logo
‘Elio' is an intergalactic tale — but for Toronto's Domee Shi, it hits close to home

‘Elio' is an intergalactic tale — but for Toronto's Domee Shi, it hits close to home

TORONTO – For Domee Shi, making a movie about an introverted kid getting abducted by aliens felt oddly familiar.
Not because she's had any close encounters, but because she remembers being a teenager longing to be taken away to a world where her weirdness was understood.
The Toronto native co-directs 'Elio,' a Pixar animated sci-fi film about an 11-year-old orphan who yearns to be snatched by extraterrestrials to escape his loneliness — and gets his wish when an interplanetary organization mistakes him for Earth's ambassador.
'He's this lonely artsy kid who just wants to belong somewhere. I definitely felt that way growing up,' says the Oscar-winning animator behind 2022's coming-of-age Toronto-set hit 'Turning Red.'
Born in Chongqing, China and raised in Toronto after immigrating to Canada as a child, Shi grew up obsessed with anime. She describes it as an isolating experience. In high school, she was the vice-president of the anime club — a group that had only two members.
'Back in the '90s and 2000s, anime was popular, but it wasn't as popular, I feel, as it is now…. I really wished people cared about the same stuff that I cared about,' Shi says during a promotional stop in Toronto.
She recalls dreaming of going to animation school so she could 'find people who understood me, who spoke my language, who understood all my nerdy-ass references.'
In 'Elio,' out Friday, the film's titular character, voiced by Yonas Kibreab, finds a sense of belonging in the Communiverse — a kind of cosmic United Nations where alien civilizations convene to share knowledge and resolve conflicts. It's a far cry from life on Earth, where Elio feels out of place living with his stressed-out, overextended aunt Olga, voiced by Zoe Saldaña.
In real life, Shi says she found her own place in the universe at Anime North, an annual anime convention in suburban Toronto. She remembers attending for the first time as a teen.
'I had a really crappy 'One Piece' cosplay on. I wore a straw hat and was dressed like a bad version of Luffy,' she says, referring to the protagonist of the Japanese manga series.
'But then I looked around and there were so many crappy cosplays around me, and people just wearing their nerddom on their sleeve…. I was like, 'Oh my God, everyone speaks the same language as me.''
It was there that Shi learned about the renowned animation program at Toronto's Sheridan College, which had propelled graduates into orbit at studios such as Pixar and Disney.
After graduating from Sheridan, Shi went on to work for Pixar as a storyboard artist for films including 2015's 'Inside Out' and 2019's 'Toy Story 4.'
Shi became the first woman to direct a Pixar short with 2018's 'Bao,' a heartfelt tale about a Chinese-Canadian mother and her dumpling-turned-son that won the 2019 Oscar for best animated short. She broke new ground again with 'Turning Red,' becoming the first woman to solo direct a Pixar feature.
'Elio' marks Shi's first time co-directing a feature. Shi says the film began as a project by 'Coco' director Adrian Molina, inspired by his isolated childhood growing up on a military base. After delays caused by the Hollywood strikes, Molina was tapped to co-direct 'Coco 2' and handed the reins to Shi and fellow director Madeline Sharafia, who was a storyboard artist on 'Turning Red,' to complete the story.
Shi describes the final product as 'a beautiful mind-meld' of all three directors' styles. In addition to channeling her own teen experience, she infused the film with influences from her favourite sci-fi films growing up — including 1979's 'Alien' and 1982's 'The Thing' — as well as eerie stop-motion classics such as 1993's 'The Nightmare Before Christmas.'
'I think kids can handle a little bit of scariness if it's more of a fun scary, like a thrill,' she says.
Shi notes there are some Canadian influences in 'Elio' as well.
'It's weird to say but I feel like diversity shows up very naturally in my work and I think that's because I grew up in a very diverse neighbourhood and city,' she says.
She says she doesn't even clock those multicultural touches until American colleagues point it out.
'People will be like, 'Oh, are you doing that intentionally? Is it intentional that Mei's friends are all girls from different backgrounds?'' she says, referencing the quartet at the heart of 'Turning Red.'
'I mean, kind of, but that's also what my friends were like growing up. I grew up in East York, moved to Scarborough. That's just what kids looked like, and I'm just used to it.'
Elio's cultural background — half Mexican and half Dominican — is woven into the film with care and intention. His Mexican heritage draws from Molina's roots, while his Dominican side is brought to life through Saldaña's own background. Shi says the actor infused Olga with personal touches, including the suggestion of a Dominican song for one scene.
A nod to Shi's own heritage turns up in an unexpected way.
'I feel like the Communiverse could be an allegory for Canada,' she laughs.
'It's definitely a mishmash and a beautiful, chaotic mosaic of different cultures and species and aliens all working and living together.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 18, 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Satellos Bioscience Shareholders Elect Two New Board Members
Satellos Bioscience Shareholders Elect Two New Board Members

