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Cannes Film Festival Winners Announced (Updating Live) - variety.com - Spain - USA - Belgium
variety.com
28.05.2022 / 21:59

Cannes Film Festival Winners Announced (Updating Live)

Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticCANNES — The awards show for the 75th anniversary Cannes Film Festival is underway, bringing 12 days of competition between 21 international features to a close. “Benedetta” star Virginie Efira is hosting, while several directors can be spotted in the audience waiting to receive their awards, including Claire Denis (“Stars at Noon”), Park Chan-wook (“Decision to Leave”) and Belgian brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (“Tori & Lokita”).Guillaume Canet presented best actress honors to Zar Amir-Ebrahimi, who plays the reporter who risks her own life to catch a serial killer in “Holy Spider.” The tense true-crime thriller exposes the crimes and aftermath of a man who targeted prostitutes, and that portion of society which accepted his religious justifications he claimed for cleaning the streets.

Cannes Review: Leonor Serraille’s ‘Mother And Son’ - deadline.com - France - Ivory Coast
deadline.com
27.05.2022 / 21:52

Cannes Review: Leonor Serraille’s ‘Mother And Son’

When his mother spoke, Ernest remembers, everything sounded important. “I cling to her light,” he tells us in voiceover, an adult remembering how that felt. The Ernest he is recalling is just a little boy (Milan Doucansi), snuggled against Rose (Annabelle Lengronne, a wonderfully vivid presence), with his grave and clever older brother Jean (Sidy Fofana) sitting opposite on a train taking them from Cote d’Ivoire to a new French life.

Joe Alwyn & Margaret Qualley Strike a Pose at 'The Stars At Noon' Photo Call in Cannes - www.justjared.com - Britain - France - USA
justjared.com
27.05.2022 / 02:11

Joe Alwyn & Margaret Qualley Strike a Pose at 'The Stars At Noon' Photo Call in Cannes

Joe Alwyn and Margaret Qualley pose together at the photo call for their film Stars At Noon in Cannes, France on Thursday (May 26).

‘Close’ Is A Exquisite Tale Of Childhood Heartbreak [Cannes Review] - theplaylist.net
theplaylist.net
27.05.2022 / 01:33

‘Close’ Is A Exquisite Tale Of Childhood Heartbreak [Cannes Review]

CANNES – Lukas Dhont’s second feature, “Close,” starts off where most love stories end, and, in that respect, it begins with almost euphoric joy. Leo (Eden Dambrine) and Remi (Gustav De Waele) are the best of friends.

Lea Mysius Skips the Madeleine in ‘The Five Devils,’ But Still Goes About the Search for Lost Time - variety.com - France - Paris
variety.com
26.05.2022 / 20:55

Lea Mysius Skips the Madeleine in ‘The Five Devils,’ But Still Goes About the Search for Lost Time

Marta Balaga French filmmaker Léa Mysius follows her nose in “The Five Devils,” focusing on the sense of smell. That’s her protagonist’s special gift, one that scares her mother (“Blue Is the Warmest Color” actor Adèle Exarchopoulos) but allows her to venture beyond the constraints of time and space.Shown in Cannes’ Directors’ Fortnight – with Wild Bunch on board – it’s Mysius’ second feature film as a director following “Ava,” awarded at the French fest in 2017. She also co-wrote Claire Denis’ “The Stars at Noon,” presented in the main competition.“It all started when I was a kid – I was fascinated by smells,” Mysius tells Variety.“Together with my sister, we had fun making these little potions.

‘The Stars At Noon’ Review: Margaret Qualley & Joe Alwyn Sweat It Out In Claire Denis’ Seductive Misfire [Cannes] - theplaylist.net - Britain - Spain - France - USA - Panama - Nicaragua
theplaylist.net
26.05.2022 / 16:05

‘The Stars At Noon’ Review: Margaret Qualley & Joe Alwyn Sweat It Out In Claire Denis’ Seductive Misfire [Cannes]

“The Stars at Noon” finds the French filmmaker Claire Denis shooting in Panama doubling for Nicaragua; directing a cast of Yanks, Brits, and assorted Central Americans; and working from a script switching between Spanish and English. Internationally coproduced Towers of Babel such as this aren’t at all uncommon at the Cannes Film Festival, but the errors in translation all over this disappointing foreign-relations drama run deeper than simple differences of ethnicity or language.

‘Stars At Noon’ Filmmaker Claire Denis Says “Harder For Women” To Make Movies — Cannes - deadline.com - USA
deadline.com
26.05.2022 / 13:49

‘Stars At Noon’ Filmmaker Claire Denis Says “Harder For Women” To Make Movies — Cannes

Asked this morning at the Cannes presser about how the fest sidelines female filmmakers, Stars at Noon director took the high road, and didn’t throw the event, which lauded her with the Directors’ Fortnight prize for 2017’s Let the Sunshine In, under the bus.

‘Stars at Noon’ Review: Margaret Qualley and Joe Alwyn Work Up a Sweat in Claire Denis’s Seductive Central American Escapade - variety.com - USA
variety.com
26.05.2022 / 01:51

‘Stars at Noon’ Review: Margaret Qualley and Joe Alwyn Work Up a Sweat in Claire Denis’s Seductive Central American Escapade

Guy Lodge Film CriticEarly in “Stars at Noon,” Yank journalist Trish gazes wistfully at a yellowed black-and-white photo of Nicaraguan resistance fighters, framed and tacked to the wall of the grim Managua hotel room where she’s having businesslike intercourse. “Young rebels used to be so sexy,” she sighs.

