Cannes lineup celebrates world film, old favorites | Inquirer Entertainment

Cannes lineup celebrates world film, old favorites

/ 06:55 AM April 19, 2013

President of the Cannes Film Festival Gilles Jacob, right, and artistic Director Thierry Fremaux, attend a news conference to announce this 2013 festival lineup in front of the Cannes International Film Festival poster for the upcoming 66th edition featuring US actors Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, in Paris, Thursday April 18, 2013. The festival will run from May 15 to May 26, 2013. AP PHOTO/FRANCOIS MORI

PARIS—The Cannes Film Festival’s 2013 lineup announced Thursday features work from some of the globe’s most dangerous locales for artists, and a sprinkling of works by old favorites including Roman Polanski, the Coen brothers and Steven Soderbergh.

Celebrating world cinema from countries with limited freedom of expression is clearly one of this year’s stories, with works from Chad, China and Iran among the 19 films competing for the Palme d’Or, one of cinema’s most coveted prizes.

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“The festival is a house that shelters artists in danger,” said Cannes President Gilles Jacob, who announced the nominees Thursday.

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Harking from Africa, “Grigris” by Chadian filmmaker Mahamat-Saleh Haroun will feature alongside “The Life of Adele” from French-Tunisian director Abdellatif Kechiche. “Zulu”—a police thriller shot in South Africa and starring Forest Whitaker and Orlando Bloom—will close the festival but is not competing.

The list also includes “A Touch of Sin” by Chinese director Jia Zhangke, and “The Past” from Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, featuring Tahar Rahim and rising star Berenice Bejo who garnered attention for “The Artist.”

The Mexican narco-film “Heli” by director Amat Escalante explores how love and family ties can provide solace in the desperation stemming from drug trafficking.

Old favorite filmmakers of the festival also fared well.

Joel and Ethan Coen, who won the Palme d’Or in 1991 for “Barton Fink,” will show their latest film “Inside Llewyn Davis,” set in New York’s 1960s folk music scene, starring Carey Mulligan, Justin Timberlake and John Goodman.

Soderbergh, who caused controversy with 1989’s Palme d’Or winner “Sex, Lies and Videotape,” is back with “Behind the Candelabra,” based on the book by Scott Thorson recounts his relationship with the flamboyant pianist Liberace.

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Roman Polanski’s “Venus In Fur” could give the Oscar-winning Polish director his second Cannes accolade. He won in 2002 with “The Pianist.”

“Only God Forgives,” Ryan Gosling’s second film with “Drive” director Nicolas Winding Refn, is also in the running. Gosling, paired with Kristin Scott Thomas, stars as a criminal in the Bangkok underworld.

Other nominees include Japanese director Takashi Miike.

Organizers sifted through 1,858 submissions over recent months. Some were submitted as late as Wednesday night, 12 hours before the official selection would be announced.

Last year, Cannes was accused of sexism for a shortlist that included no women. This year, there is one female Palme d’Or contender, Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi with her first feature, “A Chateau in Italy.” Bruni-Tedeschi is the sister of former French first lady Carla Bruni.

“The Great Gatsby,” with Leonardo DiCaprio in the title role and directed by Australian Baz Luhrmann, will open this year’s Cannes festival—in 3-D, no less. The film will be making its premiere but is not entered in the competition.

Hollywood giant Steven Spielberg heads the jury at the festival at the French Riviera this year, which runs May 15-26.

Sofia Coppola’s “The Bling Ring” will open the other official section of the festival, “Un Certain Regard,” which highlights unique styles and different points of view.

Coppola opened this section once before with the 80s-tinged “Marie Antoinette,” that divided critics back in 2006. “The Bling Ring,” starring Emma Watson, tells the true tale of celebrity-obsessed teenagers who use the internet to track the whereabouts of their famous targets in order to break into their homes.

Other films in this section include “As I Lay Dying” by actor-director James Franco, an adaptation of the famed William Faulkner novel of the same name.

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Danish “Dogma” director Thomas Vinterberg will head the “Un Certain Regard” jury.—Thomas Adamson

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