Cannes Day 5-6: "Killing of a Sacred Deer" and "Happy End"
Monday, May 22, 2017 at 8:44PM
NATHANIEL R in Cannes, Emma Thompson, Jean-Luc Godard, Louis Garrel, The Meyerowitz Stories

by Nathaniel R

Previously Day 1 and Days 2-4

How's that hunt for our Palme d'Or and runner up prizes coming? Here are the five latest in competition films to screen.

"The Meyerowitz Stories"
Netflix's second (and possibly last) Palme hopeful in the running is the latest from Noah Baumbach. It's an all star comedy and the cast appeared to be having quite a lot of fun on the red carpet. But, then, everyone always has a good time when Emma Thompson is around. I remember reading an article about her in Premiere once in the 90s and some director said 'if you have a choice between two actors and they're both equally good but one of them is Emma Thompson, you go with Emma Thompson because the set will be a much happier place' or some such. I don't remember it exactly. Word is that Ben Stiller steals the show and Adam Sandler stretches a bit, which is what working with an auteur did for him the last time he tried it (Punch Drunk Love)

Palme d'Or Contender: NO (but people seem to like it)
Reviews: Vulture, The Guardian, Collider

 

Le Redoutable: Loved this self-referential witty & oh so stylish film about Jean-Luc Godard. Lots of Easter eggs for film geeks! #Cannes2017 pic.twitter.com/yyRCNsTsYZ

— Alicia Malone (@aliciamalone) May 22, 2017

 

"Le Redoutable"
Michel Hazanavicius, who won the Best Director Oscar for The Artist is experiencing a warmer reception this time than he did last time he was at Cannes with The Search. Though that's not saying much since people really didn't like the former. He's made a comic French New Wave pastiche about Jean-Luc Godard's early years with perpetually ubiquitous Louis Garrel as the auteur and Stacy Martin as his young lover (the other leading star of the film). Robbing Garrel of his trademark mop of curls to play the male pattern baldness of Godard seems so perverse though! I can't get over it.

Palme d'Or Contender? NO 
Reviews: Vanity Fair, The Guardian, Hollywood News

 

Haneke, Trintignan, Huppert, and Kassovitz at the photocall for Happy End

 

"Happy End"
Michael Haneke is back! Jean-Louis Trintignan and Isabelle Huppert  play father and daughter again as they did in Amour  and apparently this familial drama is also, um, familiar, playing out like a greatest hits package of other Haneke films. People seem to really like it but do I detect a slight underwhelmed-but-I'm-a-Haneke-fan tone to the raves? 

Palme d'Or Contender: UNLIKELY unless they're in the mood to stan for Haneke again
Reviews: The Telegraph, Variety, The Playlist

Haneke: Can anyone outdo my fucked-up Cannes movie HAPPY END, with its cruel perversions and teen sociopaths?

Lanthimos: Hold my DEER

— Kyle Buchanan (@kylebuchanan) May 22, 2017

 

"Killing of a Sacred Deer"
Director Yorgos Lanthimos, who came to fame with Dogtooth and last year blessed the world with his highly original and blackly comic The Lobster, is getting prolific. He's already done shooting his follow up to Killing of a Sacred Deer which is called The Favourite. Deer seems to be splitting critics, some find it a razor sharp brilliant psychological horror film (with echoes of Kubrick?) others are giving it zero stars and calling it "sadism" The film stars Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman as a surgeon and his wife. Their family is coming apart at the seams due to... well, I don't read reviews of movies I don't want spoiled for me. 

Palme d'Or Chances: 50/50. It appears to be extremely divisive... so let's bet it wins something other than the Palme as a way for its haters on the jury to codify its passionate fans on the same jury.
Reviews: VarietyThe Film Stage, The Guardian

THE DAY AFTER (Hong): Sad to report that this is Hong's first ever ba... Who am I kidding, this is great. #Cannes2017

— Jordan Cronk (@JordanCronk) May 22, 2017

 

"The Day After"
This the latest film from Hong Sang Soo the director who holds the title of "Most Revered 'Master' That Nathaniel Doesn't Get At All.' I can usually understand why any of the directors who people start calling 'masters' are revered, even if I don't personally jibe with their aesthetic but he's the exception. I also dislike using the word boring to describe films (it's often lazy criticism designed for people who aren't willing to really watch what a movie that isn't plot focused is telling us visually) but his films even bore me visually!  I haven't read any reviews or seen a trailer but I'm betting this one consists of some sort of romantic relationship, possibly extramarital and vaguely defined, with lots of sitting at tables to eat and walking around parks, and maybe some confusion about whether or not some of it is real or if the chronology is a bit jumbled or merely looping because that's what the ones I've seen have consisted of.

Palme d'Or Chances: GOD I HOPE NOT
Reviews: The Guardian, Screen Anarchy, The Hollywood Reporter

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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