Exotic dancer drama, Anora, wins Cannes top prize | Arts and Culture News

Anora, a darkly funny and touching drama about a young exotic dancer who becomes involved with a Russian oligarch’s son, has won the Cannes Film Festival’s top prize, the Palme d’Or.

The film by US director Sean Baker beat the 21 other films in the competition lineup, including entries by established directors like Francis Ford Coppola and David Cronenberg.

Jury members including US actor Lily Gladstone and Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-Eda have said they are well aware their decision could make or break a director’s career.

As head of the jury, Barbie director Greta Gerwig praised Anora as an “incredible, human and humane film that captured our hearts”.

Baker’s win has made him one of the leading voices of American indie cinema. He dedicated the film to all sex workers.

“This literally has been my singular goal for the past 30 years, so I’m not really sure what I’m going to do with the rest of my life,” he said, while also thanking the film’s star, Mikey Madison, as well as his wife and producer.

Madison plays the character of the title, who meets Vanya, the immature son of a Russian oligarch with seemingly unlimited money, while working at a strip club.

Vanya, played by Mark Eydelshteyn, hires Anora to be his girlfriend for a week, deciding on a whim to take his private plane to party in Las Vegas, where they get married.

That decision upsets his disapproving parents so much that they jet over from Russia to ensure he gets an annulment.

US director Sean Baker poses during a photocall for the film, Anora, at the 77th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France [Loic Venance/AFP]

The second-place Grand Prix went to All We Imagine as Light, the first Indian entry in 30 years.

It wowed critics with its poetic monsoon-set portrayal of two women who have migrated to Mumbai to work as nurses.

Emilia Perez also won the third-place Jury Prize for its French director, Jacques Audiard.

And a devastating Iranian film about a family torn apart by the country’s recent women-led protests, The Seed of the Sacred Fig was given a special jury prize for “drawing attention to unsustainable injustice”.

Its director Mohammad Rasoulof, 51, fled Iran to avoid a lengthy prison sentence just before the festival.

Rasoulof said his heart was with the film’s crew, “still under the pressure of the secret services back in Iran”.

“I am also very sad, deeply sad, to see the disaster experienced by my people every day … the Iranian people live under a totalitarian regime,” he said.

Cannes
Indian director Payal Kapadia, centre, celebrates on stage with her cast Indian actress Chhaya Kadam, left, Indian actress Divya Prabha, second left, and Indian actress Kani Kusruti, right, after she was awarded the Grand Prix for the film, All We Imagine as Light, during the Closing Ceremony at the 77th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes [Christophe Simon/AFP]

The 77th edition of the festival on the French Riviera, which began on May 14, saw several highly charged feminist and political movies.

A trans woman won best actress for the first time, as Karla Sofia Gascon took the award for the audacious musical Emilia Perez, in which she plays a Mexican narco boss who has a sex change.

The jury shared it between Gascon and her co-stars Zoe Saldana and Selena Gomez – saying they were rewarding the “harmony of sisterhood” – though only Gascon was at the ceremony.

She dedicated it to “all the trans people who are suffering”.

“We all have the opportunity to change for the better, to be better people,” she said.

“If you have made us suffer, it is time for you also to change.”

Meanwhile, there were fewer meaty roles for men this year.

But Jesse Plemons took the prize for Yorgos Lanthimos’s bizarro series of short stories, Kinds of Kindness, though he was not present to accept it.

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Slum to stardom: Indonesian film director Joko Anwar is riding high | Cinema News

Medan, Indonesia – Indonesian film director Joko Anwar is a busy man.

He is on location in the city of Bandung, shooting “a new project”, the details of which he refuses to divulge, while also wrapping up post-production on another film to be released “soon”.

At the same time, he is doing press for his latest smash-hit horror flick Siksa Kubur (Grave Torture), which was released in Indonesia on April 11 and has already sold almost 4 million tickets – putting it on track to join the top 10 highest grossing Indonesian films of all time.

