomas Cook with
Septic Man for the Canadian Premiere. Other selections included creature features
Big Ass Spider! and
Eega; the British zombie-comedy
Stalled; the zombie-drama
The Battery, directed by
Jeremy Gardner; the World Premiere of the Canadian thriller
Silent Retreat, directed by
Tricia Lee; Don Thacker's
Motivational Growth; the Canadian Premiere of
Odd Thomas, directed by
Stephen Sommers based on the novels by
Dean Koontz; the Canadian horror-thriller
Solo; the sci-fi films
The Last Days on Mars and
The Machine, directed by Caradog W. James; the Toronto premiere of
Found, directed by Scott Schrimer; the World Premiere of the Canadian action-horror-dark comedy film
Evil Feed, directed by Kimani Ray Smith; the Bigfoot found-footage thriller
Willow Creek, directed by
Bobcat Goldthwait; and Blair Erickson's
Banshee Chapter.
Cheap Thrills rounded out the closing night of the festival along with
Big Bad Wolves, a dark crime-thriller from Israel directed by
Aharon Keshales and
Navot Papushado, selected as the Closing Gala film;
Quentin Tarantino called it the best film of 2013.
The Battery,
Solo and
Banshee Chapter won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively in the Audience Choice Awards for Best Feature Film.
2014 The 9th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 17–25, 2014. The ninth annual edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival continued to partner with Canada's Cineplex Entertainment, with their Scotiabank Theatre location in downtown Toronto, the venue partner. The 2014 Toronto After Dark Film Festival Official Feature Film Selections include, the Opening Gala film and Toronto premiere of Gerard Johnstone's
Housebound. Other selections included
Suburban Gothic, directed by Richard Bates Jr. (
Excision) and starring
Matthew Gray Gubler,
Kat Dennings and
Ray Wise; the World premiere of the Canadian film,
Hellmouth, directed by Toronto After Dark Alumni, John Geddes (
Exit Humanity), written by
Tony Burgess (
Pontypool) and starring
Stephen McHattie; the Canadian premiere of
ABCs of Death 2, directed by several Toronto After Dark Alumni, such as
Jen Soska and Sylvia Soska (
American Mary),
Julian Gilbey (
A Lonely Place to Die), Steven Kostanski (
Manborg) and Juan Martínez Moreno (
Game of Werewolves);
Zombeavers, who in turn are trying to eat Toronto After Dark alumni actress,
Cortney Palm (
Sushi Girl); Nazi zombies return in the sequel
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead, directed by Toronto After Dark alumni,
Tommy Wirkola; the Canadian 'splasher' film
The Drownsman, directed by
Chad Archibald (
Neverlost,
Antisocial and
Ejecta); the North American Premiere of
Wolves, directed by
David Hayter (best known as the voice of Solid Snake from the
Metal Gear Solid video games);
Late Phases, directed by Adrián García Bogliano (
Here Comes the Devil (Ahí va el diablo)), and starring
Nick Damici,
Ethan Embry and
Lance Guest;
Elijah Wood and
Sasha Grey star in
Open Windows, directed by
Nacho Vigalondo (
Timecrimes (Los cronocrímenes));
Rinko Kikuchi stars in
Kumiko, the Treasure Hunter;
Predestination, directed by
Michael Spierig and Peter Spierig and starring
Ethan Hawke; Bradley King's
Time Lapse, starring
Danielle Panabaker; the Canadian premiere of
Refuge, directed by Andrew Robertson; the Canadian premiere of the Australian zombie-action-comedy
Wyrmwood, directed by Kiah Roache-Turner; the Canadian premiere of
The Town That Dreaded Sundown, a meta-sequel of the 1976 film, directed by
Alfonso Gomez-Rejon; and the Canadian premiere of the documentary
Why Horror? The UK film
Let Us Prey, starring
The Woman Pollyanna McIntosh rounded out the closing night of the festival, along with
The Babadook, a creepy psychological-horror from Australia directed by
Jennifer Kent, selected as the Closing Gala film.
Dead Snow 2: Red vs. Dead,
Predestination and
Why Horror? won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively in the Audience Choice Awards for Best Feature Film. The Canadian short films screened during the festival include,
Foxed!,
Young Blood,
Pupa,
Lumberjacked,
Day 40,
Period Piece,
Kismet,
Rose In Bloom,
Dead Hearts,
The Monitor,
Migration, ''What Doesn't Kill You
, Honor Code
, Monster Island
, Lazy Boyz
, Satan's Dolls
, Last Breath
, Little Matthew
and Intruders''.
Period Piece,
Dead Hearts and ''Satan's Dolls'' won Gold, Silver and Bronze respectively in the Audience Choice Awards for Best Canadian Short Film. The festival also included a showing of ten short films in the horror, science fiction and cult genres. The 15th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 13–17, 2021. For the first time, it was organized be an all-virtual event called, Toronto After Dark At Home, with all 12 official selections available to watch right across Canada, powered by the Eventive platform - a
Video on Demand (VOD) streaming service.
2022 The 16th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 19–23, 2022.
2023 The 17th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 18–22, 2023.
2024–2025 Because of health issues, Adam Lopez, the festival's founder and director, postponed the 18th Edition from 2024 to 2025. He stepped down as director, and in 2025, died after battling cancer. The 18th Edition of the Toronto After Dark Film Festival took place October 15–19, 2025. ==See also==