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Thread: CANNES Festival 2019

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  1. #1
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    From the Guardian's Peter Bradshaw, his "top ten must-see films" at Cannes


    LEO DICAPRIO IN ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD


    Peter Bradshaw is one of the few high-profile English-language film critics who provide detailed daily coverage at Cannes so if you want to follow it day-to-day and your language is English, he's invaluable. His list but my notes. Note: I continue to miss Mike D'Angelo, whose thumbnail tweet-reviews were very useful. Let's hope the fest offers more than what's below.

    Once Upon a Time in Hollywood (Quentin Tarantino)
    Leo DiCaprio is a fading TV star and Brad Pitt his stunt double in Hollywood, late Sixties, as the Sharon Tate murders occur. Bruce Lee is a character. Much anticipated, at first not expected, promoted by Cannes Festival director Thierry Frémaux who declared QT is "a friend."

    Portrait of a Lady on Fire/Portrait de la jeune fille en feu (Céline Sciamma)
    Noémie Merlant plays a young painter asked to do a portrait of a young woman (Adèle Haenel) without her knowledge. The 40-year-old French woman director Céline Sciamma is noted for female-centric gender-conscious films. Her first three, Water Lilies, Tomboy, and Girlhood, have brought her rapid prestige in a 12-year-period. She also did the screenplay for the animation My Life As a Courgette/Zucchini. In French.

    Little Joe (Jessica Hausner)
    English philosophical comedy with Emily Beecham and Ben Whishaw concerning a botanist who develops a flower she nicknames Little Joe that can induce happiness in all those who grow it properly, but when its developer takes it home, she comes to suspect it may have a dark side. (The theme somehow makes one think of Alexander Mackendrick's 1951 English classic, The Man in the White Suit, starring Alec Guinness.)

    Sorry We Missed You (Ken Loach)
    Loach continues his worker-centric filmmaking with the study of a delivery driver having hard times. With longtime cowriter Paul Laverty. Loach's last film, I Daniel Blakek won him his second Cannes Palme d'Or.

    The Swallows of Kabul/Les hirondelles de Kabou (Zabou Breitman, Eléa Gobé Mévellec)
    Animated film based on a novel by the very prolific Algerian writer Yasmina Khadra (who writes in French, and is actually a man), about Kabul in the late Nineties and a young love affair threatened by the Taliban. In French. You can see a clip of this on IMDb, but without English subtitles. Un Certain Regard.

    The Dead Don’t Die (Jim Jarmusch)
    Cannes regular Jarmusch, who two features ago delivered the swoony, gloomy vampire movie Only Lovers Left Alive] (NYFF 2013), offers the festival "a bit of unwholesome confectionery" (Bradshaw) with this Opening Night film, a slow-moving zombie comedy-nightmare set in a small town, with an offbeat A-List cast including Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray, Steve Buscemi, Adam Driver, Selena Gomez and Danny Glover and with an appearance by Iggy Pop. (Already reviewed: Opening Night film.)

    An Easy Girl/Une fille facile (Rebecca Zlotowski)
    A romance set on the French Reviera. Bradshaw desribes Zlotkowski's Grand Central (R-V 2014) as a 'cult classic.' I was not so impressed, though I certainly liked the stars, Tahar Rahim and Léa Seydoux. Directors' Fortnight. In French.

    Frankie (Ira Sachs)
    Isabelle Huppert stars (with Brendan Gleeson, Marisa Tomei and Greg Kinnear) in Ira Sachs’s film about a family on holiday in Portugal. In English. (I don't think Huppert is as good, ever, in English, as in her native French. It loses the edge.)

    Sick, Sick, Sick/Sem Seu Sangue ["Without your blood"] (Alice Furtado)
    Debut feature by the young Brazilian director depicts an obsessive and tormented high-school love affair (with Nahuel Pérez Biscayart of 120 Beats Per Minute). Directors' Fortnight. Tragic, deranged finale. IMDb summary: "An introspective young girl falls for the new boy in class, an outcast who is also a hemophiliac." For a longer summery, go H E R E. In Portuguese.