National Post

time3 hours ago

  • National Post

Satellos Bioscience Shareholders Elect Two New Board Members

Article content TORONTO — Satellos Bioscience Inc. (TSX: MSCL, OTCQB: MSCLF) (' Satellos ' or the ' Company '), a biotech company developing new small molecule therapeutic approaches to improve the treatment of muscle diseases and disorders, today announced the election of Iris Loew-Friedrich, M.D., Ph.D., and Selwyn Ho, MBBS, to its Board of Directors. Article content 'I am so excited to welcome Dr. Loew-Friedrich and Dr. Ho to our Board at this pivotal time,' said Frank Gleeson, Satellos co-founder and CEO. 'We believe their deep expertise in global clinical and commercial development will be invaluable to Satellos as we advance SAT-3247 and realize our technology's transformative potential for the treatment of people living with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and other degenerative conditions. We look forward to drawing on their proven expertise in positioning Satellos for future partnerships and development strategies focused on delivering optimal value for shareholders.' Article content A highly accomplished biotech and pharmaceutical executive, Dr. Loew-Friedrich is recognized as the senior clinical leader who shaped UCB into a global powerhouse in neurology and immunology. Serving as executive vice president and chief medical officer until 2024, she led UCB's worldwide development and regulatory strategy for over two decades, overseeing the global approvals of multiple blockbuster therapies, including Cimzia, Briviact, Evenity, Rystiggo, Zilbrysq, and Bimzelx. Her leadership was instrumental in advancing both common and rare disease treatments, with a deep and sustained commitment to improving outcomes for underserved patient populations. Prior to UCB, Loew-Friedrich held senior R&D roles at Schwarz Pharma, BASF Pharma, and Hoechst/Aventis, where she contributed to the development and success of market-leading drugs such as Humira, Arava, Actonel, Vimpat, and Neupro. Article content Dr. Ho is a seasoned pharmaceutical and biotech executive with broad leadership experience across commercial strategy, business development, financing, and board governance. He has held senior roles at global companies including Dermira (Eli Lilly), UCB, Allergan (AbbVie), Novartis, and AstraZeneca, with expertise spanning ophthalmology, immunology, oncology, and dermatology. As CEO of Medigene AG, he led a strategic transformation and established and extended key partnerships with BioNTech, Regeneron, WuXi Biologics and EpimAb Biotherapeutics. Previously, as EVP & chief business officer at Connect Biopharma, he was instrumental in raising over $350 million through IPO and private funding. He also serves on the boards of Antennova Inc. and Peptomyc S.L., and as executive-in-residence at New Rhein Healthcare Investors. Article content As part of the Annual General Meeting, Rima Al-awar, Ph.D., William Jarosz, J.D., and William McVicar, Ph.D., did not stand for reelection. Article content 'I want to personally thank Rima, Bill and Bill for their dedicated service, thoughtful leadership and support,' said Gleeson. 'Their guidance helped position Satellos for continued progress, and we wish them all the best in their future endeavors.' Article content About Satellos Bioscience Inc. Article content Satellos is a clinical-stage drug development company focused on restoring natural muscle repair and regeneration in degenerative muscle diseases. Through its research, Satellos has developed SAT-3247, a first-of-its-kind, orally administered small molecule drug designed to address deficits in muscle repair and regeneration. SAT-3247 targets AAK1, a key protein that Satellos has identified as capable of replacing the signal normally provided by dystrophin in muscle stem cells to effect repair and regeneration. By restoring this missing dystrophin signal in DMD, SAT-3247 enables muscle stem cells to divide properly and more efficiently, promoting natural muscle repair and regeneration. SAT-3247 is currently in clinical development as a potential disease-modifying treatment initially for DMD. Satellos also is leveraging its proprietary discovery platform MyoReGenX™ to identify additional