‘Indiana Jones’ debut survives Cannes critics

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Indiana Jones received louder applause going in than he did coming out.

His latest adventure, “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” earned a respectful though far from glowing — reception Sunday at the Cannes Film Festival, avoiding the sort of thrashing the event’s harsh critics gave to “The Da Vinci Code” two years ago.

Yet Indy’s fourth big-screen romp is not likely to go down as one of the most memorable. Some viewers at its first press screening loved it, some called it slick and enjoyable though formulaic, some said it was not worth the 19-year wait since Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Harrison Ford made the last film.

“They should have left well enough alone,” said J. Sperling Reich, who writes for FilmStew.com. “It really looked like they were going through the motions. It really looked like no one had their heart in it.”

Alain Spira of French magazine Paris Match found “Crystal Skull” a perfectly acceptable “Indiana Jones” tale, a sentiment echoed by the solid applause the movie received as the final credits rolled.

“It’s good. It’s a product that is polished, industrial, we’re not getting ripped off in terms of quality,” Spira said. “You know what you’re going to see, you see what you get, and when you leave you’re happy.”

The applause was louder at the outset, though. Fans at the early afternoon showing, which preceded the film’s glitzy formal premiere with cast and crew Sunday night, cheered and clapped wildly at an announcement that the screening was about to start. Some even hummed the Indiana Jones fanfare as the lights went down.

The applause at the end was more subdued.

Cast and crew were unconcerned about how critics might dissect the film.

“I’m not afraid at all. I expect to have the whip turned on me,” Ford told reporters after the screening. “It’s not unusual for something that is popular to be disdained by some people, and I fully expect it.

But, he said: “I work for the people who pay to get in. They are my customers, and my focus is on providing the best experience I can for those people.”

The filmmakers kept the movie shrouded in secrecy, skipping the rounds of press screenings often held for big studio movies and going for a big blowout at Cannes.

Spielberg said he and his collaborators decided “that the fair thing to do and the fun thing to do would be to view it where the entire world is come together every year at this wonderful festival, and we thought that was the best place to introduce Indiana Jones to you again after 19 years.”

The film received none of the derisive laughter or catcalls that mounted near the end of the first press screening for “Da Vinci Code.”

There were a few titters from the “Crystal Skull” crowd early on over co-star Cate Blanchett’s thick, Boris-and-Natasha accent as a Soviet operative racing against Indy to find an artifact of immeasurable power. The rather corny romantic ending also drew a chuckle or two.

In between, the film packed a fair amount of action, though some viewers found the middle portion dull. Conchita Casanovas, of Spain’s RNE radio, said she was “bored to death.”

The new movie hurls archaeologist Jones into the Cold War in 1957. He survives a nuclear blast in the desert in typically creative fashion and is reunited with “Raiders” flame Marion Ravenwood (Karen Allen).

As speculated, the film has an alien connection, though far more subdued than the “Indiana Jones and the Saucer Men From Mars” story Lucas once envisioned.

There are melancholy nods to Sean Connery, who played Indy’s dad in 1989’s “Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade” but declined to return for the new movie, and the late Denholm Elliott, Indy’s college dean in two of the previous movies.

And the film reveals the relationship between Indy and his new sidekick, an angry young motorcycle rebel played by Shia LaBeouf.

As with “Da Vinci Code,” which went on to gross $758 million worldwide, “Crystal Skull” is so hotly anticipated that it will be virtually immune from critics’ opinions. The film is expected to put up blockbuster box-office numbers when it opens globally Thursday.

“The movie was absolutely effective enough to score with audiences everywhere,” said Anne Thompson, deputy editor of Hollywood trade paper Variety. “This played way better than ‘Da Vinci Code.’ No one was gunning for it. They were excited going in, hooting for it in a positive way.”

Dozens of fans prowled outside the Palais, the Cannes headquarters, holding signs saying they needed tickets for “Crystal Skull.”

Amelia Sims, a 19-year-old University of Georgia student studying abroad, held a sign reading “I (heart) Indy.” She managed to get a pass to the press screening and loved the movie.

“I guess I’ve been waiting 19 years for this,” Sims said. “You could say I’ve been waiting my whole life.”

But Christian Monggaard, who is reviewing “Crystal Skull” for Danish newspaper Information, said he grew up with the “Indiana Jones” films and came away from this one disappointed, finding the climax an “overblown special-effects extravaganza.”

