Heavyweight directors vie for top prize at Cannes
PEDRO Almodovar's story of a plastic surgeon bent on exacting vigilante justice and Terrence Malick's period piece about three Midwestern brothers, starring Brad Pitt, are among 19 movies vying for the top prize at this year's Cannes Film Festival.
The lineup announced yesterday for the 64th edition of the festival is exceptionally strong, with much-anticipated new films by the creme de la creme of auteur filmmakers. They include Denmark's Lars von Trier with "Melancholia," Turkey's Nuri Bilge Ceylan with "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia," and Belgium's Dardenne brothers with "Set Me Free."
Festival Managing Director Thierry Fremaux told a news conference yesterday he expected this year to be "quite a rich and fruitful edition" of the famed festival. Submissions for the festival, which fell last year to 1,665 films, were back up to 1,715 this year, he added.
Gilles Jacob, the festival's president, said this edition aimed to explore the future of filmmaking in the age of the iPod, the iPad and other mobile devices.
It's about "asking questions about cinema's future - particularly the future of movie theaters - at this time when people are consuming more and more images on small screens, computer screens, laptops," he told the news conference, held at a gilded Paris hotel. With the new technology, "we're going to have an ever-increasing need for content."
Rumor has it that Malick's "The Tree of Life" was initially meant to premiere at last year's edition of the festival but that it wasn't finished in time. The latest film by the acclaimed "The Thin Red Line" director is billed as a story of the loss of innocence.
Malick won Cannes best director prize in 1979 for "Days of Heaven."
Festival regular Almodovar's "The Skin I Live In," starring Antonio Banderas as the plastic surgeon, follows on the director's 2009 melodrama "Broken Embraces," which screened at the Riviera festival.
The director won Cannes' best director award in 1999 for "All About My Mother" and took best screenplay in 2006 for "Volver."
Jodie Foster's "The Beaver" is to be screened out of competition, as will the latest installment in the blockbuster "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, and Rob Marshall's "On Stranger Tides."
The festival's opening film, "Midnight in Paris," is also showing out of competition. Set in the City of Light, the latest Woody Allen movie includes French first lady and former supermodel Carla Bruni-Sarkozy in a bit part. Hopes are high that Bruni-Sarkozy and her husband, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, will turn out for the inaugural screening.
The festival runs on May 11-22.
The lineup announced yesterday for the 64th edition of the festival is exceptionally strong, with much-anticipated new films by the creme de la creme of auteur filmmakers. They include Denmark's Lars von Trier with "Melancholia," Turkey's Nuri Bilge Ceylan with "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia," and Belgium's Dardenne brothers with "Set Me Free."
Festival Managing Director Thierry Fremaux told a news conference yesterday he expected this year to be "quite a rich and fruitful edition" of the famed festival. Submissions for the festival, which fell last year to 1,665 films, were back up to 1,715 this year, he added.
Gilles Jacob, the festival's president, said this edition aimed to explore the future of filmmaking in the age of the iPod, the iPad and other mobile devices.
It's about "asking questions about cinema's future - particularly the future of movie theaters - at this time when people are consuming more and more images on small screens, computer screens, laptops," he told the news conference, held at a gilded Paris hotel. With the new technology, "we're going to have an ever-increasing need for content."
Rumor has it that Malick's "The Tree of Life" was initially meant to premiere at last year's edition of the festival but that it wasn't finished in time. The latest film by the acclaimed "The Thin Red Line" director is billed as a story of the loss of innocence.
Malick won Cannes best director prize in 1979 for "Days of Heaven."
Festival regular Almodovar's "The Skin I Live In," starring Antonio Banderas as the plastic surgeon, follows on the director's 2009 melodrama "Broken Embraces," which screened at the Riviera festival.
The director won Cannes' best director award in 1999 for "All About My Mother" and took best screenplay in 2006 for "Volver."
Jodie Foster's "The Beaver" is to be screened out of competition, as will the latest installment in the blockbuster "Pirates of the Caribbean" series, and Rob Marshall's "On Stranger Tides."
The festival's opening film, "Midnight in Paris," is also showing out of competition. Set in the City of Light, the latest Woody Allen movie includes French first lady and former supermodel Carla Bruni-Sarkozy in a bit part. Hopes are high that Bruni-Sarkozy and her husband, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, will turn out for the inaugural screening.
The festival runs on May 11-22.
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