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Screening at Christie Pits on July 21, Someone Lives Here is about a compassionate approach to one of the most urgent issues facing our city

Toronto Outdoor Picture Show (TOPS), founded in 2011 by artistic and executive director Emily Reid, is centred around the love of film and a desire to build community. The charitable organization curates its annual outdoor film festival’s programming in communities across the city, from Corktown Common to Bell Manor Park, combining the screenings of popular cinema with local and Canadian short and feature films.

Christie Pitts
Christie Pitts

Photography by Emily Atherton.

Screening at Christie Pits on July 21 is a film that shines a light on a compassionate approach to combating homelessness, one of the most pressing issues the city of Toronto faces. Someone Lives Here by 2024 TOPS Spotlight Filmmaker Zack Russell follows carpenter Khaleel Seivwright on his journey engineering tiny shelters for Toronto’s unhoused communities.

Courtesy of Toronto Outdoor Picture Show.

The winner of the Hot Docs 2023 Rogers Audience Award for Best Canadian Documentary, Someone Lives Here emphasizes the need for more robust infrastructure amidst the city’s housing crisis, growing rates of homelessness, underfunded, overenrolled shelter systems and hostile architecture. The documentary showcases Seivwright’s work and encounters with bureaucracy while interweaving the stories of unhoused Torontonians and frontline support workers.

Still from Someone Lives Here.

Showing alongside Someone Lives Here are short films The Repair Shop and Mathilde and the Love Room, which also focus on the providing community care, navigating institutional barriers and building spaces that feel like home. 

Toronto Outdoor Picture Show
Toronto Outdoor Picture Show

Courtesy of Toronto Outdoor Picture Show.

Toronto Outdoor Picture Show revels in emphasizing important messaging within its programming. The essence of coming together for something greater rings true though this year’s “On The Job” programming theme.

TOPS exists at the intersection of community and culture. Artistic and executive director Emily Reid explains that nonprofits and charitable organizations like Toronto Outdoor Picture Show do essential work in our communities.

“While acting as an Arts organizations, highlighting working artists while seeking to entertain and enrich communities, TOPS also functions as a cause-driven nonprofit, working towards effecting positive change at all levels, from vital on-the-ground support for individuals to improving government policies for us all,” says Reid.

Toronto Outdoor Picture Show is currently fundraising to keep its free public programmes afloat, despite a significant financial shortfall this year. Donations from the public can be made here.

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Okay, but it clearly is

For the first 16 years of my life, the bat cave at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM)—a reconstruction of an actual cave in Jamaica—was among my favourite places in the city. The cave was decorated with cast stalactites and wax bat models, which hung from the ceiling and threw jagged shadows on the walls. A few other features imbued it with spooky verisimilitude: the drip-drip-drip sound effects, the mirrors arranged to create the illusion of infinite depth, the strobe lights strategically placed to make the shadows flutter. When I visited as a five-year-old, the bat cave scared me. When I visited as a stoned fifteen-year-old, it scared me even more. Then came the renovation.

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