Dalya Alberge, Arts Correspondent
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To be selected for the competition at the Cannes Film Festival is, alongside
an Oscar nomination, an accolade for any film-maker.
However, when the veteran director Ken Loach found himself shortlisted for the
Palme d’Or trophy for an eighth time yesterday, he proclaimed it a greater
honour than the Oscars.
Speaking to The Times, Loach said that Cannes, the world’s leading
showcase for international cinema, was not only the premier film festival,
but that its choice of films was not dictated by the intense lobbying of
Oscar recognition.
There was, he said, something “obscene” about the fortunes spent by film
companies to get the American academy to notice their films.
He called for an end to such lobbying.
The Wind that Shakes the Barley, Loach’s Irish civil war epic starring
Cillian Murphy and Padraic Delaney, will have its world premiere at Cannes
before opening across Britain and Ireland on June 23.
It is one of three British films on the nineteen-strong shortlist announced
yesterday for the festival, which runs from May 17 to 28. Set in Ireland in
the 1920s, it tells the story of two brothers who fought together in the
Irish War of Independence but on opposite sides in the civil war that
ensued.
Loach, who has become a darling of Cannes with films such as Land and
Freedom, about the Spanish Civil War, but who has not won an Oscar, said
that it was a “pivotal” chapter in history that was relatively little- known
in Britain, yet its consequences were still felt.
The UK Film Council was particularly pleased with the film’s inclusion, having
given £545,000 of national lottery money to the project. It also backed,
with £447,100, another shortlisted British film, Red Road, which
stars Natalie Press in a story of obsession and forgiveness. It marks the
feature debut of its British director, Andrea Arnold, who was described
yesterday by David Thompson, head of BBC Films and a co-producer, as a
“film-maker of incredible vision”.
The adaptation of Dan Brown’s thriller The Da Vinci Code will
open the festival, but is not in competition.
Jeremy Thomas, a British producer whose films include The Last Emperor,
will be flying the flag with BBC Films coproduction, Fast Food Nation,
a satirical work directed by Richard Linklater. Paul Trijbits, the head of
the UK Film Council’s New Cinema Fund, said: “It confirms that British film
talent continues to produce films that excite the most prestigious film
festival in the world.”
Other competing films include Volver, starring Penélope Cruz in a tale
of troubled relationships among three generations of women, by the Spanish
director Pedro Almodóvar, and Marie-Antoinette, a biopic
directed by Sofia Coppola and starring Kirsten Dunst.
The head of the 2006 Cannes jury is Wong Kar Wai, the Chinese film-maker who
has been nominated three times for the Palme d’Or but never won it. His
panel includes Zhang Ziyi, the Chinese star of Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon, and the actor Samuel L. Jackson.
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