May 16, 2008
IW NEWS | IFC Gets Assayas' Latest
IFC Films has acquired North American rights to
Olivier Assayas' "
Summer Hours," starring
Juliette Binoche. The company is planning a 2009 release for the French drama which is screening this week in the
Marche du Film here at the
Cannes Film Festival. IFC's
Arianna Bocco negotiated the deal with
MK2 International's
Matthieu Giblin. The film is described as following, "the divergent paths of three forty something siblings whose lives collide when their mother, heiress to her uncle's exceptional 19th century art collection, dies suddenly." [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
CANNES '08 BIZ DAILY | Reliance Talks Big Numbers, Weinsteins Acquire "Lake" & Make Asian TV Deal, GreeneStreet Takes "Long Time," The Argentine Pavilion, and More
by Brian Brooks, Peter Knegt, and Jenny Sung (May 16, 2008)
Continuing coverage of the
Marche du Film in Cannes, indieWIRE reports on the latest deals and news from the Croisette. India-based media company
Reliance Big Entertainment commits to a $1 billion slate, the Weinsteins acquired "
Eden Lake," and inked a pan-Asian deal with TV network STAR, Greenstreet nabs the international rights to "
Long Time Gone,"
Flip Video puts on a shorts competition at Cannes, the Argentina Pavilion celebrates a full slate at the Festival, and more.
[ read more in Biz ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Companies, Lead Story ]
CANNES '08 | Fri PM Roundup
indieWIRE offers a select take of Cannes 2008 news around the world.
STRAIGHT TO THE (MARKETING) HEART
A giant billboard outside of the Grand Hotel forces many passers-by to stop and think. (Variety)
WHERE WORLDS COLLIDE
A survey of how the festival and Cannes the town can differ in many different ways.(The Guardian)
BEACH FARE
The sole part of the festival open to the public, this year's Cannes Classics will screen Warner Bro.'s classics to celebrate the studio's 85th anniversary. (Hollywood Reporter)
HUNGER STRIKE
A review of the controversial prison film, "Hunger," which premiered today at Cannes. (The Guardian)
Get the latest from the 2008 Cannes Film Festival in indieWIRE's special section. 
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Events ]

CANNES '08 | Desplechin on Cinema
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 16, 2008)
In Cannes for the fourth time, French filmmaker
Arnaud Desplechin unveiled his French family story "
A Christmas Tale" (Un Conte de Noel) this morning. At a post-screening press conference, Desplechin talked about his passion for cinema, noting that he spends much more time watching film than making them, gaining a sense of control through consuming cinema. "When I make films, I try to see how things work," Desplechin noted, "I go to the cinema to live better, to have a better life...What I see on the screen is better arranged than in real life." Earlier this week,
IFC Films acquired the film for a U.S. release. It opens in France later this month. [Eugene Hernandez]
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]
iW NEWS | Fortissimo Gets On Gibney's "Bus"
Fortissimo Films has acquired the worldwide rights (except the UK and US) to
Jigsaw Film's new production, "
Magic Bus." "Bus" will be directed by
Alex Gibney, and chart the story of the infamous, LSD-fueled bus journey of avant-garde author
Ken Kesey and his cohorts across America. "We are thrilled to have the opportunity to work with Alex Gibney and [the film's producer] Will Clarke on what no doubt will be a fascinating cinematic trip through the beginnings of the hippie and counter-culture movement that shook the US and the world set against the wonderful music that moved those times," said Fortissimo EVP Nicole Mackey in a statement. The film is partly financed and is being executive produced by
Phoenix Wiley, and is expected to be completed next year. [Peter Knegt]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
CANNES '08 | Fri AM Roundup
indieWIRE offers a select take of Cannes 2008 news
around the world.
CANNES DAY 1 & 2 FILMS
A quick review of the festival's films from the first few days, and a look at Ari Folman's doc which collides animation and real memories into a head-on crash. (New York Times)
"BLINDNESS" IS VISUALLY ARRESTING
A podcast reviewing the festival's opener "Blindness," and an interview with actress Alice Braga. (The Guardian)
A GREY CANNES (NOT JUST A WEATHER REPORT)
2008 Adult Video Network female performer of the year Sash Grey stars in a Canadian slasher film on the market in Cannes. (Hollywood Reporter)
GUERILLA FILMMAKING...LITERALLY
A behind-the-scenes look at one of this year's most anticipated films by Steven Soderbergh. (The Guardian)

[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Events ]
May 15, 2008
CANNES '08 DISPATCH | Serious, Silly Intersect In First 24 Hours of 61st Cannes Festival
by Eugene Hernandez (May 15, 2008)
While attendees sat inside the
Cannes Film Festival's Debussy theater on Wednesday watching the morning press screening of
Fernando Meirelles' harrowing "
Blindness," nearby on the Croisette dozens of costumed pandas danced with
Jack Black to hype the animated festival entry, "
Kung Fu Panda." Like the abandoned characters depicted in the horrific world of "Blindness," the French locals wearing the 100 lb. bear costumes yesterday had to be carefully escorted from the Carlton Beach pier because they were unable to see anything. Such was the scene during the first twenty-four hours of the 2008 Cannes Film Festival, an event comprised of serious films for cinephiles and PR stunts aimed at movie industry insiders and thousands of attending journalists.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]

CANNES 08 | A "Blindness" Quicky
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 15, 2008)
"Sumimasen (Japanese for 'excuse me'), but may I take your photo for
indieWIRE and
Cannes Market News?" "Yes, but only one shot," said "
Blindness" actor
Yusuke Iseya Wednesday night at the party for their film which opened the festival, directed by
Fernando Meirelles on the seaside in Cannes. Iseya and his beautiful co-star
Yoshino Kimura were heading out of the party, which kept the champagne flowing another hour or so, when we approached them.
