To Each His Own Cinema

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

To Each His Own Cinema
Chacun son cinéma DVD cover.jpg
DVD cover of To Each His Own Cinema
Directed bysee below
Produced byGilles Jacob
Starring
  • Beat Takeshi
  • Jeanne Moreau
  • Ela Sanko
  • Nanni Moretti
  • Émilie Dequenne
  • Josh Brolin
  • Grant Heslov
  • Luisa Williams
  • Li Man
  • Wang Liang
  • Clayton Jacobson
  • Genevieve Lemon
  • Carl-Erik Calamnius
  • Deniz Gamze Ergüven
  • Karim Kassem
  • Yosra El Lozy
  • Lee Kang-sheng
  • Lars von Trier
  • Jacques Frantz
  • Michael Lonsdale
  • Zinedine Soualem
  • Juliana Munoz
  • Michael Cimino
  • David Cronenberg
  • Fan Chih Wei
  • Golshifteh Farahani
  • Hamideh Kheirabadi
  • Pegah Ahangarani
  • Setareh Eskandari
  • Frank Hvam
  • Anne-Marie Curry
  • Casper Christensen
  • Elia Suleiman
  • Michel Piccoli
  • Duarte d'Almeida
  • Caju
  • Castanha
  • Bradley Walsh
Music by
  • Mark Bradshaw
  • Mychael Danna
  • Eleni Karaindrou
  • Howard Shore
Release date
  • 20 May 2007 (2007-05-20) (Cannes)
  • 31 October 2007 (2007-10-31)
Running time
119 minutes
CountryFrance
Languages
  • Mandarin
  • English
  • French
  • Spanish
  • Danish
  • Finnish
  • Hebrew
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Portuguese
  • Russian
  • Yiddish
  • Arabic

To Each His Own Cinema (French: Chacun son cinéma : une déclaration d'amour au grand écran) is a 2007 French comedy-drama anthology film commissioned for the 60th anniversary of the Cannes Film Festival. The film is a collection of 34 short films, each 3 minutes in length, by 36 acclaimed directors. Representing five continents and 25 countries, the filmmakers were invited to express "their state of mind of the moment as inspired by the motion picture theatre".[1]

The film's subtitle reads "a declaration of love to the big screen". Many of the shorts share similar subjects, including homage to classic European art cinema, the death of the filmgoing experience, memories of childhood wonder, the transporting power of cinema, and activities performed during a movie screening, including talking, stealing, crying, and having sex.

Distribution[]

Premiere[]

To Each His Own Cinema premiered at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival on 20 May and was televised on the same night in France on Canal+.[2] David Lynch's contribution, Absurda, was not ready in time and was instead shown before Wong Kar-wai's My Blueberry Nights on the festival's opening night.[3]

DVD release[]

Two DVD versions of the film are available, both Region 2: one released by StudioCanal on 25 May 2007,[2][4] the other released by Pyramide Distribution on 31 October 2007.[5] World Cinema by Joel and Ethan Coen is not included on the StudioCanal DVD[6] nor listed on the Pyramide DVD. David Lynch's Absurda is also not present on the StudioCanal DVD.

Short films[]

