Tag: Cannes

  • India, special guest country in 2013

    India, special guest country in 2013

    The Festival de Cannes has chosen Goa to announce it is to welcome a large delegation from the Indian film industry to Cannes to celebrate the one hundred years since the birth of cinema in India.

    The 43rd International Film Festival of India (IFFI) and Film Bazaar 2012, taking place in Goa until November 30th 2012 with the support of the Indian Ministry of Culture, present the ideal moment to announce that India, in 2013, is to be the third 'guest country' at Cannes, following Egypt in 2011 and Brazil this year.

    The Festival de Cannes is delighted to celebrate one of the most important countries in the world of cinema, a country with a prestigious history and tradition, one whose current day and creative impulses are a perennial example of vitality.

    Exact details of the celebrations will be announced at a later date.

    The Festival de Cannes will be taking place from May 15th to 26th, 2013.

  • ‘Dabba’ to be distributed by Sony in North America

    ‘Dabba’ to be distributed by Sony in North America

    NEW DELHI: The Lunchbox (Dabba), which made its debut at the Cannes Film Festival‘s Critics‘ Week section, has been acquired by Sony Pictures Classics for North America.

    Directed by Ritesh Batra and starring Irrfan Khan, Nimrat Kaur and Nawazuddin Siddiqui, The Lunchbox claimed the audience award in Critics Week.

    International sales are handled by Germany‘s The Match Factory GmbH, which also licensed the film to Happiness Distribution for France.

    The film has already been sold in 20 territories across the globe. It was already pre-sold to five countries. Major international sales include Artificial Eye (UK) and Happiness (France).

    The film has been sold to North America, France, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Spain, Poland, Portugal, Greece, Turkey, Israel, Baltic, Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Mexico, Central America, Brazil and Ex-Yugoslavia (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia).

    The film had been pre-sold to Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg.

    The film was produced by India‘s Sikhya Entertainment and D?r Motion Pictures with the National Film Development Corporation (NFDC), Germany‘s Rohfilm GmbH, France‘s ASAP Films and the US‘s Cine Mosaic.

    The story follows the connection between a widower nearing retirement and a frustrated housewife that is established when Mumbai‘s famously reliable system of lunchbox deliveries goes wrong.

  • Blue is Warmest Colour gets Palme d’Or at Cannes

    Blue is Warmest Colour gets Palme d’Or at Cannes

    NEW DELHI: Blue Is The Warmest Colour (France) directed by Abdellatif Kechiche with Ad?le Exarchopoulos and Léa Seydoux has won the Palme d‘Or at the 66th Cannes Film Festival in France.

    The Grand Prix went to Inside Llewyn Davis (USA) directed by Ethan Coen and Joel Coen, while Amat Escalante got the best Director Award for Heli (S).

    The jury prize went to Japanese film Soshite Chichi Ni Naru (Like Father, Like Son / Tel P?re, Tel Fils) directed by Kore-Eda Hirokazu. The best screenplay award went to Jia Zhangke for Tian Zhu Ding (A Touch of Sin) from China.

    The best actor and actress awards went to Bérénice Bejo in Le Passé (The Past) directed by Asghar Farhadi and Bruce Dern in Nebraska directed by Alexander Payne respectively.

    L‘image Manquante (The Missing Picture) directed by Rithy Panh received the Un Certain Regard award, while the Camera d‘Or went to Ilo Ilo directed by Anthony Chen (Quinzaine Des Réalisateurs).

    In short films, the Palme d‘Or went to Safe director by Moon Byoung-Gon and the Special Mention was for Ex-?quo Hvalfjordur (Whale Valley / Le Fjord Des Baleines) directed By Gudmundur Arnar Gudmundsson and 37°4 S Directed by Adriano Valerio.

    The jury prize for short films went to Omar by Hany Abu-Assad while the director award went to Alain Guiraudie Pour Son for L‘inconnu Du Lac.

    A certain talent prize went to the whole cast of La Jaula De Oro by Diego Quemada-Diez and the AVenir prize went to Fruitvale Station directed by Ryan Coogler.

