samedi 23 mai 2015

CANNES WATCH: GOING OUT IN STYLE

CANNES, France (AP) — The 68th Cannes Film Festival was going out in style this weekend, with Marion Cotillard drawing raves on both carpet and screen at the "Macbeth" premiere and the very cool entourage from the LA indie "Dope" continuing to wow the fest as anticipation grew for Sunday's Palme d'Or finale.

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QUEEN OF THE CARPET

Marion Cotillard plays a queen in Justin Kurzel's "Macbeth," but at its Cannes premiere she was also a bejeweled queen of the red carpet.

In a blue-and-rose truncated minidress from Dior's haute couture spring-summer 2015 collection, Cotillard sparkled Saturday as she posed alongside co-star Michael Fassbender, thanks to the outfit's myriad embroidered pailettes and jewels.

The Oscar-winner, who's known for her fashion-forward style, bucked the trend for classical va-va-voom and voluminous dresses that have been popular during this year's Cannes Film Festival.

Although the look showed off the 39-year-old's enviable legs, she might have benefited from a scarf, as the overcast Cannes sky caused a rather chilly spell.

— By Thomas Adamson, Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

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A BLOODY, STYLISH 'MACBETH'

Something wicked came the way of the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday when Justin Kurzel premiered his bloody, stylish adaptation of "Macbeth" with Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard.

Marion Cotillard and Michael Fassbender pose for photographers … Marion Cotillard and Michael Fassbender pose for photographers upon arrival for the screening of the …

Cannes hailed the premiere of the Australian director's interpretation of the Shakespeare tragedy, the final film to screen in competition at the festival, which concludes Sunday. The film, among the most eagerly awaited at Cannes, is a grimly visceral adaptation of "Macbeth," shot partly in Scotland, striking in the bleak beauty of its earthy violence.

To play the Scottish warrior, Fassbender gravitated to the idea that Macbeth suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder. He credited Kurzel for making the connection to contemporary warfare.

"That changed everything for me," Fassbender told reporters Saturday. "We know from soldiers today coming back from Iraq or Afghanistan that describe post-traumatic stress disorder and the fact that they have these hallucinations. They can be walking down the street here, the Croisette, and the next thing, it's Basra."

Cotillard drew the loudest raves for her Lady Macbeth. Hers is a tender version of the character, not the manipulative monster often depicted.

— By AP Film Writer Jake Coyle, http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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PALME D'OR UP FOR GRABS AHEAD OF FEST FINALE

A week and a half of French Riviera frenzy comes down to, as it always does, wild conjecture.

The 68th Cannes Film Festival concludes Sunday with the awarding of its top honor, the prestigious Palme d'Or, as well as a handful of other distinctions.

Few trophies in movies are more sought after than the Palme d'Or, but, unlike the Academy Awards, which whittles its field down to a few favorites over the course of months, Cannes winners are chosen clandestinely by a jury.

From left, Chanel Iman, Pharell Williams, Kiersey Clemons, … From left, Chanel Iman, Pharell Williams, Kiersey Clemons, Shameik Moore, Amin Joseph, Tony Revolori …

The mystery adds much suspense.

Throughout the festival, the jury, led by Joel and Ethan Coen, has quietly slipped in and out of theaters. Their deliberations are private, but that doesn't stop the world's media from endlessly debating the possible preferences of the Coens and fellow jurors Guillermo del Toro, Jake Gyllenhaal, Sienna Miller, Sophie Marceau, Xavier Dolan, Rokia Traore and Rossy de Palma.

All of the 19 films in competition could feasibly walk away with the Palme d'Or, but a handful of perceived favorites have emerged.

— By Film Writer Jake Coyle, http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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'DOPE' SENSATION CONTINUES AT CANNES

A year ago, writer-director Rick Famuyiwa was struggling to find financing for his film after studios in Hollywood passed on it. Now, he's sitting in a restaurant at Cannes riding the sensation of "Dope," his comic Los Angeles coming-of-age tale that sparked a bidding war this year at the Sundance Film Festival.