    Diego Maradona (Asif Kapadia)
    The hand of God descends with this documentary from British filmmaker Asif Kapadia, who made the successful doc about Amy Winehous, Amy, about the troubled football genius. Emir Kusturica has already done a film about him but Bradshaw says this "promises a treasure trove of new material." Already bought by HBO Sports. See article H E R E.

    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-15-2019 at 09:40 PM.

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    Other anticipated titles at Cannes


    TARON EGERTON AS ELTON JOHN IN ROCKETMAN

    Rocketman (Dexter Fletcher)
    A biopic about Elton John with Taron Egerton in the lead role. Egerton is the handsome 30-year-old British TV actor-singer known for the series "Smoke" and the 2014 action comedy Kingsman: The Secret Service. Dexter Fletcher, who was memorable (briefly) playing the young Caravaggio in Derek Jarman's film, got lucky last year by landing the job of finishing Bohemian Rhapsody. This film's screenplay is by Lee Hall, who did the writing for Billy Elliot, and is costars Jamie Bell as John's longtime songwriter Bernie Taupin. When shown the photo above Elton John is said to have thought it was him. Premiering Out of Competition.

    A Hidden Life (Terence Malick).
    A German-language film with Bruno Ganz and August Diehl about the Austrian Franz Jägerstätter, a conscientious objector who refuses to fight for the Nazis in World War II. Competition. This seems to signal the end of Malick's long period of navel-gazing. Why he chose this subject matter remains to be discovered.

    Pain and Glory/Dolor y gloria (Pedro Almodover)
    This stars Antonio Banderas, Asier Etxeandia, Penélope Cruz, Julieta Serrano and Leonardo Sbaraglia. It's a kind of retrospective, being focused on a director (played by Banderas) who ponders on his life choices as he finds the world crashing down on him. This opened in Spanish theaters (Sony) in March, but is in Competition at Cannes nonetheless.

    The Traitor/Il traditore (Marco Bellochio)
    Bellocchio's seventh time in competition at Cannes, but he has never been a winner. Depicts pentito Mafia boss (Italian word) Tommaso Buscetta. Pierfrancesco Favino stars as Buscetta with Maria Fernanda Cândido and Luigi Lo Cascio. The only Italian film in Competition at Cannes this year. Buscetto claims "I am and remain a man of honor. It's they who betrayed the ideals of Cosa Nostra." Caught in Brazil, where he managed the drug trade, he saw the killing of sons and brothers in Palermo, and the film shows his trial.
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-15-2019 at 10:13 PM.

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    Reviews from days one and two.


    SCENE FROM BACURAU; SONIA BRAGA, CENTER

    Bacurau (Juliano Dornelles, Kleber Mendonça Filho 2019): a tale of hunting people for sport in contemporary Brazil. Competition.

    Kleber Mendonça Filho is the director of the excellent Neighboring Sounds/O Som ao Redor (2012) and Aquarius (2016), both of which were reviewed on Filmleaf. Here he codirected with his production designer/producer, Juliano Dornelles. They take a new direction in what Peter Bradshaw in his Guardian review yesterday (Wed., May 15) called a "disturbing ultraviolent freakout." David Erlilch in IndieWire calls it "Seven Samurai Meets Hostel" and a "Delirious Brazilian Western." It's set some years in the future, where a group of rich Americans have come led by Udo Kier to hunt the locals (a matriarchal village) for their sport, as Peter Debruge explains in his Variety review. The film becomes, says Debruge, "an almost Buñuelian science-fiction thriller, shot to look like a spaghetti Western, complete with weird zooms, arbitrary crane tricks, and horizontal wipes." It suffers as a genre piece, however, Debruge says, because it's too complex and sophisticated, demanding "the extra labor of unpacking its densely multilayered subtext to appreciate." Sonia Braga is back (from Aquarius) playing an alcoholic doctor. Ominously, Bacarau suddenly is wiped off of online maps. It becomes clear soon enough that the town is going to have to fight for its life, because a high-tech ultra-rich safari has come to amuse themselves by pick;ing off the inhabitants one by one. Critics seem agreed that this film is stylistically brilliant, even if its point is not so clear other than to make some clear "broad swipes" (Erlich) against the current anti-native, anti-environment, pro-wealthy policies of the unprincipled new right wing Brazilian president, Jair Bolsonaro.