muscle diseases or injury conditions where restoring muscle repair and regeneration may have therapeutic benefit and represent future clinical development opportunities. For more information, visit Article content . Article content This press release includes forward-looking information or forward-looking statements within the meaning of applicable securities laws regarding Satellos and its business, which may include, but are not limited to, statements regarding the potential for SAT-3247 to represent a disease modifying approach to the therapeutic treatment of people living with Duchenne; anticipated benefits to patients from a small molecule treatment for Duchenne; the advancement SAT-3247 through clinical trials; the pharmacodynamic properties and mechanism-of-action of SAT-3247; the potential of our approach in other degenerative muscle diseases; its/their prospective impact on Duchenne patients, patients with other degenerative muscle disease or muscle injury or trauma, and on muscle regeneration generally; and Satellos' technologies and drug development plans. All statements that are, or information which is, not historical facts, including without limitation, statements regarding future estimates, plans, programs, forecasts, projections, objectives, assumptions, expectations or beliefs of future performance, occurrences or developments, are 'forward-looking information or statements.' Often but not always, forward-looking information or statements can be identified by the use of words such as 'shall', 'intends', 'believe', 'plan', 'expect', 'intend', 'estimate', 'anticipate', 'potential', 'prospective' , 'assert' or any variations (including negative or plural variations) of such words and phrases, or state that certain actions, events or results 'may', 'might', 'can', 'could', 'would' or 'will' be taken, occur, lead to, result in, or, be achieved. Such statements are based on the current expectations and views of future events of the management of the Company. They are based on assumptions and subject to risks and uncertainties. Although management believes that the assumptions underlying these statements are reasonable, they may prove to be incorrect. The forward-looking events and circumstances discussed in this release, may not occur and could differ materially as a result of known and unknown risk factors and uncertainties affecting the Company, including, without limitation, risks relating to the pharmaceutical and bioscience industry (including the risks associated with preclinical and clinical trials and regulatory approvals), and the research and development of therapeutics, the results of preclinical and clinical trials, general market conditions and equity markets, economic factors and management's ability to manage and to operate the business of the Company generally, including inflation and the costs of operating a biopharma business, and those risks listed in the 'Risk Factors' section of Satellos' Annual Information Form dated March 26, 2025 (which is located on Satellos' profile at Article content Article content ). Although Satellos has attempted to identify important factors that could cause actual actions, events or results to differ materially from those described in forward-looking statements, there may be other factors that cause actions, events or results to differ from those anticipated, estimated or intended. Accordingly, readers should not place undue reliance on any forward-looking statements or information. No forward-looking statement can be guaranteed. Except as required by applicable securities laws, forward-looking statements speak only as of the date on which they are made and Satellos does not undertake any obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statement, whether resulting from new information, future events, or otherwise. Article content Article content Article content Article content Article content Contacts Article content Investors: Article content Liz Williams, CFO, Article content Article content

How do you make a campus more sustainable? These universities did it with GoPros and selling leftovers

time4 hours ago

How do you make a campus more sustainable? These universities did it with GoPros and selling leftovers

