AMERICAN
CINEMA PAPERS PRINT ARCHIVE 2009 |
YES, OUI, CANNES! by Harlan Kennedy At We had been told the famous would stay away from this year’s The doomsayers had a long list, and some superstars did stay away, honourably excepting Brad
Pitt who panzered into town to promote Tarantino’s
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS. (Marquee dyslexia lives). But the galactic helmers were
present and unprecedented. They included four Golden Palm winners, 13 Jury
Prize holders and not a single first-time filmmaker. Only one director, Looking down on them all – intriguingly out of sync with the pictured
movie’s 50th anniversary next year – was the shade of Antonioni enshrined in the 2009 festival poster. This
bore an image from L’AVVENTURA (1960), featuring Monica Vitti
gazing out from a dark doorway into the sun-blinding vastness of a
Mediterranean terrace. Cannes, like the heart, has its reasons. The sun, said this poster, is
the biggest star of all. Here on the French Riviera it sears the beaches,
scalds the sidewalks and swocks down on the dark,
ecliptic activity of movie-watching. That magic doorway into the heart and
mind. The five best films all had something to say about this star, and the
manifold darknesses that fight it, for good or for
ill. Those five films were by Jane Campion, Jacques Audiard,
Michael Haneke, Marco Bellocchio
and Pedro Almodóvar. One each – with admirable representativeness – from a UK-funded Antipodean,
a Frenchman refereeing a film about Corsicans and Muslims, an Austrian
setting his film in bygone Germany, an Italian and a Spaniard. As the joker
in the pack – never forget the wild card – there was Jane Campion’s BRIGHT STAR is titled after
John Keats’s famous poem and offers what Campion does best (and possibly
Keats too), a blazing insight into mankind’s BRIGHT STAR restores her credibility. It brings fierce purpose and a furnace clarity to that often dead-ashes form, the
literary biopic. The romance between the “Ode to a Nightingale” poet and his
true-life muse, Fanny Brawne, contended with every
obstacle that 19th century Ben Whishaw brings a
quivering-lyre sensitivity to Keats, varied with sage disenchantments
and wry reprovals for Fanny’s more ingenuous
transports about poetry. Abbie Cornish, in turn,
varies young-girl gush with a smart, tough sense of self-will. It is amazing
what two good actors and a kitsch-free script can do with scenes that ought
barely to work on either paper or screen. Campion’s
(self-)belief makes it possible for Keats to recite
“Bright Star” while actually “cradled upon my fair love’s ripening breast.”
As the final tragedy moves across the story, like the shadow of an eclipse,
we forget the Victorian costumes and dialogue. We are pierced only by the
penumbral timelessness of pain and loss. There is no bright star irradiating prison life in Jacques Audiard’s UN PROPHETE (A PROPHET). Or is there? Cheekily
this gifted French director, whose last film
THE BEAT MY HEART SKIPPED set a new pace and a new high for the
angst-ridden Gallic thriller, plays off the noir at the heart of this tale of a 19-year-old Muslim criminal
surviving in jail on his wits and turncoat skill (now serving the Corsican
gang, now his brother Muslims), against the rival effulgences – implied if
not italicised – of opposed religious beliefs. God versus Allah. Isn’t that the dialectic at the heart of this
story? The hero (Tahar
Rahim), with his baby-faced Guevara features and
body prone to fleet, unthinking martyrdom poses, is a sexy messiah Sartre or
Genet might espouse. The sun that lights his life and powers his energy is himself. Audiard, more sparing
than they with his sympathy, sees vice as well as virtue in the synergy of
animal cunning, cerebral will and energised egotism. Malik’s
only God is himself. But that makes him an antihero as darkly riveting as Romain Duris in
BEAT/HEART/SKIPPED – and a flickery, protean centre
who sets off the characters more fixed in their orbits. Most memorable is Niels Arestrup as the Corsican
‘godfather’: a whitehaired figure of silky malice,
now whispering singsong promises of protection, now snapping in sudden fits
of lava-spewing anger…. Michael Haneke’s THE WHITE RIBBON (DAS
WEISSE BAND), this Austrian helmer’s strangest,
most tantalising film yet, is set in a world different from either Campion’s or Audiard’s. The
austere period garb, the black-and-white photography and the troubled
solemnity of the voice-over narration – delivered in the first person by the
village schoolteacher, though the voice’s aged timbre suggests he is looking
back across decades – put a distance between us and the story’s emotional
immediacy that makes THE WHITE RIBBON seem the screen equivalent of a 19th
century novel. The period is actually 1913. As a series of inexplicable atrocities
take place in a Protestant hamlet in north Germany on the eve of World War 1-
the village doctor goes to hospital after his horse is tripwired,
a child is viciously tied and beaten, a retarded boy is nearly blinded – the
God whom this community had supposed to be in his Heaven, looking down on
goodness and virtue, either does not exist or has taken up warped and variform being in his earthly envoys. The village pastor,
played with a subtle and repugnant fanaticism by German character stalwart Burghart Klaussner (THE
READER), trains his children in
goodness by tying white ribbons to them when they misbehave. These ribbons
symbolise and instil the image of purity. With his teenage boy he goes
further, tying his arms to the bedframe at night to
prevent onanistic urges. Corrupted paradigms of goodness, we soon learn, are everywhere. The
doctor returns from hospital to continue his secret abuse of his daughter.