Joe Alwyn On ‘The Stars At Noon’: “I Was Never Going To Say No To Working With Claire Denis” - theplaylist.net - France
theplaylist.net
25.05.2022 / 21:17

Joe Alwyn On ‘The Stars At Noon’: “I Was Never Going To Say No To Working With Claire Denis”

A new film by Claire Denis is always a cause for excitement. And fans of the French director are in for a treat in 2022, with two new films from Denis premiering this year.

Joe Alwyn On Claire Denis’ Cannes Film ‘Stars at Noon’ & His “Numb” ‘Conversations With Friends’ Character - deadline.com - USA - Panama - Nicaragua - city Panama
deadline.com
24.05.2022 / 19:13

Joe Alwyn On Claire Denis’ Cannes Film ‘Stars at Noon’ & His “Numb” ‘Conversations With Friends’ Character

The first time Joe Alwyn came to the Cannes Film Festival in 2018, he walked away with the Trophée Chopard. Now he is back to help director Claire Denis compete for the Palme d’Or with Stars at Noon, based on the novel by Denis Johnson. Alwyn stars in the romantic thriller as a mysterious businessman in Nicaragua who falls in love with an American journalist, played by Margaret Qualley. In addition to Stars at Noon, Alwyn also stars in the BBC Three/Hulu series Conversations with Friends directed by Lenny Abrahamson and based on the Sally Rooney novel, which premiered May 15.

Cannes Review: Park Chan-wook’s ‘Decision To Leave’; His First Film To Premiere At Cannes Since 2016 - deadline.com
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 20:05

Cannes Review: Park Chan-wook’s ‘Decision To Leave’; His First Film To Premiere At Cannes Since 2016

Detective Hae-joon investigating the death of a man who fell from a mountain top. When he meets the deceased man’s wife in Park Chan-wook’s latest film in competition at Cannes, Decision To Leave.  

Cannes Review: Jean Dujardin In Cedric Jimenez’s ‘Novembre’ - deadline.com - France - Paris - city Brussels - city Sandrine
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 02:27

Cannes Review: Jean Dujardin In Cedric Jimenez’s ‘Novembre’

Understandably, the terrorist attacks in Paris on the night of November 13, 2015 have been treated with great sensitivity by the French film industry, and the only other film in the Cannes Film Festival’s lineup this year to touch on those events — Alice Winocour’s Paris Revoir — is a lightly fictionalized drama set in the aftermath of the night 130 people were killed, most of them at a rock concert at the city’s Bataclan nightclub. Though many names have been changed, for obvious security reasons, Cedric Jimenez’s Novembre is, by contrast, a heavy-artillery just-the-facts-ma’am police procedural detailing the manhunt that followed in the next five days.

Cannes Review: Kristoffer Borgli’s ‘Sick Of Myself’ - deadline.com - Norway - county Person
deadline.com
23.05.2022 / 01:23

Cannes Review: Kristoffer Borgli’s ‘Sick Of Myself’

Timing can be cruel. Norwegian director Kristoffer Borgli’s second feature, Sick Of Myself, has the misfortune to arrive in the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard section in the slipstream of Ruben Östlund’s divisive but funny competition title Triangle of Sadness; the latter being a broader, sillier but much more brutal dissection of class and culture. Sick Of Myself also has to compete with the unexpected longevity of fellow countryman Joachim Trier’s hit The Worst Person In The World, which last year went from the Cannes competition all the way to the Oscars.

Cannes Review: Ethan Coen’s ‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble In Mind’ - deadline.com - county Wake
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 22:31

Cannes Review: Ethan Coen’s ‘Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble In Mind’

For his directing debut after brother Joel’s first solo outing with The Tragedy of Macbeth, Ethan Coen has chosen a similar saga of ruthless ambition and soul-devouring guilt, telling the rise and fall — and rise again — of Jerry Lee Lewis, from farmer’s son to rock’n’roll idol.

Cannes Review: Marie Perennes & Simon Depardon’s Docu ‘Feminist Riposte’ - deadline.com - France
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 21:07

Cannes Review: Marie Perennes & Simon Depardon’s Docu ‘Feminist Riposte’

“Sexism is everywhere — so are we.” It’s just one of many slogans plastered across the streets of France in the timely documentary Feminist Riposte (Riposte Féministe) which is in the Special Screenings section at Cannes. Filmmakers Marie Perennès and Simon Depardon follow 10 groups of women around the country who are protesting about harassment, rape, femicide — and about the police response to these crimes. “Les flics” — aka the cops — are a silent force in this film, policing protests with grim faces. This is about giving a voice to the young women, recording their dialogue about the cause.

Cannes Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s ‘Forever Young’ - deadline.com
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 20:27

Cannes Review: Valeria Bruni Tedeschi’s ‘Forever Young’

If you’re the parent of a kid who’s thinking about becoming an actor, nothing could be scarier than watching Forever Young (Les Amandiers).

Cannes Review: Ali Abbasi’s ‘Holy Spider’ - deadline.com - Sweden - Iran
deadline.com
22.05.2022 / 19:19

Cannes Review: Ali Abbasi’s ‘Holy Spider’

Sometimes it hardly matters whether we know a story is based on truth or not. Watching Ali Abbasi’s thunderously damning Holy Spider, on the other hand, it drives a wedge into your mind knowing that a serial killer really did terrorize the Iranian holy city of Mashhad in the early 2000s, that he killed 16 street prostitutes, that there were police who conspired to help him escape and that there were people in Iran — a lot of people, he keeps assuring his family — who were on the murderer’s side. He was doing God’s work.

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