2010 Cannes Film Festival






















63rd Cannes Film Festival

2010 Cannes Film Festival poster.jpg
The festival's official poster featuring French actress Juliette Binoche[1]

Opening filmRobin Hood
Closing filmThe Tree
Location
Cannes, France
Founded1946
Awards
Palme d'Or (Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives)[2]
Hosted byKristin Scott Thomas

No. of films
19 (En Competition)[3]
19 (Un Certain Regard)
9 (Short Film)
Festival date12–23 May 2010
Websitewww.festival-cannes.com

The 63rd Cannes Film Festival was held from 12 to 23 May 2010, in Cannes, France.[4][5] The Cannes Film Festival, hailed as being one of the most recognized and prestigious film festivals worldwide, was founded in 1946.[6][7] It consists of having films screened in and out of competition during the festival; films screened in competition compete for the Palme d'Or award. The award in 2010 was won by Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives, a Thai film directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul. This was determined by the festival's jury members who reviewed films screened in competition. American film director Tim Burton was the president of the jury for the international competition, and other members of the jury for that competition included actors, screenwriters and composers, such as Kate Beckinsale, Emmanuel Carrère, Benicio del Toro, and Alexandre Desplat.[8][9] Other categories for films screened in competition that have their own separate juries for other awards are for Short Films and the Un Certain Regard category.


Ridley Scott's Robin Hood opened the festival[10] and Julie Bertuccelli's The Tree was the closing film.[11] The full film lineup for the festival was announced on 15 April 2010.[12] English actress Kristin Scott Thomas was the mistress of ceremonies.[13]


Agence France-Presse, Reuters, Associated Press and Getty TV boycotted the press conference that announced the line-up for the festival, due to a dispute over access to the red carpet.[14] In a press release, the agencies said that they "may be forced to suspend their presence at the festival altogether" if an agreement was not reached.[14] Days before the festival was to begin, concerns were expressed that attendees might be delayed, or would not attend, due to plane flights to surrounding areas in France being delayed or canceled due to volcanic ash in the sky.[15] Two days before ths beginning of the festival, the just finished film Route Irish, directed by Ken Loach, was added to the main competition.[16]




Contents





  • 1 Juries

    • 1.1 Main competition


    • 1.2 Un Certain Regard


    • 1.3 Camera d'Or


    • 1.4 Cinéfondation and short films



  • 2 Official selection

    • 2.1 In competition - Feature films


    • 2.2 Un Certain Regard


    • 2.3 Films out of competition


    • 2.4 Special screenings


    • 2.5 Cinéfondation


    • 2.6 Short film competition


    • 2.7 Cannes Classics


    • 2.8 Cinéma de la Plage



  • 3 Parallel sections

    • 3.1 International Critics' Week


    • 3.2 Directors' Fortnight



  • 4 Awards

    • 4.1 Official awards


    • 4.2 Independent awards



  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




Juries





Tim Burton, President of the 2010 Competition Jury





Claire Denis, President of the 2010 Un Certain Regard Jury



Main competition


The following people were appointed as the Jury for the feature films of the 2010 Official Selection:[17]



  • Tim Burton (American director) Jury President[18]

  • Alberto Barbera (Italian cinematographer)


  • Kate Beckinsale (English actress)


  • Emmanuel Carrère (French author, screenwriter and director)


  • Benicio del Toro (Puerto Rican actor)


  • Alexandre Desplat (French composer)


  • Víctor Erice (Spanish director)


  • Shekhar Kapur (Indian director)


  • Giovanna Mezzogiorno (Italian actress)


Un Certain Regard



  • Claire Denis (French director) President

  • Patrick Ferla (Swiss journalist)

  • Kim Dong-ho (South Korean director of Busan Film Festival)

  • Helena Lindblad (Swedish critic)

  • Serge Toubiana (French General Director of the Cinémathèque Française)