"It's pretty freaking awesome," Famuyiwa says, tipping back his white fedora. "Here we are less than a year later. It's been crazy from Sundance to here. I haven't quite gotten any perspective on it yet, but I'm enjoying the moment."

"Dope" premiered Friday in the Cannes Film Festival's Directors' Fortnight section with most of its young cast enthusiastically in tow. While many indies that make it to Cannes arrive with a small retinue, "Dope" is here in full force — and some cast members even paid their own way to come.

"Dope" is a buoyant, stereotype-busting high-school movie about a geek (Moore) in Inglewood, California, who's aiming to get into Harvard but is thrust into a rollicking adventure when drug dealers looking for a hiding place stuff his backpack full of Ecstasy.

From left, the Un Certain Regard jury, actor Tahar … From left, the Un Certain Regard jury, actor Tahar Rahim, actress Nadine Labaki, actress Isabella Ro …

The close bond between the cast comes partly out of the unlikeliness of their journey. "Dope" was made last summer in a rapid 24-day shoot around Los Angeles.

"We were making something we all believe in," says Famuyiwa.

— By Film Writer Jake Coyle, http://twitter.com/jakecoyleAP

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ICELANDIC FILM WINS UN CERTAIN REGARD PRIZE

"Rams," a drama set among farmers and their sheep in a remote Icelandic valley, won the Cannes Film Festival's Un Certain Regard competition on Saturday.

Jury president Isabella Rossellini said Grimur Hakonarson's film was being honored for "treating in a masterful, tragicomic way the undeniable bond that links all humans to animals."

There were 19 films in the Un Certain Regard competition, which honors new directors and more offbeat films than those up for Cannes' main Palme d'Or prize.

The second-place Jury Prize went to Croatian director Dalibor Matanic for "Zvizdan" ("The High Sun"), which explores love and ethnic hatred in the Balkans. Matanic dedicated the prize to his producer, his wife and his soon-to-be-born daughter.

"I hope she will live in a better and far more tolerant world," he said.

Director Jonas Carpignano poses for a portrait to promote … Director Jonas Carpignano poses for a portrait to promote his film Mediterranea at the 68th internat …

The jury bestowed the directing prize on Kiyoshi Kurosawa for "Journey to the Shore," and also gave awards to "Treasure," by Romania's Corneliu Porumboiu, "Nahid" by Iranian director Ida Panahandeh and "Masaan" by India's Neeraj Ghaywan.

— By Jill Lawless, http://Twitter.com/JillLawless

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POWERFUL FILM HUMANIZES MIGRANTS

It may be the most topical film at Cannes — but "Mediterranea" — a searing account of a desperate African migrant who travels by boat from Burkina Faso to Italy — is not just pulled from the headlines.

It's been years in the making and is based on a true story.

First time director Jonas Carpignano — who's half African-American, half-Italian — evoked the real-life experiences of his roommate and lead actor in the film, Koudous Seihon.

Seihon witnessed shootings, race riots, violence and faced near-constant discrimination after he took the perilous trip by foot, car, bus and boat to southern Italy as a 20-year-old father seeking to support his family.

Despite its small 1 million-euro ($1.1 million) budget, Carpignano's film, which was screened at the Critics Week, has already garnered great attention for its highly personal portrayal of Europe's great migrant crisis.

"We're constantly bombarded and desensitized (about migrants). That's why I wanted to make a film about this, to give people something to latch on to," Carpignano said. "It doesn't help to constantly group immigrants as just migrants coming over. There has to be more of a personal angle."

— By Thomas Adamson, Twitter.com/ThomasAdamsonAP

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LOVE BATTLES REVENGE IN REFUGEE DRAMA

For much of its running time, Jacques Audiard's "Dheepan," which premiered at Cannes, is a gritty and naturalistic depiction of Tamil refugees trying to build a new life in France.

That's a long way from where the project began, as a remake of Sam Peckinpah's violent revenge thriller, "Straw Dogs."