    Rocketman (Dexter Fletcher 2019) Out of Competition.

    The Elton John biopic starring Taron Egerton opened tonight, making Paramount the first major studio to present gay sex openly, says Tatiana Siegel in a Hollywood Reporter article, one of several on this topic. She explains her claim by saying this is aimed at a "broader" audience than did Brokeback Mountain and Call Me by Your Name, which of course also showed gay sex in films not made purely for niche audiences. There is no Metascore out on this movie yet, or any online reviews, but much discussion of its presumed trailblazing boldness (which Fletcher himself however discounts). Fletcher has pointed out this is a musical, and Bohemian Rhapsody was a biopic, hence the two shouldn't keep being compared (as they are). Rami Malek was outstanding as an actor; Taron Egerton's task is more to sing.

    Litigante (Franco Lolli 2019). Critics Week.

    The Colombian director's second feature is a subtle treatment of family relationships, not a legal drama as the title implies. It might be considered a "belated breakout vehicle" for the lead Sanin, says Guy Lodge in his Variety review, because she's unfamiliar and so good, except that she's actually a non-pro Colombian writer and academic. Lollo has also cast another non-pro, his own mother, Leticia Gómez, in a key role. The film's "many scenes of loaded domestic conflict have a nervy authenticity that perhaps betrays Lolli’s close-to-home casting preferences," says Lodge. One of these two characters has terminal cancer, yet the two women go on bickering even in the hospital. An excellent complex family drama that keeps many balls in the air, Lodge concludes (a mom with cancer, raising a son alone, a scandal at work) - till it ends in an anticlimactic finale. Leslie Felperin in Hollywood Reporter calls this "an engaging if hardly groundbreaking work."

    Deerskin/Le Daim (Quentin Dupieux 2019)

    "The latest oddball concoction from French iconoclast Quentin Dupieux stars Jean Dujardin as a man who falls in love with his jacket", says Boyd van Hoeij in Hollywood Reporter of this film that opened Directors Fortnight at Cannes. I know what he's talking about because I just reviewed his previous one, Keep an Eye Out!/Au poste! a couple of months ago as part of this year's Rendez-Vous with French Cinema at Lincoln Center. Dupieux is definitely a droll, but also silly and frivolous filmmaker whose work can't appeal to more than a small segment of the French public, and smaller one of the non-French. But he is fiendishly clever, and commands good casts. This one also has the talented and fiery Adèle Haenel.

    The Unknown Saint/Le Miracle du Saint Inconnu (Alaa Eddine Aljem 2019). Critics' Week.

    This debut feature by the young Moroccan director Alaa Eddine Aljem was also reviewed by Boyd van Hoeij in Hollywood Reporter. It begins with a thief burying his loot at the top of a dune in a desert as police sirens are heard approaching in the distance. He goes to jail, and when he gets out the fake grave where he buried his swag has become a place of pilgrimage to an "unknown saint" so he can't get at it. Van Hoeij says this is a "bone-dry comedy and light drama," and "an absurdist tale about superstitions, beliefs and just plain bad luck." He suspects it won't do well outside the realm of festival audiences or at least "might be just a little too undernourished for more than niche theatrical action." More positively, Alissa Simon in her Variety review calls The Unknown Saint "Beautifully shot and ideally cast" and says it's "a droll, entertaining, absurdist fable about spirituality and greed that signals an important new talent."


    SCENE FROM ALJEM'S THE UNKNOWN SAINT
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-19-2019 at 11:04 PM.

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    More Cannes 2019 reviews.


