59th Cannes Film Festival

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Satyajit's Son
Joined: Wed Sep 28, 2005 6:52 am
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#26 Post by Satyajit's Son »

cafeman wrote:Just looking at lineup, it will be a crime if Aki doesn`t win. If they give it to Dumont, I will lose the last 1% speck of faith I still have in Cannes after the last two years especially.
You've got to be kidding me. L'Enfant is one of the greatest films to win the Palm D'or.
Grimfarrow
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#27 Post by Grimfarrow »

The Fanciful Norwegian wrote:Looks like Summer Palace might be out of the festival, although the Cannes website still has it premiering tomorrow (the 18th). I think the last paragraph ("...it may be that China has narrowly dodged a bullet here - sending anything but a slick, polished exhibition piece to Cannes could betray the spirit of the festival and tarnish China's image in the process") is sarcasm. I sure hope so, anyway.
Nope. Already premiered and reviews:

http://www.thehollywoodreporter.com/thr ... 1002538538

Summer Palace

By Kirk Honeycutt

Bottom line: A mesmerizing, wonderfully acted though protracted love story set against social unrest in China.
Grimfarrow
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#28 Post by Grimfarrow »

http://www.thehollywoodreporter.com/thr ... 1002538547

The Wind That Shakes the Barley

By Ray Bennett

A Ken Loach film about the British in Ireland always has the potential for controversy, but his historical drama "The Wind That Shakes the Barley" is unlikely to inflame passions on either side.
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tavernier
Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm

#29 Post by tavernier »

Grimfarrow wrote:http://www.thehollywoodreporter.com/thr ... 1002538547

The Wind That Shakes the Barley

By Ray Bennett

A Ken Loach film about the British in Ireland always has the potential for controversy, but his historical drama "The Wind That Shakes the Barley" is unlikely to inflame passions on either side.
I like how this reviewer decides that English subtitles for thick Irish brogues are part of the reason the film isn't very good:

The film looks handsomely authentic and the familiar characters are engaging, but the story is predictable and the Irish accents are so thick that even English subtitles are required.
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The Fanciful Norwegian
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#30 Post by The Fanciful Norwegian »

Oh my God, foreign people speaking in foreign ways...in movies, even. I wonder if the HR reviewer knows that Riff-Raff and Sweet Sixteen had subtitles too. I think Sweet Sixteen was subtitled even in the UK.

Here's another URL for the Hollywood Reporter review. I link this mainly (okay, entirely) because of the second link from the top under the "Companies" heading on the right-hand sidebar. Also, Ken Loach has apparently evolved beyond his human form and now exists as a pure "Concept."
Noir of the Night
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 12:57 am

#31 Post by Noir of the Night »

Took him long enough.
Anonymous

#32 Post by Anonymous »

cafeman wrote:Just looking at lineup, it will be a crime if Aki doesn`t win. If they give it to Dumont, I will lose the last 1% speck of faith I still have in Cannes after the last two years especially.
Dumont is the sole genius In Competition this year, it will be a travesty if he doesn't win.

Nb. He was apparently pressured to trim the violent ending of FLANDRES in exchange for his Competition place, that's a travesty right there. Nevertheless, expect the annual procession of feigned outrage come May 23rd.

> Luckily, the jury actually watches the films before making their decisions.

Excepting Salma Hayek last year.

> L'Enfant is one of the greatest films to win the Palme D'or.

L'Enfant is a dire film, Pickpocket for primetime TV, an insult.
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backstreetsbackalright
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#33 Post by backstreetsbackalright »

ugetsu wrote:L'Enfant is a dire film, Pickpocket for primetime TV, an insult.
...says the guy who called Bruno Dumont a genius.
Noir of the Night
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#34 Post by Noir of the Night »

ugetsu wrote: Dumont is the sole genius In Competition this year, it will be a travesty if he doesn't win.
Duh. That Almodovar guy, what a hack. And don't even get me started on Richard Linklater, when I found out Dazed and Confused was going to be in the Criterion Collection it made me want to go on a message board and rant about how some foreign film should have been released by them instead, just so I could seem all sophisticated and such.
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tryavna
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#35 Post by tryavna »

Noir of the Night wrote:
ugetsu wrote: Dumont is the sole genius In Competition this year, it will be a travesty if he doesn't win.
Duh. That Almodovar guy, what a hack. And don't even get me started on Richard Linklater, when I found out Dazed and Confused was going to be in the Criterion Collection it made me want to go on a message board and rant about how some foreign film should have been released by them instead, just so I could seem all sophisticated and such.
The force is strong in this one....

:lol:
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Michael
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#36 Post by Michael »

That Almodovar guy, what a hack.