"That was the origin of the origin," Audiard said. "At the beginning, it was a kind of vigilante movie."

The French director has long mixed genre-movie conventions and tough real-world subjects into powerful and distinctive films. His international breakthrough, "A Prophet," reinvented the prison drama, while follow-up "Rust and Bone" was inspired by B-movie melodramas.

"For me, genre is a Trojan Horse," Audiard said — a way of smuggling surprises past the audience's defenses.

This year's Cannes festival features several films by directors working in second languages, including the English-language debuts of Italy's Paolo Sorrentino ("Youth"), Greece's Yorgos Lanthimos ("The Lobster") and Mexico's Michel Franco ("Chronic").

— By Jill Lawless, http://Twitter.com/JillLawless

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EDITOR'S NOTE — "Cannes Watch" brings you the excitement of the Cannes Film Festival and related events through the reporting of AP journalists on the ground. Follow them on Twitter with the handles listed after each item. Longer versions of most items have also moved.

Marion CotillardCannes Film FestivalLady MacbethMichael Fassbender

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Sweden pips Russia in Eurovision pop fest nail-biter

Vienna (Austria) (AFP) - Sweden narrowly beat Russia Sunday in a nail-biting 60th edition of the Eurovision Song Contest, winning its sixth crown in Europe's annual anything-goes music extravaganza.

Forty-one years after Swedish superstars ABBA took the title, chiseled Mans Zelmerlow won 365 points from voters and juries in 40 countries with his up-tempo crowd-pleaser "Heroes".

As the scores were being read out nation by nation via videolink to Vienna, it looked for a while as though Russian Polina Gagarina would take the title with her paean to world peace "A Million Voices".

In the end though her anthem scored just 303 points. Gagarina did however avoid the boos that Russia's singer got last year following Moscow's annexation of Crimea.

Cheeky Italian trio Il Volo came third with 292 points with their rousing, operatic "Grande Amore".

Other strong performers among the 27 finalists were Belgian Loic Nottet and Australia's Guy Sebastian, whose country entered for the first time as a wild card for the 60th anniversary.

Russia's Polina Gagarina performs during the Eurovision … Russia's Polina Gagarina performs during the Eurovision Song Contest final on May 23, 2015 in Vi …

Ireland, which failed to make it into the final, still holds the record for the number of Eurovision victories with seven trophies to its name.

Sweden's victory means that the contest will be held in Sweden in 2016. It was in Vienna this year following bearded Austrian drag queen Conchita Wurst's win in Copenhagen in 2014.

The prospect of the contest being held in Russia had not been relished by the Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, who said Thursday Eurovision promoted values "repulsive to our soul and our culture".

Geopolitics was present again this year with Armenia's ballad -- described by one magazine as "feeling as long as a Wagner opera" -- widely seen as being about 1915 mass killings by Ottoman Turkey, with the chorus "don't deny".

Turkey, which refuses to recognise the killings as genocide, has been absent from Eurovision since 2012. Another no-show was Ukraine, cash-strapped from the conflict with Russian-backed rebels in its east.

Sweden's Mans Zelmerlow performs after winning … Sweden's Mans Zelmerlow performs after winning the 60th Eurovision Song Contest final on May 23, …

- Turkeys, orcs and babushkas -

Mostly though the riotous affair, open to the 56 members of the European Broadcasting Union and a world away from its civilised black-and-white beginnings, is about not taking life too seriously.

It is watched every year by around 200 million people worldwide, including in Australia where it has long enjoyed a cult following. This year it was shown in China for the first time, organisers said.

Previous entries have included six Russian grannies, Ireland's irreverent Dustin the Turkey and Finnish heavy metal outfit Lordi -- looking like orcs from "Lord of the Rings" -- who won in 2006 with "Hard Rock Hallelujah".

The lyrics often make no sense, if they are in any recognised language at all, like "Diggi-Loo Diggi-Ley" by golden-booted Swedish Mormon brothers Herreys in 1984, "La La La" in 1968 or Lulu's "Boom-Bang-A-Bang" in 1969.