“Can you give me 10 minutes,” he apologises about 20 minutes into the phone interview, having said that he was on set but not that he was actually between takes. “I just need to shoot this scene.”

It is perhaps no surprise that Anwar, one of Indonesia’s most celebrated film directors, is good at multitasking – particularly if the rave reviews of Siksa Kubur, which he wrote, directed and marketed, are anything to go by.

The film tells the story of a young girl Sita (played by Widuri Puteri) and her brother Adil (Muzakki Ramdhan). It begins in 1997 when the siblings witness their parents, who own a bakery, die in a suicide bombing.

Joko Anwar with the cast of A Copy of my Mind at the Venice International Film Festival in 2015 [Andrea Merola/EPA]

The bomber, who steps into the bakery moments before detonating the bomb, plans to die as a martyr – believing he will go straight to heaven and avoid being tortured in his grave.

“The concept of grave torture does not exist in other religions – it is uniquely Muslim,” Anwar explained.

“Muslims believe that, when you die, you will be questioned by two angels about your life. If you don’t do well, you will be tortured in your grave.”

After watching her parents die at the hands of a man who believes he can evade sin even as he murders innocent bystanders, Sita becomes obsessed with proving that grave torture does not exist and that religion is primarily a form of fear-mongering.

It is a sensitive topic in Indonesia, where almost 90 percent of the country’s 270 million people are Muslim, but Anwar, himself a practising Muslim, says that he did not want the film to be “judgemental”.

“We tried to treat the topic with the greatest respect and not disparage anyone. We were just throwing out questions and hoping that there would be a discussion. We wanted the film to be an experience that led to reflection,” he said.

The idea for Siksa Kubur was percolating in Anwar’s mind for “a long time” before it came to fruition.

“I wanted to examine the relationship between religion and people. Since I was a child, I have had questions about belief and religion, which I tried to explain to the audience through these characters.”

One of these characters is the head of the Islamic boarding school that the orphaned Sita and Adil attend, and who abuses the young boys in his care.

Anwar wrote the screenplay following a series of high-profile cases of abuse at religious institutions across Indonesia, including Muslim and Christian schools.

“Teachers at religious schools use religion as their identity, so I wanted to ask the question: Why are they doing that then?” he said.

“The theme of abuse at religious institutions was based on a very relevant issue in Indonesia.”

‘Gotham City’

Like Sita and Adil, Anwar’s childhood was difficult.

He was born in 1976 in the city of Medan, the provincial capital of North Sumatra.

His father worked as a pedicab driver, a backbreaking job riding a bicycle with a passenger cab around the densely populated city, while his mother sold fabric in a local market.

Anwar grew up in what he describes as “a slum named Amplas”.

Located in the heart of Medan, Amplas is the city’s main transit terminal, clogged with long-distance buses ferrying passengers across Sumatra and beyond.

Christine Hakim got her part in Siksa Kubur after a chance meeting with Anwar in a hotel lobby [Courtesy of Joko Anwar]

Like many transit hubs, Amplas has long had a reputation for a certain amount of vice, filled with pickpockets and ticket touts, grifters and traffickers – serviced by open-air shacks that offer a cheap local moonshine made from the fermented sap of toddy palms.

Across the rest of Indonesia, Medan also has a nickname: Gotham City, after the crime-ridden metropolis in the Batman comics.

Anwar, a comic book fan, laughs when reminded of the moniker and agrees that Medan is a tough place to live. Amplas, in particular, he says, was “not conducive to a child”.

By the age of 14, the majority of Anwar’s peers were either “in prison, married because they got someone pregnant, or consumed by drugs and crime. I escaped by watching films”.

From the age of six, Anwar would make an arduous 45-minute journey on foot to a rundown “bioskop rakyat” (community cinema), which sold cheap tickets for local Indonesian films and kung-fu movies from Hong Kong.

