Category Archives: Red Carpet

‘Best Of’ Students’ Photos

I (creepily?) pulled all of these off Facebook. As you can see our students were in the right place at the right time throughout this year’s Festival.  Enjoy…

Alec Baldwin after he popped in the American Pavilion

Ben Stiller after the “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” press conference
Bill Murray heading into the “Moonrise Kingdom” after-party
Brad Pitt at the “Killing Them Softly” red carpet premiere seemingly posing for our students’ lenses
Bruce Willis heading into the “Moonrise Kingdom” after-party
Chris Rock leaving the “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” press conference
Clive Owen arriving to this year’s MasterClass featuring Phil Kaufman
The cast of “Cosmopolis” on the red carpet before their premiere
(Including: David Cronenberg, Robert Pattinson, Juliette Binoche, Paul Giamatti)
David Schwimmer after the “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” premiere
Jury Judge, Diane Kruger, and beau, Joshua Jackson, heading into a premiere
Eva Longoria posing right in front of our students on the red carpet
Jury Judge, Ewan McGregor, leaving a premiere
Frieda Pinto after the “Moonrise Kingdom” premiere opening night
Frieda Pinto going in to the “Rust and Bone” premiere
Gael Garcia Bernal heading into a morning screening in the Debussy Theatre
Gerard Butler after the “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” premiere
Heidi Klum heading into “The Paperboy” premiere
Jackie Chan speaking on a panel at the American Pavilion
Jessica Chastain heading into the “Moonrise Kingdom” after-party
Jessica Chastain after the “Lawless” press conference
John Cusack after “The Paperboy” press conference
Kanye West and Kim Kardashian deboarding a yacht in the Cannes harbor
Kirsten Dunst after the “On the Road” press conference
Macy Gray after “The Paperboy” press conference
Martin Short after the “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” press conference
Matthew McConaughey catching our students snapping his photo in the posh Majestic Hotel Bar
Matthew McConaughey after the “Mud” press conference
The cast of “Moonrise Kingdom” entering the theatre before their Festival Opening premiere
(L-R: Bill Murray, Tilda Swinton, two kids in movie, Bruce Willis, Ed Norton, Wes Anderson-front)
The cast of “Mud” exiting their premiere
(L-R: Reese Witherspoon, Matthew McConaughey, the two kids in the movie, Jeff Nichols, Festival director Thierry Fremaux)
Nicole Kidman after “The Paperboy” press conference
Nicole Kidman arriving to this year’s MasterClass featuring Phil Kaufman
P.Diddy (or whatever he’s called now) heading into the “Killing Them Softly” premiere
Cast of “The Paperboy” entering their premiere
(namely from bottom to top: Nicole Kidman, John Cusack, Zac Efron, Matthew McConaughey)
Paul Giamatti after the “Cosmopolis” press conference.
Reese Witherspoon after the “Mud” press conference
Robert Pattinson signing autographs in the Palais after his morning press conference for “Cosmopolis”
Sean Penn leaving a premiere
Tilda Swinton after “Moonrise Kingdom” premiere opening night
Tye Sheridan after the “Mud” press conference
Viggo Mortensen leaving the “On the Road” press conference
Wes Anderson heading to the “Moonrise Kingdom” after-party
Zac Efron in the Palais after the morning press conference for “The Paperboy”

[Photo credits / future TMZ photogs:
Hilary Beth Allen, Laurie Costarides Liz Egan, Erin Jackson, Kara Maltby, Raines Plambeck, Sara Porch]

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Finally!

After two years I FINALLY have red TOMS shoes on the Cannes red carpet. Ta-da!