Austrian Conchita Wurst, 2014 Eurovision Song Contest … Austrian Conchita Wurst, 2014 Eurovision Song Contest winner, performs during the Eurovision final o …

And who can forget the chorus to Austria's 1977 entry: "Boom boom boomerang, snadderydang. Kangaroo, boogaloo, didgeridoo. Ding dong, sing the song, hear the guitar twang. Kojak, hijack, me and you."

The event has also long stressed tolerance for the unconventional, as witnessed by Israeli transgender Dana International in 1998, Ukraine's Verka Serduchka in 2007 and Austria's Conchita last year.

Her message of openness -- she floated gracefully onto the stage at the start of Saturday's show -- has been enthusiastically adopted by Viennese authorities, including with special gay-themed traffic lights.

"I like the feeling because it's a little bit trashy but it's also very exciting," said one German fan attending for the first time. "I have loved this show for 15 years and watch it every year on television."

Jean-Paul Philippot, chairman of the EBU, told AFP that Eurovision is "the opposite" of talent shows like "The Voice" or "The X Factor".

Budget, Tax & EconomySingapore International NewsEurovision Song ContestRussiaSwedenVienna

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Sweden wins 60th Eurovision Song Contest, Russia 2nd

VIENNA (AP) — Sweden won the 60th Eurovision Song Contest on Saturday, finishing ahead of Russia, whose contestant received some boos as the Ukraine conflict spilled over into the continent's largest songfest.

Italy came in third. Australia, which was given a wild-card entry for this year due to its enthusiastic fan base and took part for the first time, was a dark horse, with many hoping candidate Guy Sebastian would triumph and secure a place for the country next year.

His failure to do so, placing fifth, means Australia will probably not be back next year.

The race between Russia and Sweden went back and forth for most of the evening as jurors from 40 countries cast their ballots, along a worldwide audience voting by phone and app.

The win by Mans Zelmerlow and his song "Heroes" marks a record seventh time that Sweden has taken top honors in the contest.

His win comes 41 years after that of Swedish group Abba, whose triumph in 1974 with "Waterloo" launched their world career.

About 200 million people watched on TV Saturday as the 27 finalists battled it out musically. Approximately 10,000 people followed the contest live in Vienna's mammoth Stadthalle.

Last year's win by bearded cross-dresser Conchita Wurst vaulted the contest into even greater worldwide popularity.

Wurst, who co-hosted the show, was critical of the scattered boos that met Russian contestant Polina Gagarina and her pacifist-themed song "A Million Voices," calling the reaction "incomprehensible."

Eurovision Song ContestRussiaSweden

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USA TODAY BEST-SELLERS

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6. "The Maze Runner" by James Dashner (Delacorte Books for Young Readers)

7. "The Fault in Our Stars" by John Green (Dutton Children's)

8. "The Eye of Heaven" by Clive Cussler and Russell Blake (G.P. Putnam's Sons)

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10. "What If?" by Randall Munroe (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

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Reporting stores include: Amazon.com, Amazon Kindle, Barnes & Noble.com, Barnes & Noble Inc., Barnes & Noble e-books, BooksAMillion.com, Books-A-Million, Bookland and Books & Co., Costco, Davis-Kidd Booksellers (Nashville, Memphis), Hudson Booksellers, Joseph-Beth Booksellers (Lexington, Ky.; Cincinnati, Charlotte, Cleveland, Pittsburgh), Kobo, Inc., Powell's Books (Portland, Ore.), Powells.com, R.J. Julia Booksellers (Madison, Conn.), Schuler Books & Music (Grand Rapids, Okemos, Eastwood, Alpine, Mich.), Sony Reader Store, Target, Tattered Cover Book Store (Denver).

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For the extended, interactive and searchable version of this list, visit http://books.usatoday.com/list/index

Arts & EntertainmentBooks & PublishingGrand Central PublishingGayle FormanBroadway BooksJames DashnerJohn Grisham

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B.B. King memorial more cheers than tears in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A standing ovation for B.B. King and more cheers than tears marked a family-and-friends memorial of the late blues great's life and legacy Saturday in Las Vegas.

