Arab Times

Scandal amid Cannes glitz

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LONDON/PARIS, May 11, (RTRS): Movers and shakers of the film world are boarding yachts or jets to head for the once sleepy Mediterran­ean seaside town of Cannes for a 12-day party that also serves as a film festival, with this year’s lineup heavy on drama and light on humour.

The 67th Cannes Film Festival gets under way on Wednesday with 18 films showing in the main competitio­n for the Palme d’Or prize awarded by a majority female jury headed by New Zealand director Jane

Campion, the only woman ever to receive the top Cannes award for her 1993 film “The Piano”.

Another 20 films are in the “Un Certain Regard” strand, plus dozens more in the “Directors’ Fortnight”, the “Critics’ Week” and other festival showcases. And, providing the customary dash of controvers­y, the opening film — “Grace of Monaco” — has been denounced as a “farce” by the late princess’s three children.

Cannes is “insane, very intense and fun”, said Canadian director David Cronenberg, a Cannes regular whose “Maps to the Stars” starring “Twilight” teen vampire series idol Robert Pattinson as a Hollywood wannabe is in competitio­n.

Life

British director Mike Leigh, a past winner of the Palme d’Or, whose “Mr Turner” is based on the life of the British landscape painter J.M.W. Turner, said screening a film at Cannes is “a great experience”.

“I’m always delighted to be there. I think it’s my fifth time in competitio­n and I was on the jury so I’m glad to go there with something to do,” he said.

For Turkish director Nuri Ceylan, whose “Winter Sleep” is in competitio­n and whose films have regularly won awards at Cannes, “this is an opportunit­y to showcase the country and its film business because this is where the heart of the industry beats”, his producer, Zeynep Ozbatur, told Reuters.

American director Bennett Miller’s “Foxcatcher” is based on the murder of a championsh­ip wrestler by an heir to the DuPont chemical fortune. “The Search” by French director Michel Hazanavici­us (“The Artist”) is set in war-torn Chechnya.

American actor-director Tommy Lee Jones’s “The Homesman” is a frontier drama starring himself and Meryl Streep while other Cannes veterans in competitio­n include France’s Jean-Luc Godard with “Adieu au Langage” and Canada’s Atom Egoyan with “The Captive”.

Interestin­g

“The interestin­g thing for me is how much this lineup relies really on ‘Old Europe’ and America — there are a few Asian films, no German films, very few from Scandinavi­a and not much from Eastern Europe or Russia,” said Scott Roxborough, Berlin bureau chief for The Hollywood Reporter.

The festival also is known for controvers­y and already has one for this year: its opening film, “Grace of Monaco”, starring Nicole Kidman as American actress Grace Kelly who married Prince Rainier of Monaco and died after crashing her car in 1982 in hills above the principali­ty, not far to the east of Cannes.

For months, the trade press has been reporting that the film’s French director, Olivier Dahan, and producer Harvey Weinstein, who owns the American distributi­on rights, have been sparring over the final cut.

This month the Monaco royal family weighed in, calling the film a “farce”. Prince Albert and his sisters — Kelly’s children Caroline and Stephanie — said a trailer “confirms the totally fictional nature of this film”.

Asked about the dispute last month, Thierry Fremaux, the festival’s director, alluded to French law which stipulates that a film’s director decides on the final cut.

“We’re in France, and at Cannes, the only version is the version of the director,” Fremaux said.

A whiff of scandal is good for business and Cannes has reliably produced its share ever since the 18-year-old bikinied Brigitte Bardot allowed Hollywood leading man Kirk Douglas to play with her hair in a famous 1953 photo shoot on the beach.

The festival is a media magnet and Cronenberg, who won a jury prize at Cannes in 1996 for his film-noir “Crash”, says that is exactly what independen­t produc-

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