War in Gaza, Ukraine cast shadow over Academy Awards

1 / 3
Pro-Palestinian demonstrators take part in a protest near the perimeter of the 96th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, California, on March 10, 2024. (REUTERS)
2 / 3
Hundreds of protesters demonstrate in support of Palestinians calling for a ceasefire in Gaza behind a fence next to the Dolby Theatre as the 96th Academy Awards Oscars ceremony is held nearby on Sunday, March 10, 2024, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. (AP)
3 / 3
Protesters gather during a demonstration in support of Palestinians calling for a ceasefire in Gaza as the 96th Academy Awards Oscars ceremony is held nearby on March 10, 2024, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. (AP)
Short Url
Updated 11 March 2024
Follow

War in Gaza, Ukraine cast shadow over Academy Awards

  • Protests over Israel’s war in Gaza snarled traffic around the Academy Awards on Sunday, slowing stars’ arrival on the red carpet and turning the Oscar spotlight toward the ongoing conflict

LOS ANGELES: Protest and politics intruded on an election-year Academy Awards on Sunday, where demonstrations for Gaza raged outside the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, and early awards went to “Poor Things,” “The Zone of Interest” and “The Boy and the Heron.”

Protests over Israel’s war in Gaza snarled traffic around the Academy Awards on Sunday, slowing stars’ arrival on the red carpet and turning the Oscar spotlight toward the ongoing conflict. Some protesters shouted “Shame!” at those trying to reach the Dolby Theatre.
Jonathan Glazer, the British filmmaker whose chilling Auschwitz drama “The Zone of Interest” won best international film, drew connections between the dehumanization depicted in his film and today.
“Right now, we stand here as men who refute their Jewishness and the Holocaust being hijacked by an occupation which has led to conflict for so many innocent people, whether the victims of October the 7th in Israel, or the the ongoing attack on Gaza, all the victims, this humanization, how do we resist?”




A Pro-Palestinian demonstrator speaks to members of security during a protest near the perimeter of the 96th Academy Awards in Los Angeles, California, on March 10, 2024. (REUTERS)

The war in Gaza was on the minds of many attendees, as was the war in Ukraine. A year after “Navalny” won the same award, Mstyslav Chernov’s “20 Days in Mariupol,” a harrowing chronicle of the early days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, won best documentary. The win, a first for The Associated Press and PBS’ “Frontline,” came as the war in Ukraine passed the two-year mark with no signs of abating.
Mstyslav Chernov, the Ukrainian filmmaker and AP journalist whose hometown was bombed the day he learned of his Oscar nomination, spoke forcefully about Russia’s invasion.
“This is the first Oscar in Ukrainian history,” said Chernov. “And I’m honored. But probably I will be the first director on this stage to say I wish I had never made this film.”
“Oppenheimer,” the blockbuster biopic, was widely expected to overpower all competition — including its release-date companion, “Barbie” — at an Oscars that could turn into a coronation for Christopher Nolan.
But it took more than 90 minutes into the show for “Oppenheimer” to win an award. Instead, Yorgos Lanthimos’ Frankenstein-riff “Poor Things” ran away with three prizes for its sumptuous craft, including awards for production design, makeup and hairstyling and costume design.
Robert Downey Jr. won best supporting actor at the Academy Awards, notching his first Oscar and handing the 58-year-old actor a crowning moment in an up-and-down career.
Downey’s illustrious second act culminated Sunday with a win for his supporting turn in Christopher Nolan’s “Oppenheimer.” Downey Jr., 58, had been nominated twice before (for “Chaplin” and “Tropic Thunder”).
“I’d like to thank my terrible childhood and the academy, in that order,” said Downey, the son of filmmaker Robert Downey Sr.
Jimmy Kimmel, hosting the ABC telecast for the fourth time, opened the 96th Academy Awards with a monologue that drew a few cold looks (from Robert Downey Jr., Sandra Hüller and Messi, the dog from best-picture nominee “Anatomy of a Fall”). But Kimmel, emphasizing Hollywood as “a union town” following 2023’s actor and writer strikes, drew a standing ovation for bringing out teamsters and behind-the-scenes workers — who are now entering their own labor negotiations.




