Wong Kar-wai Tagged Articles at Cinematical
Festival Bites: Wong Heads Shanghai; Huston Heads Edinburgh; Rondi Heads Rome
Filed under: Festival Reports », Other Festivals », Cinematical Indie »
A few international film festivals have announced their jury heads today, so here's a roundup, plus other fest circuit news:- Chinese auteur Wong Kar-Wai (2046) will be replacing the late Anthony Minghella as the head of the jury at this month's Shanghai International Film Festival. Minghella, who died in March, will be honored by the fest, which runs June 14-22. Other jury members include filmmaker Bille August and Joan Chen, who once starred in a film co-written by Wong (1986's E nan).
- Actor Danny Huston (Children of Men) will head the Michael Powell jury at the Edinburgh International Film Festival, which runs June 18-29. He and others, including actress Joely Richardson and filmmaker Iain Softley, will be voting for the winner of the prestigious Michael Powell award. Last year's winner was Anton Corbijn's Control.
- Italian film critic Gian Luigi Rondi has been invited to be the new president of the three-year-old Rome Film Festival following a political shakeup that caused the resignation of former president Goffredo Bettini. Rondi was the artistic director of the Venice Film Festival between 1983 to 1986 and currently heads Italy's version of the Academy Awards, the David di Donatello Awards. He has so far declined that he will accept. The 2008 festival will run October 21-31.
- Jean-Luc Godard may be boycotting the Tel Aviv Student Film Festival, but other French filmmakers are set to attend another event, the Tel Aviv French Film Festival, which begins June 10. Those scheduled to appear include Alexandre Arcady, Diane Kurys and Laetitia Masson. Popular films set to screen include The Secret of the Grain and Love Songs, my review for which you can read here.
Guardian Calls Cannes Jury 'Obtuse' For Overlooking Coens
Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Thrillers », Awards », Cannes », Cinematical Indie »
Peter Bradshaw at The Guardian has a nice recap of this year's Cannes Film Festival, saying "This was a very good year for Cannes in its 60th anniversary, only just short of vintage level. There were no real disasters (excepting perhaps the clunker My Blueberry Nights by Wong Kar-Wai) and plenty of outstanding films." Bradshaw was thrilled to see The Palme d'Or -- the fest's highest honor -- go to a low-budget Romanian film about abortion called 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days.Sounds like a fun one, no? Bradshaw, like most, loved the film, and calls the award "a magnificently insouciant gesture showing that Cannes is still capable of being unimpressed by established reputations, even the reputations of its own stalwarts. Decisions like these make Cannes look, in the best possible way, like a heavily besieged city state, stubbornly holding out for world cinema against the mighty forces of Hollywood-globalization."
Not making Bradshaw happy is that the Coen Brothers were snubbed at Cannes this year. Many are saying the Coens' new movie, No Country for Old Men, ranks among their best, which is extremely high praise indeed. Says Bradshaw, "the big disappointment was that no gongs of any shape or size were handed to the Coens - especially exasperating, given that Gus Van Sant won an award for his disappointing slacker movie Paranoid Park, a real cut below his previous movies, Last Days and the Palme d'Or-winning Elephant. When the Coens' No Country for Old Men is released here in the UK, I'm confident that it will be regarded as one of their best films. It's weird that Cannes, which has so greatly sponsored the Coens' reputation over the years, should be so obtuse as to pass over such an excellent film." Read Ryan's Cannes recap here and for more on these movies, be sure to check out James' Cannes reviews of No Country for Old Men, Paranoid Park, and 4 Months, 3 Weeks, and 2 Days.
Cannes Review: My Blueberry Nights
Filed under: Romance », Cannes », Theatrical Reviews », Festival Reports », Cinematical Indie »
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From almost any perspective, My Blueberry Nights is the perfect pick to open the 60th Cannes Film Festival: A noted international director (Wong Kar-Wai) making his English-language debut, with a cast of international stars (Norah Jones, Jude Law, Natalie Portman) and exciting memories of past appearances at the Festival as part of the bargain – in 2004, Wong Kar-Wai's 2046 was such a fresh work that the screenings of the film had to be pushed back, as the print was literally still wet. At this morning's press screening, you could hear cineastes sigh in rapture from the opening titles – blue-glazed visions of pie and cream, indigo skies with neon-glow cityscapes leaning lazily against them.
