Sunday, May 15, 2011

Israeli university awards $1 million to filmmaker duo

TEL AVIV, Israel | Sun May 15, 2011 5:59pm EDT

TEL AVIV, Israel (Reuters) - An Israeli university awarded Oscar-winning filmmaker brothers Joel and Ethan Coen a million-dollar prize Sunday, as the duo made their first visit to a country their mother had long urged them to see.

In remarks before receiving the Dan David Prize, an annual award given by Tel Aviv University to outstanding scientists and artists, Joel Coen told a reporter their mother had lived in British Mandate Palestine before Israel's establishment in 1948.

"Our mother tried to get us to come here for many, many years," the elder of the siblings said. "But you know, life intervenes. We've been very busy."

Pressed about whether Israel had piqued their interest enough to set their next film there, the Coens demurred, saying their creativity thrived best on culturally familiar territory.

"We're real ignoramuses about Israel," said Joel Coen, who grew up in the U.S. Midwest.

The duo rejected calls for boycotts of the Jewish state by some artists as a protest against settlement-building on land Palestinians want for a state.

"It's people responding to real problems in a way that they think is appropriate. We obviously don't share that opinion of how to deal with those problems," Ethan Coen said.

The Coens won four Oscars for their 2007 blockbuster "No Country for Old Men" and two for "Fargo," made in 1996, and have garnered award nominations for other films including "A Serious Man" and "The Big Lebowski."

The university praised what it called the Coens' "original and creative partnership, unique in the history of filmmaking."



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"Thor" hammers away at box office competition again

LOS ANGELES | Sun May 15, 2011 2:08pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - "Thor" reigned at the North American box office for the second weekend in a row, as the raunchy women's comedy "Bridesmaids" beat expectations to come in second.

According to studio estimates issued on Sunday, the Marvel comics 3D film "Thor," about the earthly adventures of the god of thunder, sold $34.5 million worth of tickets over the weekend while "Bridesmaids" did $24.4 million in sales.

"The big news is that 'Bridesmaids' did much better than expected," said Paul Dergarabedian, head of tracking firm Hollywood.com Box Office.

Universal Pictures, the studio behind "Bridesmaids," had expected the film, which was produced by comedy powerhouse Judd Apatow on a budget of $32.5 million, to have an opening weekend more than $10 million lower than what it posted.

The movie, starring Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph, was unusual for a film geared to women, because it had plenty of raunchy bits, true to a typical Apatow film.

But it appears not only women took a shine to the film's gross-out moments, but men also were drawn to a movie about the misadventures of a group of bridesmaids who see their friendship tested by the stress of a wedding.

"Men like this movie as much as women, now the word of mouth will filter out that it's OK for a man to go see a movie called 'Bridesmaids,'" said Nikki Rocco, Universal Pictures president of distribution.

The action movie "Fast Five," in its third week at theaters, had a strong showing with $19.5 million and came in third, leaving fourth place to the action horror flick "Priest," which opened with a disappointing $14.5 million.

"Priest" is from Sony Pictures unit Screen Gems, a division of Sony Corp.

STRONG OVERSEAS SALES FOR 'FAST FIVE'

"Fast Five," a movie about a heist and fast cars, dominated international sales over the weekend by earning $58 million overseas, according to Universal Pictures, the studio behind the film. Universal Pictures is a unit of Comcast Corp-controlled NBC Universal.

"Thor," which opened last weekend and stars the relatively unknown Chris Hemsworth, is distributed by Paramount Pictures, a unit of Viacom Inc. It had international sales of $27.5 million.

It has not performed as well as last year's Marvel comics movie "Iron Man 2," but that had been expected because Marvel long considered "Thor" to be one of its most hard-to-adapt comic book properties, while "Iron Man 2" had the added benefit of A-list star Robert Downey Jr.

"Nobody expected 'Thor' to do 'Iron Man' type business," Dergarabedian said.

Overall, the North American box office was down about 3 percent this weekend from last year, its second drop in a row, hurt by its comparison to the strong ticket sales posted by "Iron Man 2," which was released about this time in 2010, Dergarabedian said.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: Editing by Eric Beech)



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Dardenne duo move Cannes with boyhood tale of loss

CANNES, France | Sun May 15, 2011 8:35am EDT

CANNES, France (Reuters) - Boyhood loss and the redeeming power of love stirred crowds at Cannes with "The Kid With a Bike," a film about a boy on a desperate search for his father by festival favorites Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne.

