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May 2012

  • Cannes Archives,Featured Review,Festivals

    CANNES FESTIVAL-Moonrise Kingdom

    If Standard & Poor’s assessed film production values Wes Anderson would remain a AAA-rated cineaste year in and year out. The level of detail that went into every square inch of “Moonrise Kingdom,” which had its premiere here in Cannes a few hours ago, is above perfection. But “Moonrise” fails on other levels. Adult characters wretchedly watch as their kids go about resolving the problems of their day (only to finally prevail, at the very

    March 29, 2013
  • Featured Review,In Theaters Now,Movies

    REVIEW – “The Avengers”

    Comic book mavens rejoice, for Marvel Studios has concocted a heady and wonderful sensory brew in “The Avengers.” Weaving together the origin stories of Iron Man, Thor, Hulk, and Captain America, “The Avengers” packages a star-studded cast, one that could easily have imploded under its own weight, into a fleet-footed, yet cohesive, plotline. Nefarious forces from other worlds threaten Earth, led by the sneering and magnetic trickster god

    March 9, 2013
  • Cannes Archives,Festivals,News

    OPINION – Open Letter to Coline, Virginie and Fanny

    What would the Cannes Festival be without a little fracas? Some kind of polemic has been making the rounds of the French media this week concerning the lack of women filmmakers in the official selection at the Cannes Festival--twenty-two films, by male directors all, are vying for awards this year. Things turned nasty when Virginie Despentes, Fanny Cottençon, and Coline Serreau (a screenwriter-director, actress and director respect-

    March 29, 2013
  • News

    GUILLERMO DEL TORO to remake Pinocchio in stop-motion 3.D.

    As reported by Variety “Pinocchio” will be the first animated [...]

    May 12, 2012
  • Cannes Archives,Featured Review,Festivals

    FILMMAKING AND REVOLUTIONS – The Yousry Nasrallah Interview

    Tahrir Square, one day during the Arab Spring. A young demonstrator falls for a camel shepherd who's under the influence of Hosni Mubarak’s militias. Two people standing on opposite side of the biggest conflict Egypt has seen in nearly half a century are brought together against all expectations. Egyptian filmmaker Yousry Nasrallah wrote and directed “After the Battle” (“Baad El Mawkeaa”) which will be competing for

    March 29, 2013
  • News

    NEW ROMAN POLANSKI ANNOUNCED

    History is an endless source of stories, which is useful [...]

    May 11, 2012
  • Cannes Archives,Featured Review,Festivals

    INTERVIEW-Sergei Loznitsa on presenting “In the fog” at Cannes

    Russian filmmaker Sergei Loznitsa will be at the Cannes Festival again this year, competing for the Palme D'Or. This time he presents "In the Fog," a feature film adaptation of a novel set in the darkest recesses of World War II, when Russians accused each other of fomenting with the enemy and soldiers turned on civilians. The memory of war is a difficult burden to bear but the need to memorialize a tragedy is as vital today as it was at the outset

    March 29, 2013
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