Showing posts with label Cannes Film Festival. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cannes Film Festival. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Turkey’s harrowing ‘Winter Sleep’ takes top prize at Cannes


Turkish film “Winter Sleep” examining the huge divide between rich and poor and the powerful and powerless in Turkey won the Palme d’Or award for best film for director Nuri Bilge Ceylan on Saturday at the 67th Cannes International Film Festival.

Ceylan’s three-hour-plus dark and atmospheric film was only the second Turkish movie to win the top award at the world’s most prestigious film festival, and the director noted that it came on the 100th anniversary year of Turkish cinema.

He dedicated the honor to “those who lost their lives during the last year”, adding that he was referring to the youth of his country and to unrest in Turkey.

“These young people actually taught us a lot of things. Some of them sacrificed their lives in a way for us,” Ceylan said later at a news conference.

“Le Meraviglie” (The Wonders) by Italian director Alice Rohrwacher took the second-place prize for a coming-of-age story set in the Tuscan countryside as a family tries to eke out a bohemian life making honey.

Twenty-five-year-old Canadian director Xavier Dolan’s film “Mommy” shared the third-place prize with octogenarian French director Jean-Luc Godard’s “Adieu au Langage” (Goodbye to Language) that uses 3D imagery to stunning effect.

An emotional Dolan said he thought the jury may have twinned him with Godard, an inventor of “New Wave” film, “because of our respective searches for freedom in cinema”.

American director Bennett Miller won the best director award for “Foxcatcher”, British actor Timothy Spall won best actor for Mike Leigh’s film “Mr Turner” and Julianne Moore was named best actress in David Cronenberg’s “Maps to the Stars”.

Spall, best known to cinema audiences as Peter Pettigrew in the “Harry Potter” films, said he felt proud to win the award.

“I’m like a bewildered 16-year-old girl, or boy,” he said. “I’m so astounded by this award, it’s amazing.”

“Leviathan” by Russia’s Andrei Zvyagintsev took the prize for best screenplay.

“It was an extremely diverse ensemble — films that were classical, films that were radical, films that were about the future of cinema,” jury member and Danish director Nicolas Winding Refn said after the awards were announced.

Hollywood Reporter critic Stuart Kemp told Reuters there were “no surprises with the awards going to predictable places”.

Critics had applauded “Winter Sleep” as one of the standout films in a festival that was somewhat short on fireworks, with the French newspaper Le Monde calling it “magnificent”.

Variety critic Justin Chang called it a “sprawling, character-rich portrait of a self-absorbed Anatolian hotelier and his uneasy relationships with those around him”.

The only other Turkish film to win the Palme was Yilmaz Guney and Serif Goren’s “The Way” (1982).

Jury head Jane Campion said she had been daunted by the running length of three hours and 16 minutes but said “it had such a beautiful rhythm … I could have stayed there a couple more hours”.

“The real gift of this film is how honest it is,” she said.

Campion, the only woman to have won the Palme d’Or, said it had not mattered to her or the jury whether a man or woman won.

“It never entered our discussions the gender of the filmmaker that won,” Campion said. “These films were on equal basis with each other. We didn’t go, ‘Oh my God, was this made by a woman or a man?’ We were moved and responded to the film.”

ALMOST CLAUSTROPHOBIC

Despite its setting in the vast Anatolian steppe, the film’s atmosphere is almost claustrophobic as it shows a rich man and former actor named Aydin (Haluk Bilginer) who uses his intellect and position to bully his tenants and beat his wife and sister into intellectual submission.

Ceylan was peppered with questions during the festival about a recent coalmine disaster in Turkey, and about unrest and whether his film was trying to explore these themes.

He said current events were important for him, but what his films really were about was human nature.

“I can find enough motivation only if I make movies about the human nature,” he said. “My motivation and starting point is to try to understand the dark side of my soul and that means human nature as well.”

British film critic Richard Mowe, who served on the Cannes Directors Jury, said the centenary of Turkish film might have been a consideration in the award to Ceylan, but he doubted that the Palme d’Or would boost its commercial potential.

“It’s a hard film to get into cinemas because you can’t even describe what it’s about in an easy way — it’s all very metaphysical and metaphorical,” Mowe said.

This year’s festival had its share of glitz and glamour, with Nicole Kidman playing Grace Kelly in “Grace of Monaco,” the widely panned film that opened the festival but was not in competition.

Those making a requisite turn down the red carpet flanked by tuxedo-wearing photographers included Sophia Loren, Sharon Stone, Aishwarya Rai, Uma Thurman and John Travolta, Eva Longoria, Naomi Watts and Jessica Chastain.

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, May 24, 2013

Cannes auction of space trip with DiCaprio raises 1.2 million euros for charity


CANNES – A trip to space with Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio raised 1.2 million euros ($1.5 million) for charity at a glitzy fundraiser at the Cannes film festival on Thursday.

At the 20th annual event organized by amfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research, DiCaprio emerged as the mystery guest to accompany the winner on a Virgin Galactic flight into space.

Actress Sharon Stone said the winner would spend three days in training with DiCaprio in Mexico before blast-off.

“You don’t get to go to outer space every day with a handsome movie star,” said Stone, dressed in a tight-fitting white dress with a gold snake trim down the back.

The bidding started at 1 million euros ($1.29 million).

The auction brochure for the star-studded gala held at the five-star Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc in Antibes, France, near Cannes, said DiCaprio and the winning bidder would be among the first 1,000 people to leave the planet.

The winning bidder, Vasily Klyukin, 37, a Russian living in Monaco, said he had always wanted to go into space.

“I want to be a bit daring,” Klyukin, who works in real estate, told Reuters. “I will have to give up smoking now for sure!”

After the winning bid from Klyukin — who also bought a gold and diamond necklace for 400,000 euros ($517,000) — Stone announced two other tickets were available on the flight. They raised another 1.8 million euros ($2.3 million).

The auction raised 25 million euros ($32.3 million) in total, more than double last year’s sum of 11 million euros($14.2 million).

The amfAR gala is the biggest fundraising event at the world’s largest film festival. The benefit was first hosted by Elizabeth Taylor.

The list of stars attending Thursday’s event included DiCaprio, Cannes jury members Nicole Kidman and Christopher Waltz, singers Kylie Minogue and Janet Jackson, and actors Adrien Brody, Jessica Chastain and Goldie Hawn.

The evening featured performances by gold-clad Shirley Bassey singing “Goldfinger” and British pop band Duran Duran.

Introducing the event, supermodel Heidi Klum said it raised more than 10 million euros ($12.9 million) a year for AIDS research.

Other auction items included tickets to Hollywood events, a Damien Hirst painting, an Annie Leibovitz family portrait, the chance to star in four movies and a private performance from Simon Le Bon and John Taylor of Duran Duran.

source: interaksyon.com