Excuse me! Now who's being the real hack?
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tavernier
Joined: Sat Apr 02, 2005 11:18 pm

#37 Post by tavernier »

Michael wrote:That Almodovar guy, what a hack.

Excuse me! Now who's being the real hack?
Uh, I think it's that Alanis Morissette thing, called "irony."
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Schkura
Joined: Sat Sep 17, 2005 5:48 pm
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#38 Post by Schkura »

Interested parties may PM me to sign up for my costly online sarcasm clinics. Irony is using a Criterion messageboard to fund my crippling DVD habit.

Oh, and thanks for the heads-up on Palace, Grimfarrow.
Anonymous

#39 Post by Anonymous »

Well the rest of the line-up consists of Hollywood darlings (eg. Del Toro), second-rate auteurs (eg. Almodovar) and a couple of wild cards.
Noir of the Night
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 12:57 am

#40 Post by Noir of the Night »

Michael wrote:That Almodovar guy, what a hack.

Excuse me! Now who's being the real hack?
Don't worry, I love Almodovar. I even did a 5-page report on him for my Spanish AP class.
Last edited by Noir of the Night on Tue May 23, 2006 5:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Noir of the Night
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#41 Post by Noir of the Night »

ugetsu wrote:He was apparently pressured to trim the violent ending of FLANDRES in exchange for his Competition place
Where did you hear this?
Anonymous

#42 Post by Anonymous »

Noir of the Night wrote:Where did you hear this?
hmm, can't tell you that... anyway, I expect the story will come out after the premiere on Tuesday.
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HerrSchreck
Joined: Sun Sep 04, 2005 3:46 pm

#43 Post by HerrSchreck »

Noir of the Night wrote:
Michael wrote:That Almodovar guy, what a hack.

Excuse me! Now who's being the real hack?
Don't worry, I love Almodovar.
DID YOU NOT READ THE POST CARL?
Grimfarrow
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#44 Post by Grimfarrow »

Yikes, early word is that SOUTHLAND TALES is getting ripped by critics.
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John Cope
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#45 Post by John Cope »

Mike D'Angelo reports that despite its otherwise lukewarm reception critics such as Hoberman, Dargis and Taubin are said to consider Southland a masterpiece. We'll have to wait for the reviews to see if this is actually true.
Noir of the Night
Joined: Tue Nov 29, 2005 12:57 am

#46 Post by Noir of the Night »

Hollywood Reporter weighs in on Southland:

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/aw ... 1002465051

Bottom Line: Shambolic.

However, their assessments of Red Road and Selon Charlie are quite positive:
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/aw ... 1002465058

Bottom line: A tense and provocative thriller revolving around a past tragedy.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr/aw ... 1002465052

Bottom line: The title of Nicole Garcia's complex and rewarding story of intertwined lives is "Charlie Says," but it is really about what observant 11-year-old Charlie sees
Last edited by Noir of the Night on Tue May 23, 2006 2:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
rs98762001
Joined: Mon Jul 25, 2005 10:04 pm

#47 Post by rs98762001 »

The Variety and Reporter reviews for SOUTHLAND and SHORTBUS are up on their respective sites, and oddly enough they are almost identical. Both pan SOUTHLAND as a huge ridiculous mess, and both claim SHORTBUS is only interesting when it deals with the sex, and rather boring otherwise.
Grimfarrow
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#48 Post by Grimfarrow »

SHORTBUS' review seems more positive than you portray it, rs98762001. Todd McCarthy ends his review with:

So it's fun while the fun lasts, which will vary for different viewers. But despite the variable outcome, Mitchell earns major points for daring such a project, finding a cast willing and able to carry it off, developing the story with the thesps so the sex integrates with the general flow of events (while remaining dominant), achieving a smooth and nimble visual style, and suffusing everything with an intense curiosity and generous spirit.

So it seems he likes it despite its flaws.
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Len
Joined: Sun Nov 21, 2004 11:48 pm
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#49 Post by Len »

I saw Aki's new film again today, and now I'm beginning to think it's definitely one of his finest works. In a way, it continues the themes of Man Without a Past, but on this second viewing, it seemed more like Aki's going back to his older material, as the film reminded me very much of his work in 80s, notably Ariel and Shadows In Paradise.

Having not seen any of the other films in competition this year, I can't judge on whether or not it deserves to win, but I strongly disagree with the people who call it a mediocre rehash of Man Without a Past. It really is much more, but as a film, it's not as easy to enjoy as the earlier parts of his Finland "trilogy" were.
rs98762001
Joined: Mon Jul 25, 2005 10:04 pm

#50 Post by rs98762001 »

Grimfarrow wrote:SHORTBUS' review seems more positive than you portray it, rs98762001.
Right you are.
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