00 - 00 : 00 : 00

Banner

Film Listings

Wed May 30, 2012

Fri Jun 01, 2012

Fri Jun 08, 2012

Wed Jun 13, 2012

Fri Jun 15, 2012

Wed Jun 20, 2012

Fri Jun 22, 2012

Wed Jun 27, 2012

Fri Jun 29, 2012

Tue Jul 03, 2012

Fri Jul 06, 2012

Wed Jul 11, 2012

Fri Jul 13, 2012

Fri Jul 20, 2012

Wed Jul 25, 2012

Fri Jul 27, 2012

Fri Aug 03, 2012

Fri Aug 10, 2012

Wed Aug 15, 2012

Fri Aug 17, 2012

Wed Aug 22, 2012

Fri Aug 24, 2012

Fri Aug 31, 2012

Fri Sep 07, 2012

Fri Sep 14, 2012

Fri Sep 21, 2012

Fri Sep 28, 2012

Fri Oct 05, 2012

Fri Oct 12, 2012

Fri Oct 19, 2012

Fri Oct 26, 2012

Fri Nov 02, 2012

Fri Nov 09, 2012

Fri Nov 16, 2012

Wed Nov 21, 2012

Fri Dec 14, 2012

Sat Dec 15, 2012

Wed Dec 19, 2012

Fri Dec 21, 2012

more listings



Top 10 Best Scenes from Cannes 2009

Posted by Eric Lavallee on May 27, 2009
Source: IONCINEMA.com Feature

When you cover a film festival of the size of Cannes, it is the standalone celluloid moments within a film that make the draining process of spending half the day in the dark actually worthwhile. I've decided to list some of the better shots, scenes and sequences of the films that I bring back from my fresh Cannes 2009 memories. I could have easily made a list of thirty, there are many yummy scenes worth pointing out in better than average films such as Broken Embraces, Air Doll, Up and Tales From the Golden Age all the way down to films that left me unimpressed such as Tsai Ming-Ling's Faces (with a Nathalie Baye crawling out from underneath a table), but I decided to go with a strict minimum. Here is a list of ten which I'll attempt to highlight without spoiling it for those who haven't yet seen the films.

#10. J'ai tué ma mère (Xavier Dolan): The cream cheese moment. After a collage of close-up shots of inanimate objects (a shrine showing his mother's tackiness), the film's first interaction between characters is during a mundane event: breakfast time. Son (Xavier Dolan) is annoyed by his mother (Anne Dorval) and the cream cheese stain on her cheek. It says so much about how he views and resents her.

#9 . Nymph (Pen-Ek Ratanaruang): Opening shot, one continuous technically difficult long-take (around 10plus minutes in runtime) explores the mysterious nature of the film's key location.

#8. Bright Star (Jane Campion). Final scene features Abbie Cornish juxtaposed to wintery backdrop with a combination of grief and honouring the person who she gave her heart to. Quite literally, this is poetry in motion.

#7. Fish Tank (Andrea Arnold): Still in the film's first act, the story-line finally unveils the protagonist's idea of escapism. Katie Jarvis' character uses an empty apartment flat to find solace. How this scene is photographed, the energy of the sequence, the editing and the hip hop song choice make this a memorable break from her dismal existence.

#6. Looking For Eric (Ken Loach): 200 Eric Cantonas. The film's climax is basically a case for safety in numbers. It's the laugh out loud moment of the film.

#5. Enter the Void (Gaspar Noe). Psychedelic Trip. When the lead character takes a hit of the DMT drug, the film goes into a sensory-filled rainbow of colors with companion muffled sounds. Easily the film's most alluring sequence that will often be referenced in comparison to Kubrick's quantum leap in 2001: A Space Odyssey.

#4. A Prophet (Jacques Audiard). After a catch-22 type of situation where the lead character played by Tahar Rahim must commit the ultimate sin, he is revisited by the last person he would want to see. It acts as the character's subconscious and reminds him that despite him selling out to the Italians, that he is fully aware of his roots.

#3. Inglourious Basterds (Quentin Tarantino). I Drink Your Milk...The opening sequence to QT's WWII epic is where we are first introduced to the villain/antagonistic force of the film (vividly interpreted by Christoph Waltz) and the origins of the female heroine. Celebrating the Spaghetti Western, the sequence which runs at least 20 plus minutes is filled with humor, is slowly paced and contains the same “agitation” found in the Leone films.

#2. Dogtooth (Yorgos Lanthimos). There are too many to choose from, but one standout scene is when father comes home from work to be meet by his adult son who in-turn asks the father to retrieve a toy out of his reach on the driveway. The scene further advocates the notion that the outside world is a hostile, unsafe environment for one, and a place or control for the other.

#1. Antichrist (Lars von Trier). The film's b&w prologue chapter which explains Charlotte Gainsbourg's character's infinite sorrow and reason for her depression is a one of sheer beauty.



Comments

ADD A COMMENT

You must be logged in to add a comment
Banner

Reviews

Review: The Kid With a Bike

Review: The Kid With a Bike

"Despite the one-dimensionality of its anti-patriarchal theme (appeasing the knee-jerk expectations of European film fest audiences), the Dardennes avoid cheapening the story with ideological smugness, achieving an emotional resonance without easy sentimentality."


more reviews

Interviews

main feature right

Review: Wrong

"Encoded in the outlandish humor that pervades the film are bits of commentary on everyday life. The most overt is Dupieux's urging to appreciate the relationships around you, which is manifested in the dog kidnapping, but also in a subplot in which a woman from the pizzeria moves between men without even realizing they have changed. Another cultural critique is found in the rainy office, an instantly recognizable visual metaphor for how dreary a 9 to 5 job can be."


right column more interviews

Festivals

festival link more

Community Film Ratings

community link more