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Cannes Film Festival, 16/05/2007

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  • Cannes Film Festival, 16/05/2007

    CANNES FILM FESTIVAL, 16/05/2007
    Tim Walker

    The Independent - United Kingdom
    Published: May 17, 2007

    The Front Page

    The media turned out in force for yesterday's photo call to mark the
    opening of the 60th Cannes Film Festival. The most glamorous date
    in the cinematic calendar boasts some of the film world's brightest
    talents on its jury. They will have to decide between them which of the
    21 films in this year's 60th festival receives its highest accolade,
    the Palme d'Or.

    The China Syndrome

    Juror Maggie Cheung has over 80 films to her name and has worked with
    an assortment of China's most celebrated directors, including Jackie
    Chan and Wong Kar-Wai. One of the stars of Wong's Palme d'Or-nominated
    "In The Mood For Love" (2000), she won Cannes' Best Actress award
    for her 2004 performance as a recovering addict in "Clean".

    Frears and Loathing

    Jury president, director Stephen Frears, has spent the past
    quarter-century chronicling some of the most pressing issues in British
    life, from the racial and sexual politics of the Thatcher years in "My
    Beautiful Laundrette" (1985), to the underworld of illegal immigration
    in "Dirty Pretty Things" (2002), to the role of the monarchy in last
    year's "The Queen".

    Wizard of Oz

    Since she first came to public attention as ugly duckling Muriel in
    "Muriel's Wedding" (1994), Australian Toni Collette - more swan than
    duckling - has cornered the kind of character roles that every actress
    in Hollywood craves, and left a f lurry of awards and nominations in
    her wake. She missed out on a Best Actress Bafta for last year's hit,
    "Little Miss Sunshine".

    The Italian Job

    Italian director and actor Marco Bellocchio has long been an active
    player on the French political scene, supporting socialist Lionel
    Jospin's 2002 campaign for a term in the Elysee Palace. He also holds
    the dubious honour of having garnered five Palme d'Or nominations
    for his films, without ever having taken home the top gong.

    The French Connection

    Michel Piccoli is a darling of the French political left, and was
    also a vocal supporter of socialist Lionel Jospin. A Cannes festival
    veteran, he gave his breakthrough performance in "Le Mepris" in 1963,
    courtesy of director Jean-Luc Godard, and won Best Actor award at
    Cannes in 1980 for his turn in "Salto nel Vuoto", directed by fellow
    juror Marco Bellocchio.

    Along Came Polley

    In 1999 child star Sarah Pol-ley turned down a role in "Almost Famous"
    to star in Canadian indie-f lick "The Law Of Enclosures"(1999). She
    has impressed audiences in "The Sweet Hereafter" (1997) and "My Life
    Without Me" (2003).

    Last year, she coaxed Julie Christie out of semi-retirement to star
    in her directorial debut, "Away From Her".

    Maria Full of Grace

    She may be most familiar to British and American audiences as Butch's
    girlfriend Fabienne in "Pulp Fiction", but in her native Portugal Maria
    de Medeiros is known as an actress, director and scion of a family
    of accomplished musicians, thesps and movie players. Among her other
    roles was a hairdresser in Canadian film "My Life Without Me" (2003).

    Out of Africa

    Abderrahmane Sissako is the Mauritanian-born, Malian-bred,
    Moscow-trained maker of "Bamako", a movie set in the Malian
    capital. Sissako's f ilm balanced its depiction of everyday life in
    a West African city with the kind of political content that Cannes
    audiences lap up - a debate over who to blame for the continent's
    problems.

    Talking Turkey

    Bit of a cushy number for Orhan Pamuk, this Cannes lark. The Nobel
    Prize-winning Turkish author of "Snow" and "My Name Is Red" spent 2005
    with the threat of a prison sentence hanging over him, after commenting
    on the massacre of the Armenians. The Croisette certainly makes for
    more comfortable surroundings than the inside of a Turkish jail cell.
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