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Fina
Torres
Venezuelan
director Fina Torres has a reputation for stylish, intelligent movies
with a strong feminist twist. She debuted in 1985 with the French-produced
Oriane, which took the Camera d'Or at that year's Cannes. She was
in Cannes with her latest film Woman
on Top starring Penelope Cruz.
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Piers
Handling
FilmFestivals.com
met with Toronto festival director at
Cannes who coined the event as a "huge meeting ground"
and a "festival of premieres." Handling also talked about
scouting for films in Cannes, Asian cinema and some of the strangest
moments at the Toronto festival.
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Mark
Herman
In
Cannes presenting Purely
Belter, Herman talked about the term, his past working in
"bacon" and the music chosen for the film.
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Melvin
Van Peebles
Critics'
Week featured a special "encounter" with Melvin Van Peebles - actor,
musician, writer and journalist - who presened his latest made-in-France
film shot in digital format, Le conte de ventre plein (Bellyful).
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Good
Housekeeping
I
fell in love with these characters, what can I say?" says writer/director
Frank Novak, about his outrageous satire, Good
Housekeeping. Winner of the Grand Jury prize at Slamdance, it
explores the white-trash life of loud-mouthed long-time married
couple Don (Bob Miller) and Donatella (Petra Western). FilmFestivals.com
met with Frank, Bob and Petra.
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Serge
le Peron
We
are all guilty, myself more than the others," said Dostoyevsky in
the introduction to "Crime and Punishment." The quote is used to
set the stage for Serge Le Péron's L'Affaire
Marcorelle, a psycho-drama featuring a prosecutor who
suffers from nightmares and walks the line between dream and reality.
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Amos
Kollek
Novelist,
screenwriter, actor, documentarist, director, producer... no one
knows the twists and turns of film-making, from the inside out,
from concept to release, better than Amos Kollek. Born
in 1947 in Jerusalem, Kollek has always gone his own way. He is
in Cannes with competition film Fast
Food, Fast Women starring AnnaThomson.
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Ryo
Ishibashi
Star
of Directors' Fortnight film
Koroshi. The film
tells the story of Yuhi Hamazaki (Ryo Ishibashi),
a gentle and honest man "a typical Japanese salaried man,"
says director Kobayashi who gets laid off from his job during
the recent Japanese recession. Ryo shared his thoughts about the
character.
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Oscar
Roehler and Hannelore Elsner
Ten
years after the fall of the Wall in Berlin, The
Unapproachable is appropriate in helping to redress
some of the imbalance in measuring the cross-border cultural significance
of that historical event. Director Oscar Roehler and Actress Hannelore
Elsner commented on the film.
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Bernardo
Bertolucci
Bernardo
Bertolucci is the Critics' Week Godfather; he himself was brought
into the limelight as a budding filmmaker in this selection with
Prima Della Rivoluzione (Before the Revolution)
in 1964.
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Christina
Andreef
This
Australian director, long-time assistant to Jane Campion, is in
Cannes for the special screening of Soft Fruit, presented
during the Critics' Week by FIPRESCI. She talked to us about Jane
Campion, the Creteil Women's Film Fest, as well as the father/son
relationship and the round-figured actresses in her film.
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Samira
Makhmalbaf
How
do you work with hundreds of sheep? It's not easy, ackowledged the
20-year-old Iranian director, whose second feature Blackboards
was screened in official competition.
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Claire
Clouzot
Seven
men and one woman -myself- screened 410 feature films for the 39th
International Critic's Week at the Cannes Film Festival. We focused
on first-timers and second-timers. It was exhausting, exciting,
titillating and sometimes very brutal.
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Jeanne
Labrune
French
writer Jeanne Labrune (who wrote and directed the 1998 drama
Si Je T'Aime, Prends Garde A Toi) wrote the screenplay for
Vatel while
Oscar-winning playwright Tom Stoppard (Shakespeare In Love) adapted
the it for English audiences.
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Sabine
Franel
For
her first feature film, Le
premier du nom, Sabine Franel left her post as editor (notably
for docu-filmmaker Emile Weiss and Manoel de Oliveira) and put "thoughts
into movement" tracing her family tree back to "the first
to carry the name" (premier du nom). Being screened in the
Certain Regard section, the 112-minute long film was produced by
Humbert Balsan and is distributed by Pyramide.
Press contact: Nicole Lambert (in Cannes: 06 07 17 31 05)
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Marie-Pierre
Macia
This
is her second year in charge of the selection Directors' Fortnight,
which she shares with Jacques Gerber and Christine Ravet. Her ideal
reason for selecting a film: "un coup de coeur", the process
of falling in love with a film. "Every time you see something
that's really good, your faith and hope are reborn. It happens all
the time. My only real fear is of not spotting a film that's of
superior quality."
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