BFF-50 Loach and Malick head but no Tarantino – yet – for Cannes film festival

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Loach and Malick head but no Tarantino – yet – for Cannes film festival

PARIS, April 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Veteran directors Ken Loach and Terrence
Malick head the line-up of a “highly political” Cannes film festival next
month, its director Thierry Fremaux said Thursday.

But the big news was that there was no place — as yet — for Quentin
Tarantino’s much-anticipated “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” starring Brad
Pitt and Leonardo DiCaprio. Fremaux hinted that the maker of “Reservoir Dogs”
could still make it, saying, “We can hope that some films may join us that we
are all waiting before May 14” when the festival starts.

“It is not yet ready,” he told reporters. “It’s a bit of a sprint… we
hope we will have good news to announce (later).”

Loach, 82, who won the top Palme d’Or prize in 2016 with “I, Daniel Blake”
— which he then said was his final film — returns with “Sorry We Missed
You”, an indictment of the gig economy.

The reclusive Malick will premiere his World War II story, “A Hidden Life”
about a German conscientious objector guillotined by the Nazis in 1943.

The world’s biggest film festival, which sees itself as the “Olympics of
cinema”, will open with cult US director Jim Jarmusch’s “The Dead Don’t Die”.

– Almodovar returns –

The zombie comedy stars Bill Murray, Adam Driver, Tilda Swinton and
singers Iggy Pop and Tom Waits.

Korean master Bong Joon-ho of “Okja” and “Snowpiercer” fame is back with a
tragi-comedy film noir called “Parasite” about the growing divide between
rich and poor in his homeland.

Another Cannes regular Pedro Almodovar also returns with his most personal
film yet, “Pain & Glory”, which has already opened to great acclaim in his
native Spain.

Palestine film-maker Elia Suleiman charts his own struggle to find an
alternative homeland in “It Must Be Heaven”.

Fremaux said the festival was full of “political” movies about “daily
life, individuals who battle against adversity. We go into people homes to
tackle ordinary problems.

“The festival isn’t political, it is the artists who are,” he added.

Fremaux said the festival was full of “political” movies about “daily
life, individuals who battle against adversity. We go into people homes to
tackle ordinary problems.

“The festival isn’t political, it is the artists who are,” he added.

“Rocketman”, the biopic of the pop legend Elton John, with Jamie Bell and
Richard Madden, will also be premiered on the Croisette, but out of
competition.

The French film legend Alain Delon, once called the most beautiful man in
the world, and the star of such classics as “The Leopard”, “Monsieur Klein”
and “The Swimming Pool”, will be awarded an honorary Palme d’Or.

The festival, whose jury this year is headed by the Mexican maestro
Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu of “Birdman” and “The Revenant” fame, runs from
May 14 to 25.

BSS/AFP/ARS/1755 hrs