France
wins big, Italy, Blanchett lose out in Cannes
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[May 26, 2015]
By Michael Roddy
CANNES, France (Reuters) -
French film "Dheepan" won the top Palme d'Or prize for
director Jacques Audiard at the 68th Cannes
International Film Festival on Sunday, crowning a good
night for French cinema but a bad one for Italy and
actress Cate Blanchett.
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The choice of a film that revolves around the lives of Tamil
refugees from Sri Lanka's civil war moving to France was seen as
sending a political message, but the awards overall left some
critics and festivalgoers dumbfounded.
"It's extremely disappointing, nobody seems happy," Jay
Weissberg, European-based critic for trade publication Variety,
told Reuters.
"It's an anti-climactic finish to a festival that was middling
to begin with."
Ethan Coen, who along with his brother Joel served as
co-president of the jury, defended the jury's choices,
especially the Palme d'Or winner.
"Everybody had an enthusiasm for it, to some degree or another
we all thought it was a very beautiful movie," he told a press
conference.
Actor and jury member Jake Gyllenhaal got a laugh when he
interjected: "It's a good prize."
Hungarian director Laszlo Nemes's debut film "Saul Fia" (Son of
Saul), which made a huge impact at the festival for its
portrayal by non-professional actor Geza Rohrig of a Jewish "Sonderkommando"
forced laborer in the Auschwitz concentration camp, took the
Grand Prix second prize.
Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos's surreal English-language film
"The Lobster" about guests at a posh singles hotel who are
turned into animals if they don't find a mate took the Jury
Prize.
Taiwan's Hou Hsiao-Hsien won best director for "Nie Yianniang"
(The Assassin) and Mexican director Michel Franco got best
screenplay for "Chronic".
But three Italian entries among 19 films competing for the Palme
d'Or went home empty-handed, as did Blanchett whose performance
as a wealthy woman who falls in love with a shopgirl in the
lesbian romance "Carol" won high critical praise.
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Instead, Rooney Mara, who plays the shopgirl in director Todd
Haynes's film shared the best actress award with France's Emmanuelle
Bercot, who stared in director Maiwenn's "Mon Roi" (My King).
Among the Italian films, Nanni Moretti's "Mia Madre" (My Mother),
about a woman director whose life spins out of control while her
mother is dying, had been tipped as a possible winner.
France's Vincent Lindon, who took the best actor prize for his
portrayal in Stéphane Brizé's film "La Loi du Marché" (The Measure
of a Man) of a floorwalker in a supermarket that has a secret plan
to get rid of employees to boost the bottom line, was unapologetic
about France's strong showing.
"It's not because it's in Cannes that we can't receive prizes as
other people and this year maybe they wanted to celebrate French
cinema," Lindon said.
The Palme d'Or winner tells the story of Tamil refugees trying to
make a new life on a violent and drug-infested French housing
estate.
"I'm very moved. Winning a prize from the Coen brothers is something
that is exceptional," Audiard, who has won two smaller Cannes awards
in the past, told the closing ceremony. "I'm thinking of my father."
Scott Roxborough, a critic for the trade publication The Hollywood
Reporter, said Audiard had been in the running for a Cannes award
for a long time.
"I don't think it's his best film but it's a hot topic ... It honors
the director and sends a political message at the same time,"
Roxborough said.
(Additional reporting by John Irish in Paris and Rollo Ross in
Cannes; Writing by Michael Roddy; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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