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]

CANNES '08 | McKellar and Handling Doing "Blindness"
Photo by Brian Brooks (May 15, 2008)
Fernando Meirelles' "
Blindness" kicked off the 61st
Festival de Canne Wednesday night and of course it was all followed by a party -- seaside, naturally -- at the Carlton Beach off the Croisette. The film's writer/actor
Don McKellar was among those celebrating along with
Toronto International Film Festival Group head
Piers Handling. The party was of, of course, packed and the glowing champagne kept everyone in a good mood, but the party was not quite the lavish spectacle of some years past.
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]
CANNES '08 BIZ DAILY | Update: Hyde Park Million Dollar Asian Fund; Celluloid Follows "Prophet," MTV Wants Their Elephant Eye, Canadians All Business, and More
by Eugene Hernandez, Brian Brooks, Peter Knegt, and Jenny Sung (May 15, 2008)
Continuing coverage of the
Marche du Film in Cannes, indieWIRE reports on the latest deals and news from the Croisette.
Hyde Park hypes a multi-million dollar fund for Singapore productions,
MTV acquires "
Planet B-Boy from
Elephant Eye,
Celluloid Dreams begins pre-sales of
Jacques Audiard's latest,
Jada Pinkett- Smith brings her directorial debut to Cannes,
Origin Pictures will launch in June, a look at the Canadian pavillion, and more.
[ read more in Biz ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Companies, Lead Story ]
May 14, 2008
CANNES '08 BIZ DAILY | IFC Takes Two, Salt Launches, Fortissimo Busy, Delpy Pre-Sales, Ukranian Pavilion, and More
by Brian Brooks, Eugene Hernandez, Peter Knegt, and Jenny Sung (May 14, 2008)
Continuing coverage of the
Marche du Film in Cannes, indieWIRE reports on the latest deals and news from the Croisette. IFC has acquired a pair of Cannes festival entries,
Arnaud Desplechin's "
A Christmas Tale" and
Josh Safdie's "
The Pleasure of Being Robbed." Meanwhile, Fortissimo has had a busy round of sales leading up to the festival, while Salt launches for its first market after being re-branded. Finally,
Julie Delpy inks pre-sales for her passion project, a look at the Ukranian pavillion, and more.
[ read more in Biz ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Companies, Lead Story ]
CANNES '08 | Wed PM Roundup
indieWIRE offers a select take of Cannes 2008 news around the world.
CANNES FROM YOUR COMPUTER
Participate in an initiative by Canada's National Film Board to watch and vote for select films on YouTube to win a special award at this year's festival. (Wired)
CANNES IN A VAN
The smallest mobile film festival at the largest static film festival. (Londonist)
CANNES YOU GUESS?
As the festival kicks off, speculations for the coveted Palme D'Or winner begins. (Reuters)
CANNES '68 REVISITED
This year's Cannes Festival will be screening films from the tumultuous May '68 festival. (Monsters and Critics)

[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Events ]
IFC Brings "Pleasure" to North America
North American rights to Cannes Directors Fortnight closing feature, "
The Pleasure of Being Robbed" by co-writer/director
Joshua Safdie have been picked up by
IFC Films, the New York-based distributor confirmed Wednesday afternoon. [Brian Brooks/indieWIRE]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
Elephant Eye Acquires Two
Elephant Eye Films have two new acquisitions: Director
Nate Meyer's urban drama "
Frat Girl," a follow-up to "
Pretty In The Face," which is starting production, and
Michael Jacob's "
Audience of One," a documentary about a Pentecostal minister who receives a vision from God telling him to make a science fiction film, which won the Special Jury Award at
South By Southwest and was a an official selection of
New Directors/New Films. Based in New York, the principals of the newly formed Elephant Eye are
Kim Jose,
David Robinson and
Vicky Wight. [Peter Knegt]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
Delpy's "Countess" Closes Pre-Sale
Director
Julie Delpy's second feature directorial effort, "
The Countess" has closed pre-sale agreements with the UK's
Halcyon and France's
Bac Films, Paris-based film sales company
Celluloid Dreams announced Wednesday. "The Countess" is described as a "period thriller" about the notorious Countess Bathory, played by Delpy. [Brian Brooks]
[permalink] [ filed under Biz, Cannes ]

CANNES '08 | Talking "Blindness"
Photo by Eugene Hernandez (May 14, 2008)
Fernando Meirelles' multi-national co-production "
Blindness," a look at (in his words today) "the fragility of civilizations," opens the
Cannes Film Festival tonight (Wednesday) in the South of France. Adapted by Canadian actor and filmmaker
Don McKellar, who called the film "tragically timey" during a press conference this afternoon in Cannes, "Blindness" seemed to stir decidely mixed reactions at a packed morning press screening. It follows a mysterious outbreak of blindness that quickly spreads across society, leading to a quarantine of those affected, including Moore's sighted character who fakes the disease to stick with her husband (
Mark Ruffalo). Adandoned in a prison-like facility, the captives must fend for themelves as their ranks continue to grow. "We consider oursleves so strong, sophisticated and solid and then one thing goes and everything collapses," Merellies elaborated today, "We are really, as you say in English, skating on thin ice." Pictured (left to right) at today's press conference in Cannes: Danny Glover, Alice Braga, Fernando Meirelles, Julianne Moore, Gael Garcia Bernal, Yoshino Kimura, and Yusuke Iseya.
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 1 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]
CANNES '08 | Wed AM Roundup
indieWIRE offers a select take of Cannes 2008 news around the world.