Sometimes, he had the few rupiahs he needed for a ticket and could go inside, but at other times, he did not have enough or the sellers refused entry to a child on their own. On those occasions, Anwar would stand on his tiptoes and peek through the ventilation shaft of the cinema, which did not have air conditioning and was cooled by fans.

“That way, I could see about three-quarters of the screen, and I discovered that there were different worlds other than my own,” he recalled.

His dream of attending film school, however, proved elusive when his parents could not afford the fees, and instead, Anwar went to the Institute of Technology in Bandung where he studied aeronautical engineering before becoming a journalist and film critic for the Jakarta Post.

Once there, he interviewed filmmaker Nia Dinata, who helped him get hired as an assistant director for the 2003 film Biola Tak Berdawai (The Stringless Violin).

In 2003, Dinata and Anwar co-wrote the satire Arisan! (The Gathering!) – “the first film in Indonesia to depict homosexual relationships in a positive light” – and won awards at the Bandung Film Festival, the Citra Awards and the MTV Indonesian Movie Awards.

The accolades kept coming.

In 2005, Anwar made his directorial debut with Janji Joni (Joni’s Promise), about a film reel delivery driver named Joni (Nicholas Saputra) who meets a girl who will only reveal her name if he successfully delivers a film reel while racing through Jakarta’s notorious traffic.

In 2009, Anwar released Pintu Terlarang (The Forbidden Door), which TIME Magazine film critic Richard Corliss said could be “Anwar’s calling card for international employment, if only Hollywood moguls wanted something out of their own narrow range”.

His fifth feature film, A Copy of My Mind, was the only film from Southeast Asia to be screened at the 2015 Venice Film Festival and, in 2019, his superhero movie Gundala premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.

In 2020, Anwar’s folk-horror film Impetigore was announced as Indonesia’s official submission to the 2021 Academy Awards.

Joko Anwar is a regular on the film festival circuit [File: Morgan Lieberman/Getty Images via AFP]

Christine Hakim, an actor, producer and activist often referred to as the “grande dame of Indonesian cinema”, has been acting since 1973, and worked with Anwar for the first time on Impetigore.

“He’s amazing, very special,” the 67-year-old told Al Jazeera. “I was not a horror film actor when I met him. I don’t like jump scares and I don’t like horror films,” she said, laughing.

But a chance meeting in a hotel lobby, during which Anwar pitched her the part, changed her mind.

“I knew he was one of the best directors in Indonesia, which is why I agreed,” she said.

When Hakin saw the script for Impetigore, she says she was astonished.

“In my 40 years working in the film industry, there had never been a director who had written the entire backstory of my character for me. Usually, as an actor, I had to interpret and find that myself, doing all my own research,” she said.

“I thought he was so serious.”

Hakim also has a role in Siksa Kubur, in which her character dies after becoming entangled in a washing machine that spins out of control.

Originally, Hakim’s manager tried to break the news about the washing machine gently.

“Of course, I started screaming. I said, ‘Are you joking? I’m too old for this’.”

Yet when she read the rich and complex script – which tells the story of Hakim’s character suffering a dreadful psychological blow that requires her to “dig deep to concentrate and find the level of stress required” – she changed her mind

“I knew Joko wouldn’t do anything to put me in danger and I felt comfortable after he explained the role to me in detail,” she said.

“I don’t think I would have ever considered acting in horror films had it not been for Joko.”

A film fan

Is there an overarching theme in Anwar’s films, from the upbeat highs of Janji Joni to the shadowy depths of Siksa Kubur?

He says there is: family dynamics.

“I always want to examine what happens if you have a ‘good’ family or a ‘bad’ family and how that plays out in society,” he explained.

As the youngest of three siblings, with an older sister and brother, Anwar says he “grew up without a father figure”.

“My father basically never talked to me. It was a dysfunctional family, but I survived and used it as my inspiration. I hope, in turn, to inspire others. In the end, it was a blessing in disguise,” he said.

