If we're rounding up what happened at Cannes in the last day or so, we need to talk about "We Need to Talk About Kevin."
Lynne Ramsay's film screened on Thursday and, from the evidence, did a pretty good job of dividing the audience. Sasha Stone loved it at TheWrap, and Guy Lodge from In Contention agreed wholeheartedly, awarding four stars to this "largely tacit, imagistic memory collage that substitutes sound and vision for dialogue as extensively as possible." Variety's Leslie Felperin called it "exquisitely realized" and then slipped into tradespeak to praise the "immaculate package that will rep catnip for crix and get auds talking, but may be too bleak for the mainstream."
But the Hollywood Reporter's Kirk Honeycutt was less enthusiastic: "It's a film to think about and debate over but not one to embrace." And Jeff Wells started by calling it "a beautifully painted, radiantly colored, anti-verbal horror film," but a few hundred words later he concludes, "Ramsay clearly had a ball shooting and cutting this thing, but her lack of interest in making the characters seem even half-recognizable as (I don't mean to introduce a sore subject) human beings with the ability to think, observe and comprehend is nothing short of breathtaking."
Also read: Cannes: 'We Need to Talk About Kevin' Explores Blame, Guilt, Motherhood
Gus Van Sant's "Restless" was another film that drew mixed reviews, though everybody – including TheWrap's Sharon Waxman– agreed that Dennis Hopper's son Henry is a real find. As for the film itself, Eric Kohn called it "a flimsy teenage romance with dashes of bittersweet inspiration," while Jeff Wells said the film is "a bit too gentle and alpha for its own good."
But Anne Thompson dubbed the film "a heartfelt romance" and said, "Only Van Sant could have pulled off this Portland-based love story on such a small, delicate scale, without manipulating madly. His touch is sure."
She did so as part of an interview with Sony Pictures Classics co-chiefs Tom Bernard and Michael Barker (above, flanking Van Sant at a Cannes dinner for "Restless"). She calls them "Kings of the Croisette" because of their sure touch at picking foreign Cannes entries ("A Prophet," "White Ribbon," "Waltz With Bashir"), and because SPC has four well-regarded entries in this year's fest, including Cannes' opening-night attraction, Woody Allen's "Midnight in Paris," and the Un Certain Regard opener "Restless."
(The other SPC films are Pedro Almodovar's "The Skin I Live In" and the Sundance fave "Take Shelter.")
Bernard and Barker tell Thompson that they feel under no pressure to acquire any more films this year. She doesn’t believe them. Neither, perhaps, do most other people who've followed their track record over the years.
Who else is buying at Cannes? Harvey Weinstein, that's who.
