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‘Promised Sky' Review: Erige Sehiri Delivers a Keenly Observed Migrant Drama With a Documentarian's Aesthetic

‘Promised Sky' Review: Erige Sehiri Delivers a Keenly Observed Migrant Drama With a Documentarian's Aesthetic

Yahoo15-05-2025

Selected to open the Un Certain Regard section of the Cannes Film Festival, French Tunisian director Erige Sehiri's intimately conceived drama 'Promised Sky' follows four generations of Ivorian immigrant women as they find solidarity, conflict and sometimes a sense of displacement in one another's company. Female relationships are complicated enough as is, even between those on a level playing field. But in 'Promised Sky,' they are thornier since none of the women are equals from a socio-economic standpoint in their adopted home in Tunisia.
'Promised Sky' starts on a note of matriarchal unity, not separation. Utilizing the same perceptive documentarian aesthetic at the heart of her previous feature, 'Under the Fig Trees,' Sehiri drops the audience into the lives of Marie (Aïssa Maïga), Naney (Debora Lobe Naney) and Jolie (Laetitia Ky), as the three roommates care for a little girl in a bubble bath, gently washing her as they try to get to know her situation.
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The girl is Kenza (Estelle Kenza Dogbo), a displaced child who appears to have miraculously survived a migrant shipwreck before the three women found her. A former journalist now serving her community as a pastor after 10 years in Tunisia, Marie decides to open her home to Kenza like she did for Naney — a spirited undocumented mother who left her child at home three years ago with the hopes of finding a better future for her family in Tunisia — and Jolie, a passionate student and the only documented member of the group.
'Promised Sky' loosely reflects real events, and feels visually and texturally truthful thanks to Sehiri's authentic point of view and cinematographer Frida Marzouk's poetic lens. The film often feels like a mazy tapestry of moods and situations, rather than a traditional narrative.
Sehiri doesn't necessarily attempt to tell a neatly organized story revolving around the three women's actions after Kenza abruptly joins their ranks. Instead, she lets the chaotic messiness of their lives unfold organically, through a casually observant disposition that feels untidy and random at times. Sehiri's film adds up to something greater than the sum of its parts, becoming a unique drama about marginalized African immigrant women fighting for their dignity and place not in Europe (the usual setting for many similarly themed films), but on their own continent, Africa.
For Marie, that fight involves providing spiritual leadership to her community, praying for strength and perseverance, and preaching compassion and forgiveness, while distributing food and supplies to those in need. For Naney, the struggle is making ends meet by any means necessary — even if that might invite trouble — while hoping to bring her child to Tunisia one day. Elsewhere, Jolie is driven by different motivations, trusting her privileges as a documented resident in Tunisia. Soon enough, she learns that racism and prejudices in the country don't spare her, regardless of what papers she possesses.
There are some male side players too, including Marie's unsympathetic landlord Ismael (Mohamed Grayaâ), who takes advantage of Marie's lack of options by refusing to make simple improvements in her modest housing. And then there is Naney's Tunisian friend Foued (Foued Zaazaa), providing her with some much-needed (if deficient) camaraderie in both life's random moments and special days like birthdays. Marie's blind friend Noa (Touré Blamassi), who judges every situation with intelligent clarity and advises Marie accordingly, brings some gentle serenity to the story. (Sehiri leans too heavily into unsophisticated symbolism with Noa, coming dangerously close to characterizing a disability as if it's a mystical feature.) Someone else who gets the short end of the stick is Kenza. After abruptly introducing the character, writers Sehiri, Anna Ciennik and Malika Cécile Louati sadly treat her like an afterthought; it almost feels as if they have struggled to find a real purpose for Kenza in the tale, missing an opportunity with a gifted child actor who will quietly break your heart with her final scene.
'Promised Sky' is at its strongest when Sehiri approaches a neorealistic style in filming the happenstances of street life, dialing up her documentarian instincts. It also packs a punch when Sehiri underscores just how deeply rooted (and similar-sounding) anti-migrant sentiments are around the world. In one scene, for instance, we learn that some Tunisians spread false rumors that migrants eat domestic cats — it's an accusation that might bring to mind alarmingly comparable lies that were spreading in the U.S. less than a year ago.
The film also shines through Naney's aching performance, and she delivers a soul-shattering and scene-stealing monologue near the end about how a better life hasn't found her despite all her hard work, belief and perseverance. Even in its shakiest moments, 'Promised Sky' pledges to honor that grit and against-the-odds struggle with dignity and humanism.
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Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'
Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'