My Blueberry Nights follows Elizabeth (Norah Jones), as her recent fresh breakup sends her down into the depths of loss and then across the country. Elizabeth lives in New York, but after friendly café owner Jeremy (Jude Law) unintentionally informs her that her boyfriend has been out with another woman, she's at a loss – spending late nights in his café, eating blueberry pie and taking comfort in his gently bruised romantic philosophies. Jeremy's place has, over the years, become a bit of a depot for broken-hearted lovers to leave their keys – why, exactly, this tradition came about is never fully explained in Wong and Lawrence Block's screenplay, but still – and he's able to share with Elizabeth some of the tales of loss and love connected to each set.
Elizabeth isn't consoled by those tales, though, and sets out rambling – we see her stop in Memphis and Nevada, get a glimpse of time spent in California and Arizona – working waitressing jobs along the way. When it was announced that Jones would be taking the lead in Wong's film, the question arose: Would Jones make the leap from pop stardom to the silver screen, as many others have tried? There's certainly no doubt that Jones has a certain presence on-screen – Wong and cinematographer Darius Khondji love to show her face, framed with a lush corona of pitch-black hair – but her skills as an actress are occasionally shaky; early in the film, she's a flat and unmoved presence; she doesn't seem to be speaking from the life of a character, but, rather, reading from the lines of a script.
Cannes Official Lineup Has Been Released!
Filed under: Cannes », Festival Reports », Quentin Tarantino », George Clooney »
After a lot of guessing and hoping (some of which turned out to be correct, and some of which did not), the line-up of films for the 60th Annual Cannes Film Festival has been released. Leading off the fest? Wong Kar-Wai's My Blueberry Nights, starring Norah Jones as a young woman looking for love, will play opening night; closing the fest will be David Fincher's Zodiac. Other highlights in competition include Joel and Ethan Coen's No Country for Old Men, which recently had its international and domestic distribution duties split up and is aiming for an Oscar-friendly fall release. Emir Kustirica's Promise Me This will play at Cannes, and, intriguingly, so will Quentin Tarantino's Death Proof in a stand-alone one hour and fifty minute-long version, with no Robert Rodriguez zombie movie to gum up the works.
Films playing outside of competition - where the Festival tends to load up on paparazzi-bait to stroll the red carpet -- include Ocean's Thirteen and Michael Moore's Sicko, which is sure to bring the media in droves. Also named today is the Cannes Un Certain Regard slate -- which includes films from Harmony Korine, Barbet Schroeder and Lola Doillon. Special midnight screenings will include a new film from New Wave-era bad boy director Abel Ferrara and U2 3D. And this is just the top-level overview; for the full slate, you can go right to the source at the Festival's web site.
The Cannes Film Festival begins on May 16th, 2007; keep it here at Cinematical for all the news and reviews you'll want from one of the premier film festivals in the world.
*Notice of change. I, Ryan, originally added in some stuff about Cannes not letting me in the festival this year, but the writer, James, doesnt want that in his post, so I've changed it back to the way he originally had it.
Greatest Living Filmmakers United for Secret Cannes Project
Filed under: Foreign Language », Cannes », Shorts », Quentin Tarantino »
For its 60th year anniversary, the Cannes Film Festival will premiere new films from many past winners of the Palme d'Or. It isn't known how many of these winners will have new material this year, but apparently festival president Gilles Jacob and artistic director Thierry Frémaux tried to get many of the living "Golden Palm" vets -- winners and nominees, both -- to contribute to a special project. Each participating filmmaker has directed a short film of 2-3 minutes in length that will be shown together as a feature-length film at a gala event on May 20. Variety reports that those known to be included are Ken Loach ('06: The Wind That Shakes the Barley), Gus Van Sant ('03: Elephant), Lars von Trier ('00: Dancer in the Dark), Theodoros Angelopoulos ('98: Eternity and a Day), Abbas Kiarostami ('97: Taste of Cherry), Chen Kaige ('93: Farewell My Concubine), Wim Wenders ('84: Paris, Texas) and non-winners (though often-nominated) Wong Kar-Wai, Michael Cimino, Amos Gitai, Manoel de Oliveira, Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang. There are 30 shorts in all, so obviously a lot of other contributors are as yet unknown. Only Pedro Almodóvar (also a non-winner, and never a nominee) is known to have declined the offer.
