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23 April, 2009

By Nancy TartaglioneSource: Screen

Pedro Almodovar, Lars Von Trier and Quentin Tarantino are among the established names in a Cannes competition line-up that contained few surprises.

This year’s heavyweight line-up, announced by festival director Thierry Fremaux this morning (April 23), sees a strong selection from Asian and good presence from British and French directors.

As previously announced, Disney-Pixar’s animated 3D film Up will open the 62nd festival on May 13 but it will not run in competition. Closing duties will be handled by Jan Kounen’s Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky on Sunday May 24.

Sandwiched in between are titles including Andrea Arnold’s Fish Tank – the UK director won the Jury Prize for Red Road, her first film, in 2006 – Jacques Audiard’s hotly-anticipated Un Prophete, Jane Campion’s Bright Star – Campion is the only woman to ever have won a Palme d’Or and is among three females in competition this year; Isabel Coixet is the third with Map Of The Sounds Of Tokyo.

Other famous names making a trip to the Palais will be Ang Lee with Taking Woodstock, Marco Bellocchio with Vincere, tireless veteran Alain Resnais with Les Herbes Folles, Elia Suleiman with The Time That Remains, Johnnie To with Vengeance, Park Chan-Wook with Thirst and the always controversial Gaspar Noe with Enter The Void.

Notably absent are US titles from the main line-up. With the exception of Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds, the only other US title is Ang Lee’s Taking Woodstock – although the director, who mostly works in the US, is of Taiwanese origin.

Lou Ye, the Chinese director, has a berth in competition with Spring Fever, a film he made clandestinely after being banned from shooting in China when his Summer Palace ran in competition in 2006 against the wishes of Chinese censors.

While it is traditional to put three French films into the competition, there is a slight departure this year. The three French titles -Audiard’s Prophete, Xavier Giannoli’s A L’Origine and Resnais’ Les Herbes Folles – are joined by Noe’s Void which is a French production, shot in Japan in English by a director who originally hails from Argentina.

Meanwhile, To’s Vengeance is a Hong Kong-French co-production and stars French actors Johnny Hallyday and Slyvie Testud, and Tsai Ming-Liang Faces is also a French co-production. The films join Ye’s Fever and Park’s Thirst in a four-strong Asian line-up.

Spain has its presence via Almodovar’s Broken Embraces while the UK bolsters its showing with three films this year Ken Loach’s Looking for Eric – the director’s ninth time in competition – Arnold’s Fish Tank and Campion’s Bright Star which is a UK co-production although the director comes from New Zealand. Italy, the Philippines, Austria, Israel and Denmark are also represented.

In all, there are 20 films in competition and 52 in official selection. The festival received 4,272 films for a 6% uptick over last year. Feature films were down however with 1,670 proposed for 2009 versus 1,792 for 2008’s edition.

Fremaux dedicated the selection this year to Wouter Barendrecht, praising the late co-founder of Fortissimo Films and saying of the industry’s sales and distribution folk, “I’m always surprised how much this community of people works in all the four corners of the world. They are so essential.”

Out-of-competition screenings include Alejandro Amenabar’s Agora, Terry Gilliam’s The Imaginarium Of Dr Parnassus which includes Heath Ledger’s final performance and Robert Guediguian’s L’Armee Du Crime.

Special screenings include Anne Aghion’s documentary My Neighbor, My Killer and an intimate story from Michel Gondry entitled L’Epine Dans Le Coeur.

The midnight screenings, meanwhile, boast a return to the horror genre for Sam Raimi with Drag Me To Hell.

Competition:• Pedro Almodovar – Broken Embraces • Andrea Arnold – Fish Tank • Jacques Audiard – Un Prophete • Marco Bellocchio – Vicenre • Jane Campion – Bright Star • Xavier Giannoli – A L’Origine • Isabel Coixet – Map of the Sounds of Tokyo • Michael Haneke -The White Ribbon • Ang Lee – Taking Woodstock • Ken Loach – Looking for Eric • Lou Ye – Spring Fever • Brillante Mendoza – Kinaray • Gaspar Noe – Enter The Void • Park Chan-wook – Thirst • Alain Resnais – Les Herbes Folles • Elia Suleiman – The Time That Remains • Quentin Tarantino – Inglourious Basterds • Johnnie To – Vengeance • Tsai Ming-liang – Face • Lars Von Trier – Antichrist• Un Certain Regard:• Bong Joon Ho – Mother • Alain Cavalier – Irene • Lee Daniels – Precious • Denis Dercourt- Demain Des L’Aube • Heitor Dhalia – Adrift • Bahman Ghobadi – Nobody Knows About Persian Cats • Ciro Guerra – The Wind Journeys • Mia Hansen-Love – Le Pere De Mes Enfants • Hanno Hofer, Razvan Marculescu, Cristian Mungiu, Constantin Propescu and Ioanna Uricaru – Tales From The Golden Age • Nikolay Khomeriki – Tale In The Darkness • Yorgos Lanthimos -Dogtooth • Pavel Lounguine – Tzar • Raya Martin – Independencia • Corneliu Porumboiu – Police, Adjective • Pen-Ek Ratanaruang – Nymph • Joao Pedro Rodrigues – To Die Like A Man • Haim Tabakman – Eyes Wide Open • Warwick Thornton – Samson & Deliah • Jean Van De Velde – The Silent Army • Hirokazu Kore-ede – Air DollClosing Film:• Jan Kounen – Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky Out of Competition:• Robert Guediguian – L’Armee Du Crime • Agora – Alejandro Amenabar • Terry Gilliam The Imaginarium Of Dr Parnassus Special Screenings:• Stephane Aubier and Vincent Patar – A Town Called Panic • Sam Raimi – Drag Me To Hell • Marina De Van – Ne Te Retourne PasCompetition Jury:• Isabelle Huppert, president (actress, France) • Asia Argento (acress, director, screenwriter, Italy) • Nuri Bilge Ceylan (director, screenwriter, actor,Turkey) • Lee Chang-Dong (director, author, screenwriter, Korea) • James Gray (director, sreenwriter, US) • Hanif Kureishi (author, screenwriting, UK) • Shu Qi (actress, Taiwan)

• Robin Wright Penn (actress, US)