    The Cinéfondation Premier Prix went to Needle directed by Anahita Ghazvinizadeh and Deuxi?me Prix went to En Attendant le Dégel directed by Sarah Hirtt, while Troisi?me Prix went to Ex-?quo În Acvariu (In The Fishbowl) directed by Tudor Cristian Jurgiu and Pandy (Pandas) directed by Matúš Vizár.

  • Neil Nitin Mukesh-Puja Gupta starrer Shortcut Romeo to be screened at Cannes Filmfest

    Neil Nitin Mukesh-Puja Gupta starrer Shortcut Romeo to be screened at Cannes Filmfest

    NEW DELHI: Shortcut Romeo, Hindi remake of a popular Tamil film, will be among the new Indian films to be screened at Cannes in the festival‘s 66th instalment.


    A new romantic thriller, it has been produced, written and directed by southerner Susi Ganeshan under his own banner, Susi Ganesh Productions. Much of the present film was shot in Kenya in East Africa.


    This is a remake of his own 2006 Tamil box office hit “Thirittu Paysale”. The current Bollywood version stars Bollywood hearthrob Neil Nitin Mukesh as Romeo, with Puja Gupta as his love interest. Ameesha Patel appears in a negative role.


    Ganeshan has already helmed half a dozen features in Tamil since 2002 and is a disciple of senior Tamilian director Mani Ratnam, who currently works mostly in Mumbai and is regarded as one of the most original and creative of all Indian directors whatever the language.

  • India’s Manjeet Singh to pitch for funds for film at Cannes

    India’s Manjeet Singh to pitch for funds for film at Cannes

    New Delhi: Two projects from Asia including one from India are among the 15 new works selected to take part in this year‘s Atelier, part of the Cannes Film Festival‘s Cinefondation.

    Ciao Ciao by Song Chuan from China and Chenu by filmmaker Manjeet Singh from India will be participating, though full details will be announced next month.

    The aim of the exercise is to bring about creative films and encourage a new generation of talent all over the world. It offers its participants access to international co-production.

    So far, 83 projects have been completed out of 126 projects presented over the last eight years and 29 are currently in pre-production.

  • Steven Spielberg heads Cannes Fest competition jury

    Steven Spielberg heads Cannes Fest competition jury

    MUMBAI: The 66th Cannes Film Festival has announced that filmmaker Steven Spielberg will head its competition jury.

    Spielberg said, “My admiration for the steadfast mission of the Festival to champion the international language of movies is second to none. The most prestigious of its kind, the festival has always established the motion picture as a cross cultural and generational medium.”

    Festival de Cannes president Gilles Jacob said, “As they say across the Atlantic,” said “Steven Spielberg is a Cannes ‘regular‘: Sugarland Express, Color Purple. But it was with E.T. that I screened as a world premiere in ‘82 that ties were made of the type you never forget. Ever since, I‘ve often asked Steven to be Jury President, but he‘s always been shooting a film. So when this year I was told E.T., phone home, I understood and immediately replied: “At last!”

    Spielberg, born in Ohio in 1946, has been a film enthusiast from a very young age. The first film he made was Sugarland Express that was selected for the Festival de Cannes in 1974 and won the best screenplay award.

    In 1993, Steven Spielberg‘s Jurassic Park beat all records for box-office takings in the US. Famous for his commercial successes, his films also The Color Purple (1986), Empire Of The Sun(1987), Schindler‘s List (1993), Saving Private Ryan (1998), Minority Report (2002), Catch Me If You Can (2002), War Of The Worlds (2005), The Adventure Of Tintin: Secret Of The Unicorn (2011) and his latest Lincoln.

  • Jalpari wins MIP Junior Kids Jury Award 2012 at Cannes

    Jalpari wins MIP Junior Kids Jury Award 2012 at Cannes

    MUMBAI: Ultra Distributors‘ Jalpari – The Desert Mermaid recently won the MIP Junior Kids Jury Awards 2012 at Cannes. The MIP Junior Kids Jury award is the international showcase for children‘s and youth programmes and films.

    As many as 115 producers from around the world had entered their programmes that were divided into three categories – Tweens (11-14 years), Kids (7-10 years) and Pre-school (3-6 years). This included both live action and animation in every category.