TV host Jimmy Kimmel speaks onstage during the 96th Annual Academy Awards at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on March 10, 2024. (AFP)

The night’s first award was one of its most predictable: Da’Vine Joy Randolph for best supporting actress, for her performance in Alexander Payne’s “The Holdovers.” An emotional Randolph was accompanied to the stage by her “Holdovers” co-star Paul Giamatti.
“For so long I’ve always wanted to be different,” said Randolph. “And now I realize I just need to be myself.”
Though Randolph’s win was widely expected, an upset quickly followed. Hayao Miyazaki’s “The Boy and the Heron” won for best animated feature, a surprise over the slightly favored “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse.” Miyazaki, the 83-year-old Japanese anime master who came out of retirement to make “The Boy and the Heron,” didn’t attend the ceremony. He also didn’t attend the 2003 Oscars when his “Spirited Away” won the same award.
Best original screenplay went to “Anatomy of a Fall,” which, like “Barbie,” was penned by a couple: director Justine Triet and Arthur Harari. “This will help me through my midlife crisis, I think,” said Triet.
In adapted screenplay, where “Barbie” was nominated — and where some suspected Greta Gerwig would win after being overlooked for director — the Oscar went to Cord Jefferson, who wrote and directed his feature film debut “American Fiction.” He pleaded for executives to take risks on young filmmakers like himself.
“Instead of making a $200 million movie, try making 20 $10 million movies,” said Jefferson, previously an award-winning TV writer.
The Oscars kicked off an hour early, due to daylight saving time. But aside from the time shift, this year’s show went for tried-and-true Academy Awards traditions. Kimmel is back as host. Past winners flocked back as presenters. And a big studio epic was poised for a major awards haul.
Yet Hollywood also has plenty of its own storm clouds to concern itself with.
The 2023 movie year was defined by a prolonged strike over the future of an industry that’s reckoning with the onset of streaming, artificial intelligence and shifting moviegoer tastes that have tested even the most bankable brands. The academy, while also widely nominating films like “Killers of the Flower Moon” and “Poor Things,” embraced both “Oppenheimer,” the lead nominee with 13 nods, and Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie,” the year’s biggest hit with more than $1.4 billion in ticket sales and eight nominations.
With the forecasted “Oppenheimer” romp, the night’s biggest drama is in the best actress category. Emma Stone (“Poor Things”) and Lily Gladstone (“Killers of the Flower Moon”) are nearly even-odds to win. While an Oscar for Stone, who won for her performance “La La Land,” would be her second statuette, an win for Gladstone would make Academy Awards history. No Native American has ever won a competitive Oscar.
While “Barbie” bested (and helped lift) “Oppenheimer” at the box office, it appears likely it will take a back seat to Nolan’s film at the Oscars. Gerwig was notably overlooked for best director, sparking an outcry that some, even Hillary Clinton, said mimicked the patriarchy parodied in the film.
Historically, having big movies in the mix for the Oscars’ top awards has been good for broadcast ratings. The Academy Awards’ largest audience ever came when James Cameron’s “Titanic” swept the 1998 Oscars.
Last year’s ceremony, where a very different best-picture contender in “Everything Everywhere All at Once” triumphed, was watched by 18.7 million people, up 12 percent from the year prior. ABC and the academy are hoping to continue the upward trend after a nadir in 2021, when 9.85 million watched a pandemic-diminished telecast relocated to Los Angeles’ Union Station.
 


Irish performer ‘cries’ after Israel reaches Eurovision final as UK venues cancel watch parties

Updated 16 min 36 sec ago
Follow

Irish performer ‘cries’ after Israel reaches Eurovision final as UK venues cancel watch parties

Bambie Thug, Ireland’s entry in the Eurovision Song Contest, claims to have cried  after Israel qualified for the final to be held on Saturday. 

