Heavyweights of world cinema dominate this year’s Cannes Film Festival: Quentin Tarantino, Ang Lee, Pedro Almodovar, Jane Campion, Ken Loach, Lars von Trier.
But first, the adventures of a cranky old man and a stowaway kid in a flying house.
Cannes has lightened up for Wednesday’s opening night as the festival’s 62nd edition takes to the sky with Disney and Pixar Animation’s “Up,” the story of a curmudgeonly widower, voiced by Edward Asner, who sets off to South America in a house carried aloft by thousands of helium balloons.
It’s the first animated movie to open Cannes. Also for the first time, the fashionable audience in gowns and tuxedos will all be wearing glasses — the 3-D kind. “Up” is the only 3-D movie ever to open the world’s most prestigious film festival.
“I’m just like a geeky kid from Minnesota who likes to draw cartoons, so the fact that we’re going to France to be a part of this internationally renowned festival is kind of mind-blowing,” said “Up” director Pete Docter.
Opening night is a far cry from last year’s, when Cannes started with the dreary plague drama “Blindness,” casting a lingering pall over the 12-day festival. The overall lineup was gloomy and generally unremarkable, loaded with tales from new and lesser-known filmmakers.
This time, Cannes has swung back to the tried and true with a main competition described by Hollywood trade paper Variety as the “biggest heavyweight auteur smackdown in recent years.”
While organizers deliberately chose a lighter movie to open things, the big-name lineup was at least partly a coincidence, said festival director Thierry Fremaux.
“If it is a year of big names, it is not a year of discoveries. Last year was a year of discoveries. Maybe next year will be again,” Fremaux said Tuesdays.
The 20 directors with films in competition include four past winners of the festival’s top prize, the Palme d’Or. Tarantino returns with “Inglourious Basterds,” starring Brad Pitt in a “Dirty Dozen”-style World War II saga, while Campion’s period drama “Bright Star” has Ben Whishaw as British poet John Keats. Von Trier’s “Antichrist” features Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg in the story of a troubled marriage that turns far worse during a trip to the woods, and Loach is back with “Looking for Eric,” in which former soccer star Eric Cantona plays himself as the personal hero of a postman whose life is spinning downhill.
Also in competition, Lee offers “Taking Woodstock,” with Emile Hirsch and Liev Schreiber in a music-soaked romp centered on the 1969 rock fest, while Almodovar reteams with Penelope Cruz for “Broken Embraces,” the story of a writer recounting a tragedy that cost him his sight and the love of his life.
“Not only does it highlight Almodovar at kind of the peak of his form, it also has another wonderful performance from Penelope Cruz,” said Michael Barker, co-president of Sony Pictures Classics, which releases the director’s films.
Cruz has a great history at Cannes. Almodovar’s “Volver,” which brought her first Academy Award nomination, premiered at the festival, as did last year’s “Vicky Cristina Barcelona,” which won her the supporting-actress Oscar.
“Taking Woodstock” is a lighter tale for Lee after the “six massively suicidal, depressing movies we made in a row,” said the film’s screenwriter, James Schamus, who has collaborated with Lee on the somber tales “Brokeback Mountain,” ”The Ice Storm” and “Lust, Caution.”
Schamus said he and Lee were surprised they landed in the Cannes competition with their modest story of a man hoping Woodstock might drum up some business for his family’s failing Catskills motel.
“We are genuinely confused. We’re in this amazing Cannes lineup with the most incredible auteurs in cinema today with this movie that’s just kind of like, ‘Let’s put on a show,'” Schamus said.
The festival will draw thousands of celebrity gawkers to the French Riviera, and there will be no bigger star this year than Pitt for “Inglourious Basterds.” Harvey Weinstein, whose Weinstein Co. is releasing the film, comes to Cannes every year but said it was especially sweet returning with a Tarantino flick.
“There’s something about going with a Quentin Tarantino movie. It doesn’t even feel like going with a movie,” said Harvey Weinstein, who also ran Miramax when it released Tarantino’s Cannes triumph “Pulp Fiction.”
“It’s like you’re with the band, a rock band. Like you’re a bunch of outlaws.”
Review: Director Bong Joon Ho’s “Mickey 17” Starring Robert Pattinson
So you think YOUR job is bad?
Sorry if we seem to be lacking empathy here. But however crummy you think your 9-5 routine is, it'll never be as bad as Robert Pattinson's in Bong Joon Ho's "Mickey 17" — nor will any job, on Earth or any planet, approach this level of misery.
Mickey, you see, is an "Expendable," and by this we don't mean he's a cast member in yet another sequel to Sylvester Stallone's tired band of mercenaries ("Expend17ables"?). No, even worse! He's literally expendable, in that his job description requires that he die, over and over, in the worst possible ways, only to be "reprinted" once again as the next Mickey.
And from here stems the good news, besides the excellent Pattinson, whom we hope got hazard pay, about Bong's hotly anticipated follow-up to "Parasite." There's creativity to spare, and much of it surrounds the ways he finds for his lead character to expire — again and again.
The bad news, besides, well, all the death, is that much of this film devolves into narrative chaos, bloat and excess. In so many ways, the always inventive Bong just doesn't know where to stop. It hardly seems a surprise that the sci-fi novel, by Edward Ashton, he's adapting here is called "Mickey7" — Bong decided to add 10 more Mickeys.
The first act, though, is crackling. We begin with Mickey lying alone at the bottom of a crevasse, having barely survived a fall. It is the year 2058, and he's part of a colonizing expedition from Earth to a far-off planet. He's surely about to die. In fact, the outcome is so expected that his friend Timo (Steven Yeun), staring down the crevasse, asks casually: "Haven't you died yet?"
How did Mickey get here? We flash back to Earth, where Mickey and Timo ran afoul of a villainous loan... Read More