Competition Films I Have Seen: Ranked in order of preference My Palme d'Or Russian Ark (Russia, dir. Aleksandr Sokurov) - Mammoth yet mercurial pageant of Russian history flashing before Sokurov's dying eyes and his camera's unblinking gaze (full review) demonlover (France, dir. Olivier Assayas) - Sizzling, sinister Mulholland Drive redux, in which other media evilly outstrip cinema's grotty and voyeuristic thrills Chihwaseon (South Korea, dir. Im Kwon-taek) - Robust, boldly edited film passing as artist-with-demons biopic. Cuts timed like brush strokes. Ego baffled by history. Bowling for Columbine (USA, dir. Michael Moore) - Digressive and inconsistently cogent, and yet scores plenty of points. Theme excuses lost-at-sea structure. The Pianist (France/Germany/UK/Poland, dir. Roman Polanski) - Stiff, stagy first hour; gains in power as dialogue recedes. Finally very moving, despite refusals of sentimentality. The Man without a Past (Finland, dir. Aki Kaurismäki) - Irréversible (France, dir. Gaspar Noé) - Asking Noé for ideas like asking Ozu for yuks. Tactile bodies, overzealous despair, virtuosic form more than enough. Sweet Sixteen (UK, dir. Ken Loach) - Ten (Iran, dir. Abbas Kiarostami) - Spider (USA, dir. David Cronenberg) - Sad, atmospheric, but oblique in defiantly unsubtle ways. Tropes, symbols feel enforced on character, not spun out of him. The Son (Belgium, dirs. Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne) - As tense as Rosetta, but with less manic energy. Polished, but for my money the Dardennes' bluntest, least rewarding tale. Punch-Drunk Love (USA, dir. Paul Thomas Anderson) - Mondrian color-blocking, boldly telescoped sound and score are hobbled by barely fertilized story and toxic lead Divine Intervention (Palestine, dir. Elia Suleiman) - Cheeky, dyspeptic vignettes, varying in humor, fire, eloquence. Bits with Suleiman, ladyfriend fall flattest. The Uncertainty Principle (Portugal, dir. Manoel de Oliveira) - Oliveira melodrama somewhere between Visconti and Fassbinder, semi-engagingly staged in etherized milieu 24 Hour Party People (UK, dir. Michael Winterbottom) - Treads some water while seeking out tone and stakes, but free-verse sprawl generates a tart, zippy countermyth All or Nothing (UK, dir. Mike Leigh) - Good work from Manville, Garland. Rich lensing from DP Dick Pope. Still, much lost to overstatement, uneven focus. About Schmidt (USA, dir. Alexander Payne) - As dotted with tiny victories of insight or humor as it is marred by condescension, mugging, and stilted contrivance My Jury Votes:
Sidebar Selections I Have Seen: Ranked in order of preference Morvern Callar (Directors' Fortnight: UK, dir. Lynne Ramsay) - Blissfully Yours (Un Certain Regard: Thailand, dir. Apichatpong Weerasethakul) - To Be and To Have (Être et avoir) (Out of Competition: France, dir. Nicholas Philibert) - Raising Victor Vargas (Un Certain Regard: USA, dir. Peter Sollett) - Sex Is Comedy (Directors' Fortnight: France, dir. Catherine Breillat) - City of God (Out of Competition: Brazil, dir. Fernando Meirelles) - Madame Satã (Un Certain Regard: Brazil, dir. Karim Aïnouz) - Femme Fatale (Out of Competition: USA, dir. Brian De Palma) - Laurel Canyon (Directors' Fortnight: USA, dir. Lisa Cholodenko) - Murder by Numbers (Out of Competition: USA, dir. Barbet Schroeder) - Star Wars, Episode II: Attack of the Clones (Out of Competition: USA, dir. George Lucas) - Searching for Debra Winger (Out of Competition: USA, dir. Rosanna Arquette) - Ararat (Out of Competition: Canada, dir. Atom Egoyan) - Hollywood Ending (Out of Competition: USA, dir. Woody Allen) - From lighting to scripting to mugging to framing, an exercise in garish self-contempt. Leoni wasted, as so often. Competition Films I'm Curious to See: Ranked in order of interest; more on this year's lineup here (opens in a new window) Unknown Pleasures, China, dir. Jia Zhangke My Mother's Smile, Italy, dir. Marco Bellocchio Kedma, Israel, dir. Amos Gitaï L'Adversaire, France, dir. Nicole Garcia Marie-Jo and Her Two Lovers, France, dir. Robert Guédiguian Sidebar Films I'm Curious to See: Listed alphabetically; more on this year's lineup here (opens in a new window)
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