Many of the village’s children have learned and implement their parents’
taste for cruelty and intolerance. The formalism of Haneke’s
storytelling – its dispassionate Dreyer-like tableaux, the formalistic sang froid
with which the narrator hints at each next barbarity – becomes another kind
of absent God. Where is the author’s helping wisdom
and compassionate omniscience to help us over these moral hurdles set up in
this darkness? But that is THE WHITE RIBBON’S brilliance. A world of certitude and
paternalistic prescript, already flawed and cruel, is about to be exploded
altogether. When a character says, with a Shakespearean-messenger abruptness,
“Archduke Ferdinand has been assassinated in As the speaking fox says in another Cannes entry, Lars von Trier’s ANTICHRIST – a sort of batty version of Haneke’s film, confronting moral-spiritual breakdown with
midnight movie grand guignol – “Chaos reigns!” Trier’s
first film since his aborted DOGVILLE trilogy emerged from a dungeon-like
depression, into which the Danish director had fallen, which may explain the
movie’s wayward, psychiatrist’s–couch trajectory: its resemblance to a
rock-strewn stream of consciousness zigging and zagging through a wilderness, whose story requires
child-bereaved couple Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg
to undergo therapy – he becoming her shrink as well as lover – in a remote
forest cabin beset by memories, fears, violence and, ultimately, wacky woodland
animals. “Where are the lodestars by which we guide our lives?” By contrast, Marco Bellocchio’s VINCERE is a
dazzling presentation of darkness. Who’d have thought it? 40 years ago Bellocchio smacked the world across the face like a
genius who meant to stay. The film was FISTS IN THE POCKET. But since then the
career has mostly marked time, the dukes remaining in the denims even when we
wished, during some festivals, that they could be brought out to smash the
prevailing complacence of the art movie fare. Now look at this tale of the early loves and state-powered hates of
Benito Mussolini. Bellocchio the bruiser is back,
right and left jabs working in a story that begins by assailing the firebrand
Socialism with which Il Duce began his political
career – meeting and romancing fellow radical Ida Dalser
(Giovanna Mezzogiorno), who later claimed they were
married although she never produced a certificate – and ends by landing blows
on the man who, apart from immolating Italy in fascism, excommunicated his
early +inamorata+ and the firstborn son she bore
him. Erased by history, mother and child each died after imprisonments in
separate asylums. The first half of VINCERE is a firework display of invention, at once
painterly and grand-operatic. From the hypberbolised
love scenes to the political rallies – private ardours
and public grandstandings – we are swept up in a
skywriting of history. This is lent sparkle and grandeur by the performances
(Filippo Timi, whose knitted brow and bullfrog features later return in
the role of young Benito) and crackle by the graphics, headlines and
newsreels that whirl out from the screen. Not since CITIZEN KANE’s ‘March of Time’ sequence took its story by the
scruff of its verismo, broadening the resonance of
a fictive-factual portrait, has a director mounted a stronger multi-media assault
on his audience. If the second half is subdued by comparison, it still boasts scenes
that stay burned on our retinas: not least the image, like a miniature of Angelopoulos’s border-railing crucifixion fresco in
ETERNITY AND A DAY, of Ida clinging high to the window bars of her asylum,
flinging out into the winter night the unsealed letters she has written to
her and Italy’s lord and master. All the 62nd In the rainbow-hued sets the polychromatic personae parade, from the filmmaker (Lluis
Homar) falling fatally in love with a mob-connected
businessman’s young mistress (Penelope Cruz, looking like the daughter of the actress who buxom’d up for VOLVER) to the movie-location hangers-on,
soon absorbed in the intricate love and death plot: the mysterious intruder
who insists on filming a ‘making of’ movie, or Homar’s
production manager and abandoned mistress, played by Blanca Portillo, whose
spooky resemblance to the late UK actress Vivien Merchant conjures contraband
memories of Merchant’s own real-life rejection, leading to her suicide, by
husband Harold Pinter. The rhythm and beauty of this movie are almost scary. ‘Learn from the
master and surpass him’ must be Almodóvar’s motto.
