Monday, May 30, 2022

Cannes 2022 Winners: ‘Triangle of Sadness’ Wins Palme d’Or

 Ruben Ostlund's boisterous film wins top award, with Grand Prix shared by Lukas Dhont's "Nearby" and Claire Denis' "Stars at Noon"


The movie, a loud three-section satire about design models, web-based entertainment powerhouses, class partitions and shot spewing, is the second Palme win in five years for Swedish chief Ostlund, who won for "The Square" in 2017. It is additionally the third successive win for U.S. wholesaler Neon, which claimed the top reward for "Titane" last year and "Parasite" in 2019. (There was no celebration in 2020.)


The second place prize, the Grand Prix, was a tie between youthful Belgian chief Lukas Dhont's "Nearby" and veteran French movie producer Claire Denis' "Stars at Noon."

Park Chan-Wook was named the celebration's best chief for "Choice to Leave," his rich cross between a homicide secret and a sentiment.


The best entertainer prize was granted to Iranian entertainer Zar Amir Ebrahimi, who plays a correspondent exploring the homicide of in excess of twelve ladies in Ali Abbasi's "Sacred Spider." Korean entertainer Song Kang-Ho won the best entertainer grant for his part in Hirokazu Kore-eda's "Representative."


Essayist chief Tarik Saleh won the screenplay grant for "Kid From Heaven," an account of debasement in both strict and political circles in Egypt. Tolerating the honor, Saleh said the film has made it incomprehensible for him to get back to Egypt, yet that he "needed to make it happen."


The Jury Prize, which is basically the third-place grant, was a tie between two movies whose chiefs utilized Italian entertainers despite the fact that they weren't from that country: Belgian chiefs Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch for "The Eight Mountains," which was set and shot in Italy utilizing Italian entertainers; and 83-year-old Polish chief, Jerzy Skolimowski, the most seasoned producer in the opposition, for "EO," whose primary entertainers were a couple of Italian jackasses.


An exceptional 75th commemoration grant was given to Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, the Belgian siblings who have proactively won two Palme d'Or grants, for "Tori and Lokita."


The Camera d'Or, the honor for the best first film from all areas of the celebration, went to Riley Keough and Gina Gammell's "War Pony."


The Main Competition comprised of 21 unique movies, likewise including James Gray's "Armageddon Time," David Cronenberg's "Wrongdoings of the Future," Kelly Reichardt's "Appearing," Albert Serra's "Pacifiction," Cristian Mungiu's "R.M.N." and Kirill Serebrennikov's "Tchaikovsky's Wife."


The jury was going by French entertainer Vincent Lindon and furthermore included Iranian chief Asghar Farhadi, entertainer chiefs Rebecca Hall and Jasmine Trinca, chiefs Ladj Ly, Jeff Nichols and Joachim Trier and entertainers Noomi Rapace and Deepika Padukone.


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The victors remembered every one of the three of the Belgian movies for rivalry, "Close," "The Eight Mountains" and "Tori and Lokita." Asian chiefs likewise got along admirably, with films by Park Chan-Wook and Hirokazu Kore-eda winning honors in the Main Competition and Hayakawa Chie and Jianying Chen taking distinctions in the Camera d'Or and short-film contests, separately.


All of the Main Competition films by North American chiefs — "Armageddon Time," "Violations of the Future" and "Appearing" — returned home with nothing, however Swedish chief Ostlund's Palme d'Or champ is in English.


At the honors function, Riley Keough was the main American chief to win an honor. (Her co-chief, Gina Gammell, is Australian.)

The list of winners:

  • Palme d’Or: “Triangle of Sadness,” Ruben Ostlund
  • Grand Prix: (TIE) “Close,” Lukas Dhont; and “Stars at Noon,” Claire Denis
  • Jury Prize: (TIE) “The Eight Mountains,” Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch; and “Eo,” Jerzy Skolimowski
  • Best Director: Park Chan-Wook, “Decision to Leave”
  • Best Screenplay: “Boy From Heaven,” Tarik Saleh
  • Best Actor: Song Kang Ho, “Broker”
  • Best Actress: Zar Amir Ebrahimi, “Holy Spider”
  • 75th anniversary special award: Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, “Tori and Lokita”
  • Camera d’Or (best first film): “War Pony,” Riley Keough and Gina Gammell
  • Camera d’Or, special mention: “Plan 75,” Hayakawa Chie
  • Palme d’Or, Short Film: “The Water Murmurs,” Jianying Chen
  • Short film special mention: “Lori,” Abinash Bikram Shah

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