BATTLE OF THE BADGES
Variety's Mike Jones takes a humorous look at Cannes color-coded system for festival badges. (Variety)
BUYER'S LAMENT
Will new films by James Gray, Steven Soderbergh, and Charlie Kaufman ignite a sluggish US market?(Hollywood Reporter)
THE STARS HIT CANNES
Julianne Moore, Harrison Ford, Clint Eastwood, Robert De Niro, Angelina Jolie, and Madonna? Where else but Cannes. (BBC News)
GET YOUR DRINK ON AT CANNES
Wondering what type of rose to finish off your first day at Cannes? (Newsday)
VICKY CRISTINA BARCELONA TRAILER
Check out the trailer for Woody Allen's latest which premiere at Cannes. (LA Times) 
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Events ]
May 13, 2008
AFP: Some like it hot! Cannes' caviar n' champ
The
Cannes Film Festival opens officially to red-carpet glory on Wednesday but already the whining about the steep prices enforced for the yearly global invasion of stars and celluloid has begun. Pierre Pratabuy
herereports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
CANNES '08 DISPATCH | Rain or Shine? Cannes Market Opens Amidst Changing Forecast
by Anthony Kaufman (May 13, 2008)
Rainy skies and industry-wide gloom-and-doom hover over this year's
Cannes, but the nearly 11,000 registrants attending this year's festival and Market can't all be depressed. With thousands of new films on offer, from auteur visions to star-driven genre pictures, and hundreds of distributors in need of product, the supply-and-demand business of Cannes must go on. Along the Cote d'Azur Tuesday, in fact, the dreary weather finally broke to reveal sunny skies.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]
CANNES '08 BIZ DAILY | Cannes Market Kickoff, Fortissimo Gets Killer Film, AmPav Turns 20, and More
by Brian Brooks, Peter Knegt and Eugene Hernandez (May 13, 2008)
In the first of a series of daily dispatches focusing on the business side of the 2008
Cannes Film Festival: indieWIRE talks to
Marche du Film director
Jerome Paillard;
Fortissimo acquires the rights to "
Gigantic;"
TFI is set to show some of
Spike Lee's "
Miracle at St. Anna,"
Arthouse Films acquires "
Louise Bourgeois,
Echo Bridge debuts a new slate, and the American Pavilion celebrates twenty years.
[ read more in Biz ] [ 1 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Companies, Lead Story ]
May 12, 2008
LAT | FIRST LOOK: Cannes colors "Blindness"
If eyes are the window to the soul, then
Cannes Film Festival organizers' choice of "
Blindness" as the opening night film promises a 24-frames-per-second allegory about the fragile state of civil society and the human spirit. Sheigh Crabtree
reports with a trailer sneak peak.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
AFP: The year that shook Cannes
A year of revolt the world over, tumultuous 1968 also brought high drama to
Cannes, the single time the film festival had to be cut short, with no one taking home a prize and no red-carpet finale. Claire Rosemberg
herereports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
Reuters: Cannes pits Hollywood against obscure arthouse
Hollywood legends and obscure arthouse directors descend on
Cannes from Wednesday for the world's biggest film festival that combines edgy cinema with A-list celebrities, glitzy parties and frenetic deal-making. Mike Collett-White
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
May 7, 2008
iW NEWS | Cannes Classics Set For Fifth Year
The
Cannes Film Festival will spotlight classic films on rediscovered or restored masterworks or films that have been re-released in theaters or DVD with the
Cannes Classics 2008 program. Presented at the Palais des Festival, the Cinema de la Plage and the La Licorne Theatre, the program includes a tribute to
Manoel de Oliveira for his 100th birthday, featuring a screening of one of his first films, 1931's "
Douro, Faina Fluvial," as well as
Wong Kar Wai presenting "
Ashes of Time Redux." Overall, the program features dozens of films, including a new or restored prints of
Marcel Ophuls' 1955 film "
Lola Montes,"
Vijay Anand's 1965 film "
Guide,"
Paul Newman's 1972 film "
Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds,"
Bruce Weber's 1988 film "
Let's Get Lost,"
Alejandro Jodorowsky's 1989 film "
Santa Sangre,"
Jean Cocteau's 1949 film "
Orphee,"
James Toback's 1977 film "
Fingers,"
Lester James Peries' 1965 film "
Gamperaliya," and
Ben Maddow,
Syndey Meyers and
Joseph Strick's 1960 collaboration "
The Savage Eye." Two new films will also be presented in the Documentaries About Cinema section:
James Cressanthis's "
No Subtitles Necessary: Laszlo & Vilmos," which follows the journey and friendship of Hungarian directors
Laszlo Kovacs and
Vilmos Zsigmond, and
Richard Schickel's documentary about the history of
Warner Brothers, "
You Must Remember This," which will be accompanied by 10 screenings of classic Warner films, including a one-off "Looney Tunes." [Peter Knegt]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
iW NEWS | Critics Week Takes on "Poverty"
Philippe Diaz's "
The End of Poverty?" has been added to
Critics Week as part of the fest's "Cinema & Politics" day on May 19. Narrated by
Martin Sheen, Diaz's ("Now & Later") doc explores whether the "true causes of povery today" stem from a deliberate orchestration since colonial times in which wealthy nations exploit the poor. Filmed in high definition in countries in Europe, Africa and South America, the film features economists, politicians and people engaged in social movements. Following its screening, Diaz and figures from the film will participate in a panel discussion. [Brian Brooks]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
VAR | Sony Classics Gets Egoyan's Cannes Entry
Sony Pictures Classics has acquired "domestic and select international rights" to
Atom Egoyan's
Cannes Film Festival competition entry, "
Adoration,"
according to
Variety.