The Belgian directors, brothers who have won the top Palme d'Or prize at the Cannes film festival twice before, looked well-placed in the competition lineup this year as the audience broke out in lengthy applause at the end of a screening on Saturday evening.

Shot in an anonymous Belgian city, "The Kid With a Bike" tells the story of Cyril, a feisty red-headed boy of 12 who breaks free from his orphanage to find the father who left him there with a promise to come back for him a month later.

As Cyril pedals furiously around suburban Belgium on his bicycle, refusing to accept that his father has lied, he is taken into the care of Samantha, a childless hairdresser played by Belgian actress Cecile de France.

"We could have called the film a modern fairy tale ... a Pinocchio or Red Riding Hood who gets lost and has to go through certain trials," said Jean-Pierre Dardenne. "He has to lose the illusion that his father still wants to see him."

Subtle and understated, the Dardennes' film brings together some of the ingredients that made their two previous winners -- "Rosetta" in 1999 and "L'Enfant" in 2005" -- popular with a Cannes jury: realism, emotional complexity and no easy endings.

"It's sort of a love story, about the love of a woman who is able to overcome the violence and anger of this boy," said Luc Dardenne.

CHILDHOOD TRAUMA CAPTIVATES The Dardenne brothers' movie falls in line with a series of films in competition at Cannes that have focused, unflinchingly, on childhood trauma and the horror of adults who abuse and mistreat children they have stolen from others.

Most unsparing in this category was "Michael," an Austrian movie by debut director Markus Schleinzer that follows a kidnapped boy of 10 during the final weeks of his captivity at the hands of a perverted and sadistic insurance salesman who keeps him locked in a basement.

With its unrelenting tension, lack of musical score and devastating subject matter, "Michael" has drawn early plaudits from some critics at the Riviera festival -- but may prove challenging for conventional audiences elsewhere.

Testifying to the film's divisive nature, part of the audience jeered loudly when the credits rolled -- in spite of Schleinzer sitting, in full tuxedo garb, in the audience.

Earlier in the competition, which runs May 11-22, French director Maiwenn Le Besco took on the subject of child abuse from the vantage of a hard-bitten team of police officers hunting for pedophiles, often at the expense of their private lives.



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Cannes movie recalls magic of the silent era

CANNES, France | Sun May 15, 2011 6:50am EDT

CANNES, France (Reuters) - There was loud applause in Cannes on Sunday for "The Artist," a black-and-white, silent movie that recreated the magic of the "pre-talkie" era and brought relief from a relentlessly dark competition lineup.

Directed by France's Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist is a romance set in Hollywood in the late 1920s and early 1930s as cinema was undergoing a seismic shift from silent to sound.

Central hero George Valentin, a mustachioed, larger-than-life screen idol with a passing resemblance to Douglas Fairbanks, refuses to believe that sound is the future, and after the economic crash of 1929 falls on hard times.

Up-and-coming actress Peppy Miller meets him and falls in love, but as he fades from the limelight she becomes a superstar and their paths diverge.

Tension and emotion come through the old-fashioned crafts of larger-than-life acting and a full orchestral score, and Hazanavicius revels in playing with the absence of sound.

He employs title cards and introduces sound only once in the main body of the movie when Valentin has a nightmare. In the buildup to the denouement, an intertitle appears with the word "BANG!," at which point the audience gasped in surprise.

"I wanted to tell the tale in this way that is purely visual, it's pure cinema," said Hazanavicius, best known in France for his commercially successful spy spoof movies.

"And indeed it was the substance of some of the greatest directors in cinema."

"PETTY THEFT FROM PAST"

French actor Jean Dujardin, who has appeared in the director's spy parodies, plays Valentin, and Argentinian-born Berenice Bejo portrays Miller. Both studied the stars of the silent and early sound era for inspiration.

"I realized that one didn't need to have a script, one could convey so much through one's bodies, one's gestures," said Dujardin, who executes the role with the melodramatic flourishes and grand gestures of the early film greats.

