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From courtside to Croisette, Spike Lee brings basketball trash talk to a contentious Cannes

From courtside to Croisette, Spike Lee brings basketball trash talk to a contentious Cannes

CANNES, France — At the premiere of Spike Lee's new movie, 'Highest 2 Lowest,' a woman squeezed into my row, sighing that she'd been held up by a Samoyed traipsing the red carpet in a ruffled gown. 'Blocked by a dog in a dress!' she said with a huff. The dog, Felicity, attended as the plus-one of an animal rights activist representing a U.K. group called NoToDogMeat. Still, even Felicity was out-glammed by that night's center of attention, Lee, who held court in Knicks-themed couture, a blue-and-orange-striped zoot suit with matching fedora and spectacles.
'Highest 2 Lowest,' a reworking of Akira Kurosawa's 1963 crime drama 'High and Low,' stars Denzel Washington as a wealthy record-label executive who gets squeezed for a $17.5 million ransom by kidnappers who claim they've taken his son. As Washington made his way into the Grand Théâtre Lumière, he looked pleasantly confused when a photographer caught his attention by waving a shiny quartz stone at him. A few minutes later, the actor was doubly delighted and startled when Cannes director Thierry Frémaux announced he was received an even shinier object: a surprise honorary Palme d'Or, along with a career-spanning montage that rewound all the way back to Washington's first film role in 1981's 'Carbon Copy.'
'It's a very special day,' Frémaux said onstage, gesturing to Lee in his orchestra seat. 'Because it's what, the 30th anniversary of 'Do the Right Thing?' Or the 40th?'
Lee cupped his hands around his mouth. '36!' he yelled.
Yes, let's be precise. 'Do the Right Thing' debuted in that very theater 36 years ago to the day — possibly even to the hour. At that Cannes in 1989, Lee figured he had a good shot at winning the Palme d'Or. He lost to Steven Soderbergh's 'sex, lies, and videotape.' Legend has it that jury president Wim Wenders refused to award 'Do the Right Thing' anything, arguing that Lee's act of destruction at the movie's incendiary climax wasn't heroic. Lee countered that he had a Louisville Slugger with Wenders name on it.
Timing is everything. Not just for 'Do the Right Thing,' which today is an inarguable masterpiece, or for Lee, who reminded the crowd that it was also Malcolm X's 100th birthday. Timing matters to every audacious artist. Bold works can hit with such a wallop that it takes a beat to gauge their lasting impact, to tell which set of brass knuckles left a mark: love or hate?
Cannes takes risk on divisive movies, on big swings. Last year's festival launched the best picture Oscar contenders 'Anora,' 'Emilia Perez' and 'The Substance.' I only liked one of them, but each gave us plenty to argue about. This year, I was enchanted to meet a critic who said she'd loathed three movies so far, and every title she named was one of my favorites. I asked her to let me know if she came across anything else she hates. I'd like to see it.
Besides Ari Aster's 'Eddington' (I dug, she despised), the most polarizing film of Cannes 2025 is turning out to be Lynne Ramsay's 'Die, My Love,' which stars Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson as new parents who are disastrously not up to the challenge. Lawrence has the showier meltdown. A former New Yorker uprooted to the countryside, Grace suffers from a postpartum depression that makes her feel like like a dreary wraith. She acts out to prove she's alive, which here mostly translates as her expressing a need to get shagged.
Mubi, a distributor that tends to have impeccable taste, purchased 'Die My Love' for an eyebrow-cocking $24 million. I couldn't stand the movie, but buying it makes some sense as Lawrence hurls herself into the kind of battering performance that gets awards attention, especially after what Mubi learned last year as it maneuvered 'The Substance's' Demi Moore all the way to the Academy Awards.
Of the two leads, I'd slightly favor giving a prize to Pattinson, who has the subtler and more pathetic role of the mealy, over-matched husband, Jackson, so clueless he tries to cheer up Grace and their crying baby by bringing home an even whinier dog. With apologies to Felicity, the film's mutt is so obnoxious that you can't wait for the inevitable moment when it disappears from the story.
The better sadomasochistic romance is in 'Pillion,' an attention-grabby tryst between a dorky male meter maid (Harry Melling) and a domineering biker (Alexander Skarsgård) who runs with a gang where every macho man has a hogtied boyfriend at his command. 'I hope that it makes some of you a little bit horny,' said its director Harry Lighton as he introduced the film. It definitely left the audience tickled, especially at the gleam in Melling's eyes as he licks Skarsgård's leather boots.