Granted, I was only allowed to wear them on the red carpet because I was attending a mid-day screening in the Grand Lumiere Theatre sans press and paparazzi. The nighttime premieres at 7:30pm & 10:30pm throughout the festival are more ritzy as those are the ones where cast, jury, etc. are in the theatre watching the screenings as well and there are hundreds of photographers yelling celebrities’ names and snapping photos throughout the long walks down the red carpet. These are the screenings in which we commoners must dress to the nines to fit in with the glamourous event. In other words, my TOMS would be out of the question – unless I was famous, in which case I could wear these shoes and a potato sack and still land on the cover of fashion mags.
I digress.
My daytime presence up the red carpet on this day is to catch an early screening of the highly anticipated in-competition film, “We Need To Talk About Kevin.” Walking the red carpet in my red shoes for this screening ended up being unexpectedly ‘on theme’ with the heavy movie as the color red is used symbolically throughout its 110 minutes. In it we follow a mother (Tilda Swinton) through her current life, the aftermath of a mass murder at a local high school carried out by her son, Kevin (Ezra Miller), amid flashbacks of her life leading up to this point. The storyline is intense enough, but coupled with the expert cinematography with smart uses of the color red – the annual tomato festival in Spain; the Andy Warhol-esque shot of Swinton in a grocery store against a backdrop of tomato soup cans; the paint splattered on Swinton’s small white house as an act of vandalism; and, of course, the blood from Kevin’s victims – is effective and evocative beyond belief.
Rarely has a film hit me as hard as ‘Kevin’ did. The first 40min of the movie, to me, can be compared with the first 20min of “Saving Private Ryan.” The immediate intensity of the situation into which you are introduced is jarring. It takes hold and won’t let go. The glimpses we see of Swinton’s current life (post-massacre) is empty, depressed, and desolate. I literally felt hollow inside just watching her. Her performance is award-worthy.
John C. Reilly plays Kevin’s father in the film and his role is exactly what you want it to be – lovable and light. He represents the half of the parental unit with which Kevin finds joy, be it genuine or not. Swinton, on the other hand, is blatantly and inexplicably hated by Kevin, seemingly since birth. The story portrays both a tug-of-war between mother and son as well as a tug-of-war between Swinton’s internal and emotional struggle. We, the audience, are the knot in the middle of the tug-of-war rope as we are pulled back and forth right along with the plot, giving reason to the exhaustion I felt when the credits finally rolled. I was drained – so much so that I literally had to separate myself from the group and avoid seeing or speaking to anyone for thirty full minutes in order to process what I had just endured.
At the end of it all – I LOVED IT. I was so affected mentally and emotionally, so for me that means the film and its performances were a success. As difficult as the subject matter is to tackle, I do hope that ‘Kevin’ finds its footing for distribution somehow, somewhere in the U.S. as Tilda’s and Ezra’s performances deserve to be seen.
(some stills from “We Need To Talk About Kevin”)


——————-***Update***——————–
Sun. 5/22 – The Closing Ceremonies of the 2011 Cannes Film Festival just aired and Kirsten Dunst (from Von Trier’s controversy-laden, “Melancholia”) scooped up (read: stole from Tilda) the “Best Actress” Palme. Was Dunst’s performance good? Yes. Some are even saying this is the best role she’s ever played. Great. Fine. But what is this being compared to? “10 Things I Hate About You”? “Marie Antoinette”? “Bring It On”? Give me a break. I am happy for Dunst and think this will serve as an incredible rebirth for her career, but was it better than Tilda’s performance? No. Both women play depressed characters in their respective storylines, but Swinton’s performance is the one that made me FEEL depressed too. I don’t know – you be the judge.
‘Kevin’, among others like Almodovar’s “The Skin I Live In,” the subtly erotic “Sleeping Beauty,” and the critically acclaimed (yet unbearably boring) “Le Havre,” were shockingly shut out of the winners circle completely. This makes me want to campaign for ‘Kevin’ and Tilda even harder in the U.S. as I sincerely think her unbelievable performance warrants strong Oscar buzz.

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Festival Day #1 – A Recap…

Begging, begging everywhere — and not a ticket to snatch.
I arrived in Cannes in the late afternoon/early evening hours just about the time all of our students donned their fancy wear and sharpied some signs requesting “1 Invitation S.V.P.” for the premiere of Woody Allen’s “Midnight In Paris” set to begin in a couple hours. Scoring a ticket to this opening film is extra special because not only does one attend the screening of the movie, but you also get the added benefit of experiencing the Opening Ceremonies to officially kick off the Festival. The 2011 Jury, headed by De Niro, sits on stage in front of the crowd, says a few words, and gets things underway. This year I even saw that Jamie Cullum did a surprise performance onstage during the ceremony.