Camera d'Or



  • Gael García Bernal (Mexican director) President


  • Gérard de Battista (French cinematographer)


  • Stéphane Brizé (French director)

  • Didier Diaz (FICAM)

  • Charlotte Lipinska (French Union Critics)


Cinéfondation and short films



  • Atom Egoyan (Canadian director) President


  • Emmanuelle Devos (French actress)


  • Carlos Diegues (Brazilian director)


  • Dinara Droukarova (Russian actress)


  • Marc Recha (Spanish Director)


Official selection



In competition - Feature films


The following feature films competed for the Palme d'Or:[3][5][11]














































































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country
Another YearMike LeighUnited Kingdom
BiutifulAlejandro González IñárrituMexico
Burnt by the Sun 2
Утомлённые солнцем 2  Utomlyonnye solncem 2
Nikita MikhalkovRussia
Certified CopyCopie conformeAbbas KiarostamiFrance
Chongqing Blues
日照重慶  Rizhao Chongqing
Wang XiaoshuaiChina
Fair GameDoug LimanUnited States
The Housemaid
하녀  Ha-nyeo
Im Sang-sooSouth Korea
My Joy
Счастье моё  Schastye moyo
Sergei LoznitsaUkraine
Of Gods and MenDes hommes et des dieuxXavier BeauvoisFrance
On TourTournéeMathieu AmalricFrance
Our LifeLa nostra vita|Daniele Luchetti
Italy
Outrage
アウトレイジ  Autoreiji
Takeshi KitanoJapan
Outside the LawHors-la-loiRachid BoucharebAlgeria
Poetry
  Shi
Lee Chang-dongSouth Korea
The Princess of MontpensierLa princesse de MontpensierBertrand TavernierFrance
Route IrishKen LoachUnited Kingdom
A Screaming ManUn homme qui crieMahamat Saleh HarounFrance
Tender Son – The Frankenstein ProjectSzelíd Teremtés – A Frankenstein TervKornél MundruczóHungary
Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives
ลุงบุญมีระลึกชาติ  Lung Bunmi Raluek Chat
Apichatpong WeerasethakulThailand


Un Certain Regard


The following films were selected for the competition of Un Certain Regard:[3]











































































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country
Adrienn PálPál AdriennÁgnes KocsisHungary
AuroraCristi PuiuRomania
Blue ValentineDerek CianfranceUnited States
CaranchoPablo TraperoArgentina
ChatroomHideo NakataUnited Kingdom
The City BelowUnter dir die Stadt Christoph HochhäuslerGermany
FlightUdaanVikramaditya MotwaneIndia
Hahaha하하하Hong Sang-sooSouth Korea
HeartbeatsLes amours imaginairesXavier DolanCanada
I Wish I KnewHai Shang Chuan QiJia ZhangkeChina
Life, Above AllOliver SchmitzSouth Africa
Lights OutQu'est-il arrivé à Simon Werner?Fabrice GobertFrance
The LipsLos labios
Iván Fund, Santiago Loza
Argentina
OctoberOctubre
Daniel Vega, Diego Vega
Peru
Rebecca H. (Return to the Dogs)Lodge KerriganUnited States, France
R U ThereDavid VerbeekNetherlands, Taiwan
SocialismFilm SocialismeJean-Luc GodardFrance
The Strange Case of AngelicaO estranho caso de AngélicaManoel de OliveiraPortugal
Tuesday, After ChristmasMarţi, după CrăciunRadu MunteanRomania


Films out of competition


The following films were selected to be screened out of competition:[3]



































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country
The Autobiography of Nicolae CeaușescuAutobiografia lui Nicolae CeaușescuAndrei UjicăRomania
Black HeavenL'Autre mondeGilles MarchandFrance
CarlosOlivier AssayasFrance
KaboomGregg ArakiUnited States
Robin HoodRidley ScottUnited States
Tamara DreweStephen FrearsUnited Kingdom
The TreeJulie BertuccelliFrance, Australia
Wall Street: Money Never SleepsOliver StoneUnited States
You Will Meet a Tall Dark StrangerWoody AllenUnited States


