(How's that for an awkward post title? I amaze myself.)
Whenever the
Cannes Film Festival ends I am left with two feelings only: Frustration and Anticipation. The first state of mind obviously springs from how long I know I will have to wait to see the films (sometimes well over a year --if they ever see release at all --given the state of international distribution) and the second is the natural byproduct of all that waiting.
So if you have any pull with the cinematic gods, please wish all of these films quick distribution. Lengthy waits do nothing to help films capitalize on their Cannes buzz. If you need an example just consider the twist of fates for last year's
Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada and
Match Point. They both looked like buzz giants until well over six months of "they're freaking brilliant!!!" buzz curdled into backlash and 'who cares?' as they opened in late December.
If you haven't really been paying attention or waiting for folks like me to wrap it all up for you. Here ya go. The rundown.
Trinity of PowerThe films that will get the most momentum from Cannes are the following big winners: The Palme D'Or winner was Ken Loach's
The Wind That Shakes the Barley a period piece set in Ireland which stars the still-ascending Cillian Murphy (previously celebrated at the Film Experience
here and still to come in the
Top 100 Actor Countdown). You can be sure this film will make it to US screens. Internationally celebrated
Alejandro González Iñárritu (
Amores Perros, 21 Grams) won the directorial prize for his third multi-narrative accident tragedy
Babel --gee, um. do you think he'll mine this territory for as long as M Night Shyamalan relied on the trick endings? The title
Babel presumably comes from the multi-lingual multi-cultural communication mishaps therein. Given
Babel's trio of headliners (Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett and Gael García Bernal) there was never any doubt that this would attract media attention and make the international rounds but here we have a nice shiny prize to help the film in its eventual quest for Oscar glory next winter.
Finally, Pedro Almodovar's
Volver was well received too. Pedro's apparently
still on that giddy masterpiece-making roll. It's the only film to win two prizes; a screenplay award and a collective Best Actress win (which should give some good copy to FYC ads for Penelope Cruz in the
Oscar Best Actress race and might even help that international treasure
Carmen Maura in the parallel
supporting actress contest. If AMPAS is still in love with Almodovar. And why wouldn't they be? Who in their right mind wouldn't be?
If It sounds vulgar to view awards at the world's greatest film festival in light of future Oscar competitions, give me the benefit of the doubt. Awards and their perceived aftereffects are realities of the market place and distribution deal incentives and the like. I'm not ever intending to suggest that a Cannes win isn't a lovely end goal in itself. But this is awardage we're talking about. It
is a vulgar process: also exciting, unpredictable, addictive, and glamourous.
Other Prizes & Buzz HitsBig awards aren't everything. Exposure is the main goal. If you get a buzz boost or a sale or raves or a minor award, you've won. The end goal is presumably to get the films out there for the filmgoing community to see. To that end the following films had a good festival. The Algerian drama
Indigènes, which seems to be referred to as
Days of Glory in some articles (?), won a collective Best Actor prize (one of the recipients was Sami Bouajila the title character in the minor gay hit
The Adventures of Felix a few years back.) so we might get to see it here stateside. Although it certainly took
The Son, a previous Best Actor winner, a million years to make that same Atlantic jump.
Second place or "Grand Prize" went to
Flanders, another brutal Bruno Dumont film (of
Humanité fame). "Jury Prize"went to the British film
Red Road by Andrea Arnold. You may recall that last year Miranda July tied for the Golden Camera (the prize that goes to a best first-time director) for her loveable
Me and You and Everyone We Know. This time the prize went to a thirty-one year old Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu
A Fost Sau N-A Fost? also known as
12:08 East of Bucharest. Norway's Bobbie Peers won the best short film prize for
Sniffer.
Some films play out of competition or just don't win awards but still win due to the buzz generated. John Cameron Mitchell's long
lonnnnng awaited follow up to
Hedwig and the Angry Inch,
Shortbus was quite well received. You may recall that that film was titled
The Sex Film Project for a long time and the story-filled casting process was chronicled in detail by Salon some years back. The explicit onscreen pansexualilty will undoubtedly cause it trouble with American distribution but we'll get it eventually. Other films that seem to be doing well word-of-mouth wise are the Mexican film
El Violin, a Norwegian comedy
The Bothersome Man, Guillermo Del Toro's
Pan's Labyrinth, and
Joon-ho Bong's monster movie
The Host.
Critical Cat Fighting to ContinueThe two most divisive American titles, The
Donnie Darko follow up
Southland Tales and Sofia Coppola's stylized
Marie-Antoinette (with the divisive Kiki Dunst as the titular teen queen) won't reach American theaters until the fall or later. But whenever they do arrive, expect critical battles to ensue. They may have a rival in provoking disparate reactions in the Italian film
A Friend of the Family.
tags:
Kirsten Dunst,
Sofia Coppola,
movies,
film,
Cannes,
Marie-Antoinette,
Cate Blanchett,
Brad Pitt,
Gael García Berna,
Pedro Almodovar,
Volver,
Cillian Murphy,
Penélope Cruz,
Southland Tales