The cast and crew of Siksa Kubur on location [Courtesy of Joko Anwar]

Anwar’s mother died in 2009 and his father the following year, having both lived to see some of his success, although they struggled to understand his films.

“We didn’t talk about them,” he said. “They were always busy and left me to my own devices. They never stopped me from doing anything, but they didn’t praise me either.”

Thomas Barker, an honorary associate professor at the Humanities Research Centre of the Australian National University, who specialises in the cultural sociology of Southeast Asian screen industries, describes Anwar as “a unique personality in Indonesian cinema”.

“The development of his career and his work traces the development of the Indonesian film industry itself over the past 20 years. He’s also a film fan, meaning he has a lot of film knowledge to draw on and this is evident in his work.

“I think this gives his work a cinematic depth and intertextuality. He understands the form of cinema and can pull in ideas from a whole range of sources.”

He adds that Anwar is “helping to elevate Indonesian cinema in a way that makes it more palatable to an international audience”, which can be demonstrated through his success at international film festivals and his work for international companies and global streaming services.

“This is not an easy skill, especially in horror which can be quite specific to a culture in terms of its characters, fears and monsters,” Barker said.

Of all his work, Anwar is most proud of Siksa Kubur, which he describes as his most personal film as well as the one that has elicited the most discussion.

“Audiences have had so many theories about the film and what it means, because we didn’t give it a neat conclusion and left it up to them.”

While Anwar is still riding high on the success of Siksa Kubur, he also has an upcoming Netflix series named Nightmares and Daydreams that tackles a rare genre in Indonesian cinema: science fiction.

Anwar and the cast on the set of the bakery between takes [Courtesy of Joko Anwar]

Anwar says the Indonesian film industry has one of the biggest potential markets in the world, although some skills are still lacking.

“We need more film schools, because lots of people want to enter the industry and don’t know where to study,” he said. “We need more film schools across all of Southeast Asia.”

Despite the hurdles, the industry continues to grow, which Anwar sees as “a good sign commercially”.

Asked if the Indonesian film industry is in good health, he pauses before answering.

“I wouldn’t say that the Indonesian film industry is in good health,” he said.

“It would say it is extremely healthy.”

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Oppenheimer sweeps Golden Globes taking best drama, actor and director | Cinema News

Christopher Nolan’s epic about the atomic bomb had eight nominations compared with nine for the box office blockbuster Barbie.

Oppenheimer, one of the biggest box office hits of 2023, has won multiple Golden Globes, as Hollywood kicked off its annual awards season.

Irish actor Cillian Murphy took home best male actor for his portrayal of scientist J Robert Oppenheimer in the film about the development of the atomic bomb.

The film was named best drama, Christopher Nolan the best director and Robert Downey Jr the best male supporting actor.

“I was in the hands of a visionary director, a master,” Murphy said as he accepted the Golden Globe on Sunday night.

Cillian Murphy won best male actor for his portrayal of scientist J Robert Oppenheimer [Universal Pictures via AP Photo]

Indigenous actor Lily Gladstone, a firm favourite, won best actress in a drama film for her role in Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon.

The gothic comedy-drama Poor Things, from celebrated Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos, was named best film comedy or musical, and its star, Emma Stone, best actress in a film comedy or musical.

The Globes ceremony marks the start of Hollywood’s annual awards season, which culminates with the Oscars on March 10. Overhauled after a diversity and ethics scandal in 2021, the Globes recognise the best in film and television and brought the stars together for the first time after six months of strikes by actors and writers in 2023.

In television, the drama series Succession was named best television drama and took the top acting awards for its final season about the high-stakes battle for control of a global media empire. Kieran Culkin, who played the wayward son Roman Roy, landed the award for best actor, while Australian Sarah Snook won best actress. British actor Matthew Macfadyen took home best supporting actor for his role as her fictional husband, Tom Wambsgans.

