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Celebration
of World Cinema at Montreal Fest
Involved in a yearly pitched battle with the Venice and
Toronto festivals over high-end art films, the Montreal World
Film Festival has scored a major coup by nabbing the world premieres
of Claude Chabrol's Merci pour le chocolat and David
Mamet's State
and Main, as well as the international premiere of
Benoît Jacquôt's Sade. Both French flicks will be
part of an official competition which promises to be one of the
strongest in the history of the Montreal event.
The Montreal fest has been criticized in recent years for
lacking in Hollywood glitz. At a time when independent and European
films are squeezed out as ever of commercial screens in North
America, however, with even the number of French films released
commercially at an all time low in predominantly French-speaking
Quebec, the determination of the Montreal festival to keep a genuine
focus on world cinema is actually a strength. Only 17 of the 206
feature films shown this year will be American. The local public
has long recognized the unique value of the fest, by packing most
screenings year in year out, making the Montreal festival arguably
the most publicly attended festival in the world.
Other films offered this year in competition include Combat
d'amour en songe, by Raoul Ruiz (who, amazingly, has another film
competing in Venice); A Handul of Grass, by up-and-coming
German director Roland Suso Richter, already well received at
the Munich fest; Ali Zaoua, by Nabil Ayouch, a rare
Morrocan film; Innocence, by famed Australian auteur
Paul Cox; the Sundance stunner You
Can Count on Me; The Mechanism, by
Yugoslav helmer Djordje Milosavljevic, and local boy Denis Villeneuve's
Maëlstrom, whose first film, Un 32 août sur
la terre, was well received at Cannes and Telluride two
years ago.
Confirmed guests reflect the "world" vocation of the fest:
Chinese diva Gong Li, whose latest film Breaking the Silence
is competing; Om Puri (a truly extraordinary Indian actor, in
the humble opinion of this correspondent), whose Canadian-produced
My Little Devil will have its world premiere; French
leading man Daniel Auteuil, in town for Sade; German
director Völker Schlondorff, who will attend an homage to the
legendary Babelsberg studios, Swedish actor-turned-director Liv
Ullman, a fest devotee whose Cannes contender Faithless
will screen with additional footage showing Ingmar Bergman; and
Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami, who will join the jury. David
Mamet is also most likely to turn up, since he will begin shooting
his next feature in Montreal this month.
The festival will feature 147 North American premieres,
half of which world or international premieres. The potential
gems, which have not played at major festivals thus far, include
Born in Absurdistan (Austria); The Sky Will
Fall (Italy), starring Isabella Rosselini; Brat
2, the summer hit in Russia; Stand by and
Les filles ne savent pas nager (France), La
terre des âmes errantes (France-Cambodia), Vendetta
(Belgium) and no doubt dozens of others. No less than seven new
films from Japan, six from Germany, and four from Iran will have
their international debut.
Scores of films discovered in other festivals earlier this
year will also be on the program, the standouts being Harry,
un ami qui vous veut du bien (France), Les
destinées sentimentales (France), the Karlovy
Vary winner The Big Animal (Poland), Woman
on Top (US) and Burning Man (US), an
outré documentary on an annual bacchanalia in the Nevada desert.
Le goût des autres, the French smash hit of the
year, will open the fest on 25 August. Bootmen (Australia), an
inspirational tale, will close it on 4 September.
FilmFestivals.com
reporter
Dominique Arel
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