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Festivals

  • Featured Review, Movies, Tribeca

    TRIBECA, brief chat with Mark Grieco of “A River Below”

    The footage is muddy, but we see it clearly enough: a pink dolphin—one of many endangered species populating the Brazilian Amazon—is harpooned to death by a group of fishermen, to be used as bait for the pirapitinga, a breed of scavenger catfish. This is just the beginning of Mark Grieco’s wrenching documentary “The River Below,” currently showing at Tribeca. Filmed over two difficult years

    April 24, 2017
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals, News

    UMA THURMAN to preside over Cannes Fest’s non-competition program

    This afternoon the Cannes Festival, still ensconced in their rue Amélie offices in central Paris, announced that Uma Thurman will preside over this year's Un Certain Regard jury. The Un Certain Regard ("a certain perspective") program offers a mishmash of diverse films by known and unknown filmmakers. Past jury presidents have included Isabella Rossellini and Pablo Trapero.

    April 21, 2017
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals

    CANNES SHORT TAKES, “Blade of the Immortal”

    One of the films to appear out of competition this year at the Cannes Festival is Takeshi Miike's adaptation of the manga opus "Blade of the immortal" ("Mugen no Junin" in the romaji original). The film combines magic with swordsmen, valor, many good sword fights, and the need for revenge. Manji's (played by Japanese actor Takuya Kimura) younger sister is killed in front of him. He goes on a quest to avenge her. A mysterious

    April 19, 2017
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals, News

    CANNES SELECTION UNVEILED | John Cameron Mitchell makes comeback

    Gentlemen, start your engines!

    The filmmakers, their movies, all of these, and more, were announced during a well-attended press conference at a grand movie theater on the Champs Elysées this morning.

    Two notable comebacks this year are Fatih Akin, with “Aus Dem Nichts” (“In the Fade”) and John Cameron Mitchell, who was last in

    April 13, 2017
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals, News

    KEN LOACH wins Palme D’Or

    CANNES FESTIVAL - Film critics and festival jurors: two divergent forces that make the weather for the eleven days that the festival lasts. And yet, there's hardly any consensus between the two, with nary an exception. Last night, "I, Daniel Blake" won the Palme D'Or. I'll venture that this is the film both jurors and press met each other halfway on. With last night's win Loach joins that small club whose members--eminent directors

    May 22, 2016
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals

    CANNES FESTIVAL | Predictions for a winner

    I’ve watched all twenty-one films in competition this year and must give credit to Thierry Frémaux and his team for having put together such a strong program. I room with one of France’s most eminent TV critics and there’s been some grousing coming from him and from some around the press rooms about the questionable quality of the films this year. But it seems to me that every year people are complaining about the mediocrity

    May 21, 2016
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals

    “Elle,” fiction about survival and bourgeois boredom, closes CANNES FESTIVAL

    “Elle,” last to be shown in competition, isn’t the best or the most accomplished film. It made sense to show it last in the festival for several reasons, however: the storied career of Paul Verhoeven, its director (at 77, Verhoeven is the oldest filmmaker among this year’s competition directors and has two major hits under his belt, “Basic Instinct,” 1992 and “Starship Troopers,” 1997), the cast, made up of A-plus-plus actors

    May 21, 2016
  • Cannes, Festivals, News

    CANNES FESTIVAL | All about Nicholas’s mother

    The press conference for the new Nicholas Winding Refn film […]

    May 20, 2016
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals

    THE LAST FACE at the CANNES FESTIVAL

    "The Last Face," starring Charlize Theron, Javier Bardem and Adèle Exarchopoulos and directed by Sean Penn, premiered in Cannes this morning. In this romance drama juxtaposed with a humanitarian action story Theron plays the director of an international aid agency who meets a Doctors Without Borders doctor (Bardem), as an armed conflict in Liberia drifts into full-on civil war.

    May 20, 2016
  • Cannes, Featured Review, Festivals, News

    CANNES DAYS 8 and 9 | “La fille inconnue,” “Personal Shopper,” “Inversion” and “Juste la fin du monde”

    The second part of the Cannes Festival is turning out to be more challenging, quality-wise, than the first where “Ma Loute” and “Mal de Pierres,” an off-kilter comedy and a love drama respectively, were easy to stamp as good cinema. Week two, on the other hand, isn’t all gems. Yesterday, the Dardenne Brothers’s “La fille inconnue” (“The Unknown Girl”) received a lukewarm response. It's a drama about a young woman doctor who, overcome

    May 19, 2016
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