“It is a complete overshadow of everything, goes against everything that Eurovision is meant to be,” Bambie Thug told journalists ahead of the event at Malmo Arena in Sweden. “I cried with my team.”

The 31-year-old singer and songwriter wore a keffiyeh and carried Irish flags while urging the European Broadcasting Union to show “conscience” and “humanity.”
 
The artist will perform “Doomsday Blue” in the final.

Israel’s performer, Eden Golan, will present her song “Hurricane” at the competition. The track underwent revisions after the initial version, “October Rain,” was deemed too political by the EBU.

Although the contest’s motto is “united by music,” this year’s event has attracted protests from Palestinians and their supporters, who say Israel should be excluded because of its conduct of the war in Gaza.

Thousands of people are expected to march for a second time this week through Sweden’s third-largest city, which has a large Muslim population, to demand a boycott of Israel and a ceasefire in the seven-month conflict. 

In Finland, a group of about 40 protesters stormed the headquarters of public broadcaster YLE on Saturday, demanding it withdraw from the song contest because of Israel’s participation.

Venues across England are canceling their gigs after Palestine protest groups instructed their followers to pressure pubs showing the contest - leading some venues to close due to staff safety concerns.

The Duke of York cinema in Brighton called off its Eurovision event this week, telling ticket holders it was doing so “due to safety concerns for our staff and customers,” the Guardian reported. The Brighton Palestinian Solidarity Campaign called the decision a “massive win.”


AlUla to have starring role in ‘Motor City’ to be filmed in Saudi Arabia

Updated 11 May 2024
Follow

AlUla to have starring role in ‘Motor City’ to be filmed in Saudi Arabia

DUBAI: Saudi Arabia’s AlUla is expected to have a starring role in director Potsy Ponciroli’s upcoming action thriller “Motor City.”

Production is due to start on July 10 in New Jersey and Saudi Arabia. The film is part of production company Stampede Ventures’ 10-picture slate deal with Film AlUla.

The cast will include Alan Ritchson, Shailene Woodley, Ben Foster and Pablo Schreiber. 

“Motor City” is centered around John Miller (Ritchson), a Detroit auto worker who loses everything, including his girlfriend (Woodley), after being framed by a local gangster (Foster) and sent to prison.

After his release, Miller seeks revenge while trying to win his former girlfriend back.


 


Singer Elyanna makes her TV debut on ‘The Late Show’

Updated 11 May 2024
Follow

Singer Elyanna makes her TV debut on ‘The Late Show’

  • Chilean Palestinian star performs hits from debut ‘Woledto’
  • Proudly adorned with Palestinian keffiyeh around her head

DUBAI: Chilean Palestinian singer Elyanna made her television debut this week on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

The 22-year-old music sensation delivered a medley of hits from her debut album “Woledto,” including “Callin’ U (Tamally Maak)” and “Mama Eh,” the first song performed entirely in Arabic on the show.

Her performance featured an ensemble of oud, tabla, riq and dancers.

“I had so much fun performing on this iconic stage,” she wrote to her 1.2 million followers after her show.

The hitmaker was adorned in a white lace dress featuring two thigh-high slits. She complemented the attire with coin-belt accessories, draping them over her shoulders and fastening them around her calves to add a Middle Eastern touch to her look.

In one of the pictures she shared with her fans, she proudly wore the Palestinian keffiyeh around her head as she posed in front of “The Late Show” desk.

Elyanna dropped her album in April. It features nine songs: “Woledto,” “Ganeni,” “Calling U,” “Al Sham,” “Mama Eh,” “Kon Nafsak,” “Lel Ya Lel,” “Yabn El Eh” and “Sad in Pali.”

Before releasing the album, she wrote to her Instagram followers: “This album is the embodiment of pride to be an Arab woman, to be from Nazareth, to be from the Middle East.”

“This is the closest I’ve been to where I come from,” she added. “The only feature on my album is my grandfather.”

The Los Angeles-based singer’s music is a mix of Arabic and Western beats, which she attributes to her multicultural upbringing.