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
May 6, 2008
iW NEWS | Visit Gets Safdie's "Robbed" for Cannes
Unveiling its lineup for next week's Cannes Market,
Visit Films has announced its acquisition of international rights to
Josh Safdie's "
The Pleasure of Being Robbed," which will close the Director's Fortnight section this year. Also on Visit's slate are
Azazel Jacobs's Sundance hit "
Momma's Man,"
Olaf De Fleur's Berlinale Teddy Award winner "
The Amazing Truth About Queen Raquela,"
Stephen Higgins and
Nina Gilden Seavey's "
The Matador" from SXSW and
Guy Moshe's "
Holly." The company recently closed a spate of deals on recent market titles, including a 4 film pact with
MovieMobz in Brazil for "
Arranged," "
Hannah Takes The Stairs," "
Choking Man," and "
Severed Ways: The Norse Discovery of America." It also licensed "Hannah Takes the Stairs" to
ICA Films (UK), "Choking Man" to
Soda (UK), and "Severed Ways" to
Ascot-Elite (Germany, Austria, Switzerland). [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
May 5, 2008
iW NEWS | Marche du Film Sees Rise in Attendance
As of April 15th, more than 8,000 professionals from 93 countries already confirmed their participation in the
Marche du Film at the
Cannes Film Festival, an 8% rise from 2007 and 40% since 2003. In response to a significant screenings demand, 3 new screening rooms will complete the 30 existing ones, with an overall of 12 digital screening rooms. The Marche will be ready to host the 1,600 screenings already booked for the 2008 edition. Additionally, about 300 companies will showcase their productions on more than 6,000 square meters of exhibiting surface. About 120 exhibitors will be present in hotels or flats on the Croisette. [Peter Knegt]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
April 30, 2008
iW NEWS | THINKFilm Makes Theatrical & Home Video Deal for "Roman Polanski" Doc
U.S. theatrical and home video rights to Sundance '08 doc "
Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired" have been acquired by
THINKFilm from
HBO, which acquired the title at the festival in January. "Polanski" will have its international premiere at the upcoming
Cannes Film Festival. HBO will air the film on June 9th, and THINK will launch a theatrical roll out beginning July 11 in New York. Directed by
Marina Zenovich, the film spotlights the the public scandal and private tragedy that drove the legendary director from the United States more than 30 years ago. "Marina's film is one of the best documentaries I've seen in years," commented Urman in a statement. "It is as compulsively enjoyable as the juiciest tabloid yet it also serves as a stunning indictment of our tabloid-crazed culture. Buoyed by HBO's terrific promotional support, the film should have enormous want-to-see, and exhibitor interest in the film couldn't be higher." The deal, which was jointly announced by THINKFilm president
Mark Urman and
Sheila Nevins, president,
HBO Documentary Films, and is the latest collaboration between the two companies, whose series of partnerships has included recent Oscar-winner, "
Taxi to the Dark Side.." Last month,
reported on the film's brief Oscar-qualifying run, which indieWIRE. [Brian Brooks]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes, Documentary ]
April 29, 2008
iW NEWS | C'est Officiel: "Blindness" To Open Cannes
Five Films Added to Fest... Fernando Mereilles's "
Blindness" will in fact open the 2008
Festival de Cannes on May 14th -- screening in competition -- organizers have just announced. Rounding out the
Official Selection for the upcoming event, planners added a few additional films to the roster. A third French film,
Laurent Cantet's "
Entre Les murs," will also screen in competition, joined by
James Gray's "
Two Lovers." Meanwhile, opening the festival's
Un Certain Regard section on May 15th will be
Steve McQueen's "
Hunger." Finally,
Robert DeNiro will present the Palme d'Or on closing night, May 25th, followed by a screening of
Barry Levinson's "
What Just Happened," starring DeNiro,
Robin Wright Penn,
John Turturro and this year's Cannes jury president
Sean Penn. [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
INSIDE WORD | Meirelles' "Blindness" Tipped for Cannes Opening Slot
Increasing buzz indicates that
Fernando Meirelles' "
Blindness" will open the 2008
Festival de Cannes, two weeks from tomorrow. In Canada, the
Globe and Mail reported that the film, shot partially in Toronto, will kick-off the fest on May 14th, joining the roster that was
announced last week. Cannes festival reps did not immediately respond to inquiries this morning and today
Miramax said the reports were "still a rumor at this point," but other film insiders are confirming the news. "Blindness" was adapted by celebrated Canadian writer, actor and director
Don McKellar from
Jose Saramago's acclaimed novel and has been described by Miramax as follows: "When a sudden plague of blindness devastates a city, a small group of the afflicted band together to triumphantly overcome the horrific conditions of their imposed quarantine." It stars
Julianne Moore,
Mark Ruffalo,
Alice Braga,
Danny Glover and
Gael Garcia Bernal. The film was produced by
Niv Fichman,
Andrea Barata Ribeiro, and
Sonoko Sakai and executive produced by
Gail Egan and
Simon Channing-Williams. [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
April 28, 2008
HR | IFC Gets "Robbed"
IFC is closing a deal for
Josh Safdie's "
The Pleasure of Being Robbed," which will close the
Directors' Fortnight in Cannes,
according to the
Hollywood Reporter.
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
April 25, 2008
CANNES '08 | Skolimoski's "Four Nights" Leads Fortnight; Fest Roster Unveiled
by Eugene Hernandez (April 24, 2008)
Jerzi Skolimoski's "
Four Nights With Anna" will open the 40th
Director's Fortnight in Cannes. Organizers unveiled the entire roster for the annual independent sidebar to the
Festival de Cannes, choosing thirty-three features for the 2008 festival. The event emerged amidst the tumult of 1968 when the fest was canceled in solidarity with striking French workers.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival News, Lead Story ]
April 24, 2008
CANNES '08 | International Critics' Week Line-up Announced
by Peter Knegt (April 24, 2007)
The
International Critics' Week, a parallel section of the
Cannes Film Festival, has dedicated itself to discovering new talents. Among the filmmakers whose first or second feature films were showcased during the program are
Bernardo Bertolucci,
Ken Loach,
Wong Kar Wai and
Francois Ozon. In the past few years, the program has received particular attention for winning 4 of last 5
Camera d'Or (which is awarded to best first feature film among all sections of Cannes). Last year, that winner was "
Jellyfish" by
Etgar Keret and
Shira Geffen. The 47th line-up was announced Thursday, with 7 features and 7 shorts in competition, including the lone American entry,
Jeff Vespa's short "
Nosebleed."