The cast of Succession celebrates winning best television drama. Sarah Snook (third left), Kieran Culkin (third right) and Matthew Macfadyen (right) also took home acting awards [Mario Anzuoni/Reuters]

Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri, meanwhile, were recognised for their leading roles in the television comedy The Bear, while road-rage saga Beef picked up best actor and actress limited series awards for Ali Wong and Steven Yeun.

 

Several Hollywood legends, from Meryl Streep to Robert De Niro and Jodie Foster, all Globe nominees vying for Oscars this year, were among those on the red carpet for the revamped awards.

Pop superstar Taylor Swift was also at the ceremony where she was nominated for best song.

That award went to Billie Eilish for What Was I Made For? which she wrote for Barbie.

The satire on misogyny and female empowerment made more than $1bn in ticket sales and was nominated for nine awards including best comedy and best director for Greta Gerwig.

Billie Eilish and her brother Finneas O’Connell accepting the award for best original song What Was I Made For? from the film Barbie [Sonja Flemming/CBS via AP]

It went home with the newly created trophy for box office achievement.

Among the other winners were the French courtroom drama Anatomy of a Fall, which won best screenplay and best film not in English, and The Boy and the Heron, which won best animated film for Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki.

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Tunisian film producer Dora Bouchoucha: ‘Free speech is threatened’ | Cinema

When she speaks in English, Dora Bouchoucha’s lilting voice still holds traces of her time in the United Kingdom.

Leaning towards her camera, she says: “I need to be touched. I like films that reveal the hidden part of a character.”

The Tunisian film producer is one of the most innovative and respected figures in Tunisian cinema and has mentored many young directors to find their path and message.

“I like plots that delve into how humans are perceived. We live in a culture where, as long as things are hidden behind a door, everything is fine.”

Her approach and keen eye for talent have resulted in the stellar success of Tunisian directors like Raja Amari and Mohamed Ben Attia, who have seen their films selected for international festivals around the world.

Bouchoucha spoke to Al Jazeera via video conference after one of her workshops for Ateliers Sud Écriture, which fosters emerging Arab and African filmmakers. Relaxed and expressive, she was happy to talk.

For her, film production came relatively late, long after her first love, literature, and it was a chance conversation with Tunisian director Moufida Tlatli in the mid-1990s that led to her first experience on a film set.

“Moufida shared with me the script of Les silences du palais [The Silences of the Palace, 1994]. After we discussed it, Moufida asked me to join the crew on set,” Bouchoucha explains.

Les silences du palais was the first feature film by a female director from the Arab world to find international success.

On set, Bouchoucha worked with one of Tunisia’s most celebrated producers, Ahmed Baha Eddine Attia, who introduced her to much of the profession.

During the course of the conversation, she described the way she has used her career to engage and inspire new generations of filmmakers.

Bouchoucha was born in 1957 in Manouba, near Tunis. Her father was the director of a hospital, and her mother ran an orphanage.

After a challenging education at the predominantly male Collège Sadiki in Tunis, she moved to the UK.

“After my secondary schooling, I went to England to study English,” she says to me. But “I’ve always wanted to come back to my homeland. So I finished my higher education in English literature at the University of Tunis.”

Dora Bouchoucha, second from left, with jury members of the Berlin International Film Festival on February 18, 2017, in Berlin, Germany [Andreas Rentz/Getty Images for Glashuette Original]

Unearthing talents 

Following the success of The Silences of the Palace, Bouchoucha co-founded Nomadis Images, with the director Ibrahim Letaïef in 1995.

Through this production company, located to the north of Tunisia’s capital in La Marsa, she has realised numerous local and international feature-length, short and documentary films, as well as having helped unearth countless talented filmmakers.

Discounting the trends and fads of much of modern cinema, Bouchoucha draws inspiration from current issues, such as memory, political violence and self-liberation.

Her first productions with Nomadis Images were Raja Amari’s short films, April (1998) and One Evening in July (2000).