The Weinsteins to Delight in My Blueberry Nights
Filed under: Drama », Independent », Romance », Casting », Deals », Distribution », Weinstein Brothers », Cinematical Indie »
It's been a while since we've had some news on My Blueberry Nights, so let's catch up: Martha Fischer started reporting about the film when it was announced, and then told us about the pic's growing cast. To review, Blueberry Nights is the new, and first English feature, of writer-director Wong Kar-wai. The film is a road trip love story that centers on a woman, played by first-time actress Norah Jones, as she travels across America meeting strange, new people. It is also based on a short film about a shopkeeper who falls for a blueberry pie fiend. Also making an appearance in the flick are Rachel Weisz, Jude Law (pictures of him in the film are now on imdb), and Natalie Portman.
Filming is now completed, and David Strathairn and Tim Roth were also added to the cast. There was some rumor that Ed Harris would be in that list, but no reports seem to confirm it. I would imagine that it never came to be if he wasn't mentioned in the new Hollywood Reporter blurb, which has announced that those Weinstein boys have picked up the rights to the movie.
These days, you can't throw a stick without hitting a Weinstein. However, every time I hear the name, I can't help but think of that Kevin Smith story about
Kidman Drops The Lady from Shanghai
Filed under: RumorMonger », Celebrities and Controversy », DIY/Filmmaking », Other Festivals »
While out promoting her new movie Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus at the Rome Film Festival, Nicole Kidman reportedly told the press that she has dropped out of Wong Kar-Wai's (remake of?) Lady from Shanghai. According to CRI, their article makes it seem as if the decision was provoked by her husband's recent trip to rehab. If you want my opinion (not that it matters much), it seems Kidman wants to keep an eye on Keith Urban once he leaves rehab to make sure he remains clean. Why do I feel like a quickie divorce is imminent?
What's odd about this news is that WKW is still in post on My Blueberry Nights, and knowing him, there's no way he has a production schedule lined up yet for Shanghai. Furthermore, Kidman is also set to star in the Untitled Baz Luhrmann Project with Hugh Jackman, as well as The Golden Compass (which is filming now), and so will either of those two be affected? Also, if she's so determined to spend more time with hubby, then why is she in Rome right now? Kidman was supposed to star alongside Hugh Jackman and Rachel Weisz in Lady from Shanghai, and as of right now there's no word on who her replacement will be.
[via IFC Blog]
More Details on Wong's Blueberry Nights
Filed under: Drama », Casting », Cannes », Newsstand »
You'd think that Wong must be salivating over this project just as much as his fans are -- imagine what he'll be able to do with the lights of Las Vegas, or the wide open spaces of the American West (to help you conjure up the latter, check out the mind-blowing Ashes of Time). As long as he brings Christopher Doyle along to shoot the thing, the movie has the potential to be just incredible.
Cinephelia in Seattle: Wong Kar-Wai; Carroll Ballard; and a Film From Fiji
Filed under: Classics », Comedy », Documentary », Drama », Foreign Language », Gay & Lesbian », Independent », Family Films », Cinephelia in Seattle », Cinematical Indie »
It's Easter weekend, and for a lot of us that means easter egg hunts,
church services, and dinner with the extended family. After stuffing yourself silly with chocolate bunnies, marshmallow
chicks and ham and listening to Uncle Bert's war stories for the 89,000th time, you'll be ready to escape -- and where
better to escape to than the movies? If you live in Seattle, count yourself lucky. You'll have more to choose from than
Scary Movie 4 or The Wild.
This week at UW brings us a showing of Academy Award-nominated Brazilian film City of God. Tuesday, April 18 @6PM, Electrical Engineering Auditorium. Also this week at UW:
Beautiful Boxer shows as part of International Queer Nights, Tuesday, April 18 @7PM, Q Center
ASUW A&E Movie Spring Series - every Weds. at the HUB Ballroom.
April 19 - Memoirs of a Geisha @5:30PM; Chronicles of Narnia @8PM
WKW Update: Blueberry Night, Lady Details
Filed under: Drama », Independent », Casting », RumorMonger », Fandom », Newsstand », Cinematical Indie »
The Monkey Peaches report also confirms that The Lady from Shanghai has been delayed, and will be shot after both Blueberry Night and Baz Luhrmann's untitled Aussie epic, in which Wong's star Nicole Kidman is appearing alongside Russell Crowe.