Special screenings


The following films were shown as special screenings.[3][11]









































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country
5 X Favela5 X Favela, por nós mesmos
Wagner Novais, Manaira Carneiro, Rodriga Felha, Cacau Amaral, Luciano Vidigal, Cadu Barcelos and Luciana Bezerra
Brazil
AbelDiego LunaMexico
ChantrapasOtar IosselianiFrance, Georgia
Countdown to ZeroLucy WalkerUnited States
Draquila – Italy TremblesDraquila - L'Italia che tremaSabina GuzzantiItaly
Gilles Jacob, Citizen CannesGilles Jacob, l'arpenteur de la croisetteSerge Le PeronFrance
Inside JobCharles H. FergusonUnited States
The PackLa meuteFranck RichardFrance, Belgium
Nostalgia for the LightNostalgia de la luzPatricio GuzmánFrance, Chile
Over Your Cities Grass Will GrowSophie FiennesUnited Kingdom


Cinéfondation


The following short films were selected for the competition of Cinéfondation:[3][19]



















































English title
Original title
Director(s)
School
Anywhere Out of the WorldCoucou-Les-NuagesVincent CardonaLa fémis, France
CookedJens BlankNFTS, United Kingdom
Dakujem, dobreMátyás PriklerFTF-VŠMU, Slovakia
The Fifth ColumnHinkerort ZorasuneVatche BoulghourjianNYU, United States
Frozen LandTae-yong KimSejong University*, S. Korea
Here I AmItt VagyokBálint SzimlerSzFE, Hungary
I Already Am Everything I Want to HaveJa Vec Jesam Sve Ono Što Želim Da ImamDane KomljenFDU, Serbia
IjslandIcelandGilles CoulierSint-Lukas University*, Belgium
El JuegoBenjamín NaishtatLe Fresnoy, France
Los Minutos, Las HorasMarques RibeiroEICTV, Cuba
MiramareMichaela MüllerALU*, Croatia
The Painting SellersTaulukauppiaatJuho KuosmanenAalto University, Finland
ShelleyAndrew WesmanHarvard University*, USA

* denotes first time a school was selected to compete


Short film competition


The following short films competed for the Short Film Palme d'Or:[3][11]






































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country
Barking IslandChienne d'histoireSerge AvédikianFrance
Bathing MickyMicky baderFrida KempffSweden
BlocksBlokesMarially RivasChile
First AidEzra rishonaYarden KarminIsrael
MayaPedro Pío Martín Pérez
Cuba
MusclesEdward HousdenAustralia
RosaMonica LairanaArgentina
StationEstaçãoMarcia FariaBrazil
To Swallow a ToadJurģis KrāsonsLatvia


Cannes Classics


Cannes Classics places the spotlight on documentaries about cinema and restored masterworks from the past.


World Cinema Foundation














































































English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country

Documentaries about Cinema[20]
...But Film is My Mistress...Men filmen är min älskarinnaStig BjörkmanSweden
Cameraman: The Life and Work of Jack CardiffCraig McCallUnited Kingdom
Hollywood Don't Surf!
Greg MacGillivray, Sam George
United States
ToscanIsabelle Partiot-PieriFrance

Restored prints[21]

The 317th Platoon (1964)
La 317ème sectionPierre SchoendoerfferFrance

The African Queen (1951)
John HustonUSA, U.K.

