Toronto International Film Festival executives thought they could get away with burying Barry Avrich’s The Road Between Us at the very moment it mattered most. They pulled the film about retired Israeli general Noam Tibon’s desperate October 7 rescue mission from the lineup, claiming that legal clearance for the footage had not been obtained, even going so far as to demand permission from Hamas for the use of video streamed by the terrorists themselves. The timing was outrageous, a craven retreat by TIFF leadership during a year when the festival was already patting itself on the back for celebrating “bold voices” and “urgent stories.” Instead of protecting truth, TIFF bosses tried to smother it. Cameron Bailey, the festival’s CEO, flatly denied censorship, insisting the film was only being withheld until requirements were met, but his words rang hollow. Producer Talia Harris Ram pointed out the obvious, that the Hamas footage was already in the public domain and required no clearance. The decision looked less like law and more like fear of protest, and that fear nearly handed veto power to the very group responsible for the massacre depicted in the film.
When public outrage forced TIFF to backtrack, the damage was plain. The September 10 premiere was held during the day under siege conditions. Protesters waved Palestinian flags, shouted abuse through bullhorns, and hurled accusations of propaganda without ever seeing the film. Police barricades went up and arrests were made. Jewish attendees and supporters of the film were screamed at simply for walking into a theatre. TIFF’s leadership hid inside while the mob outside turned a daytime screening of cinema into a gauntlet of intimidation. Inside the auditorium, the response was the opposite. Viewers watched harrowing raw footage of the Hamas attack that TIFF bosses had once said could not be screened without terrorist approval. The film ended in thunderous applause. Barry Avrich told reporters that he wished protesters would see the film first and only then have a conversation, a comment that underscored how TIFF had failed in its role as a cultural guardian.
The audience vote that followed was not just about one documentary. When The Road Between Us won the People’s Choice Award for Best Documentary, it was a rebuke to Cameron Bailey and the board who had tried to shut it down. It was a reminder that festivals exist to protect filmmakers, not to silence them. TIFF prides itself on diversity and inclusion, but when faced with a film that confronted terror head on, its executives blinked and almost erased it. That act of cowardice will now live alongside the story of its victory. The film’s award is not just a prize, it is a judgment. TIFF tried to bury a film about survival and truth. The audience dug it back up and forced the festival to wear its shame in front of the world.
