City Times

Anatomy of a Fall wins Cannes Film Festival’s Palme d’or

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Justine Triet's Anatomy of a Fall won the Palme d'or at the 76th Cannes Film Festival in a ceremony that bestowed the festival's prestigiou­s top prize on an engrossing, rigorously plotted French courtroom drama that puts a marriage on trial.

Anatomy of a Fall, which stars Sandra Hüller as a writer trying to prove her innocence in her husband's death, is only the third film directed by a woman to win the Palme d'or. One of the two previous winners, Julia Ducournau, was on this year's jury.

Cannes' Grand Prix, its second prize, went to Jonathan Glazer's

The Zone of Interest, a chilling Martin Amis adaptation about a German family living next door to Auschwitz. Hüller also stars in that film.

The awards were decided by a jury presided over by two-time Palme winner Ruben Östlund, the Swedish director who won the prize last year for Triangle of Sadness. The ceremony preceded the festival's closing night film, the Pixar animation Elemental.

Remarkably, the award for Anatomy of a Fall gives the indie distributo­r Neon its fourth straight Palme winner. Neon, which acquired the film after its premiere in Cannes, also backed Triangle of Sadness, Ducournau's Titane and Bong Joon Ho's Parasite, which it steered to a Best Picture win at the Academy Awards.

Triet was presented the Palme by Jane Fonda, who recalled coming to Cannes in 1963 when, she said, there were no female filmmakers competing “and it never even occurred to us that there was something wrong with that”. This year, a record seven out of the 21 films in competitio­n at Cannes were directed by women.

After a rousing standing ovation, Triet, the 44-year-old French filmmaker, spoke passionate­ly about the protests that have roiled France this year over reforms to pension plans and the retirement age. Several protests were held during Cannes this year, but demonstrat­ions were — as they have been in many high-profile locations throughout France — banned from the area around the Palais des Festivals. Protesters were largely relegated to the outskirts of Cannes.

The jury prize went to Finnish director Aki Kaurismäki's Fallen Leaves, a deadpan love story about a romance that blooms in a loveless workaday Helsinki where dispatches from the war in Ukraine regularly play on the radio.

Best Actor went to veteran Japanese star Koji Yakusho, who plays a reflective, middle-aged Tokyo man who cleans toilets in Wim Wenders' Perfect Days, a gentle, quotidian character study.

The Turkish actor Merve Dizdar

took Best Actress for the Nuri Bilge Ceylan's About Dry Grasses. Ceylan's expansive tale is set in snowy eastern Anatolia about a teacher, Samet (Deniz Celiloğlu), accused of misconduct by a young female student. Dizdar plays a friend both attracted and repelled

by Samet.

“I understand what it's like to be a woman in this area of the country,” said Dizdar. “I would like to dedicate this prize to all the women who are fighting to exist and overcome difficulti­es in this world and to retrain hope.” AP

 ?? ?? Justine Triet, winner of the Palme d’or for Anatomy of a Fall, poses for photograph­ers during a photo call following the awards ceremony
Justine Triet, winner of the Palme d’or for Anatomy of a Fall, poses for photograph­ers during a photo call following the awards ceremony
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