Cannes Winners ‘09: On Stage and Backstage on Closing Night

iw by Eugene Hernandez (May 24, 2009)
Cannes Winners ‘09: On Stage and Backstage on Closing Night
Michael Haneke, director of "The White Ribbon," arriving at the Palais des Festivals for the closing night of the Cannes Film Festival.

Cannes, France—The list of winners is available here at indieWIRE.

Dispatches from tonight’s arrivals, ceremony and backstage press conferences as the 2009 Cannes Film Festival comes to a close.

9:51 p.m.—Jacques Audiard, and then Michael Haneke, make very brief appearances in the press conference room as the night comes to a close. Audiard tips his hat to the crowd, while Haneke offers words of thanks to jury president Isabelle Huppert.

9:41 p.m.—A key question for Gainsbourg and Waltz was their reaction to buzz that both of their films, “Antichrist” and “Inglourious Basterds,” will be edited in the wake of reactions here in Cannes. 

“I don’t know what the film would be like without those shots,” Gainsbourg said tonight, saying she just heard this news.

“I think they are planning to cut them together,” Waltz quipped, picking up from Gainsbourgh, stirring a round of laughther and applause.

9:35 p.m.—“I admire his work, I admire everything he did,” Gainsbourg said tonight, “I know people have different opinions about the film,” she added, “He’s a great artist.”

Jacques Audiard tonight in Cannes. Photo by Eugene Hernandez/indieWIRE

9:26 p.m.—After Brillante Mendoza’s remarks, filmmaker Andrea Arnold, who shared the Prix du Jury with Park Chan Wook, said that she really liked Lars Von Trier’s remarks earlier this week in which he called audiences guests.

“Everyone that comes to see a film is a guest. You are guests and you decide whether you want to be nice guests or bad guests,” Arnold said, pausing, “That’s fine, you can be angry or have feelings about that, reaction is good.”

9:23 p.m.—“I was kind of prepared,” Brillante Mendoza, director of “Kinatay” said, when asked how he handled the divided audience reactions to his film. He said that given the debate he generated with “Serbis” last year, he was ready. And asked whether he was expecting an award, he added, “Did I expect it? Of course, I always expect for the best.”

9:03 p.m.—A journalist just asked the jury to defend their choice of Brillante Mendoza for the best director award, a choice that stirred some boos tonight from critics and writers.

“Because the jury liked it,” juror and filmmaker Nuri Bilge Ceylan said directly, with juror Hanif Kureishi added, “Sometimes good art is hard,” but he qualified, “It’s not something I want to see again, I have to say.”

9:00 p.m.—“Some of [the movies] are very very long,” juror Hanif Kureishi said, stirring laughter in the press room. “And some of them are very weird, I have to say. I saw things that I’ve never seen in my life in these films.”

I have to assume he was referring to Lars Von Trier’s “Antichrist”.

8:55 p.m.—“I always loved him as a director,” Isabelle Huppert said tonight of “White Ribbon” director Michael Haneke.

I asked her what it meant to present this award to Haneke eight years after the two of them had such success here in Cannes with “The Piano Teacher.” “My love for his work was in a sense for his humanity,” she continued, “A humanity that takes a strange path, which makes it even more interesting, an even more fascinating [look] into the human soul.”

8:39 p.m.—Press backstage awaiting the arrival of the jury.

Jurors Lee Chang Dong, Isabelle Huppert, Hanif Kureishi, Robin Wright Penn and Nuri Bilge Ceylan tonight in Cannes. Photo by Eugene Hernandez/indieWIRE

8:28 p.m.—Warwick Thornton, winner of the Camera d’Or said, moments ago, “My life has been a Cinderella story.” Talking about his outback story, the first Aboriginal film to play in Cannes, said just now, “Cinema in a sense saves my life.”

“I’ve only just begun,” Thornton added, “I’ve got so many stories to tell. Cannes and the Camera d’Or is the beginning of a cinderalla story. A journey thrugh cinema.”

8:26 p.m.—The winners, on stage in the press room, chatting about how they alerted their friends back home.

8:23 p.m.—Backstage now, the press conference room is filling up as the media await the arrival of the winners of the Camera d’Or.

8:18 p.m.—A big embrace between filmmaker Michael Haneke and jury President Isabelle Huppert, on stage at the Palais. The two famously worked together 8 years ago on “The Piano Teacher” which won three prizes here in Cannes in 2001, the best actress prize for Huppert, best actor for Benoit Magimel and the Grand Prix runner-up award for the film.

8:09 p.m.—Haneke stands, along with the rest of the audience, to applaud Jacques Audiard, who is also wearing dark sunglasses, on his Grand Prix. Does the Palme belong to Haneke?

 
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posted on May 24, 2009

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