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- <text id=93TT1797>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: Surprise! Films Shine at Cannes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 63
- Surprise! Films Shine at Cannes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The celebrity circus is upstaged by the best batch of entries
- in recent memory--except from Hollywood
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS/CANNES
- </p>
- <p> Arnold came. Liz and Sly dropped by, and so did the British
- royals, Kenneth Branagh and Emma Thompson. The Cannes Film Festival
- boasted the usual honor guard of cinema illuminati. But there
- was a difference this year. At many recent Cannes convocations,
- the stars were the show. This time, though, the 23 films competing
- for the Palme d'Or included many of high quality--the best
- batch in recent memory. Since each Cannes festival marks the
- beginning of the movies' liturgical year, audiences around the
- world can rest assured that good films are coming soon.
- </p>
- <p> In three of the past four years, Cannes awarded its top prize
- to a U.S. picture, while the rest of world cinema looked on
- in impotent envy. This year the Americans played supporting
- roles. It was not so much that a Jurassic Park-size blockbuster
- was withheld from the festival as that Hollywood is in a profound
- artistic funk. Vitality, confidence and storytelling swank have
- evaporated; the industry seems to be working on automatic pilot.
- </p>
- <p> Thus two foreign entries were the critics' darlings and front
- runners for the Palme d'Or. Jane Campion's The Piano, from Australia,
- and Chen Kaige's Farewell to My Concubine, a co-production of
- China and Hong Kong, are very different types of films--the
- first an intimate romance, the second a sprawling panorama--but both are prime exemplars of the qualities Hollywood once
- monopolized: glamour and intensity, powerful star performances,
- the pleasures of narrative. Campion and Chen, imagemakers of
- voluptuous intelligence, have found stories to suit those images.
- </p>
- <p> In the mid-1800s, Ada McGrath (Holly Hunter), a mute Scottish
- woman, lands on the isolated New Zealand shore with her chatty
- young daughter (Anna Paquin) and her precious piano; the crated
- instrument perches on the bleak beach like an exotic bird, or
- like a coffin holding the happy life Ada left behind. Her mail-order
- husband (Sam Neill) trades the piano for land with the "town
- freak," George Baines (Harvey Keitel), and in another plaintive
- transaction Baines agrees to sell the piano back to Ada, one
- key at a time, for increasingly audacious amorous favors. This
- uncorseted Brontean plot runs the gauntlet through variations--some familiar, a few astonishing--on the theme of possessive
- passion, and Campion ornaments her fable with film effects that
- are at once surreal and true to the characters and their time.
- If The Piano is not quite the culmination of a century of cinema
- art that its most fervent Cannes admirers suggest, it is surely
- a delicate, rending achievement.
- </p>
- <p> Farewell to My Concubine spans more than a half-century of Chinese
- history, from the Warlord Era through the Japanese occupation
- up to and past the egregious humiliations of the Cultural Revolution.
- Because the main characters who reflect and endure these tumultuous
- times are performing artists--two stars of the Peking Opera,
- stalwart Xiaolou (Zhang Fengyi) and comely Dieyi (Leslie Cheung)--the movie conjures up dozens of American movies, like Singin'
- in the Rain and For the Boys, in which popular entertainers
- put aside their differences before they put on the greasepaint.
- There is, of course, a pretty woman to fight over, Xiaolou's
- girlfriend (Gong Li). There is the elegance of stage art compromised
- by the humility of life beyond the footlights. There is comradeship,
- and betrayal, and comradeship again.
- </p>
- <p> Concubine throbs with the seductive power art has over life.
- And because this is a movie about the glory and competitiveness
- of performance, it is appropriate that Cheung, as the tormented
- homosexual, and Gong, as his bitter rival, should duke it out
- for the title of most beautiful star on the Asian screen. Cheung
- wins, because this is his story, and he is equal to the doomed
- sensitivity of the role. Thanks in no small part to his presence,
- and performance, Concubine has the sweep and pang of a novel
- that keeps you reading till dawn, then lives in your dreams.
- </p>
- <p> At any festival, one excellent film is a fluke, two are a faint
- promise. Cannes '93 has showcased a dozen or so delights, including
- Mike Leigh's comic scorcher Naked, from Britain, and Alain Cavalier's
- potent French film Libera Me, a deadpan document, in wordless
- closeup, of political prisoners and their torturers in an unnamed
- country--any country, alas. Wim Wenders' Faraway, So Close!,
- a sequel of sorts to his great Wings of Desire, is a monumentally
- quirky film essay that gradually, and satisfyingly, surrenders
- to the conventions of the thriller genre. The festival had two
- out-of-nowhere finds, both set in the '50s and '60s: Tian Zhuang
- zhuang's The Blue Kite, from China, and The Odor of Green Papaya,
- a lovely Vietnamese film made in France by writer-director
- Tran Anh Hung, 30, and a cast of refugees; both tell bold stories
- of a child's coming of age. And Abel Ferrara's Hollywood horror
- movie Body Snatchers, saved from the slag heap of Warner Bros.
- rejects, revives the old parable of the Pod People with a frame-by-frame
- savvy that used to be unique to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Now, when Hollywood filmmakers have all but forgotten how to
- put a story on-screen, directors from around the world--and
- especially on the Pacific continents--have watched and remembered.
- Let Hollywood send its top stars to Cannes, Chen and Campion
- and Wenders might be saying. We'll send the best movies.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-