The Battle of the Rails (1946)
La Bataille du railRené ClémentFrance

La campagne de Cicéron (1989)
Jacques DavilaFrance

The Great Love (1969)
Le grand amourPierre EtaixFrance

Happy Go Lucky (1946)
Au petit bonheurMarcel L'HerbierFrance

Khandhar (1983)
Mrinal SenIndia

Kiss of the Spider Woman (1985)
O Beijo da Mulher-AranhaHector BabencoBrazil, USA

The Leopard (1963)
Il GattopardoLuchino ViscontiItaly

Psycho (1960)
Alfred HitchcockUnited States

The Tin Drum (1979)
Die BlechtrommelVolker SchlöndorffW. Germany, Poland,
Yugoslavia, France

Tristana (1970)
Luis BuñuelSpain, France, Italy

World Cinema Foundation[22]

El-Fallâh el-fasîh (1970, short)
The Eloquent PeasantShadi Abdel Salam

Il ruscello di Ripasottile (1941, short)
Roberto Rossellini

Két Lány Az Utcán (1939)
André de Toth

Mest (1989)
Ermek Shinarbaev

Titash Ekti Nadir Naam (1973)
Ritwik GhatakBangladesh


Cinéma de la Plage


The Cinéma de la Plage is a part of the Official Selection of the festival. The outdoors screenings at the beach cinema of Cannes are open to the public.[23]



























English title
Original title
Director(s)
Country

From Here to Eternity (1953)
Fred ZinnemannUnited States

The Girl Hunters (1963)
(Solo pour une blonde)Roy RowlandU.K.

Rock'n'roll... Of Corse! (2010)

Stéphane Bébert, Lionel Guedj
France

The Silent World (1956)
Le Monde du silence
Louis Malle, Jacques-Yves Cousteau
France, Italy

That Night in Varennes (1982)
La Nuit de VarennesEttore ScolaFrance, Italy

The Two Escobars (2010)

Jeff Zimbalist, Michael Zimbalist
United States


Parallel sections



International Critics' Week


The following films were screened for the 49th International Critics' Week (49e Semaine de la Critique):[24]


Feature film competition




  • Armadillo by Janus Metz (Denmark)


  • Bedevilled by Jang Cheol-so (South Korea)


  • Belle Épine by Rebecca Zlotowski (France)


  • Bi, Don't Be Afraid (Bi, dung so!) by Di Dang Phan (Vietnam, France, Germany)


  • Sandcastle (film) by Boo Junfeng (Singapur)


  • Sound of Noise by Ola Simonsson, Johannes Stjärne Nilsson (Sweden, France)


  • The Myth of the American Sleepover by David Robert Mitchell (United States)


Short film competition




  • A distração by Ivan Cavi Borges, Gustavo Melo (Brazil)


  • Berik by Daniel Joseph Borgman (Denmark)


  • Deeper Than Yesterday by Ariel Kleiman (Australia)


  • Love Patate by Gilles Cuvelier (France)


  • Native Son by Scott Graham (United Kingdom)


  • The Boy Who Wanted to Be a Lion by Alois Di Leo (U.K.)


  • Vasco by Sébastien Laudenbach (France)


Special screening




  • The Names of Love (Le Nom des gens) by Michel Leclerc (France)


  • Copacabana by Marc Fitoussi (France)


  • Rubber by Quentin Dupieux (France)


  • Women Are Heroes by JR (France)


Short and medium length


  • Bastard by Kirsten Dunst (United States)


  • The Clerk’s Tale by James Franco (United States)


  • L’Amour-propre by Nicolas Silhol (France)


  • Cynthia todavía tienes las llaves by Gonzalo Tobal (Argentina)


  • Fracture by Nicolas Sarkissian (France)



Directors' Fortnight


The documentary film Benda Bilili! about disabled Kinshasa street musicians Staff Benda Bilili had its world premiere at the festival, with the group in attendance and performing at the Director's Fortnight opening party.[25]


The following films were screened for the 2010 Directors' Fortnight (Quinzaine des Réalizateurs):[26]


Feature films




  • All Good Children by Alicia Duffy (Ireland, Belgium, France, U.K.)


