Cannes Film Festival: Red Carpet Roundup
The best fashion from a festival with a preponderance of photo ops.
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The best fashion from a festival with a preponderance of photo ops.
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Recent releases like “American Fiction” and “The American Society of Magical Negroes” have used absurdist humor to examine race. But they have also depicted narrow views of Blackness.
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The festival opened with questions for the jury about Indigenous representation, #MeToo rumors and other timely topics.
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Playing the title character in “Furiosa,” the 28-year-old star says, “I’ve never been more alone than making that movie.”
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Cannes Film Festival: 5 Things to Look for
With the most prestigious festival in the world starting Tuesday, here are the movies, artists and events we’ll be keeping an eye on.
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Roger Corman’s Best Movies: A Streaming Guide
The producer and director ran what was essentially a trade school for future stars and filmmakers like Jack Nicholson, Francis Ford Coppola and Pam Grier.
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For This Director, There’s No Such Thing as Too Much Blood
The director Coralie Fargeat’s films don’t shy away from violence and gore, including her latest which is vying for the top prize at Cannes.
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At Cannes, Indian Filmmakers Show There Is More Than Just Bollywood
This year’s edition of the annual film festival features a prominent presence of Indian stories and storytellers that celebrates the country’s independent cinema.
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How Should an Amy Winehouse Movie Be?
Several depictions of the singer’s life have explored her tense relationship with fame. The new biopic “Back to Black” instead centers her romantic life.
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The actress is back in concert mode at 76, and doing new material. She’s also looking forward to a bold new take on “Sunset Boulevard.”
By Laura Collins-Hughes
Newly restored, Horace Ové’s film about a Trinidadian family in London makes a triumphant return to the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
By J. Hoberman
Mohammad Rasoulof, known for the award-winning “There Is No Evil,” had been barred from leaving Iran after his work criticized Iran’s authoritarian rule.
By Emma Bubola
A stage adaptation of the film is planned for next spring, with Clooney playing the journalist Edward R. Murrow.
By Michael Paulson
Ms. Backlinie, a stuntwoman, appeared in the terrifying opening scene of the 1975 blockbuster in which a great white shark attacks.
By Johnny Diaz
Film can be influential in strange ways. The HBO series and follow-up wouldn’t have been made if a killer hadn’t taken a liking to a fictional portrayal.
By Alissa Wilkinson
He had hundreds of horror, science fiction and crime films to his credit. He also helped start the careers of Martin Scorsese, Francis Ford Coppola and many others.
By Aljean Harmetz
Her first stunt was riding a horse bareback down a cliff when she was 9. She went on to soar on the hit TV series “Wonder Woman” and in many other places.
By Penelope Green
While not receiving the same attention as the main competition, the sidebar is where you often glimpse the future of cinema.
By A.J. Goldmann
Those familiar with her menagerie of grotesques, her views of Southern society, her tortured faith and inner contradictions will get what his film is doing.
By Alissa Wilkinson
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