UPI

time22 minutes ago

  • UPI

Benicio Del Toro: Imagination runs amok in 'Phoenician Scheme'

1 of 5 | Benicio Del Toro attends the photo call for "The Phoenician Scheme" at the Cannes Film Festival on May 19. Photo by Rune Hellestad/UPI | License Photo NEW YORK, June 6 (UPI) -- Oscar-winning actor Benicio del Toro says writer-director Wes Anderson meticulously plans every scene in his movies, but still welcomes input from his cast. "The approach is the same approach that I do on any movie I do. Just, I think, Wes wants you to be in the moment. He wants you to tell the truth, whatever that means," Del Toro, 58, said in a recent virtual press conference to promote his second collaboration with Anderson, The Phoenician Scheme, in theaters nationwide on Friday. "You have all this dialogue," Del Toro said, "but you can still bring a piece of yourself into it. And there's room for the imagination, too, to run amok. And you've got to have fun. Even if you're drowning, you've got to have fun." Co-starring Scarlett Johannson, Michael Cera, Bryan Cranston, Bill Murray and Tom Hanks, the espionage comedy is set in 1950 and follows Zsa-zsa Korda (Del Toro), an industrialist and arms dealer who wants to bring his estranged daughter Liesl (Mia Threapleton) -- a Catholic nun -- into his dangerous, top-secret business. It's Wes Anderson's world, we're just scheming in it. Focus Features (@FocusFeatures) June 6, 2025 "It's layered. It's full of contradictions, which makes it really yummy for an actor to try to bring to life," Del Toro said. "There is an element of my character wanting a second chance at mending a broken relationship. And I think that in the process in order to achieve that, he has to change and he does change. And I like to think that people can change. Not everyone changes, but I think some people can, and for the better." After previously working with Anderson on the 2021 hit The French Dispatch, Del Toro is used to the filmmaker's dense, quirky language. But, this time around, he has a larger role and a lot more to say. "There were a couple of moments where I went up to Wes and I said: 'Well, maybe we can take this dialogue out.' And, then, I went back to it and it wasn't as good," Del Toro recalled. "I had to go up to him and go like, 'I think you need to put it back because we're passing information that I think you need.' But that's why I couldn't join these people [in the cast] every day for dinner. I had to go up into my room and talk to myself." "You had a lot to say," Anderson agreed. "You took the time to absorb everything." Del Toro said another contribution he made to the project concerned Michael Cera's character Professor Bjorn, the tutor of Zsa-zsa's nine sons, who has a habit of sticking around when sensitive information is being shared. "I remember telling Wes, 'Well, I'm giving a lot of private information to my daughter and there is this stranger sitting right there. I feel uncomfortable as the character, giving all this information in front of a stranger. I'm telling her about my bank accounts and my everything, deals, with secrecy,'" Del Toro said. "Wes said to me, 'Well, we'll polygraph him.' And I went, 'Well, OK.' And, very quickly, he came up with this idea of a lie detector, which is a portable pocket polygraph," he added. "In 1950, it was probably the size of this building, but he made it into the pocket version." Despite the heightened reality, Anderson said this is essentially a father-daughter tale. "His whole business plan is really a mechanism for him to get back together with her," Anderson said of Zsa-zsa and Liesl. "He's acting like he's making her his successor and, really, it's more about what's going to happen between the two of them right now," Anderson added. "The business plan almost becomes like a ritual for him to be reunited with his daughter. ... In that sense, his plan goes great." 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"And her reaction was what you say in the movie," Anderson turned to Threapleton, who immediately chimed in, "This is just crazy." "So, yeah, it was a mixture of those two things," Anderson quipped. "Fouad and whatever the first thing I said was."

