Join us for Screen’s Cannes line-up live blog…

Cannes Film Festival red carpet

Ever so quiet from the film PRs this morning. Is there something going on that we should know about?

 

Yes, yes, of course….it’s that sacred event: Cannes lineup day!

Time to put to bed weeks of speculation about the chosen few and reveal which films have made it into the most prestigious film festival competition known to man.

You can follow the entries as they come in here or stick with me for some idle speculation and gossip punctuated with genuine near-insight.

[Cannes is currently showing a very jaunty and occasionally stirring promo video of the fest. Very ‘Euro’].

Onto business….

Most prediction stories kept it tight, only mentioning about 75 possible entries. Every auteur from here to Timbuktu seems to have been tipped for a slot…

Screen towers did its own crystal ball gazing in the shape of Melanie Goodfellow’s excellent and comprehensive piece:

In case you don’t know Mel, she’s Screen’s crack French correspondent. Well worth a follow on twitter @mel_goodfellow.

In truth, this should be a strong lineup. One exec told me he expects ‘a bloodbath’, with many top names not making the cut.

Opinion seems to have crystallized around a happy few: every industry topper and his unpaid intern seem to think Carol will be in. Paolo Sorrentino’s The Early Years seems highly likely. The Lobster could well make the cut in one of the lineups.

 

Here’s influential French journalist Christophe Carriere with his predictions of the French entries:

Christophe Carrière ‏@ch_carriere 10h10 hours ago

#Cannes2015 Compétition française: Arnaud Desplechin / Jacques Audiard / Maïween / Valérie Donzelli selon Radio Moquette Croisette.

 

Industry we spoke to said the festival kept the lineup closer-to-the-wire than ever before this year. Some only heard last thing last night.

There’s always plenty of jostling that goes on behind the scenes: ‘We can offer you this slot, but not that slot’..’We’d love to have you but not in this section…We understand if you need to go elsewhere…’ etc

You really must tune in to the Cannes promo video that’s playing on a loop. It’s a lot of fun.

Who do you think will be in, people? Moretti? Terence Davies? Jeff Nichols? Cary Fukunaga? Woody Allen?

What we do know are the opening films of the fest proper and Directors’ Fortnight, respectively: Standing Tall by French director Emmanuelle Bercot, and Philippe Garrel’s tangled tale of love and betrayal In the Shadow of Women.

 

I enjoyed Time Out’s description of the lineup announcement:

Anyone know the time of the Cannes lineup announcement (aka Lecture on The State of the 7th Art + Some Films) tomorrow?

 

We were leafing through some issues of Screen from the 70’s yesterday and came across a piece featuring former Cannes president Gilles Jacob. We think this is Gilles’ last year as president, ending a run that stretches back to 1977. Remarkable.

 

Even more remarkable is the supposed ban on selfies on the red-carpet this year! Really? We can add that to the famed croisetiquette…But will A-listers really be called to account for doing so? Fest topper Thierry Fremaux did make the announcement on April Fool’s Day….

 

Ooh, I hear that famous Cannes auditorium music….It’s happening…It’s alive…

 

Festival head Thierry Fremaux is speaking and correcting me [not literally] on my earlier post. Gilles stepped down last year.

 

So, we’re currently hearing all about the new sponsors of the festival. Essential but obviously quite tedious.

 

We also know, of course, that Mad Max: Fury Road will be playing at this year’s fest, which runs May 13-24.

 

Fremaux is talking about a sponsorship deal the fest has with a big jewels company…. Pay attention would-be-heisters [reference to the jewel heists that grabbed headlines last year].

 

Oops, Cannes is experiencing tech difficulties. We’re down…

 

We’re up!

 

Of course, that wasn’t Thierry speaking, it was journalist Pierre Lescaud who is now discussing this year’s poster and partnerships.

 

Cannes royalty Isabella Rossellini will be presiding over this year’s Un Certain Regard section, he says. Lescaud is discussing events around the world that Rossellini will be taking part in to honour her mother Ingrid Bergman.

 

Right, Thierry now discussing some more Cannes initiatives and is about to show a video of…Josh Brolin in a promo video….only problem is the audio stream is not live from the video, it’s live from the auditorium meaning we can’t hear it…So that’s good.

 

Quite a few people in the audience are laughing, though, so they’re enjoying it. Josh seems to be dressed as a cowboy so I imagine it’s a nod to the Coens’ No Country for Old Men. The Coens’ are of course jury president this year. Useful when it comes to snagging star appearances in promo videos. Not their only use, of course.

 

Pierre is telling us that he and Thierry were on the phone eight times last night. Are they a couple? No, they had a big announcement to make this morning…Pierre is telling us that Thierry was also at the footie last night. The Champs league. Multi-tasker!

