Posted: Fri Apr 25, 2008 7:29 am
Read between the lines...
Could this be Claire Denis? I haven't read anything about the status of this other than its opening in September in France.Oedipax wrote:Don't give up hope yet. There's another French film in Competition that hasn't been announced yet.
Now that the news is out, what I mean is, it's not a "maybe", Lisandro Alonso's film is definitely in Quinzaine.miless wrote:wait, so what is the opening film... and is Lisandro's film not a maybe, or just not showing?
I know that accomodation is usually sold out very quickly and that many people have to find accomodation away from all the action. So unless you know anyone with a house on the Croisette you'll be hard pushed to find accomodation now. With regards to tickets I have no idea as I only this small amount of information from my old company directors who went to Cannes every year.backstreetsbackalright wrote:Does anyone have any crash-course tips for attending films at Cannes? As in, is it impossible to find lodging this late in the game? How quickly to tickets to screenings sell out? That sort of thing...
There are several other contenders for sure, such as Brisseau, Michel Houellebecq or Rithy Panh.Zazou dans le Metro wrote:Could this be Claire Denis? I haven't read anything about the status of this other than its opening in September in France.Oedipax wrote:Don't give up hope yet. There's another French film in Competition that hasn't been announced yet.
Here is the text of the article:miless wrote:I cannot seem to get that link to work.
At Cannes, 'Blindness' unseen?
But the film's debut may yet be announced
By Steven Zeitchik
April 25, 2008
When the Festival de Cannes unveiled the bulk of its lineup Wednesday, a call went up among industryites and critics: No "Blindness"?
The Fernando Meirelles drama, based on a novel from Nobel Prize-winning author Jose Saramago about a city struck by a plague of blindness, seemed custom-tailored for the festival. The English-language film is an ambitious drama from a global auteur who has debuted at Cannes before. And domestic-rights holder Miramax (Focus Features holds international rights) rode the Cannes strategy to perfection last year with "No Country for Old Men."
Most important, unlike Guillermo Arriaga's "The Burning Plain" and other auteur films that won't be at the fest, "Blindness" is actually finished. So what gives?
Miramax, of course, could be holding back its big September release to roll it out through a combination of such summer/fall festivals as Venice, Toronto and New York, a gambit that worked for its September 2006 release "The Queen."
More likely, however, is that talk of a Croisette absence is premature. The opening- and closing-night films haven't been officially announced, and several sources said that Meirelles' profile and the film's scope (as well as such stars as Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo) make it a prime opening-night candidate. Even if it doesn't end up in that showcase slot, it could go in one of several competition slots that might yet be announced. Said one executive: "I'd be very surprised if it didn't end up there."
Spielberg and Eastwood could be getting company soon after all.
Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles' English-language film will reportedly open the festival while Laurent Cantet's Entre Les Murs will be the third French film competition.
'Blindness' tipped to open Cannes
'Hunger' set to open Un Certain Regard
By ADAM DAWTREY, JOHN HOPEWELLLONDON — Fernando Meirelles’ “Blindness” is being strongly tipped to open the Cannes Film Festival, while “Hunger,” from Brit director Steve McQueen, is the leading candidate to kick off Un Certain Regard.
A drama-thriller about a city succumbing to a blindness epidemic, “Blindness” stars Julianne Moore and Mark Ruffalo.
It’s produced by Meirelles’ Brazilian label O2 Filmes, Japan’s Bee Vine Pics and Rhombus Media in Toronto, the source of many press reports that identify the film as the May 14 Cannes opener.
Contacted by Daily Variety, Cannes declined to comment on the rumors regarding “Blindness.”
Meirelles' pic was one of the most glaring absences from the Official Selection lineup unveiled by delegate general Thierry Fremaux last Wednesday.
Fremaux's announcement left both opening and closing film slots open.
The Cannes berth of “Hunger” appears clearer.
McQueen’s feature debut is strongly expected to open Un Certain Regard.
If so, the film’s choice as the section opener will be interpreted as a big, bold statement by Fremaux about the type of film he’d like to see packing out Un Certain Regard, for long regarded as a destination for Cannes Competition rejects.
Reportedly powerful, but very out-there, “Hunger” is an impressionistic interpretation of the last six weeks in the life of Bobby Sands, the IRA hunger striker who died in the Maze prison in 1981.
The latest Barry Levinson film apparently.The comedy drama What Just Happened, starring Robert de Niro, Bruce Willis, and Sean Penn, will close the festival.
Warner Bros. To Be Feted At Cannes
The Cannes Film Festival announced plans on Wednesday to pay tribute to Warner Bros. on the studio's 85th anniversary by screening a classic movie from the studio's archives during each night of the festival. The festival said that it will also premiere film critic Richard Schickel's documentary, You Must Remember This: The Warner Bros. Story, narrated by Clint Eastwood, as well as a night of Looney Tunes shorts. The tribute begins with a screening of Mervyn LeRoy's 1932 I Am a Fugitive From a Chain Gang and ends with 1999's The Matrix. Somewhat surprisingly, the film series does not include a screening of The Jazz Singer, the first sound film, produced in 1927 and starring entertainer Al Jolson.
Sounds interesting, but it really doesn't sound like Visconti's film or Dostoevsky's story (both rely pretty heavily on depressing/magical realism and a touch of naivety, and of course there aren't two women). Maybe the director's inspiration is Visconti in general, as his films were for Michael Cimino?Two Lovers is sort of classically plotted, with the hero torn between two beautiful women, one mysterious and maddening, the other intimate and calming.