Elyanna has been normalizing Arabic lyrics in the Western world throughout her career, taking inspiration from artists including Lana Del Ray and Beyonce, as well as Middle Eastern legend Fayrouz.

In 2023, Elyanna became the first artist to perform a full set in Arabic at California’s Coachella music festival.

She embarked on a North American Tour this year, gracing stages in Dallas, Houston, Toronto, Montreal, Washington, New York, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco and Santa Ana.


REVIEW: ‘Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes’ a worthy addition to successful franchise

Updated 11 May 2024
Follow

REVIEW: ‘Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes’ a worthy addition to successful franchise

DUBAI: When soulless, cookie-cutter franchises were but the norm, the “Planet of the Apes” reboot trilogy — starring Andy Serkis’s commanding Ceasar — cut through the noise to offer a textured, resonant story that not only did well with the critics but also broke box office records.

Coming seven years after the final instalment of that trilogy, “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” continues the legacy with a visually rich and emotionally layered story. It takes its inspiration from the original 1968 film, “Planet of the Apes,” which was in itself an adaptation of French author Pierre Boulle’s 1963 novel “La Planete des singes.” 

Director Wes Ball (“The Maze Runner” trilogy) continues his run of dystopian features, but this time explores it in a lush, Garden of Eden-adjacent setting.

“Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” is set generations after Ceasar’s time, when the world has been taken over by intelligent apes. The same virus that evolved them has regressed humans into an echo of their former selves, rendering them primitive and without language.

A coming-of-age story, our protagonist is the young simian Noa (a poignant and scene-stealing Owen Teague). When his clan is murdered by a rival group of bloodthirsty apes, Noa goes on the adventure of his life as he sets out to save those he can from the tyrannical rule of Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand). On his journey, he teams up with a human girl May (“The Witcher” star Freya Allan) and a wise orangutan named Raka (Peter Macon), who still live by the words of the original Caesar.

While the premise itself lacks the depth of the previous trilogy, Ball compensates through extensive character work. He poses thought-provoking questions about whether humanity deserves a second chance, whether the apes will continue to make the same mistakes humans did, and whether apes and humans can imagine a future of peaceful co-existence.

The action and emotions are supported by groundbreaking visuals that seamlessly blend convincing motion-capture performances with beautifully rendered CGI.

To sum up, “Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes” proves a more than worthy successor to a franchise that refuses to quit — and for good reason.


The Arab world’s representatives at Cannes Film Festival 

Updated 11 May 2024
Follow

The Arab world’s representatives at Cannes Film Festival 

  • The movies from Arab filmmakers showing at the industry’s most prestigious event this year 

‘Norah’

Starring: Yaqoub Alfarhan, Maria Bahrawi

Director: Tawfik Alzaidi

Last year, the Saudi-backed “Jeanne du Barry” opened the festival. This year, the Kingdom’s burgeoning film industry takes an even more significant step forward on the global stage with Saudi filmmaker Tawfik Alzaidi’s debut feature “Norah,” which will screen in the festival’s Un Certain Regard section (for “films with unusual styles and non-traditional stories seeking international recognition”). “Norah” is set in AlUla in the late Nineties and follows a teacher named Nader (Yaqoub Alfarhan), whose ambitions of becoming an artist himself are fading. But when he meets Norah (Maria Bahrawi), a young, talented girl, he does his best to help her make the most of her artistic abilities, in the hope that her country may one day embrace her self-expression. Speaking to Arab News in November, Alzaidi said: “People always say to me that this movie contains one thing above all else: the truth. I am so happy that our truth can now be told.” He added: “When audiences of the next generation see this film, I want them to remember one thing: Believe in yourself. And if you have a voice, never stop fighting for it.”