Jan Brueghel crowned a winner in the Coronation Cup at Epsom
Jan Brueghel crowned a winner in the Coronation Cup at Epsom

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jan Brueghel crowned a winner in the Coronation Cup at Epsom

Jan Brueghel (10-3) battled to a gutsy victory to give Aidan O'Brien a record-extending 10th victory in the Betfred Coronation Cup at Epsom on Friday afternoon. Under Ryan Moore, the four-year-old son of Galileo upset warm 8-13 favourite Calandagan in the Group One contest, holding the French raider off to score by half-a-length. The Francis Henri-Graffard-trained four-year-old, who won at Royal Ascot last year, was once again having to settle for second place in a Group One having been runner-up to to O'Brien's City Of Troy in the Juddmonte International, to Anmaat in the Champions Stakes at Ascot and on his seasonal return behind Danon Decile in the Dubai Sheema Classic in Meydan in April. But Jan Brueghel, who was unbeaten in his four starts last season including in the Betfred St Leger, bounced back from a first career defeat when second on his seasonal return to Galen in the Group Three Alleged Stakes at the Curragh in April, to land another Group One victory despite not necessarily being at home on the ups and downs of the Epsom track. Advertisement Ballydoyle stable-mate Continuous cut out the running with Giavellotto. But after the turn around Tattenham Corner, Jan Brueghel – who was tracking the leaders – came through to hit the front as Calandagan also made his move. The pair battled for supremacy all the way to the line and while the pair were locked together, Jan Brueghel was always giving more and held his big rival to follow the likes of O'Brien's great stayer Yeats, hat-trick hero St Nicholas Abbey (2011-2013), Fame And Glory and Luxembourg – in the same maroon and blue Coolmore colours 12 months ago – to land the Coronation Cup. 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Everyone knew it was going to be a good gallop and Wayne Lordan (on Continuous) was there to ensure it was a good gallop, all everyone wanted was a solidly-run race and Ryan felt they were going fast enough for him. "I thought Wayne was excellent at setting the pace and everyone was happy to get a lead off Wayne and when you get a race run at a suitable pace you know what distance you can go next or what not to. This way everyone learns. "At Group One level he is a mile-and-a-half-plus horse and he's a very tough horse who would still be unbeaten if I hadn't run him at the Curragh. It's was a lovely run first time back and it was only over a mile and a quarter and he was beaten by a good horse of Joseph's (O'Brien, Galen). It was a bit unfair what I did pitching him in over that trip, but I needed to get him out early. He's a very brave horse and if you pass him slowly you're in trouble." Advertisement Illinois was originally set to be the Ballydoyle entrant in the Coronation Cup but following the retirement of star stayer Kyprios, he will be heading to the Ascot Gold Cup. O'Brien added: "Everyone was standing in line behind Kyprios and he was always going to get first preference and there would be no move made on anything if he was going to Gold Cup. When he was retired Illinois was put in there and this fella came into Illinois' position. He was going to go for a Group One in Longchamp but then slotted in here." Jockey Moore, who was winning a fifth Coronation Cup. said: "He's only been beaten once and he's a very good horse. He's a Classic winner and still improving and we're still learning. Hopefully we'll keep learning about him. He was headed there and battled back, but he's a tough horse." Francis-Henri Graffard, trainer of runner-up Calandagan, said: 'The horse had a perfect run and got the ride we were thinking of. Going down the hill he found himself behind Ryan (Moore on the winner) and he gave him plenty of time to balance. He probably took the lead for a small moment and then when they started to climb again you could see that Ryan was finding more. He's a very talented horse and I'm sure he'll win a Group One as he always runs his race. There are no excuses and I think it was a good performance. Don't forget he ran in Dubai and he hasn't run in Europe until this race. I think he was ready, but the winner is a tough O'Brien horse who keeps finding more. He's in the Grand Prix de Saint-Cloud.' Calandagan's jockey Mickael Barzalona added: 'He always throws away the start a little – we cannot manage another way with him, but once he found his rhythm… I was behind Ryan at Tattenham Corner and I was pretty happy to be there. About 100yd before the line I hoped he'd stay on, he was just getting a bit tired before the line. It was the first time for him at this track and I hoped that he would break faster and get a better position earlier, but he has his own rhythm and we have to deal with that. This is the first time he has run on this different sort of track. I think he might have been outstayed, yes.' Formal, ridden by Oisin Murphy, on the way to winning the Nyetimber Surrey Stakes on Betfred Oaks Day at the 2025 Betfred Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse on Friday, June 6 2025 -Credit:PA Formal (9-4 joint favourite) scorched to victory in the opener on Betfred Oaks day, the Listed Nyetimber Surrey Stakes. Under Oisin Murphy three-year-old filly, who was trained by the now retired Sir Michael Stoute during her juvenile campaign, justified the support that sent her off the well-backed 9-4 joint