Kuwait Times

‘Miss Sunshine’ star Dano to make directoria­l debut at Cannes

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Hollywood star Paul Dano’s much-anticipate­d directoria­l debut, “Wildlife”, will open Critics’ Week at the Cannes film festival next month, the organizers said yesterday. The film by the “There Will Be Blood” and “Little Miss Sunshine” actor features his friend Jake Gyllenhaal, who played opposite Dano in the Oscar-nominated “Prisoners” in 2013. The film is based on a Richard Ford novel about a teenager watching his parents’ marriage fall apart.

Critics’ Week director Charles Tesson said it includes an “extremely impressive” performanc­e from British actress Carey Mulligan, who was nominated for an Oscar for her performanc­e in “An Education”, the coming-of-age drama based on journalist Lynn Barber’s bestsellin­g memoir. “Paul Dano shows himself to be a true cineaste in his first feature film,” Tesson told AFP, “a profoundly human portrait at the disintegra­tion of an American family... done with elegant classicism.”

The parallel event for first- and second-time directors, which starts on May 9, the day after the main Cannes festival, also features a parody of the life of a superstar footballer not unlike Cristiano Ronaldo called “Diamantino”. Although its Portugese-American co-director Gabriel Abrantes has said that the film is “not really about” the Real Madrid star, Tesson said the “delightful off-the-wall” comedy would ring bells with football fans.

Women dominate

Unlike the main festival, which has been criticized for its dearth of female talent, Critics’ Week is dominated by films by and about women. While only three of the 18 films competing for the top Palme d’Or prize are by women, they make up the majority in the Critics’ Week competitio­n. Indian director Rohena Gera turns the romantic comedy on its head in her first feature, “Sir”, Tesson said, a master-servant love story that shakes class and caste taboos starring rising Bollywood actress Tillotama Shome. “One Day” by the Hungarian Zsofia Szilagyi follows the manic day of an overstretc­hed working mother trying to hold her own and her family’s life together, while “Woman at War” is the “funny and stirring” story of an Icelandic environmen­tal activist.

Young documentar­y-maker Anja Kofmel investigat­es the murder of her cousin, a journalist who was killed during the wars in the former Yugoslavia, in her film, “Chris the Swiss”, which is partly animated. “Sauvage” takes on the rarely touched world of male prostituti­on while another gritty French film “Sheherazad­e” dives into the chaotic life of a young prostitute and her boyfriend in the port of Marseille. French star Romain Duris plays a union stalwart whose wife leaves him with their children in the Belgium drama “Our Battles”, which is being shown out of competitio­n.

The line-up for the main competitio­n at Cannes is markedly more political than usual, with an Iranian and Russian director who are banned from leaving their countries, in the running for the Palme d’Or. It is highly unlikely that Iran’s Jafar Panahi and Russia’s Kirill Serebrenni­kov will be able to attend, despite pleas by festival organizers and the French authoritie­s. The world’s biggest film festival runs from May 8 to 19. — AFP

 ??  ?? In this file photo US actor Paul Dano poses as he arrives for the screening of the film ‘Okja’ at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. — AFP
In this file photo US actor Paul Dano poses as he arrives for the screening of the film ‘Okja’ at the 70th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. — AFP

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