Posted on 06/04/2008 8:49:50 AM PDT by thinkingIsPresuppositional
Cannes' Voyage to Neverland
By Yervand Kochar
During the 1963 Moscow International Film Festival, few had a doubt that Federico Fellini’s “8 ½” was not just a masterpiece but a milestone achievement that will signal a new epoch in filmmaking. The film was not merely contending for the Grand Prize; it was clear that no conventional prize can put a tag on the sheer artistic genius and refreshing power of the movie. Threatened by Fellini’s highly formalistic language, the Communist party’s movie department that was behind making the decisions of the festival, as usually, suspected something potentially harmful for the cause of the international proletariat. They began putting pressure on the head of the jury, Soviet filmmaker Grigori Chukhrai, not to award the Grand Prize to “8 ½ .”
Chukhrai was in a tight spot. He had his share of problems with the system with his 1959 war movie “The Ballad of a Soldier” where he did not depict the Nazis as stupid animals but rather as a highly organized and evil intelligence. Because of that, some in the government tried to ban Chukhrai and tried to label him as a Nazi sympathizer.
They failed; Chukhrai’s movies about the war were Soviet classics and Chukrai himself was a war hero who fought his way all the way to Berlin, involved virtually in every major battle of the war.
So when Chukhrai refused to back down the pack sensed an opportunity for a sweet revenge. Chukhrai claimed that depriving "8 ½" would not only be a blunt error of cinematic judgment but a political disaster for an A class festival...
(Excerpt) Read more at modernconservative.com ...
It makes me queasy to see Hollywood drooling over Che. Osama is next, you watch. In ten years, college kids will be wearing Osama t-shirts as Hollywood makes a sympathetic movie about his early years. I bet they’re searching the Calvin Kline ads right now looking for some gaunt, hollow-eyed young man to play the part.
Film making is as significant to our world as are pet rocks.
Cannes has always been a eurotrash sandbox.
Cannes isn’t Hollywood.
Would you say the same thing about music? Literature?
No, but movies made in Hollywood are going to Cannes.
The film about Che you mentioned wasn’t made by Hollywood either...
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0374569/companycredits
That was an interesting story about Fellini’s 8 1/2 at the Moscow Film Festival. There are Chinese filmmakers who have paid the price in recent years as well, but I don’t see Sean Penn defending them. He’s too busy worrying about that Fascist Police State known as Bush’s America.
Iranian filmmakers too.
Sundance must be an Amerotrash sandbox.
The film I mentioned? I didn’t mention it by name, but I was thinking of Motorcycle Diaries, at least one of whose contributing production companies is out of Santa Monica. I’m not sure what your point is, but my own point is that Hollywood churns out left-wing crap and many of them go to Cannes. I’m not sure why you have such a problem with that observation.
Yes. I have managed to survive quite comfortably with spending my time and money on fiction. Music is different IMO because it is something that can be done by anyone in the comfort in their own home. However, not doing so will not threaten their survival.
How did mankind survive before film-making came to light? How did mankind survive before tax-payer subsidized art?
The majority of ‘Motorcycle Diaries’ funding came from outside of American filmmaking. It’s even listed on IMDB with a Spanish title...
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0318462/companycredits
Very few Big Studio Hollywood films play in competition at Cannes these days actually.
Mankind has always had Art in one form or another. I don’t know what goverment subsidies have to do with this subject.
So? Plenty of small Hollywood indies are going, I’ve met them. I LIVE HERE! IN HOLLYWOOD! What, again, is your problem with my remarking on the zeitgeist in Hollywood?
It doesn't, it was just extra commentary on my part.
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