Seymour
Barros Sanchez
Need I Seymour?
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After receiving a
special commendation from the Ecumenical Jury at the recent Cannes Film
Festival, Brillante Mendoza’s film Taklub (Trap) will have its invitational
Philippine premiere at the 20th French Film Festival on June 3, 8:30 p.m., at
Greenbelt 3 Cinema 1.
Camille Conde,
Press Attaché of the Embassy of France to the Philippines, confirmed this
latest development regarding the annual event which is organized by the French
Embassy together with Alliance Française de Manille and Institut Français.
The French Film
Festival, which reaches a significant milestone this year as it celebrates two
decades of bringing the best of French cinema to the Philippines, will kick off
with an invitational screening of Eric Lartigau’s award-winning hit comedy film
La Famille Bélier (The Bélier Family), also at Greenbelt 3 Cinema 1, at 5 p.m.,
followed by the red carpet opening ceremonies at the Fashion Walk, at the
ground floor of Greenbelt 5, at 6:30 p.m.
French film
festival for 20 years, the French film festival has been providing a venue for
the Filipino audience to appreciate critically acclaimed and blockbusters from
the French New Wave, the classics, auteur films, and contemporary releases like
La Famille Bélier, as well as Filipino films showcased in international film festivals
in France such as Taklub. At the same time, the event also celebrates the
developing bilateral relations between France and the Philippines.
Taklub is the only
Philippine entry in competition at Cannes this year, officially selected to the
Un Certain Regard category, and one of only two Filipino films screening in
this year’s edition of the prestigious film festival, the other one being a
restored version of Lino Brocka’s masterpiece Insiang, which was shown as part
of the Cannes Classics section.
Mendoza’s film,
which stars Nora Aunor, tells the story of three survivors of typhoon Yolanda
in Tacloban, Leyte. The independent jury honored the advocacy film with a
special commendation “for the sensitive portrayal of individuals and
communities working for life in the midst of suffering and death in the shadows
of natural catastrophes in the Philippines.”
Serving as one of
three Cannes juries, together with the official jury and the FIPRESCI critics
group, the Ecumenical Jury is made up of President Barbara Lorey de Lacharrière
and Marie-Nicole Courboulès, both from France, Chiara Fortuna from Italy,
Jonathan Guilbault and Andrew Johnston, both from Canada, and Jolyon Mitchell
from the United Kingdom. The jury members were nominated by SIGNIS for the Catholics
and Interfilm for the Protestants.
Nanni Moretti’s
Mia Madre (My Mother) from Italy, an entry in the main competition, won the
Prize of the Ecumenical Jury, while Stéphane Brizé’s The Laws of Contract from
France, which is also entered in the same category, received a special mention
like Taklub. Grimur Hakonarson’s Hrutar (Rams) from Iceland won the Un Certain
Regard top prize.
Taklub is
Mendoza’s fourth Cannes entry, after Foster Child, Serbis, and Kinatay, for
which he won Best Director in 2009. This is also his fourth time to win an
award of such nature from a film festival, after winning the Interfaith Award
for Masahista at the 2006 Brisbane International Film Festival in Australia,
the SIGNIS award for Foster Child at the 2008 Las Palmas Film Festival in
Spain, and another special mention citation from the Ecumenical Jury for Lola
at the 2010 Fribourg International Film Festival in Switzerland.
The Belier
FamilyMeanwhile, La Famille Bélier is about a sixteen-year-old girl living with
her deaf-mute family who discovers she has a gift for singing. Her teacher
encourages her to join a prestigious Radio France singing competition, which
may lead to a college degree, a good career, and a better future. However, this
would mean leaving her parents and brother who have depended on her as an
indispensable interpreter especially in running their dairy farm.
La Famille
BelierThe film won Best Female Newcomer for Louane Emera at the 2015 Cesar
Awards, Best Actress for Karen Viard and Best Female Newcomer for Emera at the
2015 Lumiere Awards, and Salamandre d’Or (Audience Award) at the Sarlat Film
Festival in November 2014.
This year, the
event will run from June 3 to 9, at Greenbelt 3 and at Bonifacio High Street’s
Central Square Cinemas, offering a selection of 20 films, both recent and
classic releases, and concluding with the new CINEMIX, a special DJ event
fusing cinema with electronic music.
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