 

Ok, here we go! They’re going to announce 90 percent of the lineup….except they’re not…yes, this is just like the Champions League draw.

 

Theirry says this is a ‘good, fresh and risky’ lineup. It ‘expresses the ‘art and evolution of cinema’.

 

They received 1,854 films this year..Wow, that’s a few. He says every film is viewed by multiple people. Shoot a film on your phone, send it in, and they’ll watch it. Easy.

 

He says, this year won’t showcase as many ‘returning directors’. Not so many ‘grand auteurs’. Hmmmm.

 

We’re not expecting a Malick, are we? Hard to keep up with Terry.

 

This year’s selection will highlight some new and returning countries.

 

Thiery is talking about ehtics…He is French. He and collegaues will be wearing ‘ethical tuxedos’…! Really, Thierry?

 

They are not prohibiting selfies, he adds, but will be looking to launch a campaign to diminsih the ‘grotesque’ red carpet tradition. So that’s that.

 

Here we go….

 

Midnight Screenings, two: Korean film Office (O Piseu) by Hong Won-Chan and Asif Kapadia’s Amy Winehouse doc Amy.

 

Official Selection Special Screenings include Souleymane Cisse…and…

 

Out of Comp titles include Mad Max, which he descibes as a ‘walk through the Australian desert’…Charmant. And….Woody Allen’s Irrational Man! He couldn’t convince Woody to play in comp, however. Also Out of Comp is Pixar’s Inside Out…And animation Le Petit Prince Et Moi.

 

SPECIAL SCREENINGS

  • OKA by Souleymane CISSE
  • HAYORED LEMA’ALA by Elad KEIDAN
  • SIPUR AL AHAVA VE CHOSHECH (A TALE OF LOVE AND DARKNESS) by Natalie PORTMAN
  • AMNESIA by Barbet SCHROEDER
  • PANAMA by Pavle VUCKOVIC
  • ASPHALTE by Samuel BENCHETRIT

So, Natalie Portman film will be presenting her film as a special screening.

 

Un Certain Regard so far includes:

UN CERTAIN REGARD

  • MASAAN (FLY AWAY SOLO) by Neeraj GHAYWAN
  • HRÚTAR (RAMS) by Grímur HÁKONARSON

 

Fremaux is talking about the fertile Korean cinema of today. He has annoucned 3 Korean films so far. Strong.

 

He promises that there won’t be so many long films this year. So average running time of only 4 hours then.

 

And we’re down again…And back. And down…And back…like being at Roland Garros this.

UN CERTAIN REGARD update…

  • MASAAN (FLY AWAY SOLO) by Neeraj GHAYWAN
  • HRÚTAR (RAMS) by Grímur HÁKONARSON
  • KISHIBE NO TABI (JOURNEY TO THE SHORE) by KUROSAWA Kiyoshi
  • JE SUIS UN SOLDAT (I AM A SOLDIER) by Laurent LARIVIÈRE
  • ZVIZDAN (THE HIGH SUN) by Dalibor MATANIC
  • THE OTHER SIDE by Roberto MINERVINI

 

Main comp coming now….Four French films out of comp, he says. But the lineup isn’t complete, he says.

 

Thierry is discussing the reason for the opening choice and the fact that this one isn’t so glamorous and ‘Hollywood’….But it will be, he says. The Deneuve factor. Instead of a more obviously mainstream title he says he wanted to kick the festival off with one that could have been in competition…except this one isn’t. Clear?!

 

Audiard is in! Boom. Big gun. And expected. Dheepan is the working title.

 

Valerie Donzelli…Ah, lost stream…Cannes, you need to sort this out. We missed films 2-4. Can you recap, please?

 

Matteo Garrone is in!

 

Carol is in! Mais bien-sur. Thierry is happy, he says. Director Todd Haynes is happy. Everyone is happy.

 

Comp recap:

  • DHEEPAN (working title) by Jacques AUDIARD
  • LA LOI DU MARCHÉ (A SIMPLE MAN) by Stéphane BRIZÉ
  • MARGUERITE ET JULIEN (MARGUERITE AND JULIEN)by Valérie DONZELLI
  • IL RACCONTO DEI RACCONTI (THE TALE OF TALES)by Matteo GARRONE
  • CAROL by Todd HAYNES

 

Spit it out, Thierry…

 

Ok, an Asian title…An ‘Asian master’…

 

Kore-eda is in! ‘Important to celebrate this auteur…’

 

Justin Kurzel’s Macbeth is in! Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard could be treading the carpet! Though Fassbender has shied away from publicty in the past. Will he be there?

 

Yiorgos Lanthimos’ The Lobster is in! ‘One of the most original’ films in the lineup, says Thierry.

