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CANNES

Steven Spielberg and Jodie Foster top star-studded Cannes cast

Hollywood actors-turned-directors Jodie Foster and Sean Penn will premiere their latest films at Cannes next month, joining a star-studded cast at the world's most prestigious film festival.

Steven Spielberg and Jodie Foster top star-studded Cannes cast
Veteran director Steven Spielberg. Photo: AFP
Veteran director Steven Spielberg will also unveil his version of Roald Dahl's classic children's book “The BFG” (Big Friendly Giant) at the French Riviera movie extravaganza.
   
Foster's Wall Street thriller “Money Monster” stars George Clooney while Penn's former girlfriend Charlize Theron is the lead in his love story set among aid workers in Africa, “The Last Face”.
   
Women directors have their best showing for five years in the main competition, with three among the 20 competing for the Palme d'Or top prize, led by Britain's Andrea Arnold, whose “American Honey” stars maverick American actor Shia LaBeouf in a film about the macho culture of a sales team.
 
   
Cannes has been repeatedly criticized for being a “boys' club” with no women at all selected in 2012 after a record four were included the previous year.
   
The festival's feminist credentials took another battering last year when it emerged that women were banned from its glamorous red carpet premieres for not wearing high heels.
   
Both Jodie Foster and Spielberg are showing their films outside of Cannes' main competition in a year which is thick with Hollywood stardust.
 
 
Scandal-hit Almodovar
 
The paparazzi will have their hands full, with “Twilight” superstar Kristen Stewart in two films and Ryan Gosling, Keanu Reeves and “Star Wars” actor Adam Driver also on the Croisette.
   
After his years in the wilderness following the critical mauling of “Showgirls”, “Total Recall” director Paul Verhoeven returns to the main competition for the first time since 1992, when his steamy thriller “Basic Instinct” set pulses racing.
   
Despite a controversy raging in Spain over Pedro Almodovar being named in the Panama Papers leak, the organizers included his new film “Julieta” in the main competition.
   
The Spanish director – a leftwinger known for his support of environmental causes – cancelled a press conference last week to promote the story of a girl who disappears for a decade, and he did not show up at another event in Barcelona.
   
The official selection is a mix of big surprises and Cannes regulars, with veteran British director Ken Loach making the final cut despite rumours that his “I, Daniel Blake” might be left out.
   
The biggest surprise was the absence of two-time Cannes winner Serbian master Emir Kusturica, whose “On the Milky Road” stars Monica Bellucci.
 
 
Africa, Middle East left out 
 
“We know the risks we are taking and risks sometimes end in pain,” festival chief Thierry Fremaux told reporters in Paris.
   
“But we liked (these films) and we want to share them with you because we think they are important.”
  
He said it was a “festivals of stars, of cinematic auteurs and of an extraordinary geographic diversity.”
   
However, journalists were quick to point out that there was only one Latin American entry in the main competition and no films from Africa, the Middle East or Italy, traditionally one of the festival's mainstays.
   
But Fremaux said the selection, which was only agreed hours before being unveiled after marathon deliberations, was truly global, with 28 countries represented between the main competition and its “Un Certain Regard” sidebar.
   
He said he was particularly happy that a German film, Maren Ade's “Toni Erdmann”, would be the country's first in the running for the Palme d'Or “in a very long time”.
   
Fremaux said there could still be some last-minute adjustments to the line-up, hinting that a Panamanian film with “a story which is very much in tune with the news” could yet make the final cut.
   
He joked that the mystery film was “very well-financed”, a reference to the Panama Papers leak, which exposed the way the rich and powerful hide their money.
   
In the one major innovation, Cannes' closing night film – the slot once filled by Spielberg's “E.T.” and Ridley Scott's “Thelma & Louise” – is being scrapped.
   
Instead, the movie that wins the Palme d'Or will be screened again, Fremaux told a press conference that was delayed by a protest by French film and theatre workers.
   
The festival runs in the French Riviera resort from May 11th to 22nd.

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FILM

Cannes Film Festival postponed to July due to Covid

The Cannes Film Festival has been rescheduled for July 6th to 17th - postponed by around two months due to the ongoing virus crisis, organisers said on Wednesday.

Cannes Film Festival postponed to July due to Covid
The 2018 Palme d'Or winner Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-Eda posing for the cameras at the Cannes Film Festival, is an annual highlight for movie lovers in France. Photo: AFP

“As announced last autumn, the Festival de Cannes reserved the right to change its dates depending on how the global health situation developed,” they said in a statement.

“Initially scheduled from 11th to 22nd May 2021, the Festival will therefore now take place from Tuesday 6th to Saturday 17th July 2021.”

The festival was cancelled last year, while rival European events in Berlin and Venice went ahead under strict health restrictions.

The Berlin Film Festival, which usually kicks off in February, said last month it would run this year's edition in two stages, an online offering for industry professionals in March and a public event in June.

France has closed all cinemas, theatres and show rooms alongside cafés, bars and restaurants as part of its Covid-19 health measures and the government has pushed back their reopening date until further notice due to rising levels of viral spread across the country.

The Cannes festival normally attracts some 45,000 people with official accreditations, of whom around 4,500 are journalists.

It had only been cancelled once before, due to the outbreak of war in 1939.

Its Film Market, held alongside the main competition, is the industry's biggest marketplace for producers, distributors, buyers and programmers.

Last year, the festival still made an official selection of 56 films – including the latest offerings from Wes Anderson, Francois Ozon and Steve McQueen – allowing them to use the “Cannes official selection” label.

 

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