Cannes: For the first time, a gay themed love story
'Blue is the Warmest Colour' directed by French-Tunisian filmmaker
Abdellatif Kechiche has won the top honour - the Palme d'Or - at the
66th Cannes Film Festival.
Filmmaker Steven Spielberg, head of the competition jury, announced
that he and the other jurists including Oscar-winning actors Nicole
Kidman, Christopher Waltz and Bollywood actress Vidya Balan, had decided
to formally recognise not only the movie's director but also its two
young actresses, Adele Exarchopoulos and Lea Seydoux.
'Blue is the Warmest Colour' is a three-hour coming-of-age movie in
which Exarchopoulos plays a 15-year-old, who falls in love with an
older woman, played by Seydoux.
The movie has been selected from the 20 films in competition at Cannes this year.
The second place Grand Prix went to another popular choice, the
Coen brothers' 'Inside Llewyn Davis'. A bleak comedy set in the early
60s folk scene of Greenwich Village, the film has made a star of its
lead actor Oscar Isaac and it was he who collected the award in place of
the directors.
Another American to receive a significant award was Bruce Dern, who was named best actor for 'Nebraska'.
Alongside Kechiche, France's other big award of the night went to
Berenice Bejo, who was dramatically crowned with the best actress award
for 'The Past', from Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, an honour that
sees her catapulted into the front rank of French actors after her
career-making role in the Oscar-winning silent film 'The Artist'.
The jury prize, Cannes' third top award, went to Kore-eda
Hirokazu's drama 'Like Father, Like Son.' Mexican filmmaker Amat
Escalante took best director for his brutal drug war drama 'Heli'.
The best screenplay was given to Jia Zhang-ke for 'A Touch of Sin'.
The prize for Un Certain Regard, a sidebar section, went to 'L'Image
Manquante', a feature from the Cambodian filmmaker Rithy Panh.
The award for the Camera d'Or, for the best first feature, went to 'Ilo Ilo', from the Singaporean director Anthony Chen.
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