  • Año bisiesto by Michael Rowe (Mexico)


  • Benda Bilili! by Renaud Barret, Florent de La Tullaye (France)


  • Cleveland versus Wall Street (Cleveland contre Wall Street) by Jean-Stéphane Bron (Switzerland, France)


  • Des filles en noir by Jean Paul Civeyrac (France)


  • Everything Will Be Fine by Christoffer Boe (Denmark, Sweden, France)


  • Illegal (Illégal) by Olivier Masset-Depasse (Belgium, Luxembourg, France)


  • The Invisible Eye (La mirada invisible) by Diego Lerman (Argentina, France, Spain)


  • Le Vagabond by Avishai Sivan (Israel)


  • Le quattro volte by Michelangelo Frammartino (Italy, Germany, Switzerland)


  • Petit bébé Jésus de Flandre by Gust Van den Berghe (Belgium)


  • Picco by Philip Koch (Germany)


  • Pieds nus sur les limaces by Fabienne Berthaud (France)


  • Shit Year by Cam Archer (United States)


  • The Joy by Felipe Bragança, Marina Meliande (Brazil)


  • The Light Thief (Svet-Ake) by Aktan Arym Kubat (Kirghizistan, Germany, France, Netheralnds)


  • The Silent House by Gustavo Hernández (Uruguay)


  • The Tiger Factory by Ming jin Woo (Malaysia, Japan)


  • Two Gates Of Sleep by Alistair Banks Griffin (United States)


  • Love Like Poison (Un poison violent) by Katell Quillévéré (France)


  • You All Are Captains (Todos vós sodes capitáns) by Oliver Laxe (Spain)


  • We Are What We Are (Somos lo que hay) by Jorge Michel Grau (Mexico)


Short films




  • A Silent Child by Jesper Klevenås (Sweden)


  • Light by André Schreuders (Netheralnds)


  • Mary Last Seen by Sean Durkin (United States)


  • Petit tailleur by Louis Garrel (France)


  • Cautare by Ionuţ Piţurescu (Romania)


  • Shadows of Silence by Pradeepan Raveendran (France)


  • Shikasha by Isamu Hirabayashi (Japan)


  • Three Hours by Annarita Zambrano (Italy, France)


  • ZedCrew by Noah Pink (Canada, Zambia)



Awards





Apichatpong Weerasethakul, winner of the 2010 Palme d'Or





Xavier Beauvois, winner of the 2010 Gran Prix





Mahamat-Saleh Haroun at the festival for his film A Screaming Man



Official awards


The Palme d'Or was won by the Thai film Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul.[27] It was the first time that an Asian movie won the award since 1997.[28]Tim Burton, chairman of the jury that determined the award, stated about its decision: "You always want to be surprised by films and this film did that for most of us."[29] French film Of Gods and Men was the runner up.[30] The Xavier Beauvois-directed film had been considered a favourite for the Palme d'Or along with Mike Leigh's Another Year.[31] During the ceremony special attention was paid to Iranian filmmaker Jafar Panahi in hopes of increasing international pressure on the Iranian government to release Panahi from jail.


The following films and people received the 2010 Official selection awards:[2][32]In Competition



  • Palme d'Or: Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives by Apichatpong Weerasethakul


  • Grand Prix: Of Gods and Men by Xavier Beauvois


  • Best Director Award: Mathieu Amalric for On Tour


  • Best Screenplay Award: Poetry by Lee Chang-dong


  • Best Actress Award: Juliette Binoche for Certified Copy


  • Best Actor Award: Javier Bardem for Biutiful & Elio Germano for Our Life


  • Prix du Jury: A Screaming Man by Mahamat-Saleh Haroun

Un Certain Regard



  • Prix Un Certain Regard: Hahaha by Hong Sang-soo

  • Un Certain Regard Jury Prize: October by Daniel Vega, Diego Vega

  • Un Certain Regard Best Actress Award: Adela Sanchez, Eva Bianco, Victoria Raposo for The Lips