Ronit Elkabetz and
Shlomi Elkabetz's "
Les Sept Jours" was announced as the opening feature film, while
Rodrigo Pla's "
Desierto Adentro" will close the week.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival News ]
April 23, 2008
CANNES '08 | Dardennes, Desplechin, Egoyan, Eastwood, Martel, Salles, Soderbergh, and Wenders Among Those Set for 61st Festival de Cannes Competition
by Eugene Hernandez (April 23, 2007)
A number of familiar names are set to compete at the 61st
Festival de Cannes organizers announced today in Paris, revealing the official selection of 52 feature films during a morning press conference. While the fest has yet to designate its opening and closing films, nineteen features are set to vie for the Palme d'Or. Among the films in competition are new work by The Dardenne Brothers, Arnaud Desplechin, Atom Egoyan, Clint Eastwood, Lucrecia Martel, Walter Salles, Steven Soderbergh, and Wim Wenders.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 1 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival News, Lead Story ]
April 18, 2008
CANNES '08 | L'Affiche: Inspired By Lynch
Cinema poster artist
Pierre Collier has created the poster and visual identity for the 61st
Festival de Cannes, inspired by a photograph by
David Lynch. The festival will run May 14th through 25th. Check out the image on indieWIRE's
Cannes blog.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
April 11, 2008
April 10, 2008
AFP: Cult director Tarantino to deliver Cannes Masterclass
Cult award-winning film director
Quentin Tarantino is to give this year's Cinema Masterclass at
Cannes, the world's premier film festival. AFP
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
March 31, 2008
CANNES '08 | 4th Atelier Slate Set
Fifteen projects are set for the 4th
Atelier of the Cinefondation at the
Festival de Cannes, facilitating industry meetings aimed at securing financing and additional support for new films. On this year's roster for the program are "
Cure For Serpents" directed by
Ben Hackworth (Australia), "
Bitch" directed by
Lou Ye (China), "The Stoplight Society" directed by
Ruben Mendoza (Columbia), "
One More Croissant" directed by
Ilmar Raag (Estonia), "
Here" directed by
Braden King (USA), "
Lucky Life" directed by
Lee Isaac Chung (USA), "Qu'un seul tienne, et les autres suivront" directed by
Lea Fehner (France), "
Womb" directed by
Benedek Fliegauf (Hungary), "
The Policeman" directed by
Nadav Lapid (Israel), "
First of all, Felicia" directed by
Razvan Radulescu &
Melissa De Raaf (Romania), "
White, White World" directed by
Oleg Novkovic (Serbia), "
Queleh" directed by
Abdi Ismael Jama (Somalia), "
First page Taipei" directed by
Arvin Chen (Taiwan), "
Punta del Este" directed by
Juan Pittaluga (Uruguay), "
Bi, don't be afraid" directed by Phan Dang Di (Vietnam). [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
March 21, 2008
HR | The Cannes plan comes together
Tipping new films from
Steven Soderberg,
Woody Allen and
Michael Winterbottom for the 61st
Festival de Cannes 2008,
Hollywood Reporter surveys some of the films likely to screen at the 2008 festival (May 14 - 25).
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
January 3, 2008
iW NEWS | Sean Penn to Head 61st Cannes Jury
Actor/director
Sean Penn has been named president of the jury for the 61st
Festival de Cannes, taking place May 14 - 25, festival organizers announced early Thursday morning local time in France. Penn's acclaimed directorial effort, "
Into the Wild," will open in the country on January 9, 2008. Penn won the best male performance prize at the festival in 1997 for "
She's So Lovely" by
Nick Cassavetes and took an Oscar in 2004 for his performance in
Clint Eastwood's "
Mystic River," which also screened at Cannes. "In the last few years it seems there has been a rejuvenation of cinema building worldwide [with] increasingly thoughtful, provocative, moving, and imaginative films by talented filmmakers: that a new generation of filmmaking may have begun," commented Penn, in a statement upon accepting the invitation extended by the festival's
Gilles Jacob and
Thierry Fremaux. "The Cannes Film Festival has long been the epicenter in the discovery of those new waves of filmmakers from all over the world. I very much look forward to participating in this year's festival as president of the jury." [Brian Brooks]
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
June 25, 2007
iW NEWS | Koch Lorber and Red Envelope Take "Water Lilies"
All U.S. and Canadian rights to
Celine Sciamma's "
Water Lillies" (La Naissance des Pieuvres) have been acquired in a joint deal by
Koch Lorber Films and
Red Envelope Entertainment, the companies announced Monday. The film, set in the summer at a suburban Parisian municipal swimming pool, debuted in the Un Certain Regard section at this year's
Cannes Film Festival.
Richard Lorber from Koch Lorber and
Liesl Copland from Red Envelope negotiated the pact with
Film Distribution's
Nicolas Brigaud-Robert and
Didar Domehri. Koch Lorber is planning a national theatrical release beginning early next year, followed by a DVD release later in the year. [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
June 21, 2007
CANNES '07 | Michael Moore on "Sicko"
Michael Moore debuted his new film, "
Sicko," at the 2007
Cannes Film Festival. Picking up on the more personal types of stories covered in his recent "
Fahrenheit 9/11," Moore's moving new film is structured primarily around human interest tales of American's troubles with the U.S. health care system.