    MAME BINETA SANE IN ATLANTICS

    Atlantics/Atlantique (Mati Diop 2019)

    This is one of the four women directors who got a film in Competition this year, enough to make it known widely. She is Senegalese and more known as an actress but her shorter films have gained her notice as a director leading up to this feature debut, whose plot has the sound of myth or fable: and even the bare words evoke striking images. It's the melancholy story of a Ada, young woman about to be married to the well-to-do Omar when she truly loves Soleiman. And just then, Soleiman is lost at sea with a group of others he went out in an open boat with heading for Spain, leaving her devastated. The lost men worked on a big building on the edge of Dakar and were owed a lot of back pay. Their ghosts return and inhabit the young women to demand the money. Focus shifts to Issa, an investigator called in when the marriage bed is set aflame. There have been numerous films focused on the men lost at sea trying to escape to Europe, Jay Weissberg says in his Variety review, and it's refreshing to see one focused on the women they leave behind. Weissberg finds narrative or structural weaknesses in this movie, but it sounds potentially vivid and beautiful. In his enthusiastic Guardian review Peter Bradshaw calls it an "intriguingly ruminative and poetic movie," "a Voodoo-realist drama, or docu-supernatural mystery" whose strangeness doesn't keep it from saying some very "pertinent things" about the "contemporary developing world." He gives it 4 out of 5 stars.


    MATI DIOP AT CANNES [GUARDIAN]
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-19-2019 at 10:05 AM.

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    Review


    OPENING SCENE FROM LES MISÉRABLES

    LES MISERABLES (Ladj Ly 2019). A powerful French cop thriller with sociological bent. In Competition.

    Though it bears little direct narrative resemblance to the eponymous Victor Hugo tome, this crime thriller (the feature debut of a former documentary filmmaker) that examines the tensions between Paris anti-crime police and poor Muslim populations they torment is set in the housing estate of Les Bosquets in Montfermeil, in the département of Seine-Saint-Denis that figured in the Hugo novel. It also shows the same extreme injustices still prevail. David Erlich of IndieWire says this shows Ly grew up in the influence of Mathieu Kassovitz's 1995 La Haine (about social tensions in Paris) and (as others also say) invites comparisons to Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing. Erlich calls this "a gripping and grounded procedural," "never more tactile and kinetic than in the breathtaking prologue," "powered by the raw muscularity of its filmmaking." There's a kind of police riot, which a ghetto kid captures on film with a drone. The banlieue setting is Ly's own home turf. Guy Lodge's Variety review (and others) praises highly with some reservations. He calls this film "a furious work of social geography that satisfies slightly less as a character piece," dramatizing the "violent anxieties on both sides" but perhaps "selling some of the victims a little short." The cops are not seen sympathetically, yet most of the action is through the point of view of a three-man crime unit, two vets and a newbie, on a single day. Still the whole social topography of Montfermeil is also depicted. according to Jordan Mintzer of Hollywood Reporter, who relates this to David Simon's iconic TV series "The Wire." Peter Bradshaw hails this film's "striking and even glorious pre-credit" sequence (of Paris celebrating France winning the World Cup) and thinks it excels at its ordinary, everyday moments. But then he thinks it tries to work on too broad a scale and turns too violent. Not a pan, though: he gives Les Misérables 3 out of 5 stars. Ly also was codirector with Stéphane de Freitas of the uplifting César-nominated doc Speak Up/À voix haute : La Force de la parole.


    LADJ LY
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-26-2019 at 09:59 PM.

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    Almodovar's Pain and Glory/Dolor y gloria.


    ANTONIO BANDERAS IN PAIN AND GLORY

    Peter Bradshaw in the Guardian says in Dolor y glória Almodóvar "delivers another sensuous and deeply personal gem" in this "wistful extravaganza" in which "life meets art," and gives it 4 out of 5 stars. Ruminative, painful, with a sense of declining powers, the director presents an aging movie director played by Antonio Banderas. Peter Debruge in his Variety review calls it a "remarkably mature metafiction." AlloCiné, whose press rating (based on 23 French reviews) is an exceptional 4.6 (even Cahiers du Cinéma gives it a rave), asks: "Is Almodóvar on the way to the Palme d'Or?" and he indeed looks like a prime contender. This clearly sounds like a very positive consensus, perhaps to remain the most admired 2029 Competition film. Perhaps the best has come first. But could this be a little too familiar a maker and topic to be up for a top prize? Time will tell.

