Kuwait Times

LEAVE THE MOVIE AT THE BEDROOM DOOR, SAY CANNES COUPLES

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Hepburn and Tracy, Bogart and Bacall, Joel Coen and Frances McDormand: movie magic often has real-life love stories behind it, but star couples at Cannes say you must tread carefully when mixing work and romance. Spanish Oscar winners Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem, who have replaced Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt as the smoulderin­g A-list pair on the Cannes red carpet, have already teamed up on nine movies. After the premiere of their new thriller, “Everybody Knows”, which opened the festival, Cruz said dryly that while she enjoyed working with her husband, she wouldn’t want to do it all the time.

“It’s not something that we plan on doing every two years.” Cruz said she and Bardem, who have two children, were paid equally for the film and have strict ground rules about leaving the push-and-pull of their personal relationsh­ip far from the set. “It would not make your life better, I think, if you used certain things from your private life (on a film),” said Cruz. “So the fact that we know each other and trust each other so much only helps.” Asked by a waggish reporter what was like to be the “only man in the world who likes working with his wife”, Bardem responded sternly: “That’s a question in very poor taste.”

China’s Zhao Tao, who influentia­l movie website IndieWire last week called “one of the greatest actresses in the world”, has made a half dozen films with her spouse, director Jia Zhangke, including “Touch of Sin” and “Mountains May Depart”. Their latest is another Cannes contender, “Ash is Purest White”. She calls her husband “Director Jia” while shooting, just like the rest of the cast-keeping their shop talk and pillow talk sharply separate. “When I come home and we get back to our own family we have nicknames for each otherbut that is something that just belongs to both of us privately,” she said.

Zhao said their relationsh­ip had grown more “dynamic” and collaborat­ive since they made their first picture together, “Platform”, in 2000. “Back then, if the director thought a scene was good, I tended to think ‘Yeah, it’s good enough’,” she said. “Now it’s more of a dialogue about the characters-how I want from a female perspectiv­e to make a character come alive. I think he’s very responsive to my opinions and suggestion­s.” Jia, who won the Golden Lion top prize at Venice in 2006 for “Still Life”, told AFP their sometimes hardfought consensus covered even ostensibly trivial details like costumes.

He said their shared love of Quentin Tarantino’s “Kill Bill” movies led the couple to occasional­ly borrow some of the eye-watering colors of its costumes. They revived the look in “Ash is Purest White”, whose first chapter set in the 2000s recalls Tarantino and the Hong Kong action movies that inspired him with their ultrastyli­sh violence.

“We were just on the same page,” Jia said of his wife. Another on-screen, off-screen partnershi­p that made a splash at Cannes this year was Spanish director-producer pair Raul de la Fuente and Amaia Ramirez, who presented their animated docudrama “Another Day of Life” after a few cinematic kisses for the cameras. Ciro Guerra and Cristina Gallego also managed to co-direct their critically­acclaimed Colombian narcodrama, “Birds of Passage”, despite the recent end of their romantic relationsh­ip.

‘Really terrifying’

It’s often a cinema passion project that brings lovers together in the first place, as with A.B. Shawky and the producer of his debut feature “Yomeddine”, Dina Emam. “We didn’t start dating until maybe right before production,” Emam told reporters in Cannes. The film, set in an Egyptian leper colony using non-profession­al actors who were not able to read or write, proved to be more of a bonding experience than they bargained for. The two survived a “really terrifying” shakedown by amateur security guards, byzantine bureaucrac­y and the vagaries of crowd funding a complex project that surprised everyone-particular­ly the filmmakers themselves-by getting into Cannes’ vaunted competitio­n. “It was a grueling shoot, I can’t sugarcoat it,” said Shawky, at 32 the youngest director in the Cannes competitio­n.

Emam agreed: “There’s no amount of planning that could have prevented the things that happened on this shoot-I think maybe we were a little cursed.” But after their baptism of fire, Shawky and Emam decided they were ready to take the next step. “As soon as we were done with the film we decided ‘I think we’ve gone through the hardest thing we’ll ever go through in our lives-I think marriage will be a piece of cake’,” she quipped. — AFP

 ??  ?? Spanish actor Javier Bardem (left) and Spanish actress Penelope Cruz pose as they arrive for the screening of the film “Todos Lo Saben (Everybody Knows)” and the opening ceremony of the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern...
Spanish actor Javier Bardem (left) and Spanish actress Penelope Cruz pose as they arrive for the screening of the film “Todos Lo Saben (Everybody Knows)” and the opening ceremony of the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern...
 ??  ?? Egyptian director A.B Shawky (left) and producer Dina Emam pose during a photocall for the film “Yomeddine” at the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. — AFP
Egyptian director A.B Shawky (left) and producer Dina Emam pose during a photocall for the film “Yomeddine” at the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. — AFP
 ??  ?? Chinese actor Liao Fan (left) and Chinese actress Zhao Tao during a photocall for the film “Ash is Purest White (Jiang hu er nv)”.
Chinese actor Liao Fan (left) and Chinese actress Zhao Tao during a photocall for the film “Ash is Purest White (Jiang hu er nv)”.

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