The 2007 Cannes Film Festival, also known as the 60th Annual Cannes Film Festival, ran from May 16 to 27, 2007. Wong Kar Wai's My Blueberry Nights opened the festival, and Denys Arcand's The Age of Ignorance closed (Wong was the 2006 Cannes Film Festival's Jury president). The President of the Official Jury was British director Stephen Frears.
Feature film competition
Festival line-up
Opener
Closer
Films in competition
- 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, by Cristian Mungiu (Romania) - Won Palme D'Or
- Aleksandra, by Alexander Sokurov (Russia)
- The Edge of Heaven (film), by Fatih Akın (Germany-Turkey)
- The Banishment, by Andrey Zvyagintsev (Russia-Belgium)
- Breath, by Kim Ki-duk (South Korea)
- Les Chansons d'amour, by Christophe Honore (France)
- Death Proof, by Quentin Tarantino (United States)
- The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, by Julian Schnabel (France) - Won Best Director
- Import/Export, by Ulrich Seidl (Austria)
- The Man from London, by Bela Tarr (Germany-France-U.K.-Hungary)
- Mogari no mori, by Naomi Kawase (Japan) - Won Grand Prix
- No Country for Old Men, by The Coen Brothers (United States)
- Paranoid Park, by Gus Van Sant (France-United States)
- Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud (Iran/France) - Shared Jury Prize
- Promise Me This, by Emir Kusturica (France-Serbia)
- Secret Sunshine, by Lee Chang-dong (South Korea) - Won Best Actress (Jeon Do-yeon)
- Silent Light, by Carlos Reygadas (Mexico-France-Netherlands) - - Shared Jury Prize
- Tehilim, by Raphael Nadjari (France)
- Une vieille maîtresse, by Catherine Breillat (France)
- We Own the Night, by James Gray (United States)
- Zodiac, by David Fincher (United States)
Out of competition gala screenings
Midnight screenings
Un certain regard
- Am Ende kommen Touristen, by Robert Thalheim (Germany)
- L'avocat de la terreur, by Barbet Schroeder (France)
- El bano del papa, by Enrique Fernandez and César Charlone (Uruguay)
- The Band's Visit, by Eran Kolirin (Israel)
- California Dreamin', by Cristian Nemescu (Romania)
- Calle Santa Fe, by Carmen Castillo (Chile)
- Du levande, by Roy Andersson (Sweden)
- Et toi, t'es sur qui?, by Lola Doillon (France)
- Kuaile Gongchang, by Ekachai Uekrongtham (Thailand)
- Magnus, by Kadri Kõusaar (Estonia-United Kingdom)
- Blind Mountain, by Li Yang (China)
- Mio fratello è figlio unico, by Daniele Luchetti (Italy)
- Mister Lonely, by Harmony Korine (United States)
- Munyurangabo, by Lee Isaac Chung (United States)
- Night Train, by Diao Yi'nan (China)
- Water Lilies, by Celine Sciamma (France)
- Actresses, by Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi (France)
- La soledad, by Jaime Rosales (Spain)
Special screenings
60th anniversary tributes
Cannes Classics — Documentaries on Cinema
Competition shorts
- Ah Ma, by Anthony Chen (Singapore)
- Ark, by Grzegorz Jonkajtys (Poland)
- The Last 15, by Antonio Campos (United States)
- Looking Glass, by Erik Rosenlund (Sweden)
- My Dear Rosseta, by Yang Hae-hoon (South Korea)
- My Sister, by Marco Van Geffen (The Netherlands)
- The Oates' Valor, by Tim Thaddeus Cahill (United States)
- Resistance aux tremblements, by Olivier Hems (France)
- Run, by Mark Albiston (New Zealand)
- To onoma tou spourgitiou, by Kyros Papavassiliou (Cyprus)
- Ver Llover, by Elisa Miller (Mexico)
Juries
International competition
Un certain regard
Camera d'or
Cinefoundation and short films
Additional film programs
Tous Les Cinemas du Monde
Tous Les Cinemas du Monde (World Cinema) began in 2005 to showcase films from a variety of different countries. From
19 May to
25 May,
2007, films were screened from
India,
Lebanon,
Poland,
Kenya,
Guinea,
Angola,
Slovenia, and
Colombia.
India
The first two days of this program were devoted entirely to the cinema of India and included films in a number of different languages. The
Hindi film,
Lage Raho Munna Bhai, which screened on
May 19 (with
Bollywood superstar,
Sanjay Dutt, as a
Mumbai underworld don, who begins to see the spirit of
Mahatma Gandhi), was particularly well received. In addition, a
Maniratnam film,
Guru, (starring
Abhishek Bachchan,
Madhavan and
Aishwarya Rai and loosely based on the life of
Dhirubhai Ambani; Bachchan also made a
cameo appearance in
Lage Raho Munna Bhai) was also a "critical success".Other films included the
Hindi film
Dharm, the
Malayalam film
Saira,
Missed Call, the
Tamil film
Veyil, and the
Bengali film
Dosar.Another
Tamil language Indian film,
Mozhi was shown in the non-prize category at a later date.
Lebanon
Debuting at the Director's Fortnight was
Nadine Labaki's
Caramel, a charming dramedy about five women who gather at a beauty salon and deal with their everday problems with men, social expectation, sexuality, and tradition vs. modernizing times. Labaki not only directed and co-wrote the film but plays the lead as well. The rest of the cast is composed mostly of unprofessional actors, all of whom deliver very convincing performances and add a lot of color and depth to the film. Reminiscent of an
Almodovar picture,
Caramel is unique not just for its technical and creative sophistication but also for not tackling any of the religious, political, or war-related issues that have continued to plague its setting,
Lebanon, til now. The film proved to be a sleeper at the festival and was distributed in well over 40 countries, becoming an international hit.
Winners
Footnotes
External links