By Jake Coyle, Film Writer
CANNES, France (AP) --The Cannes Film Festival, with its late-night soirees and throngs of paparazzi, isn't an ideal place for children. Few of its movies are PG-rated, nor is much of the nightlife.
Yet at this year's Cannes, kid actors have delivered many of the festival's most memorable performances, often by not just equaling their better-known and taller co-stars, but by towering above them. It's the year of les enfants.
That's perhaps been especially welcome during a festival where innocence has been hard to come by, and not just on the screen. Monday's bombing in Manchester, England, which took the lives of many young concertgoers there to see one of their favorite pop stars perform, was acutely felt in Cannes. Already pervasive security measures were ramped up even more after the explosion – measures that had themselves been inflated following last year's deadly rampage in nearby Nice.
That made the smiling young faces of Cannes' kids shine all the brighter. Most of them, plucked from obscurity and dropped into the middle of Cannes' cacophony, were agog at the spectacle they found themselves in – but none looked out of place.
Meet the Cannes class of '17:
MAGGIE MULUBWA
Rungano Nyoni's "I Am Not a Witch" was one of the standouts of the festival, a film playing in the Directors' Fortnight section that announced the Welsh, Zambia-born Nyoni as a major new talent. But it wouldn't have worked without Mulubwa's remarkable lead performance in the surreal, comic, tragic tale of a young African girl who is declared a witch by her village and exiled. While researching in Zambia, location scout Tobias Tembo and location manager Gabriel Gauchet happened to take pictures of Mulubwa playing on the beach. The filmmakers auditioned hundreds of girls before deciding, however they could, to track down the arresting girl in their photos. With the help of a local chief and the messaging service Whatsapp, they did. Now Mulubwa is frolicking along the French Riviera.
MILLICENT SIMMONDS
For the part of Rose, a young deaf girl in 1927 New York, Todd Haynes went searching for a nonprofessional deaf girl who could help carry his period fable "Wonderstruck." When he saw Simmonds' audition tape, he said he "shivered." Her performance was one of the most acclaimed at the festival. She and her young co-star Jaden Michael made for perhaps the cutest pair in Cannes. Their dancing at the film's post-premiere party, Haynes said, was "outrageous and adorable." Said Simmonds, a Utah native: "I never dreamt my life would come here, to this."
AHN SEO-HYUN
Bong Joon-ho's fantastical "Okja" contains some eye-catching characters – Jake Gyllenhaal, Tilda Swinton, a digitally created giant pig. But the 13-year-old South Korean actress Ahn Seo-Hyn, who stars as Mija, may best them all. In a wild romp of a movie, she's the film's quiet, melancholic core.
BROOKLYNN KIMBERLY PRINCE and VALERIA COTTO
In Sean Baker's "The Florida Project," a Directors' Fortnight entry, Prince and Cotto play 6-year-olds living in an Orlando, Fla., motel. Their world, poor and gritty, is far cry from the nearby Walt Disney World, but no less magical.
FANTINE HARDUIN
You can count on Michael Haneke to supply a less rosy-eyed view of youth. In "Happy End," Harduin plays Jean Louis Trintignant's 13-year-old granddaughter in a film full of disconnected characters in anguish and apathy. Harduin's young girl is no different, and just as callous, if not more so, than the cruel family members that surround her. The film's beginning and ending, is seen, disturbingly, through her camera phone.
MATVEY NOVIKOV
Russian director Andrey Zvyagintsev's "Loveless" his follow-up to the Oscar-nominated "Leviathan," is also no picnic. It's about a bitterly divorcing couple and their missing 12-year-old son, played by Novikov. The scene that precedes the boy's flight, in which he overhears his parents trying to pawn him off on the other, provided one of the most haunting, heartbreaking images of the festival. Life was tough for a lot of the kids in Cannes, on screen, at least.
Droga5 Appoints Emma Montgomery As Global Chief Strategy Officer
Creative agency network Droga5 has appointed Emma Montgomery as global chief strategy officer. She is the third global appointment for the agency this year, with Pelle Sjoenell named worldwide chief creative officer this past March, and global CEO Mark Green recently appointed this fall. Montgomery will be responsible for connecting and supercharging Droga5โs strategy and creative offerings globally. She will be based in its headquarters in New York City.
โEmma is a world-class strategic leader and authority that Iโve long admired and dreamt of being partners-in-crime with,โ said Sjoenell. โHer work inspires the creativity that connects people and brands in ways that move business and culture forward, so Iโm excited to finally be able to work with her alongside Mark, and to see her lead and further strengthen our leadership and strategy teams around the world.โ
Montgomery joins Droga5 after serving as CEO of DDB Chicago. Sheโs been in the industry for over 20 years, and has served in several high-level leadership positions throughout her career, including as president and CSO of Leo Burnett Chicago, global CSO of TBWA, and CEO of Leo Burnett Australia. Sheโs also worked across a breadth of categories and multiple global clients such as Kraft, Aldi, Diageo and Molson Coors, among many others, including challenger brands and startups.
โIโm excited to join Droga5 and have the opportunity to help carve out a new path for the brand globally, building on its tremendous legacy of creative leadership,โ said Montgomery. โThe potential of Droga5, combined with the possibilities of Accenture Song, was too exciting to pass up. No other agency has what they have, and as marketing shifts, the chance to make creativity a genuine... Read More