favourite alongside Diego Ventura, to score in style. Advertisement Now trained by Andrew Balding, the Cheveley Park Stud-owned daughter of Dubawi justified the promise of her first two wins last season. Although she disappointed when eighth in the Fred Darling Stakes at Newbury on her debut for her new stable, she stepped up markedly on that. She was sat just off the pace set by The Waco Kid before easily moving to the front. She went clear of her rivals with around three furlongs to go in the seven-furlong contest. And she was a length-and-half clear of Saqqara Sands (13-2) at the line with the other 9-4 joint favourite Diego Ventura a further length-and-a-quarter back in third. Balding said a trip to Royal Ascot is unlikely but he was delighted with Formal. He said: "I thought she ran well in the Fred Darling, but it was a funny race and she got impeded at a vital stage and didn't give her true running. It made our decision easy and we skipped any idea of a Guineas and rebooted and this became the obvious choice. It's a relief to see her win like that. She had been quite keen early doors at home and her work is very good at home, but we thought now she had the first run under her belt we would take the hood off. She travelled really strongly but didn't over-race." He added: "I think we'll probably wait for something like the Oak Tree (at Goodwood on July 30). I don't think we want to be squeezing races into her and that looks the right spot. After that we know she goes well on slow ground so we would have the whole autumn ahead of us. She looked quite good there, but we will take it step by step." Ralph Beckett, trainer of runner-up Saqqara Sands, said: 'The winner got away but that was a really good effort. She lacked a recent run, which all those around her had had, and we are very pleased. I should think the Eternal Stakes at Carlisle in three weeks' time might be next for her.' Advertisement On the third-placed Diego Ventura, jockey James Doyle added: 'It's a bit sticky out there, a bit dead, but not bad (ground). Mine ran fine, but he was just a bit sleepy for this trip and track. I think he wants more of a stiff seven (furlongs).' Maximized, ridden by Liverpool FC fan William Buick, wins the Betfred British EBF Woodcote Stakes on Betfred Oaks Day of the 2025 Betfred Derby Festival at Epsom Downs Racecourse on Friday, June 6 2025 -Credit:PA Maximized (6-5 favourite) won the Betfred British EBF Woodcote Stakes. Under Liverpool FC fan William Buick, the Charlie Appleby-trained two-year-old made it two wins from two starts with a smart victory in the six-furlong contest. Maximised had made an eye-catching debut when winning over six furlongs at Haydock Park and the son of Mehmas, who cost £720,000 at the spring breeze-up sales, continued that perfect start to score in the Godolphin blue at Epsom. The two-year-old was tracking the pace set by Logi Bear and then came through to take over two furlongs from home alongside Havana Hurricane. Coral cut Maximized to 12-1 from 16-1 for the Group Two Coventry Stakes on the opening day of Royal Ascot two weeks on Tuesday. Advertisement Trainer Appleby said: "When he won at Haydock he jumped and skipped very sweetly on the sounder surface and it's good to soft out there today. It will be interesting to see what Will has got to say, but he might have found that a little bit more testing today I would imagine. "The Royal Ascot picture is building with a few of these two-year-olds. With Military Code we might look towards the Coventry, and then we've Wise Approach who we thought could be a Norfolk or a Windsor Castle horse. I don't think this horse would be able to drop back in trip, so if we need to go to Ascot it could be the Coventry, or we could skip Ascot as I thought the July Stakes (at Newmarket) could be a nice race for him to be honest." Brocklesby Stakes winner Norman's Cay had to be eased down by jockey David Egan well before the line, with the colt appearing to go wrong. Screens were erected around the Richard Hannon-trained runner but a Jockey Club spokesperson said: "He walked into the horse ambulance and will be taken to the racecourse stables for further assessment." Ecureuil Secret, ridden by Oisin Orr, on the way to winning the Betfred Nifty 50 Handicap at Epsom Downs Racecourse on Friday June 6 2025 -Credit:PA Ecureuil Secret (28-1) ran out an impressive winner of the Betfred Nifty 50 Handicap. Richard Fahey's four-year-old, under Oisin Orr, made what appeared a competitive 1m2f handicap look easy as he bounded clear to score by four lengths from Akecheta (17-2) with Westerton (11-1) third, three-quarters-of-a-length back in third and Defiance (11-2) half-a-length further adrift in fourth. Advertisement Winning jockey Orr said: "He's been working well at home and I thought the ground on the easy side would definitely suit but we didn't have a great draw. We got a good break, got in a really good position and it was easy from there. I know he stays well so I was happy enough to get rolling early and he galloped through the line well, took a bit of pulling up as well; it's a dead end and that was it so he had no choice but to stop, lucky it was there." David Loughnane's Partisan Hero (7-2) made all the running under Silvestre de Sousa to deny Fahey and Orr a big-priced double with Golden Mind (25-1) a head adrift in second in the Debenhams Handicap. Last year's winner Rhoscolyn (5-1) was a length back in third with Persuasion (33-1) a further two-and-a-quarter lengths further adrift in fourth.