The Weinstein Company is releasing the film in the U.S.
[ filed under Cannes, Film Festivals ]
June 1, 2007
AP: Cannes winner praises Romania's films
Cristian Mungiu, the first Romanian to win the
Cannes Film Festival's top prize, says his country's recent movie output helped him win the award. He has said "
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days" shows how people's choices are affected by the political system, indoctrination and stereotyping. The film had a budget of $671,000. AP
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, People ]
May 31, 2007
The Guardian Interview: Out of the back room
The film world's collective jaw may have dropped on Sunday night when "
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days," a Romanian film about abortion with no stars and costing under half a million pounds, walked off with the Palme d'Or in
Cannes. Less surprised, probably, was its director,
Cristian Mungiu. He was confident enough of his chances when we met, 10 days before the prize-giving, to tell me that he wasn't going home when his free, festival-provided hotel room ran out: "I'm going to stick around for the awards." Nick Roddick
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, People ]
May 30, 2007
"Paranoid" Set for IFC Release in U.S.; MK2 Sells Film in 72 Territories
Gus Van Sant's "
Paranoid Park," which has been acquired by
IFC First Take for a U.S. release, has been sold in some 72 territories according to
Marin and Nathanael Karmitz's French company
MK2, which fully finananced the movie. MK2 said Wednesday that the film, winner of the special 60th Anniversary Award at the recent
Cannes Film Festival, has already sold the film in the United Kingdom, Italy, USA, Spain, India, Argentina, Australia, Greece, Portugal, Benelux, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Russia, Poland, Japan and Korea. [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
iW NEWS | NonStop Makes "4 Months" Deal
In a deal with
Wild Bunch,
NonStop Entertainment has announced its acquisition of
Cristian Mungiu's "
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days," winner of the Palme d'or at the recent
Cannes Film Festival. The company will release the movie in Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, while
IFC First Take is handling the U.S. release after acquiring the film last week in France. Set in a small town in Romania, the film is the story of two university students dealing with an unwanted pregnancy during the last years of Communism. "We are very proud to bring home the critically acclaimed Palm d'Or winner '4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days'," said NonStop CEO
Ignas Scheynius, "Together with the Golden Lion winner '
Still Life' and the Golden Bear winner '
Tuya's Marriage', NonStop Entertainment is doing a hat trick by adding the winners from the most recent film A-film festivals in Venice, Berlin and Cannes to its repertoir." [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
May 29, 2007
CANNES '07 | 10 Films To Watch from the 60th Festival de Cannes
by Eugene Hernandez and Brian Brooks (May 29, 2007)
Dozens of new films from the recent
Cannes Film Festival will receive attention and acclaim at film festivals, and ultimately in distribution, around the world after launching earlier this month. In a final festival dispatch from France, indieWIRE offers a subjective hotlist of 10 films worth watching from this year's event. We invite indieWIRE readers to consider our favorites and offer, in the comments section at the end of the article, their own tips on other Cannes festival films worth watching.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 2 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]
May 28, 2007
Cannes '07 - Wong Kar Wai
At the
Cannes Film Festival, "
My Blueberry Nights" director
Wong Kar Wai and the film's co-stars
Norah Jones and
Jude Law, talk about the new movie. The three-part story of a young woman dealing with a particularly bad break-up, "My Blueberry Nights" follows her on a journey from New York to California.
The Weinstein Company will release this movie later this year.
[ filed under Cannes, Film Festivals ]
Cannes '07 - Gus Van Sant
In Cannes with his new film, "
Paranoid Park,"
Gus Van Sant talks about working with emerging actors and focusing on younger characters in his work. The new film, adapted from
Blake Nelson's young adult novel of the same name, is the story of a kid who hangs out at a popular Portland, OR skate park where he accidentally kills a local security guard and tries to keep the death a secret. It was acquired by
IFC Films shortly after its debut at the festival.
[ filed under Cannes, Film Festivals ]
May 27, 2007
SFC: Health reformers to piggyback on "Sicko"
Michael Moore couldn't have scheduled the release of his movie "
Sicko" at a more opportune time. The film, which opens in theaters in the United States on June 29, arrives as many states, including California, have introduced health care reform proposals. In polls, health care routinely ranks among the public's top domestic concerns. Health care reform is also expected to be an important theme in the presidential campaign for 2008. Victoria Colliver
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
CANNES '07 DISPATCH: Mungiu's "4 Months..." Wins Palme d'Or; Schnabel Snaps Directing Prize and "Meduzot" Takes Camera d'Or
by Eugene Hernandez and Brian Brooks (May 27, 2007)
Cristian Mungiu's "
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days" from Romania won the Palme d'Or as the 60th
Cannes Film Festival came to a close on Sunday night with winners taking their bows. The prizes were presented prior to the closing night screening of
Denys Arcand's "
L'Age Des Tenebres," marking the end of the 2007 festival. Selecting the winners in the '07 Cannes competition were jury president
Stephen Frears, along with fellow jurors: actress
Maggie Cheung, actress
Toni Collette, director and actress
Maria de Medeiros, director and actress
Sarah Polley, director
Marco Bellocchio, writer
Orhan Pamuk, director and actor
Michel Piccoli, and director
Abderramane Sissako.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 2 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]
AFP: East Europe calls to West at Cannes
While films from Eastern Europe made big on festival screens at
Cannes, the region's cash-strapped industry looked West for the future. At the Cannes trade market, where thousands of film execs did business on the sidelines of the 12-day film festival ending Sunday, Eastern Europeans said co-productions were the path to the future for a new generation of talented filmmakers. Audrey Stuart
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
AP: Cannes closes on light note with comedy
After a 12-day lineup of weighty films, the
Cannes Film Festival came to a close Sunday with a movie called "
Days of Darkness -- despite its title, a comedy. French-Canadian filmmaker
Denys Arcand, who won best foreign language Oscar in 2004 for his funny, moving, "
The Barbarian Invasions," has a thing for over-the-top titles. Angela Doland
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
May 26, 2007
CANNES '07 CRITICS NOTEBOOK | Mining for Genre Gems in Cannes
by Michael Lerman (May 26, 2007)
The first thing one notices when looking for genre fare at the
Cannes Film Festival is that you won't find it in the Midnight section. Featured as part of the Out of Competition program, Midnight in Cannes 2007 contained two edgy dramas from veteran directors and one light heist flick. But when the strongest thing in the midnight selection is a 3D concert film meticulously directed to perfection by a mainstream Hollywood director (I'm speaking of Mark Pellington's "U2 3D", of course, co-directed Catherine Owens who was supposedly mainly responsible for the onstage visuals), its time to search deep into the festival's sidebars to find the real genre gems.
