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My Cannes Moment: Anaïs Demoustier

Hollywood Reporter Scott Roxborough 0 переглядів 3 хв читання
At the 56th Cannes Film Festival in 2003, the stars of 'Le temps du Loup' gathered. Left to right: Beatrice Dalle, Michael Haneke (director), Isabelle Huppert, Patrice Chereau, Anais Demoustier, Lucas Biscombe.
At the 56th Cannes Film Festival in 2003, the stars of 'Le temps du Loup' gathered. Left to right: Beatrice Dalle, Michael Haneke (director), Isabelle Huppert, Patrice Chereau, Anais Demoustier, Lucas Biscombe. Courtesy of Pool Benainous/Catarina/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

I’ve been back to Cannes something like 15 times. I was there with Valérie Donzelli’s film [Marguerite & Julien in 2015] in Competition and with the closing film [2012’s Thérèse] from Claude Miller. I’ve had films in Critics’ Week and Un Certain Regard. I was President of the Jury that awarded the Camera d’Or [to Vietnamese director Pham Thien An for Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell] in 2023.

But the one that stands out is from my very first time. I was 15, and I was in Cannes with a Michael Haneke film [2003’s Time of the Wolf]. I was so young, so light-hearted. I didn’t really understand the craft of an actor, or the stress and joy of attending the Cannes Film Festival. I still remember people telling me: “You don’t know if you’ll ever make another film, this could be the end of your career. So enjoy it while it lasts.”

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I remember the red carpet. I was so young. I didn’t expect the photographers to yell so loudly. When Isabelle Huppert, who was the star of the film, walked up, it was just: “Isabelle! Isabelle! Isabelle!!!”

Then the screening itself, in the Grand Theatre. In that legendary movie theatre with that big screen. The screening felt almost like a religious ceremony. But, because it was a Haneke film, it was also controversial. During the screening, people were whistling and shouting at the screen. Others were clapping. It was incredible. I’d never experienced a screening like that before or after.

Looking back, and returning again to open the festival, I consider myself very lucky to still be in the business 20 years later. And to still be coming to Cannes. Because we aren’t in competition [with The Electric Kiss] there’s no extra stress and no extra pressure. Just extra pleasure.

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