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Police accuse bank robbery suspect of gobbling up note (with dashcam video)
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By Jill Lawless
Associated Press
POSTED: 01:03 p.m. EDT, May 13, 2009
CANNES, France (AP) — The evening gowns glittered, the red carpet was unfurled — and the 3-D glasses were at hand as the 62nd Cannes Film Festival opened Wednesday.
Organizers were hoping the opener, the soaring 3-D adventure "Up," would provide a buoyant start before the festival plunges into 12 days of movies that take in passion, murder, Korean vampires and a band of Nazi-hunters led by Brad Pitt.
Soon members of the jury, led by French actress Isabelle Huppert would be wrangling over which auteurs — from a slate that includes Pedro Almodovar, Ang Lee, Quentin Tarantino and Ken Loach — should receive Cannes' coveted prizes. But on Wednesday, Huppert was in a gentle mood.
"I don't think we are here to judge," she said. "I think we are here to love films — and to see what we love more than others."
Huppert is one of only a handful of women ever to head the jury at the world's most prestigious film festival. She said the numbers didn't bother her: her predecessors — who include Sophia Loren and Liv Ullmann — were "women who count for a lot."
Fellow juror Hanif Kureishi, the British screenwriter of "My Beautiful Laundrette" and "The Mother," was more concerned with another omission.
"I'm not aware we've ever had a black or Asian president of the jury," he said. "It will be interesting to see when that will occur."
Politics is never far away from the art at Cannes — and neither is spectacle.
Scores of celeb-watchers waited patiently outside Cannes' waterside film complex Wednesday, hoping for a glimpse of the stars — any stars. Few knew who was due to arrive, but most didn't seem to mind.
"I want to see Angelina Jolie on the red carpet," said Corinne Besnier, who traveled hundreds of miles (kilometers) from Reims in northern France. "And Johnny Hallyday" — the French rock star who plays a killer in Hong Kong's director Johnnie To's "Vengeance."
Hundreds of brightly colored helium balloons festooned the building in honor of Disney and Pixar Animation's "Up," the story of an old man and a young boy who float off to South America in an airborne house.
There's also plenty of weightier fare among the 20 films in competition, including Tarantino's World War II epic "Inglourious Basterds," with Pitt as leader of a group of Jewish soldiers hunting down Nazis.
Gloom and gore abound: Lars von Trier's "Antichrist," about a couple's trip to the woods that turns chilling; Park Chan-Wook's "Thirst," in which a priest turns bloodsucker; and Gaspar Noe's "Enter the Void," billed in the festival program as a nightmarish "hallucinatory maelstrom."
On a gentler note, Jane Campion's "Bright Star" depicts the poet John Keats in love, while Lee's "Taking Woodstock" set on the fringes of the seminal '60s rock fest.
The lineup looks strong, but festival organizers and industry attendees are apprehensive about how the global recession will affect the event.
Festival director Thierry Fremaux said he expects attendance to be up slightly from last year, but Vanity Fair magazine has canceled its annual Cannes party, and some soirees are rumored to have swapped champagne for sparkling wine.
Off the red carpet, there is an apprehensive mood in the sprawling festival market where movie deals are done.
"We all know the world is not going very well and the crisis is here, for the industry of cinema like for the industry of cars," Fremaux said.
But for one evening, stars and festival-goers ignored the gloom, walked the famous red carpet in their evening finery — and promptly donned clunky plastic glasses to watch the 3-D opener.
John Lasseter, the chief creative force behind "Up" makers Pixar Animation, said coming to Cannes was one of the highlights of his career. "Up" is the first animated film to open the festival.
"The thing I'm looking forward to the most is seeing that great image of all these people tonight in their tuxedos, bow ties and gowns, wearing 3-D glasses in that big theater," he said. "That's going to be a good picture."
CANNES, France (AP) — The evening gowns glittered, the red carpet was unfurled — and the 3-D glasses were at hand as the 62nd Cannes Film Festival opened Wednesday.
Organizers were hoping the opener, the soaring 3-D adventure "Up," would provide a buoyant start before the festival plunges into 12 days of movies that take in passion, murder, Korean vampires and a band of Nazi-hunters led by Brad Pitt.
Soon members of the jury, led by French actress Isabelle Huppert would be wrangling over which auteurs — from a slate that includes Pedro Almodovar, Ang Lee, Quentin Tarantino and Ken Loach — should receive Cannes' coveted prizes. But on Wednesday, Huppert was in a gentle mood.
"I don't think we are here to judge," she said. "I think we are here to love films — and to see what we love more than others."
Huppert is one of only a handful of women ever to head the jury at the world's most prestigious film festival. She said the numbers didn't bother her: her predecessors — who include Sophia Loren and Liv Ullmann — were "women who count for a lot."
Fellow juror Hanif Kureishi, the British screenwriter of "My Beautiful Laundrette" and "The Mother," was more concerned with another omission.
"I'm not aware we've ever had a black or Asian president of the jury," he said. "It will be interesting to see when that will occur."
Politics is never far away from the art at Cannes — and neither is spectacle.
Scores of celeb-watchers waited patiently outside Cannes' waterside film complex Wednesday, hoping for a glimpse of the stars — any stars. Few knew who was due to arrive, but most didn't seem to mind.
"I want to see Angelina Jolie on the red carpet," said Corinne Besnier, who traveled hundreds of miles (kilometers) from Reims in northern France. "And Johnny Hallyday" — the French rock star who plays a killer in Hong Kong's director Johnnie To's "Vengeance."
Hundreds of brightly colored helium balloons festooned the building in honor of Disney and Pixar Animation's "Up," the story of an old man and a young boy who float off to South America in an airborne house.
There's also plenty of weightier fare among the 20 films in competition, including Tarantino's World War II epic "Inglourious Basterds," with Pitt as leader of a group of Jewish soldiers hunting down Nazis.
Gloom and gore abound: Lars von Trier's "Antichrist," about a couple's trip to the woods that turns chilling; Park Chan-Wook's "Thirst," in which a priest turns bloodsucker; and Gaspar Noe's "Enter the Void," billed in the festival program as a nightmarish "hallucinatory maelstrom."
On a gentler note, Jane Campion's "Bright Star" depicts the poet John Keats in love, while Lee's "Taking Woodstock" set on the fringes of the seminal '60s rock fest.
The lineup looks strong, but festival organizers and industry attendees are apprehensive about how the global recession will affect the event.
Festival director Thierry Fremaux said he expects attendance to be up slightly from last year, but Vanity Fair magazine has canceled its annual Cannes party, and some soirees are rumored to have swapped champagne for sparkling wine.
Off the red carpet, there is an apprehensive mood in the sprawling festival market where movie deals are done.
"We all know the world is not going very well and the crisis is here, for the industry of cinema like for the industry of cars," Fremaux said.
But for one evening, stars and festival-goers ignored the gloom, walked the famous red carpet in their evening finery — and promptly donned clunky plastic glasses to watch the 3-D opener.
John Lasseter, the chief creative force behind "Up" makers Pixar Animation, said coming to Cannes was one of the highlights of his career. "Up" is the first animated film to open the festival.
"The thing I'm looking forward to the most is seeing that great image of all these people tonight in their tuxedos, bow ties and gowns, wearing 3-D glasses in that big theater," he said. "That's going to be a good picture."
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