 

Moretti is in! Will be vying to win his second Palme. The film is out in Italy now. But please don’t rush to Italy to see it, Thierry asks.

 

Comp update:

  • DHEEPAN (working title) by Jacques AUDIARD
  • A SIMPLE MAN (LA LOI DU MARCHÉ) by Stéphane BRIZÉ
  • MARGUERITE AND JULIEN by Valérie DONZELLI
  • THE TALE OF TALES (IL RACCONTO DEI RACCONTI)by Matteo GARRONE
  • CAROL by Todd HAYNES
  • THE ASSASSIN (NIE YINNIANG) by HOU Hsiao Hsien
  • MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART (SHAN HE GU REN) by JIA Zhang-Ke
  • OUR LITTLE SISTER (UMIMACHI DIARY) by Hirokazu KORE-EDA
  • MACBETH by Justin KURZEL
  • THE LOBSTER by Yorgos LANTHIMOS
  • MON ROI by MAÏWENN
  • MIA MADRE by Nanni MORETTI
  • SON OF SAUL (SAUL FIA) by László NEMES
  • YOUTH by Paolo SORRENTINO
  • LOUDER THAN BOMBS by Joachim TRIER

 

Thierry is thanking the industry: sellers, distribs, producers etc…It does go on a little, doesn’t it. But it’s all part of the fun, people. Good context from Thierry.

 

Gus Van Sant is in! Sea of Trees. Matthew ‘will-he-take-his-shirt-off-in-this-one-but-also-what-a-great-actor-these-days’ McConaughey. Boom.

 

Denis Villeneuve’s Sicario will be in!

 

Thierry has just listed the stars they’re expecting…wow, quite the lineup this year! Starrier than ever? Incredible.

 

The lineup in full:

  • Dheepan (working title), Jacques Audiard
  • A Simple Man (La Loi Du Marché), Stéphane Brizé
  • Marguerite And Julien, Valérie Donzelli
  • The Tale Of Tales (Il Racconto Dei Racconti), Matteo Garrone
  • Carol, Todd Haynes
  • The Assassin (Nie Yinniang), HOU Hsiao Hsien
  • Mountains May Depart (Shan He Gu Ren), JIA Zhang-Ke
  • Our Little Sister (Umimachi Diary), Hirokazu KORE-EDA
  • Macbeth, Justin Kurzel
  • The Lobster, Yorgos Lanthimos
  • Mon Roi, Maïwenn
  • Mia Madre, Nanni Moretti
  • Son Of Saul (Saul Fia), László Nemes
  • Youth, Paolo Sorrentino
  • Louder Than Bombs, Joachim Trier
  • Sea of Trees, by Gus Van Sant
  • Sicario, Denis Villeneuve

 

Thierry taking questions. First one out the gate is about the shortage of UK films. No Mike Leigh or Ken Loach this year, of course. The two warhorses account for pretty much every UK fimmaker to have made it into competition [joke]. Thierry says Macbeth has a UK element but admits that it can be tricky to find UK films for the main competition lineup. He says when they do have them, they tend to be very good ones. Hmmm.

 

The second question is about why some of the Italian films are in English. Thierry denies that this is to please US audiences.

 

On that question of UK films: The Lobster certainly has a large UK element. Carol has a major UK element but the official word is that it should be deemed a US film. No Wheatley so far. No Terence Davies either. No Frears.

 

The Screen office is pretty excited about this lineup. It’s always starry but this seems a bumper year for potential star-count.

 

Reviews editor Fionnuala Halligan is reminding us that the Moretti review is already live on our site. Read it here. Interesting.

 

One reporter notes the lack of Spanish films in the lineup. True that.

 

Thierry says he’ll take one last question…it’s about the number of jury members. Not a crescendo question. Those will come from our @mel_goodfellow who will be interviewing Thierry later this afternoon. Check back in for that later.

 

Looks like a pretty strong lineup to us. What do you think? Congrats in order for all those with films in the lineup.

 

Film4 are among the parties to be congratulated. The UK broadcaster backed four of the films in the lineup: Todd Haynes’ CAROL, Yorgos Lanthimos’ THE LOBSTER, Paolo Sorrentino’s YOUTH and Justin Kurzel’s MACBETH.

 

No Vinterberg so far, notices a colleague. Shame.

 

Well, the celebrations and inquests will begin. We’re not done, remember. Still more films to come in the coming weeks. But that’s the vast majority in the bag. 90%, according to Thierry.

 

And on that bombshell, it’s time for me to bid you adieu. We’ll have plenty more reaction throughout the day and that interview with Thierry. Click here for the full line-up.

 

Thanks for stopping by, and stay classy…