<p>Oscar-nominated actress Naomi Watts has worked with Hollywood icons such as David Lynch and Sean Penn, but admitted Saturday that a magpie stole her scenes in <em>Penguin Bloom,</em> premiering at the Toronto film festival.</p>.<p>Watts plays Sam Bloom in the real-life drama about a mother who becomes paralyzed in an accidental fall, but is pulled out of despair by caring for an injured baby bird named Penguin.</p>.<p>"That made me nervous. How do we get a performance out of a bird and, you know, magpies are famously not super friendly," Watts told a virtual news conference.</p>.<p>The movie used some animatronics and CGI, but mostly "a multitude" of live birds, confirmed director Glendyn Ivin.</p>.<p>"They absolutely stole the scenes every single day," said Watts, describing how one used the bathroom on her head on the first day of filming.</p>.<p>Speaking from her home in Australia, Sam Bloom said the real Penguin had "brought a bit of excitement and happiness into our house" after the accident "made everyone sad."</p>.<p id="page-title"><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/toronto-film-festival-goes-hybrid-stars-seek-virtual-hype-884735.html" target="_blank">Toronto film festival goes hybrid, stars seek virtual hype</a></strong></p>.<p>With a pandemic and a closed Canadian border forcing Hollywood stars and media to remain home, North America's biggest film festival has scrambled to find socially-distanced ways to present this year's line-up, with movies premiering online and at drive-in screenings.</p>.<p>Earlier in Toronto, <em>Selma </em>star David Oyelowo unveiled<em> The Water Man</em>, marking his directorial debut.</p>.<p>"I made it for my 12-year-old self, I made it for those kids who don't get to see themselves represented in this kind of story," he said.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/popcorn-palm-trees-and-face-masks-cannes-rolls-out-drive-in-cinema-amid-coronavirus-threat-840345.html" target="_blank">Popcorn, palm trees and face masks: Cannes rolls out drive-in cinema amid coronavirus threat</a> </strong></p>.<p>Written by Emma Needell and backed by Oprah Winfrey, the film follows the adventures of a boy, played by Lonnie Chavis, who seeks out a fabled bogeyman hoping he can cure the terminal cancer plaguing his mother, played by Rosario Dawson.</p>.<p>"It's very rare to see a black family at the center of this kind of story," Oyelowo said.</p>.<p>"And I'm not just making it for black and brown people. I'm hoping that white people watch it and see themselves represented in it (too) because I do believe that seeing ourselves in different kinds of people is what engenders empathy and erodes ignorance," he said.</p>.<p><em>Lord of the Rings</em> star Viggo Mortensen also realized his dream of directing a movie, premiering <em>Falling</em>, about a crotchety and demented father who relentlessly assails his son's homosexuality.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/coronavirus-updates-cases-deaths-country-wise-worldometers-info-data-covid-19-834531.html" target="_blank">15 countries with the highest number of cases, deaths due to the Covid-19 pandemic</a></strong></p>.<p>The three-times Oscar-nominated actor last appeared in <em>Green Book</em>, which screened at the Toronto film festival before winning a Best Picture Oscar in 2019.</p>.<p>"It's one thing to know me as an actor, but I mean, I haven't directed anything," said the 61-year-old, who also stars in the main role.</p>.<p>The film shifts between the main character John as a boy, forced into tests of masculinity by his father, and John as an adult living happily as a gay man until his dad (played by Lance Henriksen) comes back into his life, spewing his usual vitriol and rancid homophobia.</p>.<p>Producer Daniel Bekerman shared an on-set anecdote to describe Mortensen's directing resolve: In the film Henriksen wades into the ocean with a lit cigarette, but splashing waves keep extinguishing it.</p>.<p>Behind the camera, Mortensen "had multiple lit cigarettes in (his) mouth" to give to Henriksen each time one went out.</p>
<p>Oscar-nominated actress Naomi Watts has worked with Hollywood icons such as David Lynch and Sean Penn, but admitted Saturday that a magpie stole her scenes in <em>Penguin Bloom,</em> premiering at the Toronto film festival.</p>.<p>Watts plays Sam Bloom in the real-life drama about a mother who becomes paralyzed in an accidental fall, but is pulled out of despair by caring for an injured baby bird named Penguin.</p>.<p>"That made me nervous. How do we get a performance out of a bird and, you know, magpies are famously not super friendly," Watts told a virtual news conference.</p>.<p>The movie used some animatronics and CGI, but mostly "a multitude" of live birds, confirmed director Glendyn Ivin.</p>.<p>"They absolutely stole the scenes every single day," said Watts, describing how one used the bathroom on her head on the first day of filming.</p>.<p>Speaking from her home in Australia, Sam Bloom said the real Penguin had "brought a bit of excitement and happiness into our house" after the accident "made everyone sad."</p>.<p id="page-title"><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/toronto-film-festival-goes-hybrid-stars-seek-virtual-hype-884735.html" target="_blank">Toronto film festival goes hybrid, stars seek virtual hype</a></strong></p>.<p>With a pandemic and a closed Canadian border forcing Hollywood stars and media to remain home, North America's biggest film festival has scrambled to find socially-distanced ways to present this year's line-up, with movies premiering online and at drive-in screenings.</p>.<p>Earlier in Toronto, <em>Selma </em>star David Oyelowo unveiled<em> The Water Man</em>, marking his directorial debut.</p>.<p>"I made it for my 12-year-old self, I made it for those kids who don't get to see themselves represented in this kind of story," he said.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/popcorn-palm-trees-and-face-masks-cannes-rolls-out-drive-in-cinema-amid-coronavirus-threat-840345.html" target="_blank">Popcorn, palm trees and face masks: Cannes rolls out drive-in cinema amid coronavirus threat</a> </strong></p>.<p>Written by Emma Needell and backed by Oprah Winfrey, the film follows the adventures of a boy, played by Lonnie Chavis, who seeks out a fabled bogeyman hoping he can cure the terminal cancer plaguing his mother, played by Rosario Dawson.</p>.<p>"It's very rare to see a black family at the center of this kind of story," Oyelowo said.</p>.<p>"And I'm not just making it for black and brown people. I'm hoping that white people watch it and see themselves represented in it (too) because I do believe that seeing ourselves in different kinds of people is what engenders empathy and erodes ignorance," he said.</p>.<p><em>Lord of the Rings</em> star Viggo Mortensen also realized his dream of directing a movie, premiering <em>Falling</em>, about a crotchety and demented father who relentlessly assails his son's homosexuality.</p>.<p><strong><a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/coronavirus-updates-cases-deaths-country-wise-worldometers-info-data-covid-19-834531.html" target="_blank">15 countries with the highest number of cases, deaths due to the Covid-19 pandemic</a></strong></p>.<p>The three-times Oscar-nominated actor last appeared in <em>Green Book</em>, which screened at the Toronto film festival before winning a Best Picture Oscar in 2019.</p>.<p>"It's one thing to know me as an actor, but I mean, I haven't directed anything," said the 61-year-old, who also stars in the main role.</p>.<p>The film shifts between the main character John as a boy, forced into tests of masculinity by his father, and John as an adult living happily as a gay man until his dad (played by Lance Henriksen) comes back into his life, spewing his usual vitriol and rancid homophobia.</p>.<p>Producer Daniel Bekerman shared an on-set anecdote to describe Mortensen's directing resolve: In the film Henriksen wades into the ocean with a lit cigarette, but splashing waves keep extinguishing it.</p>.<p>Behind the camera, Mortensen "had multiple lit cigarettes in (his) mouth" to give to Henriksen each time one went out.</p>