His love for By the last days of the festival we were almost begging for a bad film. Big mistake. We got our
wish, in triplicate. For a proper escape from the good, the bad or the incomprehensible, on
It is a small step from the end of the Croisette
to the Palais Stephanie. This houses the Quinzaine des Realisateurs
(Directors Fortnight), on the site where the original Palais
des Festivals once stood. Yes, this counterculture event unspools
in the very temple and locus, though now rebuilt, where Cocteau loved and
Carne sang – a popular double act in its day – and where the Golden Palm
wrapped early victors in its frond embrace. This year’s Quinzaine
had flying visits from the famous (Francis Coppola, Jim Carrey) as well as a
few debuts that bawled like newborn babies proclaiming their right to life.
Xavier Dolan’s J’AI TUE MA MERE was the loudest, a fizzy, stroppy,
witty black comedy about matters Oedipal and Schmoedipal
by a 20-year-old French Canadian. Sometimes you wanted to love it, sometimes
to smack it on the behind. The other top sideshow at The winner of the Un Certain Regard jury prize was Yorgos
Lanthimos’s DOGTOOTH from Nationwise,
A festival of riches
and contrasts had its quirky individual moments, on and off screen.
Lars von Trier brushed off critical hostility to
ANTICHRIST by declaring himself "the world's best director."
Bill Clinton, our great former President, made a headline worthy entrance at
the AMFAR Aids benefit dinner. Sharon Stone wore and eye-popping cut-away
gown and a smile stealing lightning bolts of flashbulb bursts at the entrance
to the Palais. And Quentin Tarantino
did a dance on the red carpet with leading lady Melanie Laurent before
entering the screening of his INGLORIOUS BASTERDS. That film was an insane treat out of left field or perhaps out of
far-right. A gung-ho war movie inspired by Enzo Castellari’s 1978 pic of the
same title (though correctly spelled) is lifted to grandeur by Tarantino madnesses – including a climax that beats TEAM AMERICA
for barefaced revisionism, wiping out in one gala evening at a Paris theatre
Hitler, Goering, Bormann
and Goebbels – and by Christoph
Waltz as the chief villain, a silkenly ruthless and
opportunistic SS officer who evidently majored at the Claude Rains University
of Urbanity in Casablanca, Morocco. Waltz won the festival’s Best Actor prize while Charlotte Gainsbourg brought balm to the battered ANTICHRIST by
winning Best Actress. The runner-up Grand Jury Prize bestowed itself on Audiard’s A PROPHET, an award catering to both art and
the host country’s ego. And the Golden Palm winner? Haneke’s
THE WHITE RIBBON. A few cynics commented on the well-historied
working relationship between Haneke and jury
president Isabelle Huppert – THE PIANO TEACHER, TIME OF THE WOLF – but most festivaliers recognized that in the most competitive
competition for years the best film had won. Who were this year’s losers? Jane Campion, Marco Bellocchio,
Pedro Almodóvar (again) and – almost – dear old
Alain Resnais. At 87 he had his delicate love
comedy WILD GRASS cheered to the echo in the Salle Lumière,
missed out on a movie prize but then won a lifetime achievement Palme d’Or. Resnais
was the most touching figure in late festival. Frailly taxi’d
to the Palais’s front door and whisked up an inside
escalator, he was spared the exertion of the red carpet climb. Instead he
materialised at the top, a deus ex machina in shades, to greet his own stars as they
puffed up from base camp. Inside the auditorium Resnais
received six minutes of standing applause and kept his shades on throughout.
When you have made the most enigmatic film in history – LAST YEAR IN
MARIENBAD – you don’t abandon your air of mystery at the drop of an ovation. Quel festival. Quel Cannes. It
was eventful, dramatic, nourishing and memorable. I shall be back for more
next year. But there hardly could be more, without a miracle. Not that those
should ever be counted out at this all-capable shindig. To echo the rallying
cry of affirmation made famous by a recently elected Yes – oui –
Cannes! COURTESY T.P. MOVIE NEWS. WITH THANKS TO THE
AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTE FOR THEIR CONTINUING INTEREST IN WORLD CINEMA. ©HARLAN
KENNEDY. All rights reserved |
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