‘Everybody Loves Touda’

Starring: Nisrin Erradi, Joud Chamihy, Jalila Tlemsi

Director: Nabil Ayouch

Franco-Moroccan producer, writer and director Ayouch is no stranger to Cannes. He’s married to Moroccan filmmaker Maryam Touzani and co-wrote her 2022 Cannes entry “The Blue Caftan,” with her. Ayouch’s own “Casablanca Beats” was in competition for the Palme d’Or, the festival’s highest accolade, in 2021. Like the latter, “Everybody Loves Touda” relies heavily on Morocco’s vital music scene for inspiration. The titular character, a single mom in a provincial town, dreams of being a ‘sheikha’ — a traditional performer “empowered by the lyrics of the fierce female poets who came before her, with their songs of resistance, love and emancipation.” Touda dreams of making it big in Casablanca.

‘To A Land Unknown’

Starring: Angeliki Papoulia, Mahmood Bakri, Manal Awad

Director: Mahdi Fleifel

UAE-born Danish-Palestinian filmmaker Mahdi Fleifel has made several memorable short films about the harrowing experiences of Palestinian refugees in Europe — including “A Drowning Man” and “3 Logical Exits” — that have undoubtedly provided inspiration, and information, for this feature film. Two Palestinian cousins, Chatila and Reda, are trying to make their way from Athens to Germany, and have nearly saved enough cash to buy their fake passports when Reda, a drug addict, loses their money. Desperate to get out of their seemingly hopeless situation, Chatila hatches a dangerous plan involving hostages and the two best friends posing as smugglers.

‘Motel Destino’

Starring: Iago Xavier, Fabio Assuncao, Nataly Rocha

Director: Karim Ainouz

Ainouz — born in Brazil to an Algerian father and Brazilian mother — presents his latest feature in the festival’s Official Selection. It’s billed as an ‘erotic thriller’ and centers on the titular roadside ‘love hotel’ run by “hot-headed Elias and his restless younger wife Dayana.” When 21-year-old Heraldo arrives, on the run after an assassination he was meant to carry out went wrong, the established order of Motel Destino’s world is turned upside down as Dayana finds herself intrigued by the newcomer and decides to let him stay. “As the tropical noir plays out, loyalties and desire intertwine to reveal that destiny has its own enigmatic design,” the official blurb reads.

‘The Village Next to Paradise’

Starring: Ahmed Ali Farah, Anab Ahmed Ibrahim

Director: Mo Harawe

The Mogadishu-born Somali-Austrian filmmaker’s debut feature will screen in the festival’s Un Certain Regard section. Judging by the success of his previous shorts, which include “Will My Parents Come to See Me,” it should be worth watching. Harawe told Deadline that his movie “serves as a metaphor for a country that holds the potential for paradise were it not for the circumstances that make such a reality impossible.” “The Village Next to Paradise” is set in a remote village in Somalia, and, according to the festival’s synopsis, “revolves around a newly assembled family as its members navigate between their different aspirations and the complex world surrounding them. Love, trust and resilience will power them through their life paths.”

THE HOTTEST PREMIERES

Four of the world’s most acclaimed directors have films debuting at Cannes this year

‘Megalopolis’

Francis Ford Coppola 

The five-time Oscar winner — widely regarded as an all-time great — returns with an epic sci-fi drama with a stellar cast including Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, Aubrey Plaza, Shia LaBeouf, Jon Voight, Jason Schwartzman and Dustin Hoffman.

‘Kinds of Kindness’

Yorgos Lanthimos

Lanthimos is one of the most inventive filmmakers working today. Last year’s “Poor Things” picked up four Oscars, including Best Actress for Emma Stone, who teams up with Lanthimos again in this anthology film.

‘The Shrouds’

David Cronenberg

The Canadian filmmaker — one of the finest horror directors around — presents his latest work at Cannes this year. It’s about a technology that allows the living to monitor their deceased love ones in their “shrouds.”

‘Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga’

George Miller

This spin-off from Miller’s excellent 2015 film “Mad Max: Fury Road” tells the origin story of Imperator Furiosa (played in “Fury Road” by Charlize Theron, and here by Anya Taylor-Joy), kidnapped as a child by a biker horde and determined to find her way home.