'Pillion' isn't judgmental, but it also doesn't expect Melling's naif to like everything his partner orders him to do. It's about finding one's own boundaries. And it's funny, too, especially with Melling's adorably British parents (Lesley Sharp and Douglas Hodge) conceding that their son's special someone is handsome, although they must insist that both lads wear helmets when they go speeding off.
Most of the major titles have now premiered. While I'm not homesick, I did think the only good part of Hubert Charuel's 'Meteors,' an addiction-themed buddy dramedy, was when a character wore a vintage Lakers jersey. In the 11 days I've been here, a few themes have emerged. Whatever you do, don't swig rosé every time a dog dies (thrice) or whenever someone shoots up heroin or mentions God (exponentially more). You'll be hungover by noon.
Kristen Stewart's directorial debut 'The Chronology of Water' follows a boozy, damaged poet who could keep pace with that drinking game. Imogen Poots is quite good as Lidia, a self-destructive life-guzzler who, over the course of the film, goes from 17-years-old to middle-aged, a time span she mostly spends wasted. Stewart has made an assured mess: a bleary, florid and sometimes lyrical film that could stand to be doused by a bucket of ice water.
At the very least, there's no denying that Stewart has artistic conviction. That's more than one can say about lots of other projects orbiting the festival's main selection. After the screening, I wandered downstairs to the festival's concurrent marketplace, the Marché du Film, where sales rights are negotiated and budgets hopefully secured, and saw producers giddily capitalizing on classic IP that's recently gone into the public domain. One studio was hawking 'Bambi: The Reckoning,' 'Poohniverse: Monsters Assemble,' and 'Pinocchio Unstrung,' whose tagline teased, 'There's nothing holding him back.' Who knows, maybe they'll be brilliant?
My most-anticipated film of the festival was Julia Ducournau's 'Alpha.' The French provocateur won 2021's Palme d'Or for her 'Titane,' a piece of unhinged auto-erotica about a model-slash-serial-killer who gets turned on by cars. Ducournau had launched her career here in 2016 with her gory coming-of-age cannibal film 'Raw.' (I caught up with 'Raw' at its infamous midnight screening at the Toronto International Film Festival, where so many people collapsed that someone called an ambulance.)
Before I could watch 'Alpha,' I caught Charlie Polinger's 'The Plague,' a solid body-horror movie about bullies at a preteen water-polo summer camp, which I half-praised by telling someone it was like Ducournau for kids. To my surprise, 'The Plague' and 'Alpha' turned out to share the exact same scene: a 13-year-old social pariah getting beaten up in a swimming pool and bleeding into the water. Maybe I undersold Polinger as 'Raw' 101, or maybe Ducournau is regressing.
'Alpha,' a hazy sci-fi drama, putters after a young girl (Mélissa Boros) who may have gotten herself infected by an unnamed contagion that turns its victims into marble. Her mother (Golshifteh Farahani, great) is a doctor at the hospital where the beds are filled with victims whose faces are petrified into ghastly rictuses. Imagine a plague of Pietàs. Elliptical and dull, 'Alpha' veers between the teenager's indolent storyline and the mom's desperation to rescue both her child and her toxic brother (Tahar Rahim), a mangy, charismatic addict.
Only the sibling story is interesting. Rahim has the kind of prominent ribs and veins that were made for statuary. He lives as though he doesn't intend to grow old and when he coughs, we see suspicious puffs of dust. I think Ducournau wants us to ask if we can ever love someone so much as agree to let them die. But she has a hard time getting around to that point. Heavy violins do too much of the talking.
Ultimately, so does the score of Lee's 'Highest 2 Lowest.' Washington is good as the music mogul weighing whether to pay the exorbitant ransom — no one does bristly better — yet his crisis scenes are so deluged by heaving strings and harps that you can't hear his character think. I desperately wanted to watch the film on mute. But the French subtitles were wonderful. (When Jeffrey Wright, playing Washington's chauffeur, said 'Easy B,' the translation read, 'Cool Abdul.')
The second half of the film is simpler and stronger, with a terrific supporting performance by ASAP Rocky as a rapper named Yung Felon. Once it was clear that Lee wasn't as interested in Kurosawa's themes of inequity and despair — that this would be a story of redemption by any means necessary — I wound up liking it simply because Lee is loud about what he loves (and hates). The title comes up over a blue sky in orange font and goes on to insult the Celtics as much as possible. (If the Knicks end up facing the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, the music cue Lee will regret is that opening blast of 'Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin'' from Rodgers and Hammerstein's 'Oklahoma!')
Have I seen this year's Oscar contenders? I don't think so. But I've seen plenty of directors presenting exactly the movie they damned well please. And that alone is worth making like Lee and cupping my own hands around my mouth for an enthusiastic yell.

