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Innocence
and Le goût des autres
Win Top Prize at Montreal
Australia's
Innocence and France's Le goût des autres
shared the honors of the Montreal World Film Festival's
coveted Grand Prix des Amériques at the closing ceremony on Monday
September 4. This choice by the jury presided by famed Iranian
filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami echoed popular taste, as Innocence
was also voted best film by the audience, with Le goût des autres
as a runner-up. Their Montreal triumph of the Australian and French
pics, already very popular on their home turf, suggests that both
films will travel well internationally. Aussie director was moved
by the critical and popular reaction, especially since, as he
told the audience, he has "always been accused of making films
that nobody wanted to see." This certainly has not been the case
here.
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September
Innocence
Conquers Montreal
The Montreal World Film Festival had its first revelation
in competition on Wednesday: Innocence, by prolific
Aussie-based auteur Paul Cox. A moving tale of rediscovered love
by elderly people who meet again after forty years, the film instantly
became the front runner for the competition's top award. At a
time when pushing the cinematic envelope means more sex and violence
(as in the lurid French exploitation film à scandale Baise-moi,
thankfully not shown here), Cox dares to break one of the real
taboos of the film industry: making an intelligent film about
old age, love, and death. Roger Ebert, who caught the flick at
a private screening at the Cannes market in May, declared it the
most impressive film of the whole event, and he was right.
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30
August
Canadian
Pics Shine and Provoke
Local
production shared the limelight during Days 3-4 of the Montreal
World Film Festival. Two of the four films in official competition,
Hochelaga and Maëlstrom, were from
promising homegrown filmmakers and they both grabbed the most
headlines and popular enthusiasm in this early part of the week.
The films couldn't be more different. Hochelaga
is a sizzling first feature from director Michel Jetté who dares
to penetrate Montreal's criminal biking underworld, where the
number of gang killings have rivaled those of the Moscow mafia
in in recent years.
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Fest
Opening
Mamet, Puri, Rosi, Freeman and Hackman Spark Montreal Fest
The 24th edition of the Montreal World Film Festival got
off to a rousing start this weekend, with David Mamet's State
and Main providing one of the many early cinematic excitements.
Unspooling in world premiere, this biting satire of a movie production
in a sleepy New England town, with buffo performances by the likes
of William Macy and Philip Seymour Hoffmann, ranks as one of Mamet's
best. In town for the shooting of his next flick Heist,
Mamet wowed the jam-packed marquee Imperial cinema by speaking
to the public exclusively in French.
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Overview
Celebration
of World Cinema at Montreal Fest
The Montreal fest has been criticized in recent years for
lacking in Hollywood glitz. At a time when independent and European
films are squeezed out as ever of commercial screens in North
America, however, with even the number of French films released
commercially at an all time low in predominantly French-speaking
Quebec, the determination of the Montreal festival to keep a genuine
focus on world cinema is actually a strength. Only 17 of the 206
feature films shown this year will be American. The local public
has long recognized the unique value of the fest, by packing most
screenings year in year out, making the Montreal festival arguably
the most publicly attended festival in the world.
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