[ read more in Movies ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals, Lead Story ]
More Deals Mark Cannes Fest: "Control" and "Paranoid Park"
Another pair of
Festival de Cannes films are finding distribution in the United States.
The Weinstein Company has acquired North American rights to Anton Corbijn's "Control,"
according The Hollywood Reporter. The film, which opened the 2007
Directors' Fortnight section, also won a trio of awards on the sidebar's closing night. Meanwhile,
Gus Van Sant's Cannes competition entry, "
Paranoid Park," is closing in on a U.S. deal with
IFC Entertainment. Despite word of a sealed deal, IFC reiterated yesterday that a deal is not yet finalized.
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
May 25, 2007
CANNES '07 | Marcus Hu: Cannes Fest Fixture Sits One Out; '08 Fest Awaits Her Return
Since 1989, my mom, Evelyn has been my trusty sidekick, best friend and confidant to accompany me to Cannes every consecutive year since. I am sure many of you have seen this 4'10" Asian American mom whizzing down the Croisette to a screening or to meet me at a reception, with the sparkle of a teenager in love with the movies. Her love for cinema rubbed off onto me as a child and stuck with me as a career...
Strand Releasing co-president Marcus Hu writes about why he and his Mom are not at the Cannes Film Festival.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, People ]

Deneuve in Cannes
"
Persepolis," the animated Cannes competition entry from France, has stirred awards talk here since the film's debut earlier this week. On Thursday, leading French actress
Catherine Deneuve joined her daughter
Chiara Mastroianni and the film's writer/directors
Marjane Satrapi and
Vincent Paronnaud at the Carlton Beach restaurant on Thursday for a
Sony Pictures Classics lunch. Deneuve, who voiced a character for the animated, French-language adaptation of Satrapi's succesful books, will also perform the role in English for an alternative version of the film.
Asked about recent talk in Cannes this year about the apparent "death of cinema," while sipping a glass of wine and smoking a cigarette, Deneuve was straightforward on the matter. "I've heard that for such a long time," she said of the death of cinema, "It's a very slow death...since the end of the New Wave..." Concluding the thought, she added, "It is still very alive, I think."
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]
May 24, 2007
CANNES '07 DISPATCH | Americans in Cannes Stir Fest; Schnabel, Van Sant, and Coens Lead Competition
by Eugene Hernandez (May 24, 2007)
A group of films from established American filmmakers, all adapted from books, are among the most acclaimed films in competition as the Cannes enters its final weekend in France. Critics, programmers and insiders all consider
Julian Schnabel's "
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,"
Gus Van Sant's "
Paranoid Park" and
The Coen Brothers' "
No Country for Old Men," frontrunners for prizes at this year's festival and among the best films screening here at the 60th Festival de Cannes.
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]
CANNES '07 CRITICS NOTEBOOK | "Secret Sunshine" Lights Up Competition; Akin and Tarr Stumble, and Korine's Nuns Fly High
by Anthony Kaufman (May 24, 2007)
"The fragility of human joy" -- the words are spoken in "
A Mighty Heart," but the sentiment runs throughout several Cannes films, as random tragedy or political circumstance dashes characters' hopes for happiness. In a most trenchant way, South Korean director
Lee Chang-dong's "
Secret Sunshine" -- a new frontrunner for major Cannes prizes -- focuses on a young widow, Shin-ae (
Jeon Do-yeon). After moving from Seoul to the town of Miryang, where her late husband was born, Shin-ae tries to fit into her new smalltown surroundings. But an unexpected event throws her life into further turmoil.
[ read more in Movies ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals, Lead Story ]
iW NEWS | Miramax Captures Schnabel's "Butterfly"
Julian Schnabel's "
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" (Le Scaphandre et le Papillon) has been acquired by
Miramax Films, in a deal for all North American rights to the Cannes '07 competition film. Adapted by
Ronald Harwood, the film is the story of former editor-in-chief of
Elle Magazine in France,
Jean-Dominique Bauby.
Mathieu Amalric portrays Bauby, who, after suffering a debilitating stroke, was forced compose his autobiography entirely by dictation through a series of blinks, grunts and movements. He died in France three days after the book was published. Produced by
Kathleen Kennedy and
Jon Kilik, the film also stars Emmanuelle Seigner and
Max Von Sydow.
"What excited our whole team so much is that this film is a combination of all of the elements we look for and more - an amazing true story, a flawless adaptation of an incredible memoir, remarkably beautiful direction and extraordinary performances," said Miramax president
Daniel Battsek, in a statement today in Cannes. "The end result is a film told with fantastic sensitivity and humanity that still manages to keep a sense of humor which audiences will find undoubtedly moving."
