Tag Archives: Tilda Swinton

‘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]

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tilda Swinton

After hearing Jonathan Caouette speak to us at a hotel up by the Cannes Train Station we speed-walked down to the beach to get in our seats at the UK Pavilion to hear Tilda Swinton generously speak one-on-one with our group.
Here, the students are awaiting the arrival of Tilda. I know the background behind them is fairly white washed, but if I had adjusted the lighting on my camera correctly you would see the bright blue water of the Mediterranean underneath the bright white glow of huge yachts. Not a bad view.
Tilda was wonderful. Having just spoken to a crowd at Ebertfest in April with Roger and Nate (our professor/program director) we were able to somehow occupy a bit of her heavily sought-after time during the chaos of Cannes. She was open, lovely, honest, and insightful. Such an honor and a joy to have her speak to our group of budding film and journalism students.

She cited her two children serving as constant inspirations throughout her talk with us – especially when it comes to film. Not just acting in film, but appreciating film. Tilda described her home absent of television and video games, so when her children are exposed to movies, be it in a local Scottish theatre or simply watching Hitchcock classics in their home, she absolutely admires and is inspired by the way the children let the films wash over them and are absorbed into their young, honest psyches.
Tilda sipped on tea at first because her voice was wearing out from all of the interviews and panels she had participated in prior to speaking to us. Despite tirelessly fulfilling her duties as a lead actress in one of the most talked about films in competition, Tilda’s mood and intention with us was nothing but uplifting and informative. She is a true professional. And her humility was surprising. When describing how she became involved in “We Need To Talk About Kevin” she recalled how she was dumbfounded that Lynne Ramsay and John C. Reilly even knew who she was. She seems to forget she’s an Oscar-winning actress who is arguably one of the best of our time. I guess leading a secluded, normal life on the coast of Scotland could do that to a person. In her town she says she’s “just her kids’ mom” and at the vet she’s “just her dogs’ mom.”
Shockingly, too, was her humor. At one point a nearby helicopter loudly started up and she childishly/mockingly stuck her pointer fingers in her ears and made a face. Smiling, she angrily demanded (in a pretending manner, of course), “Who is that [in the helicopter]?!” It made me daydream and imagine her marching over to the helicopter, knocking on its door, and telling its mystery passengers to quiet down so she could continue speaking to our group of university students in peace. She has the perfect combination of celebrity prowess and innate down-to-earth nature to be able to pull something like that off effectively.
I love this last shot shown below. This is Tilda’s immediate reaction to our student, Donté Slocum’s, question: “How have you grown as a person since you first started acting?” She pensively processed how to respond as the question really took her aback.
All in all, the concise, yet full thirty minutes we spent with Tilda on the patio of the UK Pavilion were so appreciated and sincere. She really took her time with our group. My perceptions of her before this talk and after could not be more different. She is such a normal, amazingly talented woman.
The day after she spoke to us Nate received an email from her apologizing for “rushing out of there.” This completely unnecessary apology couldn’t describe her character more. Genuine, kind, and classy. What an experience!

Tagged

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.

Tagged , , , ,