President of the Jury Sean Penn (2nd R) poses with jury
members Natalie Portman, Marjane Satrapi, Jeanne Balibar and Alexandra Maria
Lara (L-R) during a photo call at the 61st Cannes Film Festival yesterday. -
Xinhua/Reuters
It's indie movies vs. Indy's movie at the Cannes Film Festival.
As the French Riviera blitz of movies, parties and industry schmoozing
started yesterday, the question was whether the independent movies beloved by
Cannes critics could hold their own against the media bombast for "Indiana Jones
and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull," which plays here this weekend.
On opening day, the festival's dual nature was apparent for anyone strolling
down Cannes' main drag, the Croisette. On one side is Cannes' official poster --
indie filmmaker David Lynch's arty photo of a mysterious blond bombshell. On the
other is a hotel facade dressed up for "Indiana Jones" festivities to look
something like a plastic temple of doom.
While critics may gripe that Cannes has succumbed to Hollywood, the festival
prides itself on having something for everyone.
Take Wednesday. The festival opens on a serious note with "Blindness,"
Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles' tale of an epidemic that causes people to
lose their vision, starring Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo, Gael Garcia Bernal and
Danny Glover and based on a novel by Portuguese Nobel laureate Jose Saramago.
While critics pondered the symbolism of "Blindness" in a darkened cinema,
paparazzi were hitting the beach to capture funnyman Jack Black pulling a
publicity stunt for "Kuar at Cannes -- he led the jury in 1994 and showed films
here including "Mystic River" -- but he has never won the top prize.
Jolie, Harrison Ford, Woody Allen, Scarlett Johansson, Penelope Cruz and
Robert De Niro are among the stars expected in town during the festival. Madonna
and Sharon Stone are to turn up at a benefit dinner on Cannes' sidelines for the
American Foundation for AIDS Research.
Other films in the running for prizes are James Gray's "Two Lovers," a
romantic drama starring Joaquin Phoenix and Gwyneth Paltrow, and Steven
Soderbergh's four-and-a-half hour marathon "Che," starring Benicio Del Toro as
Argentine revolutionary Ernesto Guevara.
Dark themes abound as usual in the competition films. Palme d'Or laureates
Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, who took top honors at the 1999 and 2005
festivals, are back with a gritty drama about an illegal immigrant and her sham
marriage, "Le Silence de Lorna (Lorna's Silence)."
Israeli writer-director Ari Folman's "Waltz With Bashir" -- an animated film
-- tackles the subject of war. And Italian film "Gomorra," by director Matteo
Garrone, takes on the Naples-based Camorra mob.