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Iraq's first-ever director at Cannes Festival wins best feature debut
Iraq's first-ever director at Cannes Festival wins best feature debut

LBCI

time25-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • LBCI

Iraq's first-ever director at Cannes Festival wins best feature debut

Hasan Hadi, the first filmmaker from Iraq to be selected for the prestigious Cannes Festival, on Saturday won a top prize for his childhood adventure under economic sanctions in "The President's Cake." His first feature-length film follows nine-year-old Lamia after her school teacher picks her to bake the class a cake for President Saddam Hussein's birthday or risk being denounced for disloyalty. It is the early 1990s, the country is under crippling U.N. sanctions, and she and her grandmother can barely afford to eat. The pair set off from their home in the marshlands into town to try to track down the unaffordable ingredients. Hadi dedicated his Camera d'Or award, which honors first-time directors, to "every kid or child around the world who somehow finds love, friendship, and joy amid war, sanctions, and dictatorship. "You are the real heroes," he said. He later shared the stage with dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, who won the festival's Palme D'Or top prize for his "It Was Just an Accident," the tale of five ordinary Iranians confronting a man they believed tortured them in jail. "The President's Cake" has received excellent reviews since premiering last week in the Directors' Fortnight section. Cinema bible Variety called it a "tragicomic gem." Deadline said it was "head and shoulders above" some of the films in the running for the festival's Palme d'Or top prize, and "could turn out to be Iraq's first nominee for an Oscar." Also from the Middle East, Palestinian director Tawfeek Barhom received his award for his short film "I'm Glad You're Dead Now." After giving thanks, he took the opportunity to mention the war in Gaza. "In 20 years from now when we are visiting the Gaza Strip, try not to think about the dead and have a nice trip," he said. Outside the main competition, Gazan twin brothers Arab and Tarzan Nasser on Friday received a directing award in the Certain Regard parallel section for "Once Upon A Time In Gaza." One of them dedicated the award to Palestinians, especially those living in their homeland of Gaza, which they left in 2012. He said that, when they hesitated to return to Cannes to receive the prize, his mother had encouraged him to go and tell the world about the suffering of people in Gaza. "She said, 'No, no, no, you have to go. Tell them to stop the genocide," he said. AFP

First Iraqi director at Cannes wins top prize with The President's Cake
First Iraqi director at Cannes wins top prize with The President's Cake

The National

time25-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The National

First Iraqi director at Cannes wins top prize with The President's Cake

Hasan Hadi, the first filmmaker from Iraq to win a top prize at the Cannes Film Festival said he's optimistic about the future of cinema in his country. "I think this proves that our story matters and if you can tell them and tell them well, people around the world will respond positively," he said. At the festival on Saturday, Hadi's childhood adventure film, The President's Cake, won the Camera d'Or, which honours first-time directors. Set in the 1990s when Iraq was under crippling UN sanctions, the drama follows nine-year-old Lamia after her school teacher picks her to bake the class a cake for President Saddam Hussein's birthday or risk being denounced for disloyalty. Along with her grandmother, the pair set off from their home in the marshlands into town to try to track down the unaffordable ingredients. Speaking at a press conference following his win, Hadi called the win "overwhelming and exciting". "It means more responsibility and that you have to make films in the same level," he said. "We are an emerging industry. There's still a lot to be done, there are lot of artists that are coming up and I'm optimistic about the future of cinema." The President's Cake received excellent reviews since premiering last week in the Directors' Fortnight section. Hadi and his team shot the feature entirely in Iraq, filming predominantly amid the ancient wetlands in the south of the country, listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site since 2016. He spoke to AFP about how the near-total trade and financial embargo imposed on Iraq after it invaded Kuwait "demolished the moral fabric of society," Hadi said. It sent the country "hundreds of years back", he said, adding that he did not taste cake until he was in his early teens, after the US-led invasion in 2003 toppled Saddam and sanctions were lifted. "Sanctions empower dictators," he said. "In the history of the world, there was no one time when they imposed sanctions and the president couldn't eat." Following his win, Hadi dedicated his award to "every kid or child around the world who somehow finds love, friendship and joy amid war, sanctions and dictatorship". "You are the real heroes," he said. He later shared the stage with dissident Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi, who won the festival's Palme D'Or top prize for his film It Was Just an Accident, the tale of five ordinary Iranians confronting a man they believed tortured them in jail. Also from the Middle East, Palestinian director Tawfeek Barhom received his award for his short film I'm Glad You're Dead Now. After giving thanks, he took the opportunity to mention the war in Gaza. "In 20 years from now when we are visiting the Gaza Strip, try not to think about the dead and have a nice trip," he said. US President Donald Trump sparked controversy this year by saying he wanted to turn the war-ravaged Palestinian territory into the "Riviera of the Middle East". Agencies contributed to this report

‘Renoir' Review: A Delicate and Touching Tokyo-Set Portrait of a Girl's Loneliness
‘Renoir' Review: A Delicate and Touching Tokyo-Set Portrait of a Girl's Loneliness

Yahoo

time18-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

‘Renoir' Review: A Delicate and Touching Tokyo-Set Portrait of a Girl's Loneliness

