ENTERTAINMENT / Movies
Cannes' glittering 60th edition opens
(AP)
Updated: 2007-05-17 09:34
British actor Jude Law, left, and American actress-singer Norah Jones
arrive for the screening of the film 'My Blueberry Nights,' at the 60th
International film festival in Cannes, southern France, on Wednesday, May
16, 2007.[AP]
Cannes celebrated its 60th edition Wednesday by inviting a screen
newcomer to open the film festival: singer Norah Jones, playing a
heartbroken lover in a role that forced her to cry on command and spend
hours smooching co-star Jude Law.
Their movie, "My Blueberry Nights," by director Wong Kar-wai, was the
first screening in an 11-day fete of cinema, parties and dealmaking.
The festival has an extra dash of glitter this year: Stars slated for
appearances include George Clooney, Sharon Stone, Brad Pitt, Leonardo
DiCaprio, Al Pacino and Angelina Jolie. Movies on Cannes' lineup range
from "Ocean's Thirteen" to Michael Moore's "Sicko," to films from Russia
to Mexico to South Korea.
Jones wore a strapless midnight blue gown, and Law and Wong wore black
sunglasses, as they climbed the red carpet. Other stars at the premiere
included China's Gong Li, India's Aishwarya Rai and France's Juliette
Binoche. Diane Kruger ("Troy") was the first German to open the ceremony,
where American director David Lynch ("Blue Velvet") screened a surreal
film short set in a movie theater.
Cannes strives to achieve just the right blend of Hollywood glitz and
international arthouse films, and the opening night movie certainly fit
the bill.
Hong Kong director Wong ("In The Mood for Love") is a Cannes favorite,
and "My Blueberry Nights" is his first English-language movie. Besides
Law and Jones, the cast includes Natalie Portman, who plays a Nevada girl
on a gambling streak; David Strathairn, in a terrific turn as an
alcoholic policeman; and Rachel Weisz as his unhappy wife.
Jones stars as a New Yorker who hits the road on a curative cross-country
trip after being dropped by her boyfriend. She had never acted before,
but Wong heard her sultry voice and knew he had a role for her.
"Basically, when you listen to her voice only, without seeing her face,
you can have a kind of a story out of it," he said.
Jones said she was terrified when they shot her first scene.
"I remember the first take we did, my voice was really high," she said,
finishing her sentence with a squeak. "I was just terribly nervous, and
Kar-wai came over and patted me on the back and I relaxed a little."
But Wong said Jones grew more at ease over the shoot �� she impressed him
in a scene where he asked her to cry.
"We rolled the camera and she cried, and after that I said, `Well, it's
great,' and she said, `Do you want one more?'" Wong said.
The movie's turning point is a kissing scene in a diner, with Law licking
drops of ice cream from Jones' lips as she sleeps. Jones said Wong had
very particular ideas about what he wanted. "We shot it a long time,"
Jones said.
The actors hadn't seen the movie yet as they walked down the red carpet.
Earlier in the day, it garnered muted applause at a showing for critics.
Cannes was founded in 1939 as an alternative to the Venice Film Festival
in Mussolini's Italy �� but almost as soon as it opened, the festival was
canceled because World War II broke out. Cannes did not get going in
earnest until the 1950s.
The festival is looking back at its glamorous history this year with a
photo exhibit on the beach. There's Cary Grant in black tie, Natalie Wood
and Warren Beatty hailed by paparazzi and Kim Novak in a limousine, with
raindrops sparkling on the window like diamonds.
But the celebrations are more than just nostalgia. For a feature-length
homage to the movies, it commissioned 35 shorts from directors including
Wong, Roman Polanski ("The Pianist"), Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu
("Babel"), the Coens ("Fargo") and Wim Wenders ("Wings of Desire.")
Oscar-winning director Martin Scorsese ("The Departed") has been enlisted
to give a master class on moviemaking.
Pacino, Clooney, Pitt and Matt Damon will promote threequel "Ocean's
Thirteen," DiCaprio brings his environmental documentary "The 11th Hour,"
and celebrity super couple Pitt and Jolie will appear �� he for "Ocean's
Thirteen," she for "A Mighty Heart," in which she plays the widow of
murdered Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl.
Those films are screening out of competition, as is "Sicko" by Moore,
whose "Fahrenheit 9/11" won the top prize at Cannes in 2004. But his look
at the U.S. health care system is sure to be one of the festival's most
talked-about movies. The U.S. Treasury Department opened an investigation
into a trip Moore took to Cuba �� accompanied by a group of ailing Sept.
11 rescue workers �� during the film's shooting.
Related Stories
� Celebrities arrive for the 60th Cannes Film Festival
===========================================================================
� HongKong actress ShuQi arrives at Cannes
===========================================================================
� Prepare for the Cannes
===========================================================================
� Angolan movie "O Heroi" participates in Cannes Film Festival
===========================================================================
� Cannes opens with Asian take on US road movies
===========================================================================
� Gong Li, Wong Kar-wai to attend Cannes birthday party
===========================================================================
Top Entertaiment News
� Cannes' glittering 60th edition opens
� People can learn from Paris, mom says
� Disney hopes to strike `Magic' in China
� Bo Diddley hospitalized after stroke
� Christina Aguilera will perform in Shanghai
Today's Top News
� Consultations to handle US complaints on IPR
� China sincere in helping Africa - Wen
� 3 satellites set for launch in 2008
� Two S.Korean ships seized off Somalia
� US: Private trade talks can be more fruitful
Most Commented/Read Stories in 48 Hours
Learn Chinese, Free Chinese Lesson, Learning Materials, Mandarin audio lessons, Chinese writing lessons, Chinese vocabulary lists, About chinese characters, News in Chinese, Go to China, Travel to China, Study in China, Teach in China, Dictionaries, Learn Chinese Painting, Your name in Chinese, Chinese calligraphy, Chinese songs, Chinese proverbs, Chinese poetry, Chinese tattoo, Beijing 2008 Olympics, Mandarin Phrasebook, Chinese editor, Pinyin editor, China Travel, Travel to Beijing, Travel to Tibet

No comments:
Post a Comment