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Movies to see this week: 'John Wick' marathon, Laurel & Hardy, 'The Hidden Fortress'
Movies to see this week: 'John Wick' marathon, Laurel & Hardy, 'The Hidden Fortress'

Yahoo

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Movies to see this week: 'John Wick' marathon, Laurel & Hardy, 'The Hidden Fortress'

The summer movie season is upon us. While there are plenty of Marvel, Mission: Impossible, Karate Kid reboots, and live-action Disney remakes to occupy your evening, there are also some splashy repertory epics on screens right now. Here are the repertory movies playing around the Twin Cities this week. Wednesday, May 28, at Heights Theater Some of Alfred Hitchcock's most iconic films have scenes that burn so brightly in memory that they stand in for the entirety of the film and can obscure their overall greatness. North By Northwest can feel that way. Roger Thornhill (Cary Grant) gets mistaken for a government agent by a group of spies. It looks like a simple case of mistaken identity, but things go wrong over and over, pulling him deeper and deeper into danger. That includes falling for Eve Kendall (Eva Marie Saint). It's tense and delightfully frustrating every step of the way, especially if your memory of the movie is a bit obscured by its iconic plane scene. 3951 Central Ave. NE, Columbia Heights ($19–$19.75) Wednesday, May 28, at The Trylon Cinema With the Cannes success of Spike Lee's Highest 2 Lowest, a reimagining of High and Low, we're probably in for a spate of renewed interest in that Akira Kurosawa classic. For now, play at being too cool for the obvious pick and catch another masterful collaboration between Kurosawa and his favorite actor, Toshiro Mifune. Two peasants (Minoru Chiaki and Kamatari Fujiwara) discover a general (Mifune) and a princess (Misa Uehara) hiding in a fortress with a hoard of gold. The peasants, fresh off the failure of another money-making scheme, are convinced to aid the general and princess in sneaking through enemy territory and back to safety. It's entertaining and beautifully shot. First-time viewers may also find that there are more than a few ways that George Lucas took inspiration from Kurosawa's film for that little-known space opera he released in 1977, which is going to play at this same theater in June. (Also, the Trylon once released a shirt with Mifune's face on it, so it's obviously the perfect place to see this one.) 2820 E 33rd St., Minneapolis (free for members, $8 for a member's guest) Thursday, May 29, at Heights Theater The 12-movie collaboration between director Billy Wilder and screenwriter I.A.L. Diamond may be one of the most fruitful partnerships in the history of Hollywood. It gave us comedy classics like The Apartment and Some Like It Hot, as well as the more serious The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes and underappreciated comedies like The Front Page and One, Two, Three. Among that latter category is The Fortune Cookie, a goofball comedy that, like many of Wilder's films from this era, starred Jack Lemmon with his longtime foil Walter Matthau. Harry (Lemmon) is a sideline videographer at a football game who gets bowled over by star player Luther "Boom Boom" Jackson (Ron Rich). Harry's crooked lawyer brother-in-law, Willie (Matthau), convinces him to feign an injury in hopes of a fat payday. But Luther's insurmountable guilt has Harry second-guessing the scheme. 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You probably have to Google that miniseries to remember what it was, and that's probably all you really need to know about it. 5677 Hadley Ave. N, Oakdale ($28.12) Tuesday, June 3, at Alamo Drafthouse Arriving the same year as George A. Romero's third zombie opus, Day of the Dead, The Return of the Living Dead got in on mocking zombie movies early. The story is that two buffoons at a medical supply facility accidentally release a gas that raises the dead. The medical supply guys, the local mortuary owner, and a bunch of punks wind up trapped together in the midst of a zombie attack that they don't really understand. It's all played as a very knowing elbow to the ribs. The movie even references Night of the Living Dead before deciding that its own plot doesn't mean a whole lot. It's absurd, sometimes funny, and willing to ask, "Why are these the rules of zombie movies"? The zombies can talk, don't die when you hit them in the head, and don't even really have to be dead to be zombies. 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adidas Presents a Bruce Lee-Themed Take on the Jabbar Lo
adidas Presents a Bruce Lee-Themed Take on the Jabbar Lo

Hypebeast

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adidas Presents a Bruce Lee-Themed Take on the Jabbar Lo