In her debut feature Plan 75, which premiered at Cannes in 2022, Chie Hayakawa offered a quietly disconcerting vision of the future in which Japanese residents over the age of 75 could elect to be euthanized. At first the program seems to be benign, but Hayakawa's film steadily reveals how the policy thrives on the cruel capitalist tenet that people are disposable. Plan 75 won a 'special mention' Camera d'Or (best first film) prize that year and announced Hayakawa as a director to watch. Now, three years later, the Japanese filmmaker turns her considered eye to the past. Premiering in competition at Cannes, Renoir is a poetic meditation on a crucial summer in the life of 11-year-old Fuki (a gorgeous turn by newcomer Yui Suzuki) as she navigates her father's battle with cancer, her mother's ambient stress and persistent loneliness. The film, set in suburban Tokyo in 1987, moves at the speed of a leisurely stroll, using direct, but by no means harsh, cuts (editing is by Anne Klotz) to carry us from one scenario to the next. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Nouvelle Vague' Review: Richard Linklater's Enjoyable Deep Dive Celebrates How Godard's 'Breathless' Came to Life Cannes Hidden Gem: 'A Useful Ghost' Is a Socio-Political Parable Starring a Vacuum Cleaner Cannes: Young Danish Collective Reboots Dogma for New Generation We follow Fuki as she wanders the city and retreats into her imagination. Hobbies are acquired, friends are made, enemies procured and people lost. Throughout, Hayakawa maintains a steady control of this delicate story. There are moments toward the end when Renoir takes sentimental turns that feel a touch too obvious for its subtle framing. Still, the film will likely find a life outside the festival circuit, especially with the arthouse crowd. As with many lyrical coming-of-age films (like All Dirt Road Taste of Salt, for example), Renoir rewards patience with fragmented narratives and surrealist touches. And it's fair to say not everyone will be able to get on its wavelength. The movie is calibrated to the volume of a whisper, as if Hayakawa is in a conspiratorial conversation with her own memories. Renoir's themes are deeply personal for the director, who, like the central character, grappled with the realities of a terminally ill parent. Working with her Plan 75 DP Hideho Urata, Hayakawa embraces a dreamy aesthetic that enhances the perspective of a child who is always looking. At one point in the film, Fuki stares at a man (Ayumu Nakajima) her mother, Utako (Hikari Ishida), has brought around and he jokingly asks if she finds his face interesting. And the answer is, well, yes, of course. Because Fuki is a curious child, the kind of 11-year-old people find peculiar because of the intensity of her gaze and the directness of her manner. We meet Fuki in a quietly harrowing opening sequence. She is watching a montage of crying infants on a VHS, which she quickly discards in her apartment complex's trash room. It's in that dark, musty area that she encounters a strange man with a gruff voice. He asks her invasive questions and Fuki, freaked out, runs. Later that evening, the man strangles her in bed and Fuki, through voiceover, considers her own death. It turns out that this is a short story she has written for a school assignment, a literary musing on grief and sadness. A few scenes after this, Fuki's teacher meets with her mother to ask if the young girl is alright. In many ways, Fuki isn't. She's surrounded by adult anxiety. Her father, Keiji (Lily Franky, a regular in Hirokazu Kore-eda's films), has cancer and her mother is buckling under the strain of caring for him. When he is hospitalized early in the film, Utako asks the hospital to assume long-term care duties. She is expecting he will die soon and accepting that reality comes with its own challenges. While her parents negotiate the emotional and financial weight of a looming death, Fuki tries to stave off loneliness and boredom through hobbies and friendships. She becomes close with Kuriko (Yuumi Kawai), a girl at her school with perfectly braided hair, and starts a suspect relationship with Kaoru (Ryota Bando), an older boy whom she meets by calling into a hotline for people seeking connections. Out of all these amusements, however, Fuki's obsession with magic and telepathy remains constant. Early in the film, the young girl watches an English-language show hosted by a kind of musician. He mostly guesses which card people have chosen from a deck, but he occasionally wills a pair of glasses to levitate with his mind. His primary instruction for those trying to tap into their psychic power is to concentrate. Fuki takes the directive seriously and spends most of the film conscripting those around her to take part. Kuriko is her most willing participant, and together the pair arrange rituals and try to read each other's minds. When Kuriko eventually moves away, it's a heartbreaking turn, leaving Fuki once again alone. Part of the reason Renoir, despite its modesty, hits emotionally is because of Suzuki's compelling performance. The newcomer has a wide-eyed, penetrating stare that at once communicates the reality of Fuki's innocence and the depth of her curiosity. In the actress' hands, the character becomes someone you come to feel deeply protective of. When Fuki decides to meet the young man she's been talking to on the telephone in real life, an anxious tension creeps into Renoir as you start to spiral about all the ways that interaction could go wrong. But thankfully Hayakawa cares about Fuki too, and so the character, despite her quirks and odd predilections, never gets into too much trouble. The director is interested, above all, in bringing the complications of Fuki's emotional life to the surface, a mission that the film largely accomplishes. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now "A Nutless Monkey Could Do Your Job": From Abusive to Angst-Ridden, 16 Memorable Studio Exec Portrayals in Film and TV The 10 Best Baseball Movies of All Time, Ranked

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