They share the screen with U.S. actors John Goodman, as the ruthless studio boss, and James Cromwell, who takes the role of Valentin's faithful butler Clifton.

Some of the biggest laughs went to a Jack Russell terrier, the early frontrunner for the annual, unofficial Palme Dog award set up to parody the coveted Palme d'Or prize for best picture.

Hazanavicius said he deliberately avoided making a spoof of the silent era, but created instead a melodrama which could draw in the audience.

He also resorted to what he called "petty theft" by borrowing scenes and ideas from black-and-white films including those of the late "Metropolis" creator Fritz Lang.

"And what's Fritz Lang going to say about it anyway?" said Hazanavicius. "Yes, there are a whole series of little things. This is part and parcel of my whole project. This is what the cinema does constantly, to borrow."

The return to 1920s cinema was in sharp contrast to the high-tech 3D blockbuster "Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides" which screened at the Cannes film festival on Saturday.

Eight of the 20 films in competition in Cannes have screened to the press, and The Artist is among the most popular so far among critics who have been underwhelmed by the overall quality.

Pre-festival favorites Terrence Malick, Lars Von Trier and Pedro Almodovar are all yet to come.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White)



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Azeri romantic ballad wins Eurovision Song Contest

DUESSELDORF, Germany | Sun May 15, 2011 6:10am EDT

DUESSELDORF, Germany (Reuters) - Azerbaijan won the annual Eurovision Song Contest with the romantic ballad "Running Scared" on Saturday, watched by a television audience of more than 100 million people.

The song about a love-struck couple was performed by 21-year-old student Eldar Gasimov and Nigar Jamal, 30, a mother-of-two who lives in London. The duo, known as Ell-Nikki, won a total 221 points.

Italy was second with 189 points and Sweden came third on 185 in the 56th edition of the contest, hosted by Germany. Widely heralded pre-contest favorites Ireland, Britain and France all had disappointing results.

The extravaganza, dubbed the world's biggest music competition with one of television's largest audiences, was beamed to countries from the Atlantic Ocean to the Caspian Sea -- and to nations around the world that were not even competing.

"Oh my gosh, we won, we won," said Gasimov, whose face was drenched with sweat as he celebrated on stage in front of 36,000 spectators in a soccer arena in the German city of Duesseldorf that had been converted for the event.

"I'm the happiest man in the world right now," he said.

The Azeri entry had Swedish touches. It was composed by Swedes Stefan Orn, Sandra Bjurman and Iain Farquharson and four Swedish dancers accompanied Ell-Nikki.

Jamal, who has an economics degree, said it was hard to grasp the fairytale victory for Azerbaijan, a former Soviet republic of eight million that regained independence in 1991.

"A few months ago I was a housewife and mother of two children -- and my biggest dream was to represent my country in the Eurovision Song Contest," she told news conference. "My dream came true: I'm a winner of Eurovision."

GLITZ AND KITSCH

The Eurovision Song Contest has been a launching pad for international careers. Swedish pop group Abba became famous after winning in 1974 with "Waterloo" and Celine Dion took top honors in 1988 while competing for Switzerland.

Many deride the contest for serving up mediocrity, while others are enthusiastic followers.

From its start in Switzerland in 1956, the contest conceived by the European Broadcasting Union has grown into a giant event where performers, often dressed in spangly costumes, belt out their songs in different languages.

Fans draped in national flags and clad in exotic outfits packed the arena, cheering the 25 finalists who mixed glitz and kitsch with ballads, rock 'n' roll and disco to try to win votes from viewers and 43 national juries.

It was also a disappointing night for Germany after Lena won last year in Oslo.

Lena became an instant national hero for ending Germany's three-decade Eurovision drought. Her song "Satellite" went to the top of pop music charts in six countries and was a top 10 hit in seven others. She was a distant 10th on Saturday night.

French opera singer Amaury Vassili, British boy band Blue and Ireland's Jedward had also been tipped as favorites by bookmakers but finished poorly.

Other famous participants in past contests included Julio Iglesias, Olivia Newton-John, Secret Garden, t.A.T.u., Lordi and Patricia Kaas. Riverdance was created in 1994 when Ireland hosted the contest.

(Editing by Ralph Gowling)



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