As usual, about half of our students got in to the opening ceremony and subsequent screening of the opening premiere that directly follows. 50% sounds like great odds, especially when we have 26 students dressed to the nines begging for tix – however, try explaining that to the half of the group who DON’T receive tickets. Their outlook on the process and its (temporarily) unfavorable results is pretty grim at this point, so it takes a lot to try and put a positive spin on it for them. I try my darndest, though.
Take, for example, Bobby – shown below. The sting of rejection was extra harsh when he didn’t get a ticket into the premiere screening because it was also his birthday. He even mentioned this fact – in French, I might add – on his sign. Unfortunately, none of the wealthy cougars bought it thus Bobby was left to sulk at the American Pavilion. Pauvre, Bobby.
But wait! There is a second screening at 10:30pm that re-shows the opening film. Sure, this screening is absent of all the pomp and circumstance of the earlier screening as it lacks the presence of Woody Allen, Owen Wilson, Rachel McAdams, Adrien Brody, Robert DeNiro, Uma Thurman, Jude Law (okay, you get the picture) – but the red carpet is still there, right?! So I convince the students to pick their heads up, turn their smiles upside down, grab a bite, hell – imbibe a little – then come back at 10pm and beg for the later screening like you mean it.
During this layover period when we all put out of our minds what is happening inside the Grand Lumiere Theatre while we are left outside, I head down the Croisette towards the harbor to the famous, Caffe Roma. This haunch frequently hosts my hungry taste buds during the Festival. Usually, I am accompanied by Sophie (the program director’s daughter) and this time is no different. Sophie landed in France mere hours ago. She just stood in the registration line to get her badge while the red carpet chaos occurred, so she was accredited and hungry for some familiar Cannes foods. We sit at a table along the exterior of the giant covered patio dining on pizza and french fries (Sophie’s choice).

A quartet delights us with jazzy old tunes throughout our meal – check out the guy on the oboe (?) – he was killing it!
After dinner, everyone returns to their respective posts trickled along the pavements around the Palais. And, darn it, if every single one of those kids who didn’t get into the early premiere (+ me) didn’t nab a ticket for the late showing. We were golden!
Happily we marched up to the red carpet, shiny tickets in hand, and worked that thing like it was our job. I HAD to get a photo of me and my brother, Alex, a transient student in this year’s program. After all, this is his first Cannes red carpet (and certainly not the last) – the memory had to be captured photographically. I mean, come on…two Beavers, one red carpet?! Definitely worth taking the time to pose.
Two hours after walking the red carpet and six hours after delving into their first go of ‘begging’, the second half of our students had experienced night one of Cannes in all its glory. It may not have been what they expected and they may even have hated the Woody Allen movie, but there’s no denying these kids were hopped up on adrenaline, finally having reveled in the sweet feeling of success. I snapped the photo below at the taxi stand just after the screening — those smiles don’t lie.
Day/Night One at the 64th Annual Cannes Film Festival = Complete. And Bobby’s birthday was finally a happy one.
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Day 1 – Complete

I made it into Cannes hours after many of our unstoppable students had already gotten 3-4 film screenings under their belts. This is a whole new breed of participants, these students. Their excitement is palpable, but their humility remains intact throughout. They are wonderful.

Once I got off the train in sunny Cannes I stopped into 8 or 9 hotels, unfortunately, not making it past many of their lobbies. They were either too small to accommodate a group of our size OR they were already booked the entire 12 days of the Festival. I have a couple of strong leads with which I’ll need to follow up in the coming days. Both places have rooftop solariums that could seat 30 of us plus a speaker comfortably. Send good vibes my way in hopes that I can nail one of these places down – hopefully for the price of “gratuit” (though unlikely).

After my hotel search I popped in to my fave shoe store, André, to see what they had in stock for oh ten. I gave them lots and lots of Euros last year – which included the purchase of my FAVORITE tan, leather, peep-toe, wedges with the wooden heel — one of which is currently lost in G’boro, North Cakalaki from the weekend before I left. Long, sad story, but I guess that’s what a high school reunion of sorts can do to a person (or rather, a shoe). Blame it on the a-a-a-a-a-al-co-hol. Oh well. And no such luck finding a replacement pair at Andre this year. I guess they are “so last season” already. Bummer.
*One fun note about my visit to André (Dan, pay attention here) – when I walked in the store I was met with the familiar sounds of Vampire Weekend’s latest song playing through the speakers. Ah, what a refreshing reminder of home.