Name:Bruce Lee x adidas Jabbar Lo 'Game of Death'Colorway:Yellow/BlackSKU:JR1597MSRP:$110 USDRelease Date:August 30Where to Buy:adidas adidasturned back time last year by bringing backKareem Abdul-Jabbar'ssignature shoe, theadidas Jabbar. Its low and high-top variants have been the subject offun colorwaysandhigh-powered collaborationssince, with yet another project being teased by the Three Stripes. Bruce Leehas remained an inspirational figure for generations, prompting everything from stories to sneakers made in his honor. The latest Lee-themed shoe to appear is thisadidas Jabbar Lo'Game of Death.' Not only does it feature callouts to Lee such as his signature at the lateral heel and a silhouette of him at the heel, but the yellow and gold rendition also remembers Lee's time with Kareem Abdul-Jabbar forGame of Death. The film, while incomplete prior to Lee's death, went on to be finished posthumously and notably features ascenein which the two athletic greats fight. Related graphics are included at the sockliner and packaging, completing this special tribute. At the time of writing, adidas has not yet discussed when this Bruce Lee x adidas Jabbar Lo 'Game of Death' colorway will be dropping. Stay tuned for updates, including official confirmation of the project's rollout, as we currently expect the pair to land on shelves starting on August 30 via adidas and select retailers at a retail price of $110 USD.

‘The Pitt' star Tracy Ifeachor thinks about Collins and Robby's backstory ‘all the time': ‘It just didn't work out because it's not the right time'
‘The Pitt' star Tracy Ifeachor thinks about Collins and Robby's backstory ‘all the time': ‘It just didn't work out because it's not the right time'

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‘The Pitt' star Tracy Ifeachor thinks about Collins and Robby's backstory ‘all the time': ‘It just didn't work out because it's not the right time'

