Thursday May 15, 9:42 PM
Grim drama opens Cannes film festival
CANNES, France (Reuters) - A grim Brazilian drama about
society's descent into anarchy launched the Cannes film
festival on Wednesday, and politics dominated the opening news
conference held by jury president Sean Penn.
"Blindness," starring Julianne Moore, marked a somber start
to 12 days of movies, publicity stunts and late-night revelry
in the Riviera town, which prides itself on embracing weighty
cinema as well as rolling out the red carpet for Hollywood
royalty.
Directed by Brazil's Fernando Meirelles, of "City of God"
renown, "Blindness" is an English-language adaptation of Nobel
Prize-winning writer Jose Saramago's novel of the same name,
and tells the story of a plague of blindness sweeping the
world.
Moore plays a doctor's wife, who, like the film's audience,
sees death, cruelty, degradation as well as dignity around her.
"We consider ourselves so strong and sophisticated and
solid, and then one thing goes and everything collapses,"
Meirelles told reporters after a press screening. "We are
skating on thin ice. Anything can happen and everything does."
The movie had its premiere in the evening, with Dennis
Hopper, Eva Longoria Parker and Cate Blanchett among the stars
joining cast and jury in front of hundreds of fans.
Penn, who heads the nine-member jury that decides which of
22 entries in the main competition receives the coveted Palme
d'Or for best film, hinted that the winner was likely to be one
that tackled contemporary issues.
"Whatever we select for the Palme d'Or, I think that we all
are in sync that we're going to feel very confident that the
... maker of that film was very aware of the times in which he
lives," the U.S. actor-director said.
Penn, an outspoken detractor of George W. Bush, renewed his
criticism of the U.S. president.
"When somebody operates without a brain and without a
heart, they kill hundreds of thousands of people around the
world," he told a news briefing during which he lit a cigarette
in defiance of French anti-smoking laws.
'ODD' CHOICE FOR OPENING
Meirelles said it was both a challenge and an honor to open
Cannes, but added of "Blindness": "To be honest, I still don't
think this is the best film to open a festival."
Moore called the choice "kind of odd."
Much of the film is set in an abandoned asylum outside an
unnamed city, where those stricken by the contagious "White
Sickness" -- so called because the blind see white, not black
-- are locked up by increasingly panicked authorities.
A workable system of living despite the squalor soon breaks
down when one prisoner, played by Mexico's Gael Garcia Bernal,
takes the law into his own hands.
Among the other entries in competition is "Waltz With
Bashir," the animated documentary about the 1982 Sabra and
Shatila camp massacres which screened late on Wednesday.
It is up against Clint Eastwood's "Changeling," starring
Angelina Jolie, who confirmed on Wednesday in an interview in
Cannes that she was expecting twins with Brad Pitt.
Steven Soderbergh presents "Che," a two-part,
four-and-a-half hour epic about Argentine revolutionary Che
Guevara with Benicio del Toro in the title role.
The other two U.S. entries are James Gray's "Two Lovers,"
featuring Gwyneth Paltrow and Joaquin Phoenix, and Charlie
Kaufman's "Synecdoche, New York" with Philip Seymour Hoffman.
The biggest show in town this year is likely to be the
latest installment of the Indiana Jones series, again starring
Harrison Ford as the whip-wielding archaeologist in "Indiana
Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" by Steven
Spielberg.
Reuters/Nielsen
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