    A jury of fifteen children from the International School of Nice judged their favourite film during a private screening session with the help of French TV presenter and producer, Billy. And the winning choice for the Tweens category, was the India presentation Jalpari – The Desert Mermaid.

    The other entries for this category were Chilli Girl (Domo Animato – Columbia), Monster Mountain (Dancing Digital Animation – China), One and a Half Heroes (Fantawild Animation Inc – China) and The Eternal Song, Jazzit II – Zhejiang Dishun Tech Co, Ltd – China).

    One interesting and shocking revelation noted by the experts in this year‘s MIP Junior was the Tweens are just not watching kids TV or only animation was not on their viewing list. They moved onto a more aspirational live action offering. They want to be immersed in stories and this bears out with their winning choice for the Tweens category, that was Jalpari – The Desert Mermaid.

    This is the first time that an Indian film was selected that as well as won the award.

  • How Indian agencies can win big at Cannes

    How Indian agencies can win big at Cannes

    MUMBAI: India‘s weak performance at the Cannes Lions Festival, the worst in the last five years, is evoking criticism in the advertising world. Sinking to just 14 metals, down from 24 last year, the time has come to retrospect and build on the talent pool that has the potential to create bigger impact in the advertising world.

    The record book looks even worse as India went without a Grand Prix this year. It won three gold, one less than last year, and three silver, seven less.

    India‘s advertising minds need new ideas that are bold and fresh at a time when new markets are emerging to give competition. Some experts feel that Indian agencies lost out at Cannes because the ‘basic idea‘ ‘lacked the magnificence‘ to win big.

    Laments Leo Burnett chairman and CEO Indian sub-continent Arvind Sharma, “Cannes is a contest of great ideas executed brilliantly. This year unfortunately we had very few big bold ideas. We won some gold metals but they were for execution specialities like typography and film direction. For winning in ideas, we bagged smaller trophies. What we need is bigger, bolder and fresher ideas across categories like we had in the past with the Luxor and the Lead India campaign.”

    In a fast-changing global environment, exposed to new technologies and market situations, Indian agencies need to realise that every year is a different ball game and the need of the hour is to adapt.

    Says JWT chief creative officer and managing partner Bobby Pawar, “We need to understand that every year the game changes and you just have to keep doing better and smarter from year to year. Take the example of Usain Bolt. Every time he fails to make it, he tells himself ‘I am going to train harder and get where I want‘. That is a lesson we all got to learn.”

    The most glaring under achievement of the Indian agencies perhaps is the failure to make it to the Digital and Mobile Lions shortlist. In an age where every advertiser is vying to go online or be present on the mobile platform, and where every day sees a new innovation in the digital space, the Indian agencies failed to impress the jury enough to even make it to the final lap.

    The accent for digital is rapidly evolving across the world and the subtle tone is to come out with bolder ideas. For executing these ideas, one needs the apt technology and infrastructure.

    “When you compare India to other developing nations even in the realm of digital, I would say we are in The Stone Age. When the bandwidth for an exceptional online campaign is not available, how can you expect any path breaking work? In the case of mobile too, I feel we need ‘imagineers’ and not just programmers and engineers. It is the imagination that needs to grow and develop that will then translate into award winning work,” says Pawar.

    Expanding reach across platforms is also becoming an important tool reflective of the changes in the advertising world. Says Scarecrow Communications founder director Manish Bhatt, “The definition of creativity is changing. Creative is not just a clever idea or stunning execution anymore. It also includes factors like how much response a campaign manages to evoke. Entries that have evoked stunning response can change the world and look superior than the other works. Entries which go beyond the common benefit of the product and do something for the society have cut ice with the jury.”

    Cannes Lions Tally
    Year
    Awards
    2008
    23 (including Grand Prix)
    2009
    25
    2010
    17
    2011
    24
    2012
    14

    Worse, India‘s achievement in the traditional categories wasn‘t too impressive. Admits Law and Kenneth CEO and managing partner Anil Nair, “The traditional categories – print, TV and outdoor – have become fiercely competitive, and there is a lot of innovation within them. Our work is one-dimensional, which in a way suits our local requirements. But this did not catch the fancy of the jury. Some of the work like for Nike and Google have a lot of spin in new media technology, but we have not been able to demonstrate that kind of thinking. The works we have sent are majorly in print.”