Using GoPros to monitor tree seedlings and tackling campus food insecurity through leftovers are among the initiatives that helped propel two Canadian universities into the top 10 in a U.K. ranking of efforts at post-secondary schools worldwide to meet United Nations goals for a sustainable planet. Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., and the University of Alberta are among the top 10 institutions in the world when it comes to advancing UN goals such as ending poverty and protecting the planet, according to Times Higher Education's 2025 Impact Rankings. The 17 sustainable development goals, established by the UN in 2015 as a call to action to tackle pervasive global issues and ensure prosperity across the globe, range from ending world hunger to taking climate action and ensuring access to health and education. The goals were unanimously adopted by member countries at the time, but the UN warned last year that less than one-fifth of the targets are on track to be achieved by the deadline in 2030. Times Higher Education's Impact Rankings is the only ranking system that looks at how universities are helping to address these UN goals through research and education, as well as campus and community programs, according to the publication. Universities are actually uniquely positioned to help solve the sustainable development goals, Ellie Bothwell, rankings editor at Times Higher Education, told CBC News. Enlarge image (new window) This United Nations infographic shows the 17 sustainable development goals established in 2015 as part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Photo: United Nations Not only can they drive research efforts to find solutions and teach the next generation of problem-solvers, she said, but universities also collaborate heavily with surrounding communities locally, nationally and on campus. They're sort of mini-cities in a way themselves. The rankings (new window) , released Tuesday, assessed more than 2,500 universities from 130 countries and territories for their sustainability progress, including 24 from Canada. Queen's University was the highest-scoring Canadian university, tying for sixth place overall with Arizona State University. Programs reducing food waste and insecurity on campus and research into green supercomputers and lowering emissions are among the factors keeping them ahead of the pack, Queen's says. The University of Alberta also made it to the top 10, at eighth place. Seven Canadian universities were ranked in the global top 50, the most for any country after Australia, which netted nine. Canadian universities perform really strongly, Bothwell said. Lots of [Canadian universities] were among the first to sort of commit to be carbon neutral or to publish really quite detailed sustainability reports on their own emissions. So, yeah, we see Canada among those leading the way on this. A Queen's University student conducts field work at the Queen's University Biological Station, where students learn about ecology first-hand. Photo: Queen's University To be included in the rankings, which have been conducted since 2019, universities submit data each year on their progress toward the goals. Their progress in advancing a specific goal, such as ending poverty, for example, is scored using factors such as the number of research publications universities put out on that topic, courses and campus programs addressing it, and partnerships with governments, non-governmental organizations and other post-secondary institutions. Canadian universities scored high in several individual categories. The University of Alberta was ranked first in the industry, innovation and infrastructure goal along with 11 other universities, while the University of Victoria came in second for advancing sustainable cities and communities. How Canadian universities are pursuing sustainability At Queen's University, the goals are considered in every department, said principal and vice-chancellor Patrick Deane. Whatever we do here needs to be green. It needs to be properly responsive to the sustainable goals, he told CBC News. [It's] critically important for the health of societies, the health of individuals and the health of the planet that we make progress on all of these. So it's a matter of urgency. Queen's University is the only Canadian institution to have been in