    Hausner's Little Joe.


    JESSIE MAE ALONZO AND BEN WHISHAW IN LITTLE JOE

    Another much anticipated film at Cannes was Jessica Haussner's Little Joe. Haussner is known for her Lourdes (2009). But Peter Bradshaw says he was disappointed, and gives it a measly 2 out of 5 stars. It's a horror film that likens the spread of antidepressants to the invasion of an alien force a la "Bodysnatchers." Erlich of IndieWire finds in this "plenty of potential to offend," though he calls the film "brilliant." Bradshaw finds " plot implausibilities" and a movie "too high on the art-house register" to notice its lack of "out-and-out thrills or suspense."

    Fletcher's Rocketman.

    The comparison with Bohemian Rhapsodyis inevitable: two pictures about gay glam rock stars directed by Dexter Fletcher. Nicolas Barber of BBC Culture says "this year’s Elton John biopic is superior to last year’s Freddie Mercury biopic in almost every way: funnier, more moving, more imaginative, more upfront about its hero’s sexuality." That's nice, isn't it? I wonder if the public will go along. Probably not, and later in the review Nicolas Barber doesn't even seem to like the movie so much, though he still rates it and Fletcher and Egerton high.
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-26-2019 at 10:03 PM.

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    Recent Cannes reviews


    PAMELA MONDOZA IN CANCIÓN SIN NOMBRE

    Canción Sin Nombre/Song Without a Name (Melina León). Directors Fortnight.

    "In a dingy clinic, a newborn child is whisked away from her exhausted mother, supposedly for routine health checks, and is never returned; in short order, the clinic vanishes into thin air too, leaving the stolen baby’s bewildered, impoverished parents with no recourse." So Guy Lodge states the film's premise in his admiring but critical Variety review about this child-trafficking tale. The Peruvian writer-director's film is a "visually striking period piece" that's "a Kafka-esque crime thriller inspired by real events" says Stephen Dalton of Hollywood Reporter. It has some similarities to Cuaron's ROMA, being about a poor peasant woman and in black and white. (Today.)


    THE CAST OF SORRY WE MISSED YOU

    Sorry We Missed You (Ken Loach) Competition.

    A "fierce, open and angry" new film about life in the British "service-economy serfdom" says Peter Bradshaw who gives it a full five stars in his Guardian review. In his Variety review, Owen Gleibeman says 82-year-old Loach has grown spryer as he's aged and now is at the top of his game and is making films that "connect, with a nearly karmic sense of timing, to the social drama of our moment." This one is about "how the gig economy screws over the people it promises to save." This is indeed perhaps the dominant, and fastest growing, labor issue in the developed world today and an even more relevant film than Loach's last one, which won the Palme d'Or in 2016. But a feeling is he won't win again. Three Palme d'Ors would be a bit much for one director. (May 16th.)


    IMAGE FROM THE WILD GOOSE LAKE

    The Wild Goose Lake/南方车站的聚会 (Diao Yinan). Competition.

    An understatedly brilliant and poetic noir that winds up being less than the sum of its parts, says David Erlich of IndieWire. It works with traditional ingredients, a gangster on the run, a femme fatale at his side, and cops and bad guys trying to do them in, he writes. But along with that it's also a picture of "contemporary China as a vast land of exploitation and criminality." The central Chinese capital of Wuhan is the setting for a lot of eye-catching and rich seediness. It has some ingenious ultra-violence, some over-congested plot moments, style, and the benefit of Dong Jinsong, one of the dp's of Bi Gan's visually entrancing Long Day's Journey Into Night. Jessica Kiang of Variety says Diao has made a "sumptuously sleazy film" in which he shows "an extraordinarily elastic mastery of form," and has a superbly precise sound design. This may, Kiang says, wind up being "the last word in Chinese crime noir." For fans of Asian neo-noir, this film is a must-see, maybe a cult classic. The images are so ravishing I was sorely tempted to reproduce more than one here. (Today.)
    Last edited by Chris Knipp; 05-26-2019 at 10:08 PM.

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