    So what are the key learnings from this year’s somewhat disappointing performance at the biggest ad fest?

    “The learning for me is that we should win more in the traditional category like Films which is a major medium here. We don’t have any metal in films apart from one that is in film craft. We should have won more metals even in radio, outdoor and now digital,” says McCann Worldgroup India chairman and CEO Prasoon Joshi, the man who led his agency to win a gold for Outdoor.

    Sharma, though, likes to see the glass half full. “I‘m sure India has the talent and the passion it takes to win big at Cannes. This year‘s results will push us harder and I‘m sure we will do well next year,” he concludes with a note of optimism.

  • Cannes: India ends disappointing run with Gold for Taproot in Film Craft

    MUMBAI: Ending this year’s Cannes Lions Festival on a winning note, Taproot India bagged a Gold Film Craft Lion for its ‘I am Mumbai‘ campaign for client Times of India, in the Direction sub-category.

    India‘s overall performance at Cannes was not inspiring at all as it failed to get a Grand Prix. The scorecard looked unhealthy as it pocketed just three gold trophies, three silver and eight bronze. The winning list was better last year with four gold and a total of 24 trophies that included 10 silver.

    India‘s weaker record was all the more disappointing as newer markets like Tunisia, Puerto Rico and the UAE made their mark in the creative field.

    India also scored a a blank in the recent categories like Cyber and Mobile.

    Taproot may have had some satisfaction amid this gloom. The last winning streak, which came in the form of ‘I am Mumbai‘ campaign, was created by Ramesh Deo Productions.

    The film had also qualified in the Film Lions category, but failed to convert the shortlist into a metal win. Also shortlisted in the Film Craft category was BBH India’s work for Google Chrome titled Tanjore, but did not win a metal.

    Paris-based agency BETC won the Grand Prix in the category for its ‘Bear‘ campaign that it created for Canal+ in the ‘Best Production Value‘ sub-category.

    Taproot’s ‘I am Mumbai’ campaign consists of a series of stories featured in the paper compiled in one film. It touched upon current events like the politically-motivated university ban of Rohinton Mistry’s book, the milk adulteration fiasco, the horrifying hell of the kavda orphanage and the fight against illegal political posters destroying our cityscape. The idea was to communicate that every morning one voice – the tabloid Mumbai Mirror – makes sure that many voices in the city are heard.

  • Taproot and BBH are India entries to Film Craft Lions shortlist

    MUMBAI: Two Indian entries have made it to the Film Craft Lions shortlist at this year’s Cannes Lions Festival: BBH India’s ‘Tanjore’ for Google Chrome and Taproot India’s ‘I am Mumbai’ campaign for The Times of India Group.

    BBH India has qualified in the sub category Art Direction. The ad is a part of Google Chrome’s ‘The web is what you make of it’ campaign.

    The campaign follows the real story of a local from Tanjore, G Rajendran, who strived to keep alive the dying art of Tanjore paintings. As a part of his mission, he created his own website to facilitate his business/art and other Google products to promote himself. The commercial communicates how the oldest Indian art form collaborated with the most modern marketplace to keep itself relevant and used it effectively to thrive and survive in today’s fast-paced world.

    Taproot’s ‘I am Mumbai’ campaign consists of a series of stories featured in the paper compiled in one film. It touched upon current events like the politically-motivated university ban of Rohinton Mistry’s book, the milk adulteration fiasco, the horrifying hell of the kavda orphanage and the fight against illegal political posters destroying our cityscape. The idea was to communicate that every morning one voice – the tabloid Mumbai Mirror – makes sure the many voices in the city are heard. The campaign has been shortlisted in the Direction sub category.

    Of the 1721 entries received, 131 have been shortlisted in the category this year. There were 41 entries from India in the Film Craft Lions category, eight more than last year’s 33 entries.