the top 10 of the rankings for five years straight, and jumped two places this year compared to last year's ranking. It's a vindication for the work it has been doing, Deane said. Enlarge image (new window) Queen's University has run the PEACH Market since 2022, one of several campus initiatives aimed at reducing food waste and making healthy food more accessible to the community. It works by repurposing leftovers to sell to the community on a sliding scale pricing model. Photo: Queen's University In the individual goals, Queen's University was ranked second in two: peace, justice and strong institutions; and furthering sustainable oceans. Queen's came first globally for addressing the goal of zero hunger. One of the programs highlighting the university's commitment to addressing food insecurity, according to Deane, is its Providing Equal Access, Changing Hunger (PEACH) Market, started in 2022, where leftover food from Queen's hospitality services is then sold on a pay-what-you-can model. Queen's is also developing a software-automated aeroponic vertical farm, a type of farming that uses less land and water. Deane said that as researchers look to expand supercomputing and artificial intelligence capacity in Canada, Queen's is also working on more environmentally friendly and efficient supercomputers to cut the ecological cost of energy-hungry AI. The rankings have made the university much more deliberate about this work, he said. And I think that's what's required if we're going to get where we need to be on these goals. St. Joseph's College on the University of Alberta campus is shown here in August 2019 in Edmonton. U of A is one of two Canadian universities ranked in the top 10 globally for its work advancing the UN sustainable development goals. Photo: CBC / Codie McLachlan At the University of Alberta, graduate student Sarun Khadka found that GoPros could monitor tree seedlings as accurately as humans, potentially making monitoring more efficient and accessible, a spokesperson told CBC News. Other examples of how the university is addressing the sustainability goals include a new course to help future urban planners find practical tools for climate adaptation and a new interdisciplinary research centre focused on water safety. Universities in Asia saw advances in sustainable development in the latest ranking, Bothwell said, with a university from South Korea (Kyungpook National University) and one from Indonesia (Universitas Airlangga) entering the top 10 for the first time. U.S. has 1 university in top 50 Asian universities now lead 10 out of the 17 individual ... rankings, up from five last year, Bothwell said. That's something that's been really pleasing to see. The U.S., despite being known as a research powerhouse, had only one university in the global top 50, compared to three in last year's ranking. It's striking that there are relatively low numbers of U.S. universities, given the size of the sector, Bothwell said. The U.S. formally withdrew its support of the goals earlier this year, with Edward Heartney, a minister-counsellor at the U.S. mission to the United Nations, stating at a March meeting of the General Assembly that the U.S. rejects and denounces the shared UN goals. Enlarge image (new window) The campus of Queen's University is seen from above in this panorama. Photo: Queen's University With global progress toward the goals already slowed by widespread disruptions like the COVID-19 pandemic and global conflicts, and the United Nations warning that progress on more than one-third of the goals had "stalled or regressed (new window) " as of 2024, it's an uphill battle, but one Bothwell says post-secondary institutions are still fighting. There is certainly skepticism about whether nations will be able to reach the goals, Bothwell said. I would say though that I think that universities are showing amazing resilience and momentum and continuing to make an impact, striving to keep progress going even when maybe nationally the governments aren't focusing as much on this as they could. Alexandra Mae Jones (new window) · CBC News Alexandra Mae Jones is a senior writer for CBC News based in Toronto. She has written on a variety of topics, from health to pop culture to breaking news, and previously reported for CTV News and the Toronto Star. She joined CBC in 2024. You can reach her at