Michael Luisi, an EVP at Miramax negotiated the deal with
Cameron McCracken from
Pathe UK and
CAA, representing Schnabel. [Eugene Hernandez]
[permalink] [ filed under Acquisitions, Cannes ]
AFP: Cannes world cinema puts spotlight on India, Lebanon and more
"All the world's a stage" wrote
Shakespeare, and this year at
Cannes, India, Lebanon, Poland, Africa, Colombia and Slovenia are spotlighted at the festival event "All The World's Films." The world cinema affair is a recent and increasingly popular addition to the 12-day annual movie extravaganza, showcasing the vast and rich variety of cinema produced around the globe. Audrey Stuart
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
The Guardian: Cannes Roundup
The race for the Palme d'Or in Cannes has been thrown open again with a mighty challenger coming up on the inside rail.
Julian Schnabel's "
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" is a wonderfully acted and profoundly moving adaptation of the memoir by French magazine editor
Jean- Dominique Bauby, who, at 42, and at the height of his brilliant media career, became paralysed with a stroke. Peter Bradshaw
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
May 23, 2007
CANNES '07 CRITICS NOTEBOOK | Camera D'Or Candidates Emerge
by Eric Kohn (May 23, 2007)
The vetted progress of distribution deals dominates the omnipresent chatter at most major film festivals, closely accompanied by evaluations of the movies' artistic merits. Industry and aesthetic outlooks collide when news of deals break, mainly focused on whether business is allotting its finances to the deserving parties. There's little doubt that the latest offerings from established auteurs will successfully make their way beyond the festival circuit - a certain fate, as the
New York Times recently pointed out, for
Gus Van Sant's "
Paranoid Park," and several other high profile titles screening at this year's Cannes Film Festival.
[ read more in Movies ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals, Lead Story ]
CANNES '07 DISPATCH | Biz and Prize Buzzing as Cannes Fest Hits Home Stretch
by Eugene Hernandez and Ashley Adams (May 23, 2007)
Heading into the final four days of the 60th
Cannes Film Festival, only a handful of competition titles have yet to screen for audiences and jurors here in France. Barring last minute surprises, observers have an idea of the film's they expect will win. Meanwhile, a handful of films are also on a track to secure a U.S. theatrical release. Among the hottest properties is
Julian Schnabel's "
The Diving Bell and the Butterlfly," a French language film that many rival buyers are saying will end up at Paramount Vantage or Miramax.
The film will no doubt end up scoring a U.S. theatrical release, some saying that an announcement will come in the next day or so and many buzzing about the possibility that the film will take home a prize this Sunday The other top reviewed titles from the competition seem to be
Christian Mungiu's "4 Months, 3 Weeks And 2 Days" (which was acquired this week by IFC for a U.S. release), the
Coen Brothers' "
No Country For Old Men" from
Miramax, and
Gus Van Sant's "
Paranoid Park." (indieWIRE will have more on those films later this week)
[ read more in On The Scene ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Festival Dispatches, Lead Story ]

Fortissimo Films Fun
by Eugene Hernandez (May 23, 2007)
Of the many afternoon and evening beach parties that fill festivalgoers' schedules in
Cannes, the annual
Fortissimo Films bash (usually held at the Majestic Beach near the Palais) always draws a high-profile mix of folks. This year was no exception. Hanging on the resort's pier with company chiefs
Wouter Barendrecht and
Michael Werner, among others, was actress
Tilda Swinton. Decked out in a shining silver dress, Swinton is starring in the leading sales company's "
The Man From London,," debuting in competition in Cannes. Making the rounds at the bash, she also stopped for a chat and a photo with
Cinetic Media's
John Sloss. The dealmaker recently closed a major deal at the festival himself, selling
James Gray's "
We Own the Night" to
Columbia Pictures for more than $11 million. Also spotted at the Fortissimo bash on the beach were
Robert Rodriguez with
Rose Macgowan (in town with Tarantino's "
Death Proof"),
Jim Jarmusch, and Cannes festival opening night director,
Wong Kar Wai. Harvey Weinstein also made an appearance, but didn't stay long. The mogul swiftly made his way through the bash to the dock, chatted up Jarmusch and quickly stepped onto a small tender boat that presumably whisked him away to a yacht.
[ read more in iPOP ] [ 0 comments ] [ filed under Cannes, Cannes: On the scene ]
NYT: Alienated Europeans, Through a Cold Lens
One of the most fertile subjects of contemporary European cinema is the desolation of contemporary European life. The extravagance and high spirits outside the
Cannes screening rooms thus frequently stand in jarring contrast to the misery displayed within them, where stories of privation, disconnection and violence hold up a corrective mirror to a continent that likes to present itself to the rest of the world as prosperous, unified and at peace. A.O. Scott and Manohla Dargis
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, Festivals ]
The Guardian Interview: Gael Garcia Bernal
"Doing films in Mexico is pretty difficult; it's not yet a self-sustaining industry," says
Gael Garcia Bernal. "But one thing you can do is manage to make films without very much money. There was an energy developing around the things that we wanted to do, and there came a point when we thought, 'You know what, why don't we concentrate all this energy? Why don't we make it in practical terms and build a company?'" Garcia Bernal is in Cannes with his directorial debut, "
Deficit." The Guardian
reports.
[permalink] [ filed under Cannes, People ]
AFP: NKorea's first film to hit West: schoolgirl's dreams n'drama
North Korea's first film bidding for buyers at the Cannes market provides a rare look at the fortress nation seen through teenage eyes. "
The Schoolgirl's Diary," one of only two films produced by Pyongyang last year, chronicles a girl's life through her school years, grappling with peer pressure and family problems much the same as those the world over. Claire Rosemberg
reports.