  • Raymond DepardonCinéma d'été (Open-Air Cinema): A small crowd attends a makeshift movie theatre.
  • Takeshi KitanoOne Fine Day: An older gentleman deals with an incompetent projectionist (Kitano).
  • Theo AngelopoulosTrois minutes (Three Minutes): A woman (Jeanne Moreau) confesses her love to a fellow filmgoer who doesn’t reciprocate.
  • Andrei KonchalovskyDans le noir (In the Dark): An aged cinema owner (Ela Sanko) attempts to watch , while sex-crazed youths make out behind her.
  • Nanni MorettiDiario di uno spettatore (Diary of a Moviegoer): Moretti himself recounts treasured movie memories.
  • Hou Hsiao-hsienThe Electric Princess Picture House: A family in 1940s Taiwan goes to see a film in a suddenly abandoned or decrepit theatre.
  • Jean-Pierre and Luc DardenneDans l'obscurité (Darkness): A pickpocket in a screening of Au hasard Balthazar accidentally connects with an audience member (Émilie Dequenne).
  • Joel and Ethan CoenWorld Cinema: A cowboy resembling Llewellyn Moss (Josh Brolin) decides between art films at the Aero Theatre.
  • Alejandro González IñárrituAnna: A blind woman (Luisa Williams) is profoundly moved listening to her boyfriend interpret the end of Contempt.
  • Zhang YimouEn regardant le film (Movie Night): A young boy is enchanted by the arrival of a travelling movie show in his village.
  • Amos GitaiLe Dibbouk de Haifa (The Dybbuk of Haifa): Movie houses in 1930s Poland and present-day Israel are attacked.
  • Jane CampionThe Lady Bug: A theatre janitor (Clayton Jacobson) fights a playful, dancing human-sized insect (Genevieve Lemon).
  • Atom EgoyanArtaud Double Bill: Vapid young people are more concerned with texting each other than the films they are nominally watching, The Passion of Joan of Arc, Vivre Sa Vie, and a porno.
  • Aki KaurismäkiLa Fonderie (The Foundry): Factory workers on lunch break sit down to enjoy a Lumiére silent film of workers on lunch break.
  • Olivier AssayasRecrudescence (Upsurge): A thief with an ambiguous relationship to a young woman (Deniz Gamze Ergüven) steals her purse during a screening.
  • Youssef Chahine47 ans après (47 Years Later): A young Chahine (Karim Kassem) and his lead actress (Yosra El Lozy) commiserate over the critical failure of their movie at Cannes.
  • Tsai Ming-liangIt's a Dream: A man (Lee Kang-sheng) remembers bonding with his family and the small audience at a theatre in Kuala Lumpur.
  • Lars von TrierOccupations: Von Trier plays himself, violently assaulting a loudmouthed businessman (Jacques Frantz) at the premiere of Manderlay.
  • Raoul RuizLe Don (The Gift): A blind man (Michael Lonsdale) tells his niece about the time he screened Casablanca to a rural village.
  • Claude LelouchCinéma de boulevard (The Cinema Around the Corner): A memoir of how the movie Top Hat impacted the director’s family throughout the years.
  • Gus Van SantFirst Kiss: A young projectionist falls in love with a girl in a film.
  • Roman PolanskiCinéma érotique: A middle aged couple watching Emmanuelle are annoyed by an apparent masturbator.
  • Michael CiminoNo Translation Needed: An obnoxious theatre owner and amateur filmmaker (Cimino) makes a music video for a Cuban band.
  • David CronenbergAt the Suicide of the Last Jew in the World in the Last Cinema in the World: In a dystopian future, the horrific act of the title character (Cronenberg) and its societal implications are the subject of bland media obsession.
  • Wong Kar-waiI Travelled 9000 km to Give It to You: A young man eating fruit (Fan Chih Wei) thinks of his lover.
  • Abbas KiarostamiWhere Is My Romeo?: Various Iranian women, including Golshifteh Farahani, Hamideh Kheirabadi, and Pegah Ahangarani, watch Romeo and Juliet and cry. This short is similar to Kiarostami’s 2008 film Shirin.
  • Bille AugustThe Last Dating Show: A man (Frank Hvam) translating a Danish movie for his non-fluent date (Anne-Marie Curry) runs afoul of aggressive audience members.
  • Elia SuleimanIrtebak (Awkward): A Palestinian director (Suleiman) is uncomfortable at a film festival.
  • Manoel de OliveiraRencontre unique (Sole Meeting): A silent film depicting a meeting between Nikita Khrushchev (Michel Piccoli) and Pope John XXIII (Duarte d'Almeida) is screened.
  • Walter SallesÀ 8 944 km de Cannes (5,557 Miles from Cannes): In front of a marquee for The 400 Blows, two Brazilian singers trade songs about visiting the Cannes Film Festival.
  • Wim WendersWar in Peace: The inhabitants of a Congo village watch and discuss Black Hawk Down.
  • Chen KaigeZhanxiou Village: Small children rig up a projector to watch a Charlie Chaplin film, only to be scared off by a nosy adult.
  • Ken LoachHappy Ending: A father (Bradley Walsh) and son argue about the screenings at a multiplex, ultimately deciding to go watch football instead.
  • David LynchAbsurda: A sinister projectionist shows a group of teens a nightmarish vision of a murder. As he rolls the film, the teens appear to be compelled to commit it.

References[]

  1. ^ Jacob, Gilles. "To Each His Own Cinema, The 60th Anniversary Film of the Festival de Cannes". Cannes Film Festival. Retrieved 28 December 2007.[dead link]
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b McCarthy, Todd (20 May 2007). "To Each His Own Cinema". Variety. Retrieved 28 December 2007.
  3. ^ James, Alison; Gray, Timothy M. (16 May 2007). "Cannes rolls out red carpet". Variety. Retrieved 30 December 2007.
  4. ^ "Chacun son cinéma – DVD – StudioCanal" (in French). StudioCanal. Archived from the original on 30 June 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
  5. ^ "Chacun son cinéma" (in French). allocine.fr. Retrieved 1 January 2008.
  6. ^ Thompson, Anne (31 May 2007). "Chacun Son Cinema". Thompson on Hollywood. Variety. Retrieved 1 January 2008.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""