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By Dave McCoy MSN Movies
"In Cannes, the streets are so jammed that one would think one is still
in Paris. The shops are full of stuff at astronomical prices and the casino is
the meeting point of the journalists with their demands and communiqués. On the
Croisette, it is a constant parade of cars. It's the rendezvous of stars and
celebrities, a whole world, half naked and tanned to a perfect crisp."
These were the words of one French journalist attempting to summarize the
lunacy, charisma and dizzying chaos that annually personifies the Cannes Film
Festival. The year he wrote it? 1946, the festival's first full year, though the
description could just as easily apply in 2008. In terms of romanticized images
and overcrowding, not much has changed in Cannes during the past 61 years. For
two weeks each May, the quaint, usually sleepy coastal village in France's
Riviera, sporting an average age of 64, becomes the frantic, glamorous heart of
the film world, populated by international celebrities, publicists and
paparazzi. Although it only spans 10 blocks alongside the Mediterranean, Cannes
has become so enormous, as the world's largest international film festival and
marketplace, and so overwhelming that several books and Web sites now exist
offering survival tips on how to avoid a nervous breakdown while attending.
Others enjoy the pace, such as the former distributor who told writer Cari
Beauchamp: "I've won big in Las Vegas, I've done some great drugs, but these
were nothing compared to the rush of excitement that hits at Cannes."
Just glancing at Cannes' current, eye-popping numbers is enough to cause
sensory overload. The festival has a staff of more than 850 with a budget beyond
$30 million. In 12 days, nearly 1,500 films screen from more than 90 countries
worldwide. Between 8:30 a.m. and midnight on any day, as many as 15 films may be
showing simultaneously.
At the same time, extravagant parties, most privately held by studios or
distributors or the festival, vie for patrons' attention, as do the town's
casino, topless beaches, chic shops and unreasonable restaurants. The media
onslaught often swells to 4,000 journalists, photographers and critics from more
than 70 nations, all desperately battling for screening passes or those precious
5-minute intervals allowed for "probing" celebrity interviews. This year,
Cannes celebrates its 61st year. The lineup definitely has a strong
international flare this year, aside from a few flashy Hollywood titles, and a
handful of famous filmmakers, which seems to cater to hard-core cinephiles
looking for something new and different. Brazilian director Fernando Meirelles ("City of God," "The Constant Gardener") kicks off the proceedings
with "Blindness" (starring Julianne Moore, Mark Ruffalo, Danny Glover and Gael Garcia Bernal) on May 14. The film will
battle it out for the prized Palme d'Or with 21 other films, including Steven Soderbergh's 4-hour-long Che Guevara biopic; Clint Eastwood's "Changeling"; Charlie Kaufman's directorial debut, "Synecdoche, New York"; James Gray's "Two Lovers" starring Joaquin Phoenix and Gwyneth Paltrow; and the latest from two-time Palme d'Or
winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne (going for a record third prize), "Le Silence
de Lorna." Big titles screening out of competition include "Indiana Jones and Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" (you may
have heard of it), the animated film "Kung Fu Panda" and Woody Allen's Spanish movie, "Vicky Cristina Barcelona." Finally, the festival
ends May 24 with Barry Levinson's "What Just Happened?," starring heavies such as Robert De Niro, Bruce Willis and Sean Penn. It promises to be another interesting,
exhausting two weeks on the Croisette.
A Brief History of Cannes
Despite the number of films shown and the media attention given to the
prominent awards handed out in international competition, Cannes has principally
maintained its vitality and influence through a mixture of celebrity glitz and
business deals. The two have been impossible to separate since the festival's
earliest years. However, politics was the initial catalyst for Cannes. When the
Venice Film Festival adopted a fondness for Fascist propaganda films in the
1930s (only Germany and Italy were grabbing prizes), other countries started
worrying. Masterpieces such as Jean Renoir's "Grand Illusion" were being ignored while Mussolini's son
took home the Grand Prize in 1938. France led a movement to start a democratic
film festival, and Cannes was chosen as its site. The town's government hoped to
promote tourism, and the first festival was scheduled in September 1939.
Right from the start, Cannes was star studded. The United States sent Gary Cooper and Douglas Fairbanks, while "The Wizard of Oz" and "Only Angels Have Wings" were set to screen. According to
Cari Beauchamp and Henri Behar's book "Hollywood on the Riviera: The Inside
Story of Cannes Film Festival," a giant cardboard Notre Dame Cathedral stood on
the beach promoting the opening-night premiere of "The Hunchback of Notre Dame." The gimmicky aesthetic of
Cannes publicity was set. The opening film, a Russian documentary titled
"Berlin," broke several times during its showing (foreshadowing future growing
pains for the festival.) Then, midway through the film's screening, Hitler
invaded Poland.
The festival was canceled through the years of World War II, until Sept. 20,
1946. In 1947, the roof of the newly constructed main theater, the Palais des
Festivals, was torn off by a storm during a screening. No festivals were held
from 1948 to 1950 for lack of funding. Despite the setbacks, Cannes' few
festivals in the '40s established its reputation for hedonism. The combination
of Hollywood stars, warm beaches, galas, casinos and endless parties grabbed
instant media attention, and despite its financial problems, Cannes was
instantly prominent. Most major film festivals (Sundance and Toronto come to
mind) are discovered slowly, through word of mouth or a breakthrough film. But
Cannes has a media blitz every year.
During the 1950s, Cannes became a more "legitimate" film festival. Moving
from autumn to spring in 1951 helped the festival secure better films that
hadn't already premiered elsewhere. Robert Favre Le Bret took over general
control of the festival and gave it structure. Films were divided into three
categories: In Competition, Out of Competition, and Un Certain Regard, for films
deemed to have artistic merit but not considered worthy of competition. Starting
in 1955, films in competition vied for the distinguished Palme d'Or for best
film, with additional awards for best actor, actress, director and special jury
prizes also awarded at the discretion of the jury. Out of Competition was used
purely as a publicity tool, and America helped turn Cannes into spectacle with
it.
The Hollywood studios' primary goal at Cannes, starting in the 1950s, was
either to secure foreign distribution or launch publicity for a film already
sold. Bubbly musicals, dry epics such as "Exodus," or star vehicles (with stars
in tow) were shipped to Cannes, shown as opening- or closing-night premiere
events, and hated by the hosts. The media, however, loved it. For the premiere
of "Around the World in 80 Days" in 1957, caged lions and circus
performers decorated the Palais stage, while a huge air balloon flew about the
theater. The 1968 opening-night re-release of "Gone With the Wind" featured a recreation of Atlanta burning
on the beach. Naturally, the biggest American exports were the celebrities sent
to charm the press and Europeans and to sell films. Cary Grant or Liz Taylor strolling down the famous red-carpeted Palais
steps was worth more publicity than 20 interviews.
Americans weren't the only ones focusing on glamour in the '50s and early
'60s, however. Brigitte Bardot came to Cannes virtually unknown worldwide
in 1953. After the media fell in love with her, she became synonymous with the
festival, externalizing its sensuality and proving that with the right look and
luck, anyone can be "discovered" at Cannes. A photo of unknown French actress
Simone Silva topless in front of Robert Mitchum in 1953 also brought the festival immense
international notice and sealed its reputation as a place of sex and stardom.
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