'Grandpa robber' behind Kim Kardashian Paris heist recalls that 2016 night

time36 minutes ago

'Grandpa robber' behind Kim Kardashian Paris heist recalls that 2016 night

Kim Kardashian made a defiant walk into Paris' Palace of Justice in May, to face the criminals who held the reality star at gunpoint and robbed in 2016. The trial's shocking outcome would only prompt more questions. Ten suspects, dubbed the "Grandpa Robbers" by French media because most of them were in their 60s and 70s, stood trial in Paris for the notorious 2016 jewel heist that terrorized the reality star. ABC News Studios' "IMPACT x Nightline: Inside the Kim Kardashian Heist" is streaming only on Hulu. Despite finding eight of the 10 suspects guilty of crimes related to the 2016 heist, the French court allowed all defendants to walk free, with some receiving suspended sentences or credit for time already served. The judge cited the defendants' ages and health concerns as reasons for leniency. Two were acquitted. The crime occurred during Paris Fashion Week in October 2016, when Kardashian was staying at the exclusive "No Name Hotel," reportedly known for hosting celebrities like Leonardo DiCaprio and Madonna. That night, while Kardashian's security detail accompanied her sister Kourtney to a nightclub, the robbers struck. In an interview with ABC News, Yunice Abbas, one of the convicted robbers, said he didn't even know who Kardashian was at the time. "I was always told 'wife of an American rapper,'" Abbas said. The robbers, wearing fake police jackets, first confronted the hotel's night concierge, Abderrahmane Ouatiki. They forced him at gunpoint to lead them to Kardashian's suite. "When you feel the cold steel of a gun on the back of your neck, you have to be calm," Ouatiki told ABC News. "You have to be wise in such situations." The thieves escaped with more than $6 million worth of jewelry, including Kardashian's upgraded 18.8-carat wedding ring from then-husband Kanye West. In their hasty bicycle getaway, Abbas admitted to falling and spilling some of the stolen jewels on the street. Following the verdict, Kardashian, who has become an advocate for criminal justice reform, released a statement. "While I'll never forget what happened, I believe in the power of growth and accountability and pray for healing for all. I remain committed to advocating for justice, and promoting a fair legal system." The outcome of the trial surprised even the defendants. When asked if he expected the lenient sentence, Abbas responded with a simple "No" as he left the courthouse a free man. The unexpected verdict left some questioning the French justice system. "I respect Kim Kardashian, but I call foul. Justice was not served," legal commentator Nancy Grace told ABC News. "They should be in jail for what they did."

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