'The Life of Chuck' wins the Toronto Film Festival's People's Choice Award

The Toronto International Film Festival's People's Choice Award went to ā€œThe Life of Chuck,ā€ handing Mike Flanagan's Stephen King adaptation one of the most-watched prizes of the fall film festival circuit.

The award for ā€œThe Life of Chuckā€ was announced Sunday as North American's largest film festival drew to a close. ā€œThe Life of Chuck," based on King's 2020 novella of the same name, stars Tom Hiddleston as Charles ā€œChuckā€ Krantz, an ordinary man living through apocalyptic cataclysms. Mark Hamill, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Karen Gillan and Jacob Tremblay co-star.

TIFF's People's Choice Award is regarded as a reliable Oscar harbinger. Since 2012, every winner of the festival's top prize has gone on to be nominated for best picture at the Academy Awards. Last year, Cord Jefferson's ā€œAmerican Fictionā€ won, and went on to be a major awards contender.

But ā€œThe Life of Chuckā€ could test that track record. The film is up for sale and doesn't yet have distribution. It could be acquired and quickly readied for release this fall, or it might end up a 2025 release. ā€œThe Life of Chuck" drew mixed ā€” though mostly positive reviews ā€” out of Toronto, though audiences were clearly charmed by the uplifting drama.

Runners-up for the People's Choice Award, which is voted on by festival attendees, were both films that first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May. The first was Jacques Audiard's ā€œEmilia PĆ©rez." The second runner-up was Sean Baker's ā€œAnora,ā€ the Palme d'Or winner at Cannes.

The audience award for top documentary went to Mike Downie's ā€œThe Tragically Hip: No Dress Rehearsal.ā€ In the festival's Midnight Madness section, the prize went to Coralie Fargeat's ā€œThe Substance,ā€ starring Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley.