Critics have said a jury including Cate Blanchett, Kristen
Stewart and Lea Seydoux has more A-list acting talent than the
films - many from lesser-known European, Asian and African
filmmakers - vying for the Palme d'Or.
"Solo: A Star Wars Story," will be the only Hollywood
blockbuster screened during the fortnight, and even that will
have already premiered in Los Angeles.
Netflix, which brought a raft of A-listers last year, is
boycotting Cannes due to French rules that would stop it
streaming movies for three years after a cinema release.
This will also be the first festival in years without Harvey
Weinstein, the movie mogul once famous on the Riviera for his
lavish parties, but now the subject of sexual assault
allegations that have shaken the global film industry.
Weinstein has denied all allegations of non-consensual sex.
Festival director Thierry Fremaux denied that the lack of U.S.
movies indicated Cannes was losing its appeal in Hollywood,
where studios increasingly release big films late in the year to
get visibility in the run-up to the Oscars, which are awarded in
late winter.
"You should never judge on one year," he told a news conference,
while adding that the perhaps the famously harsh press corp at
Cannes - where movies are often booed during media screenings -
might be "scaring certain productions" away.
Hollywood Reporter critic Scott Roxborough said Cannes remained
"the number one film festival for quality cinema worldwide" and
that its selection of less commercial movies showed "Cannes is
going back to its roots."
"It's the only place really you can have an unknown film ...
that within a hour of being shown everybody is talking about it
... within a day, a week, it's the biggest name in arthouse
cinema," he told Reuters.
There are 21 films in the main competition and dozens more vying
for other prizes and screening out of competition. Here are a
handful of the most hotly anticipated:
Everybody Knows (Todos lo Saben)
The festival opens with this Spanish-language family drama
starring Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem. The writer-director is
the Iranian Asghar Farhadi who won foreign language Oscars for
"A Separation" and "The Salesman", taut character-driven realist
movies that explore the divisions imposed by social class and
national boundaries. "Everybody Knows" is competing for the
Palme d'Or.
The House That Jack Built
Danish provocateur Lars von Trier returns after being ejected
from the festival in 2011 for telling a news conference he was a
Nazi who sympathized with Adolf Hitler - comments he later said
were taken out of context.
Matt Dillon stars as a serial killer of women. "We experience
the story from Jack's point of view, while he postulates each
murder as an artwork in itself," according to notes in the
festival's program.
Hollywood Reporter critic Roxborough said the film, screening
out of competition, is one of his top-three must-sees, calling
it: "a movie that could almost be seen as an answer to the MeToo
movement, in a really nasty way".
[to top of second column] |
BlacKkKlansman
Spike Lee returns to Cannes almost 30 years after "Do the Right
Thing" was tipped for, but failed to get, the Palme d'Or. ("He said
he was robbed, I agree with him," said Roxborough.)
"BlacKkKlansman", the true story of an African-American police
officer who infiltrates the Ku Klux Klan, stars John David
Washington (son of Denzel) and Adam Driver.
Lee says the story, set in the 1970s, is more relevant than ever in
President Donald Trump's America.
"Agent Orange refused to repudiate the Klan, the alt-right and the
Nazis," he told Hollywood Reporter.
"'There's good people on both sides.' That's going to be on his
gravestone."
In competition for the Palme d'Or, "BlacKkKlansman" will open in
U.S. cinemas on Aug. 10, one day before the anniversary of the
far-right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia where counter-protester
Heather Heyer was killed by a car driven into the crowd.
The Man who Killed Don Quixote
Terry Gilliam's two-decade struggle to make this film has entered
movie folklore. An initial version, starring Johnny Depp and Vanessa
Paradis, was dumped after a series of calamities meant shooting had
to stop.
Finally finished, it remains to be seen if this version, with
"Brazil" star Jonathan Pryce as the Spanish knight who tilts at
windmills, can be shown at Cannes due to a last-minute legal
challenge from a movie producer who says he has the rights over it.
"It's taken him so long to make this movie I think we all owe it to
the man to go and check it out," said Roxborough of the film that
should, but may not, close the festival, out of competition, on May
19.
A Paris court on Monday heard an application for an injunction on
showing the film, but will not rule until Wednesday.
Leto (The Summer)/ 3 Faces
Two films in the main competition will screen without the presence
of their directors - both prevented from traveling by national
authorities in their home countries.
Leto, about the Leningrad rock music scene in the latter years of
the Soviet Union, is directed by Kirill Serebrennikov who is under
house arrest pending a fraud case his supporters say is part of a
government crackdown on artistic freedoms.
Iranian director Jafar Panahi was arrested in 2010 and banned from
making films, but has continued to work, to international acclaim.
Like his 2015 film "Taxi", "3 Faces" features Panahi playing himself
on screen.
The Cannes Film Festival runs from May 8 to May 19.
(Additional reporting by Sarah Mills; Writing by Robin Pomeroy;
editing by John Stonestreet)
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