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Mobsters and moonwalkers

Sunday, January 20th, 2008

%26middot; Oct 17, 7pm, OLeicSq; Oct 18, 4pm, OWE2.In the Shadow of the Moon dir. David SingtonBritish documentarist David Sington interviews all the surviving Apollo crew members and moonwalkers, and tries to recapture that sublime sense that we had, in the words of Ronald Reagan (quoting the aviator poet John Magee), “slipped the surly bonds of earth to touch the face of God”.%26middot; Oct 18, 6.30pm, NFT1; Oct 20, 12.30pm, OWE2.4 Months, 3 Weeks, 2 Days dir. Cristian MungiuIt’s not hard to see why this outstanding movie won the Palme d’Or at Cannes this year. It’s a slice of social-realist life from Ceausescu-era Romania, in which things go horribly wrong for a pregnant student and her friend when they visit a hotel-room abortionist. The storytelling is miraculously easy, and the situation is both gripping and moving.%26middot; Oct 19, 6pm, OWE2.Lust, Caution dir. Ang LeeLee returns with a film that is part espionage thriller and part psychosexual drama, set in Japanese-occupied Shanghai during the second world war. Tang Wei plays a patriotic student who joins a Chinese resistance cell and sets about seducing a collaborationist police chief, played by Tony Leung. Of course, they begin to fall in love. Superbly realised drama.%26middot; Oct 20, 8pm, OWE2; Oct 23, 12.45pm, OWE1.The Diving Bell and the Butterfly dir. Julian SchnabelThe finest hour of Schnabel and actor Mathieu Amalric. It dramatises the remarkable true story of the French magazine editor Jean-Dominique Bauby (played by Amalric) who, after being immobilised by a stroke, used the movement of one eyelid to dictate a passionate memoir. It is unbearably sad but powerfully moving: when it was first shown, many people in the audience wept.%26middot; Oct 21, 8.30pm, OWE2; Oct 22, 3.30pm, OWE1.You, the Living dir. Roy AnderssonAndersson, a director of bizarre, dreamlike black comedies, could be the nearest thing we have to a successor to Ingmar Bergman. His tableaux depicting troubled souls are detached from conventional drama, but they are compelling, eerie and often funny. The final sequence here, in which a plain waitress, infatuated with a rock musician, recounts an ecstatic dream in which they are honeymooning on a moving train, is extraordinary.%26middot; Oct 24, 9pm, OWE1; Oct 25, 1.45pm, NFT2.Persepolis dir. Marjane SatrapiA black-and-white animation about a young woman’s experience of the Iranian revolution sounds like a tough watch. Actually, it’s terrifically funny. Developed from Satrapi’s own graphic novels, it describes how a girl growing up in a worldly, non-religious family is forced to reassess her life after the great regime-change of 1979.%26middot; Oct 29, 9pm, OWE1; Oct 31, 3pm, OWE2.Into the Wild dir. Sean PennExcitement is building about this film, which is a beautiful, spaciously rendered piece of Americana. It is based on the true story of Christopher McCandless, played by Emile Hirsch: a wealthy student who, on graduating from college in 1990, gave away almost everything he owned and went on a spiritual hike across America. It has won wild applause so far.%26middot; Oct 25, 8.30pm, OWE2; Oct 26, 12.30pm, OWE2.I’m Not There dir. Todd HaynesSix actors (Ben Whishaw, Marcus Carl Franklin, Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Richard Gere and Cate Blanchett) interpret the various ages of Bob Dylan. Blanchett has, by all accounts, stolen the scene; her extraordinarily detailed impersonation has made the bookies very nervous about taking bets on next year’s best actress Oscar.%26middot; Oct 27, 8.30pm, OWE2; Oct 29, 3pm, OWE1.Battle for Haditha dir. Nick BroomfieldThe British documentary-maker investigates alleged US military abuses in Iraq. The Haditha incident was a disputed exchange of fire that left one US Marine and two dozen Iraqi civilians dead; a subsequent official investigation raised the possibility that the killing of civilians was a deliberate retaliation for the death of an American soldier. This fictionalised reconstruction promises to be fierce and challenging.%26middot; Oct 30, 9pm, OWE1; Oct 31, 8.45pm, Rich Mix.%26middot; For full details of the London film festival, see bfi.org.uk/lffVenues: OWE = Odeon West End OLeicSq = Odeon Leicester Square NFT = National Film Theatre at BFI Southbank Rich Mix = Rich Mix Cinema, Bethnal Green

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Drogba wary of Schalke threat

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Didier Drogba has warned Chelsea all their good work against Valencia could be undone by Schalke on Wednesday night.

Drogba, who issued a statement reaffirming his commitment to Chelsea in the wake of the quit threat he issued in a French magazine interview, scored the winner against Valencia in the Mestalla in their last Champions League outing.

Didier Drogba’s goal in Valencia helped erase Rosenborg memories

Chelsea’s 2-1 victory over the Spanish giants put their Champions League ambitions back on track after a 1-1 home draw with Rosenborg, but the Ivorian striker knows that Schalke still possess the ability to upset them at Stamford Bridge.

Drogba declared: “We’ve had a difficult start so we tried to win away. We did it and now we have to focus on Schalke and it will be difficult because they have won against Rosenborg away and these two games are important to qualify as well as the next game.

“In the Champions League game against Rosenborg we had something like 30 chances and we didn’t score, against Valencia we only had three. So I don’t know, sometimes that’s football.

“If you want to score you have to believe that you will score, and it is what I know how to do best.”

But Chelsea will face Schalke without captain John Terry and left-back Ashley Cole.

Terry underwent a knee operation last week and Cole, who hurt his ankle on international duty, is expected to miss the next month with ligament damage.

The clash with Schalke will be coach Avram Grant’s first taste of Champions League football at Stamford Bridge along with newly installed assistant Henk ten Cate.

Ten Cate, who left Ajax to link up with Grant during the international break, admits it was a hard decision to make.

Ten Cate said: “Of course it was hard because I worked there with a group of very talented and very young players. The only problem with Ajax is you always lose your best players.

“Two days before qualifying for the Champions League, I lost my two best players and the club ended up with a lot of money. It is kind of frustrating. The decision to leave was a big one but Chelsea and I met at the right moment. They needed someone and I wanted to move and everything came together and everybody is happy.”

Ten Cate helped Barcelona to win the Champions League and both he and Grant share a vision to get Chelsea playing a similar style of football.

But in the post-Jose Mourinho era, Ten Cate admits the change will not happen instantly.

Ten Cate declared: “At Barcelona the first half-year was not really a success. But the people kept confidence in our work because they were seeing things improving and at the end of the season, we ended second.

“The next two years we won all the prizes to win in Spain and the Champions League which was a great result of course. But you need to be patient. You cannot do it in one year or one-and-a-half years. You have to work on this.”

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