"B.B. was energetic, Amen?" Pastor Pamela Myrtis Mason said to open the service that drew more than 350 to the Palm Mortuary chapel.

"Amen," they said.

King's closed casket lay framed by an array of floral arrangements, two of his guitars named Lucille and a tapestry showing him in eyes-clenched reverie picking a note from a section of the guitar frets dubbed by followers the "B.B. King Box."

"Why don't you put your hands together for the King of the Blues, B.B. King!" the pastor said.

As the applause ended, granddaughter Landra Williams dubbed him "the backbone of our family King."

FILE - In this Aug. 27, 2008 file photo, blues legend … FILE - In this Aug. 27, 2008 file photo, blues legend B.B. King poses during an interview in Los Ang …

More than 10 of King's 35 grandchildren and eight of the blues icon's 11 surviving adult children spoke during a two-hour service that was distinct for its intimacy and notable for its lack of acrimony.

Several sang a cappella versions of King classics. From daughter Claudette King Robinson, it was, "(Someone Really Loves You) Guess Who?"

Williams, who lives in Houston, remembered her grandfather calling every woman in the family "pretty girl," and spoiling them all, while making himself their confidante and protector.

"To everyone else, he was a legend," she said. "But for us, he was love."

King's generosity was recalled by grandson Leonard King Jr., who remembered being onstage when people praising the B.B. King show got a prideful earful from his grandfather about his kin.

Paul Flintroy, right, waits in line with others to … Paul Flintroy, right, waits in line with others to view the body of B.B. King during a public viewin …

"His humility was almost as legendary as his music," the grandson said.

Rock superstars Carlos Santana and Richie Sambora attended, although Santana left early.

"Buddy Guy and B.B. let me into the blues," said Sambora, longtime guitarist with of the band Bon Jovi. "That's why I'm here. He made me family."

Other music notables are expected to attend memorials in coming days in Memphis, Tennessee, and King's hometown of Indianola, Mississippi.

King's onstage drummer for 37 years, Tony Coleman, provided another upbeat note on a day full of them.

Rita Washington, from left, Willie King and Barbara … Rita Washington, from left, Willie King and Barbara King Winfree stand outside of a funeral home aft …

"He fired me five times," Coleman said, drawing laughter. "But he hired me six times. He said, 'Once you're with me, you're always with me.' "

Coleman promised to go on playing blues "with class, with dignity, with humanity" — just like B.B. King taught him to do.

King was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 1990 and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987. He won 15 Grammys and sold more than 40 million records worldwide.

A family feud wasn't directly addressed by the dozens of speakers.

Several of King's surviving children are fighting with LaVerne Toney, his longtime business agent and power-of-attorney, who is now executor of his estate. Toney watched Saturday from the back row of the chapel and didn't speak during the service.

FILE - In this Feb. 16, 2007 file photo, B.B. King … FILE - In this Feb. 16, 2007 file photo, B.B. King performs at the Wicomico Youth and Civic Center,  …

Attorney Larissa Drohobyczer said Saturday that five adult King daughters — Patty King, Michelle King, Karen Williams, Barbara King Winfree and Robinson — will contest the blues legend's will and Toney's actions.

The lawyer issued a statement alleging that Toney has misappropriated millions of dollars, has been untruthful and is unqualified to serve as executor of the B.B. King estate.

Toney has said she was carrying out King's wishes as directed, and she told The Associated Press on Saturday that she would not immediately respond to the daughters' allegations.

Toney said she was happy the memorial remained calm, peaceful and respectful.

The spirit of B.B. King will be in the air again on Sunday at the previously scheduled 35th annual B.B. King Homecoming Festival in Indianola.

That will be followed by a procession on Wednesday on Beale Street in Memphis before the last leg of what Landra Williams, the granddaughter, has dubbed "The Road to Mississippi Tour" — the last leg of Riley B. King's trip to Indianola for burial May 30.


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