Tracy Ifeachor remembers the moment she knew The Pitt would be a hit — and it's not tied to any one episode or fan reaction. "I want to say something really profound here, but instead I'll say I remember coming in one day and saying to Noah [Wyle], 'Now I know this show is going to be an absolute smash hit because I got my identity stolen three times in the course of a week and all these different things happened,'" Ifeachor tells Gold Derby. "Got stuck in customs. I went, 'There's a lot opposing me when that happened.' I was like, 'Yeah, yeah, this is going to be something.' ... So when, like, 50 bad things happen on a single day, you've got to know that something great is coming around the corner." More from GoldDerby Everything to know about 'The Devil Wears Prada' sequel: Official release date set for May 1, 2026 Cannes 2025 wrap: 'Sentimental Value,' Jennifer Lawrence, June Squibb, and the 2026 Oscar contenders to know 'Ren Faire' director Lance Oppenheim on the corrupting influence of power and accidentally capturing 'America in miniature' In all seriousness, Ifeachor knew the medical drama was a special project from the start between the "amazing cast" and the involvement of executive producer and director John Wells. "I remember feeling like, 'Yeah, this feels special. It feels good. It feels right and truthful." A classically trained actor, the Brit was also attracted to the theater-esque nature of the show that unfolds over 15 episodes a season in real time. The Pitt shoots on a full hospital set in continuity, so everyone is basically around all the time, if not on camera. "I love this kind of, 'Roll up your sleeves. Everybody's there together.' I really enjoy working like that and I really enjoy collaboration. So that's the thing that really makes my heart sing when we get to collaborate," Ifeachor says. "There was a 10-minute discussion — didn't stop a camera — but it was a 10-minute discussion [about] whether or not I could roll my sleeves up because they had just seen me four minutes ago. So yes, they took it very seriously." SEE 'I've never been on a show that got this kind of recognition': Katherine LaNasa on The Pitt's success and Dana's 'existential crisis' As senior resident Dr. Heather Collins, Ifeachor exudes confidence, intelligence, and warmth. When Wells, Wyle, and creator R. Scott Gemmill gave her the character breakdown, they discussed Collins' "pursuit of excellence." Though it wasn't revealed in the first season, Collins went into medicine after a career in finance. "Her mentor convinced her to come into medicine, and she just loved it," Ifeachor says. "So I knew that she was a driven person. She's about her business and she's really caring kind and has a sense of compassion. And her humanity is really key. It's always on display, even when she's busy doing lots of different things." Ifeachor was also informed that Collins and Dr. Robby (Wyle) were exes, a plot point that's not revealed until the fifth episode. "I think Dr. Collins never thought she would see him again. And then here she is matched with the Pittsburgh hospital," she says. "So she ends up working with him, and they kind of have a few awkward moments, but they're full of joy because when someone really knows you, they know how to push your buttons, and you know how to push their buttons." Collins is indeed one of the few people who can call out Robby in the way only someone you're really intimate with can. She's the one who tells Robby, who's working on the anniversary of his mentor's death, to check his baggage at the door like they all do. The 15-hour shift is the worst day of Robby's life, culminating in his breakdown in the 13th episode, but as Ifeachor notes, it's also the worst day of Collins' life. She suffers a miscarriage at the end of the seventh episode — her second attempt with IVF — and has several cases during the day that involves pregnancy, babies, and children. For each and every one, she steadies herself and does her job. In the 11th episode, Collins takes charge of a complicated childbirth, one of the most graphically realistic births portrayed onscreen. Ifeachor pulled from her own experience with compartmentalization. She was diagnosed with dyslexia at 21 and struggled with learning lines, sometimes in a different dialect. They were "all these wonderful challenges that I love, but at the same time having to be on and being your own dialect coach and not having a coach on set... but having to still deliver no matter what, I kind of drew from that because it was a high-pressure situation," she says. "Collins is having a lot of pressure placed on her as well. So I feel like I felt like I kind of lived it." John Johnson/HBO The storylines involving children were all difficult because "every woman knows a woman who has had a miscarriage." Someone in Ifeachor's family lost a baby at seven months. "I still remember that child every now and then. I still think about that child," she shares. "And so coming to this with that kind of history — the whole thing is on [one] day — so you're always thinking about it. It's always on your mind. It was really challenging. It was really challenging. So I had no idea what it would end up looking like, whether it would be something that was really good or something that was there's just no way to know. Sometimes when you're actually making something — I knew the overall piece was good — but I really want to make sure that my part in it, [that] I'm not going to drop the ball for anybody, because this is a really important project, and it means a lot to all of us. And I'm really glad that it translated." Towards the end of the 11th episode, Collins and Robby have an emotional exchange in the back of an ambulance. She opens up about her fertility struggles before revealing she had an abortion a few years ago because she wasn't sure about the relationship. "I never told him," she says. "I was afraid. I was afraid of all of it. But mostly, I was afraid he'd hate me for being selfish." It dawns on Robby that she's talking about him. Robby tells her she was not selfish, and that "he" would forgive her and "he would want you to forgive yourself." "We all need a little bit more grace for ourselves, and then if we have that, we have it for each other," Ifeachor says. She and Wyle never spoke about the scene before filming it. "I think the key is just in those moments to just be really available to each other and just to embrace whatever the other person is giving you. And I feel like certainly I did that, and I feel like certainly he did that as well in that scene. And then just allow yourself to be surprised," she says. "You enjoy just being present with another person and creating something that wasn't there before. And obviously the writing really helped and did so much work for us as well." SEE The Pitt star Isa Briones loves the discourse around Dr. Santos: 'I just want people to feel something viscerally' It's unclear exactly why Collins and Robby broke up, but it doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out it has to do with the latter not being fully emotionally available. Ifeachor thought about their backstory "all the time." "I was like, 'So what do you think of this?' They're like, 'Nope, nope,'" she says. Robby is "somebody that is not fully in touch with themselves because of trauma, because of just trying to keep going," she continues. "They're always going to feel like they're hiding a little bit of themselves, and that's kind of a lonely place to be in a relationship. And so, after however long of trying to get that part of him, I think you just have to accept the person is not able to give you what you might need in that relationship. And they're a good person. You're a good person. It just didn't work out because it's not the right time." The 11th episode is the last time fans see Collins in Season 1. Robby lets her clock out early and she misses the mass casualty incident that begins at the end of the episode. The team calls her, but she never returns, seemingly passed out and somehow completely disconnected from the world. "That was my question!" Ifeachor exclaims. "I was like, 'But uh...' I have, like, five devices. And I don't look at my phone anyway, and I remember trying to turn off my phone once for like an hour. I was like, 'OK, I'll just get an Uber Eats. Oh, wait, I need my phone for that.' I was like, 'Oh, I'll just get a ...' 'No.' 'What time is it?' My watch is off. It's like, 'This isn't working.' She was, like, curtains out. It had been a long 11 hours, let's just say, for her." But fear not: Collins will be awake and back in Season 2, which takes place 10 months later on the Fourth of July. "I know that there will be a lot of surprises. That is all I could tell you." Season 1 of The Pitt is streaming on Max. Best of GoldDerby How Eddie Redmayne crafted his 'deeply unflappable' assassin on 'The Day of the Jackal' TV composers roundtable: 'Adolescence,' 'Day of the Jackal,' 'Interview With the Vampire,' 'Your Friends and Neighbors' 'Your Friends and Neighbors' composer Dominic Lewis on matching the show's tonal shifts and writing the catchy theme song 'The Joneses' Click here to read the full article.

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