‘Elio' is an intergalactic tale — but for Toronto's Domee Shi, it hits close to home
‘Elio' is an intergalactic tale — but for Toronto's Domee Shi, it hits close to home

CTV News

time6 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘Elio' is an intergalactic tale — but for Toronto's Domee Shi, it hits close to home

A scene from 'Elio,' a Pixar animated sci-fi film about an 11-year-old orphan who yearns to be snatched by extraterrestrials to escape his loneliness — and gets his wish when an interplanetary organization mistakes him for Earth's ambassador, is shown in this handout image. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Disney/Pixar *MANDATORY CREDIT* TORONTO — For Domee Shi, making a movie about an introverted kid getting abducted by aliens felt oddly familiar. Not because she's had any close encounters, but because she remembers being a teenager longing to be taken away to a world where her weirdness was understood. The Toronto native co-directs 'Elio,' a Pixar animated sci-fi film about an 11-year-old orphan who yearns to be snatched by extraterrestrials to escape his loneliness — and gets his wish when an interplanetary organization mistakes him for Earth's ambassador. 'He's this lonely artsy kid who just wants to belong somewhere. I definitely felt that way growing up,' says the Oscar-winning animator behind 2022's coming-of-age Toronto-set hit 'Turning Red.' Born in Chongqing, China and raised in Toronto after immigrating to Canada as a child, Shi grew up obsessed with anime. She describes it as an isolating experience. In high school, she was the vice-president of the anime club — a group that had only two members. 'Back in the '90s and 2000s, anime was popular, but it wasn't as popular, I feel, as it is now…. I really wished people cared about the same stuff that I cared about,' Shi says during a promotional stop in Toronto. She recalls dreaming of going to animation school so she could 'find people who understood me, who spoke my language, who understood all my nerdy-ass references.' In 'Elio,' out Friday, the film's titular character, voiced by Yonas Kibreab, finds a sense of belonging in the Communiverse — a kind of cosmic United Nations where alien civilizations convene to share knowledge and resolve conflicts. It's a far cry from life on Earth, where Elio feels out of place living with his stressed-out, overextended aunt Olga, voiced by Zoe Saldaña. In real life, Shi says she found her own place in the universe at Anime North, an annual anime convention in suburban Toronto. She remembers attending for the first time as a teen. 'I had a really crappy 'One Piece' cosplay on. I wore a straw hat and was dressed like a bad version of Luffy,' she says, referring to the protagonist of the Japanese manga series. 'But then I looked around and there were so many crappy cosplays around me, and people just wearing their nerddom on their sleeve…. I was like, 'Oh my God, everyone speaks the same language as me.'' It was there that Shi learned about the renowned animation program at Toronto's Sheridan College, which had propelled graduates into orbit at studios such as Pixar and Disney. After graduating from Sheridan, Shi went on to work for Pixar as a storyboard artist for films including 2015's 'Inside Out' and 2019's 'Toy Story 4.' Shi became the first woman to direct a Pixar short with 2018's 'Bao,' a heartfelt tale about a Chinese-Canadian mother and her dumpling-turned-son that won the 2019 Oscar for best animated short. She broke new ground again with 'Turning Red,' becoming the first woman to solo direct a Pixar feature. 'Elio' marks Shi's first time co-directing a feature. Shi says the film began as a project by 'Coco' director Adrian Molina, inspired by his isolated childhood growing up on a military base. After delays caused by the Hollywood strikes, Molina was tapped to co-direct 'Coco 2' and handed the reins to Shi and fellow director Madeline Sharafian, who was a storyboard artist on 'Turning Red,' to complete the story. Shi describes the final product as 'a beautiful mind-meld' of all three directors' styles. In addition to channeling her own teen experience, she infused the film with influences from her favourite sci-fi films growing up — including 1979's 'Alien' and 1982's 'The Thing' — as well as eerie stop-motion classics such as 1993's 'The Nightmare Before Christmas.' 'I think kids can handle a little bit of scariness if it's more of a fun scary, like a thrill,' she says. Shi notes there are some Canadian influences in 'Elio' as well. 'It's weird to say but I feel like diversity shows up very naturally in my work and I think that's because I grew up in a very diverse neighbourhood and city,' she says. She says she doesn't even clock those multicultural touches until American colleagues point it out. 'People will be like, 'Oh, are you doing that intentionally? Is it intentional that Mei's friends are all girls from different backgrounds?'' she says, referencing the quartet at the heart of 'Turning Red.' 'I mean, kind of, but that's also what my friends were like growing up. I grew up in East York, moved to Scarborough. That's just what kids looked like, and I'm just used to it.' Elio's cultural background — half Mexican and half Dominican — is woven into the film with care and intention. His Mexican heritage draws from Molina's roots, while his Dominican side is brought to life through Saldaña's own background. Shi says the actor infused Olga with personal touches, including the suggestion of a Dominican song for one scene. A nod to Shi's own heritage turns up in an unexpected way. 'I feel like the Communiverse could be an allegory for Canada,' she laughs. 'It's definitely a mishmash and a beautiful, chaotic mosaic of different cultures and species and aliens all working and living together.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 18, 2025. Alex Nino Gheciu, The Canadian Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store