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CANNES 2010 Selection

Hopeful films race against time for Cannes selection

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Rumours are circulating in Paris two weeks ahead of the press conference at which the official selection for the 63rd Cannes Film Festival (May 12-23, 2010) will be unveiled. And uncertainty will reign until April 15 for this year many films are apparently caught up in a race against time to be ready for Cannes.

According to our sources, the race for the Palme d’Or will almost certainly include Tree of Life by US director Terrence Malick; Biutiful by Mexico’s Alejandro González Inárritu (see news); Tamara Drewe [+see also:
film review
trailer
interview: Stephen Frears
film profile
]
by UK director Stephen Frears (see news); Another Year [+see also:
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interview: Mike Leigh
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]
by fellow Brit Mike Leigh; and two Korean films: Poetry by Lee Chang-dong and The Housemaid by Im Sang-soo.

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The competition line-up may also include US director Darren Aronofsky’s Black Swan, Miral by fellow US filmmaker Julian Schnabel, Outrage by Japan’s Takeshi Kitano, and two Argentinean features: Pablo Trapero’s Carancho and Diego Lerman’s Moral Sciences. Hungary also hopes to be selected in extremis with Bela Tarr’s The Turin Horse [+see also:
film review
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interview: Béla Tarr
film profile
]
, or even Kornel Mundruczo’s The Frankenstein Project [+see also:
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]
(see news).

On the French side, the die is not yet cast, although favourites include Olivier Assayas’s Carlos [+see also:
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]
(which would be screened in its long version - see news); Bertrand Tavernier’s La Princesse de Montpensier [+see also:
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]
(see news); and Rachid Bouchareb’s Outside the Law [+see also:
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(see news). Guillaume Canet’s Little White Lies [+see also:
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]
(see news) is an outsider favourite.

Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami’s French/Italian co-production The Certified Copy [+see also:
film review
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]
could be selected out of competition (the fact that its star Juliette Binoche appears on the Cannes 2010 poster seems incompatible with a competition screening), as could Woody Allen’s You Will Meet a Tall Dark Stranger [+see also:
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and Joann Sfar and Antoine Delesvaux’s French animated film The Rabbi’s Cat [+see also:
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]
.

Among the other most-cited possible Croisette contenders (a non-exhaustive list including all sections) are Jean-Luc Godard’s Socialism [+see also:
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]
; Black Heaven [+see also:
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interview: Gilles Marchand, director o…
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]
by France’s Gilles Marchand (see news); Tournée [+see also:
film review
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interview: Mathieu Amalric
interview: Mathieu Amalric
film profile
]
(“Tour”) by fellow French director Mathieu Amalric; Rabbit Hole by US director John Cameron Mitchell; Uncle Boonmee by Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul; The Essence of Killing [+see also:
film review
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interview: Jerzy Skolimowski
film profile
]
by Poland’s Jerzy Skolimowski (see news); Romanian features Aurora [+see also:
film review
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interview: Clara Voda
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]
by Cristi Puiu (see news) and Principles of Life by Constantin Popescu; Adrienn Pal [+see also:
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interview: Agnes Kocsis, director of P…
film profile
]
by Hungary’s Agnes Kocsis (see news); R U There by Dutch filmmaker David Verbeek; and All Good Children by young Brit director Alicia Duffy (see news).

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(Translated from French)

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