Cinéfondation



  • First Prize: – The Painting Sellers by Juho Kuosmanen

  • 2nd Prize: Anywhere Out of the World by Vincent Cardona

  • 3rd Prize: The Fifth Column by Vatche Boulghourjian and I Already am Everything I Want to Have by Dane Komljenk

Golden Camera



  • Caméra d'Or: Año Bisiesto by Michael Rowe

Short films



  • Short Film Palme d'Or: Barking Island by Serge Avédikian

  • Short Film Jury Prize: Bathing Micky by Frida Kempff


Independent awards


FIPRESCI Prizes[33]



  • On Tour (Tournée) by Mathieu Amalric (In Competition)


  • Adrienn Pál (Pál Adrienn) by Ágnes Kocsis (Un Certain Regard)


  • You All Are Captains (Todos vós sodes capitáns) by Oliver Laxe (Directors' Fortnight)

Vulcan Award of the Technical Artist[34]



  • Vulcan Award: Leslie Shatz, Bob Beemer, Jon Taylor (Sound Department) for Biutiful

Ecumenical Jury[35][32]



  • Prize of the Ecumenical Jury: Of Gods and Men (Des hommes et des dieux) by Xavier Beauvois

  • Prize of the Ecumenical Jury - Special Mention: Another Year by Mike Leigh & Poetry (Shi) by Lee Chang-dong

Awards in the frame of International Critics' Week[32]


  • Critics Week Grand Prize: Armadillo by Janus Metz

  • SACD Award: Bi, Don't Be Afraid (Bi, dung so!) by Di Dang Phan

  • ACID Award: Bi, Don't Be Afraid (Bi, dung so!) by Di Dang Phan

  • Young Critics Award: Sound of Noise by Ola Simonsson, Johannes Stjärne Nilsson[34]

  • Canal+ Gran Prix for short film: Berik by Daniel Joseph Borgman[34]

  • Kodak Discovery Award for Best Short Film: Deeper Than Yesterday by Ariel Kleiman

Other awards


  • Regards Jeunes Prize: Heartbeats (Les amours imaginaires) by Xavier Dolan

Association Prix François Chalais



  • Prix François Chalais: Life, Above All by Oliver Schmitz[36]


References




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  11. ^ abcd "63rd Festival de Cannes: Press Conference". Cannes Film Festival. Archived from the original on 14 October 2012. Retrieved 11 May 2010.


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  13. ^ "Kristin Scott Thomas Is Cannes Mistress Of Ceremony, And Woody Will Be There Too". deadline.com. Retrieved 26 May 2017.


  14. ^ ab "Cannes row leads to press boycott". BBC News. BBC Online. 14 April 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2017.


  15. ^ Zeitchik, Steven (9 May 2010). "An ash-colored pall could settle over the Cannes Film Festival". Los Angeles Times. Tribune Company. Retrieved 26 May 2017.


  16. ^ Staff writer (10 May 2010). "Route Irish by Ken Loach, 19th film in the Competition". festival-cannes.com. Cannes Film Festival. Archived from the original on 15 October 2012. Retrieved 11 May 2010.


  17. ^ "All Juries 2010". festival-cannes.fr. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.


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  19. ^ "The Selection Cinéfondation". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 24 July 2017.


  20. ^ "Documentaries about Cinema 2010". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 31 July 2017.


  21. ^ "Cannes Classics - Restored prints". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 25 July 2017.


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  33. ^ "FIPRESCI Awards 2010". fipresci.org. Retrieved 24 July 2017.


  34. ^ abc "Cannes Film Festival Awards for 2010". imdb.com. Retrieved 22 July 2017.


  35. ^ "Jury Œcuménique Palmarés 2010". cannes.juryoecumenique.org. Retrieved 24 July 2017.


  36. ^ "Association Prix François Chalais Cannes 2010". francois-chalais.fr. Retrieved 24 July 2017.



External links




  • Official website Retrospective 2010

  • 63ème Festival de Cannes, cinema-francais.fr


  • Cannes Film Festival:2010 at Internet Movie Database








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