Lynne Ramsay's Cannes entry "We Need To Talk About Kevin" has been acquired by Oscilloscope Laboratories. The Tilda Swinton-starring adaptation of Lionel Shriver's award winning novel will be released in time for 2011 Oscar consideration.
Read More »The 2011 Cannes Film Festival has offerined a cinephile's dream of a program, with the likes of Pedro Almodovar, Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, Bruno Dumont, Terrence Malick, Lynne Ramsay, Paolo Sorrentino, Lars Von Trier and Gus Van Sant all screening their latest work. To make things easy ...
Read More »As the 2011 Cannes Film Festival comes to a close, indieWIRE's poll of 19 critics and bloggers has made clear the critics' favorites of this year's festival. Hundreds of grades have been entered, leaving six films in the official competiton with a "B+" level average: Terrence Malick's Palme d'Or win...
Read More »This weekend saw the 64th Cannes Film Festival come to a close, with Terrence Malick's long-awaited opus "The Tree of Life" taking the festival's top honor. indieWIRE was on the scene to review the anticipated titles and to report on everything from the Lars von Trier debacle,...
Read More »After 12 long days and even more sleepless nights for hundreds of people, the Cannes Film Festival finally came to an end Sunday. As with each year at this massive spectacle of media chaos and cinematic discovery, many moments and images (not to mention movies!) will continue to reverberate.
Read More »Editor's note: A version of this review originally ran during the Cannes Film Festival. "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia" opens at Film Forum on Wednesday.
Read More »Since kicking off last Wednesday with the world premiere of Woody Allen's well received "Midnight in Paris," the 64th Festival de Cannes has churned out one anticipated title after another. indieWIRE's Eric Kohn has been busy on the scene from day one of the event to review a slew of titles. Check o...
Read More »Terrence Malick's "The Tree of Life" took the Palme d'Or Sunday night in Cannes, though the notoriously shy director did not take to the stage to accept the prize. The Dardennes' "The Kid with a Bike" shared the Grand Prix with "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia" by Nuri Bilge Ceylan, and Nicolas Winding...
Read More »Editor's note: A version of this review originally ran during the Cannes Film Festival. "Outside Satan" opens Thursday in limited release.
Read More »Andrei Zvyaguintsev starts and ends his third feature, "Elena," with the symbolic image of a barren tree, an accurate reflection of the dreary narrative sandwiched between those two shots. All three of the Russian director's features - alongside "Elena," he directed "The Return" and "The Banishment"...
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Posted 12 minutes ago
RT @indiewire: James Gray's Marion Cotillard-Starring Drama 'The Immigrant' Is the Most Divisive Film in Cannes Competition http://t.co/fFS2TMGGsM #cannes
Posted 14 minutes ago
RT @indiewire: James Gray's Marion Cotillard-Starring Drama 'The Immigrant' Is the Most Divisive Film in Cannes Competition http://t.co/fFS2TMGGsM #cannes
Posted 19 minutes ago
RT @indiewire: James Gray's Marion Cotillard-Starring Drama 'The Immigrant' Is the Most Divisive Film in Cannes Competition http://t.co/fFS2TMGGsM #cannes
Posted 21 minutes ago