I left the shoe mecca empty-handed (thank goodness for my bank account’s sake) and made my way through the criss-crossed streets up to the Croisette, the main drag of Cannes. I rendez-vous’d with Sophie and Lily at the American Pavilion to pick up my Festival-long pass to the Am Pav (another unprecedented coup for this year’s program participants). I was handed my Am Pav badge and two free drink tickets, so we wandered through the crowd of familiar accents and grabbed a table on the sunny patio.
Many of our students were there readying themselves to head out to the streets and beg for tickets.
Notice the difference between the girls’ signs (above) and the boys’ signs (below). Just an interesting gender study. Ha.
The boys went to change into their tuxes, and Lily and Sophie into their dresses, so I was left to sit on the patio by my lonesome sipping a (FREE) Stella and planning out which screenings/speakers I want to see.
After a bit more time lounging and scheduling out my next few days – I gathered my things and trekked back out into the winding streets in search of a daggum hotel/meeting space for our group. On my way to some familiar establishments I passed faces I knew on just about every corner. Students were holding up signs EVERYWHERE – and looking good doing it!
After I searched for more hotel meeting locations I attempted to make my way over to the doors in front of the Palais to meet up with Sophie and Lily, who had failed to land a ticket to the “Robin Des Bois” (aka- ‘Robin Hood’) premiere. However, I only made it so far before I was corralled in with the masses on the grasses due to the barricades EVERYWHERE. I felt like a bull being wrangled through the grid of rodeo barricades – I was trapped – and a cowboy was about to mount me. Wait, what? No. But I WAS trapped in the crowds…with a FANTASTIC view of the red carpet.
[insert Kate Bekinsale glamour shot here]
Can you say, ‘movie star’? People around me literally gasped when she started walking up the stairs with her dress draping dramatically behind her.
*Insider note: One of our more fashion-conscious students, Katie Kellogg, informed me later that she and Kate Bekinsale were wearing the SAME designer, Marchesa, during that first premiere night. That, to me, is impressive – considering most of my clothing can be found at your local Urban Outfitters or Target.
[insert picture of entire jury]
I call this “Blurry Jury.”
Next I saw the curvaceous Salma Hayek. Even from 200 yards away I felt like Roger Rabbit staring at Jessica Rabbit – I mean, bodies like hers do not exist elsewhere in the world. She looked amazing. Unfortunately, you’ll never know b/c I didn’t get a good enough picture to share it on here. Guess you’ll have to just catch it on “The Today Show.”
[insert picture of Russell Crowe giving a peace sign and Kate Blanchett looking so effortlessly beautiful it would make you sick]
…whenever the internet will upload one photo quicker than 3omin then I will post the aforementioned picutres – but for now you can just fantasize.
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Slacking

I promise to finish writing about the last few days.  I have seen three new movies that I am dying to tell you about among many other things.  So I will include all of this when I finish posting later tonight (afternoon – your time).

For now, though, I’m going to take a break from this blogging business to take care of some REAL business over here.  I have to:
– Get back in touch with film critic, Michael Phillips (Chicago Tribune), about speaking with our students this Friday evening.  And since it seems like our good fortune has run out at the Hotel Victoria (their hospitality for our “free” meetings lasted only so long) I must book another place for us to meet with our guest speakers.  Luckily, I found a super swanky hotel right across the street from the Victoria that looks like it’ll work.  Need to get back in touch with the manager there and book a time/menu for us on Friday (they’re charging us in food/drinks instead of a base price….which I can appreciate).
– I also have two friends in town who arrived via train last night.  They have backpacked through 5 countries in the past week.  That makes me tired to think about.  So now they’re shacking at my place in Juan-Les-Pins to slow down their pace for a few days of R&R on the beach.  I think I may join them for a couple hours this afternoon.
– While sunning in the sand today I also need to jot some ideas down for my next article on athensexchange.com since I have left them hanging since last week.  I feel really bad, but the business of Cannes has consumed my life and left little time for solid, reflective writing.  I will give it my best effort later today, though.
– Tonight is the red carpet premiere of the in-competition Tarantino film, “Inglorious Basterds,” starring Brad Pitt.  The Croisette is going to be CROWDED tonight because everyone will want a glimpse of Brangelina.  Most of our students are going to beg the hardest they’ve begged so far for a ticket to tonight’s screening, I know.  While I would love to be in there with Brangey and ‘tino, I think the chaos would be more than I could handle in heels.  Instead I think my visiting friends and I will don some long-sleeve tees and flops to observe the red carpet from afar and then hit up the laid-back movie on the beach with a make-shift picnic on a blanket.  That is much more my speed these days.
– Then hopefully tonight I can muster up enough energy to finish posting about the last few days.  I’ll channel “The Little Engine That Could” as much as humanly possible (“…I think I can, I think I can, I think I can..”).
Until tonight, mes amis…   A bientot!
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