Afterwards, she continued to produce and co-produce Amari’s work, including the acclaimed Red Satin (2002), which tells the story of a widowed Tunisian housewife who takes up belly dancing as a form of liberation for the female body.

However, despite being a relatively lone female voice, Bouchoucha rejects the idea that she may have been the victim of discrimination.

“Looking back, I didn’t have the impression that I had to fight battles. I mingled a lot. I wouldn’t say that it was difficult to be a producer because I was a woman,” she recalls.

What discrimination she did encounter, such as being labelled, along with Amari, the “scandalous women of Tunisia” when Red Satin was released is remembered with wry amusement rather than resentment.

In addition to her own work, Bouchoucha has also worked alongside Tunisian director Mohamed Ben Attia’s transition from short fiction films to feature film, co-producing Hedi, a Wind of Freedom (2016) with the Dardenne brothers’ production company, Les Films du Fleuve.

Hedi, a Wind of Freedom, went on to win the Best First Feature Award and the Silver Bear for Best Actor at the 66th Berlin International Film Festival.

Along with Amari, Bouchoucha has continued to work with Ben Attia, producing his subsequent films, Dear Son (2018) and the recently added Behind the Mountains (2023), the story of a man breaking free from his banal environment and dismissing society’s banal principles, codes and institutions.

Festivals, juries and collaborations 

In 1997, Bouchoucha founded Sud Écriture, a small association which mentors emerging African and Arab filmmakers, together with her Nomadis Images colleague Lina Chaabane and the now-retired Annie Djamal.

As the industry grows and gains more international appreciation, record numbers of African films have had their premieres in international film festivals, such as this year in Cannes.

“In 26 years of activity, the Sud Écriture workshops have trained more than 200 emerging filmmakers from the African Continent and the Arab World,” Bouchoucha says.

Asmae El Moudir, director of The Mother of All Lies (2023), which is Morocco’s entry for the Best International Film at the 96th Academy Awards, attended the workshop series. The hybrid documentary directed, written and co-produced by Asmae El Moudir is inspired by bread riots in El Moudir’s home city of Casablanca in 1981, and world premiered at Cannes this year.

Since 2011, Sud Écriture has also regularly organised a workshop for six national projects, with the support of the French Institute of Tunisia and the Tunisian Ministry of Culture.

“Aside from our Sud Ecriture workshops, I contribute to the Doha Producers Lab, to Ouaga Film Lab, In Burkina Faso and Up Courts in Senegal. This is important for me as I witness the cinema of the continent and the MENA region,” she said, “I noticed how the narrative has evolved, how the stories are strong and diverse. When we look up at the last Cannes lineup, we are happy to say that most of them had been developed in these labs.”

Plaudits for Bouchoucha’s contribution to film have come from as far afield as El Gouna and Luxor film festivals in Egypt and MedFilm in Rome.

Ginella Vocca, founder and artistic director of the MedFilm Festival in Rome had no hesitation in rendering her verdict on Bouchoucha’s contribution to cinema. “For years, Dora Bouchoucha has tirelessly supported and launched outstanding filmmakers,” she said by phone.

Calling the Tunisian producer “a colleague but also a friend”, Vocca continued, describing how Bouchoucha was distinguished by “the absolute dedication she reserves to the projects she works on”.

In addition to producing films, Bouchoucha led the Carthage Film Festival as general director in 2008, 2010 and 2014. She has also served as a jury member at the 67th Berlin International Film Festival in 2017 and for the Luigi De Laurentiis Award for a Debut Film at the 77th Venice International Film Festival in 2020.

In 2018, Bouchoucha was elected to join the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which runs the annual Oscars Awards, along with 11 other Arab filmmakers.

However, suggestions that the space for free speech is shrinking within Tunisia are dismissed: “Nowadays free speech is threatened in the entire world,” she said, pointing to the relative silencing of prominent Muslim voices in the US.

“So I can say that free speech in Tunisia is not doing [too] badly.”

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