2. Winter Sleep
Director: Nuri Bilge Ceylan
Cast: Haluk Bilginer, Melisa Sözen, Demet Akbag
Release date: TBD
Nuri Bilge Ceylan has presented a crowd favorite this year at Cannes. “Winter Sleep” won the most coveted ‘Palme d’Or’ award this year at Cannes. This is not his first time at Cannes, nor is it his first win. Nuri Bilge Ceylan won the ‘Grand Prix’ award for “Once Upon a time in Anatolia” in 2011 and the ‘Best Director’ award for “Three Monkeys” in 2008 at Cannes. Clocking in at 196 minutes “Winter Sleep” holds the promise to be an epic in the masterful style of his last film, one that we are very eager to see.
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Great list. There’s a few films on here that I’ve been looking forward to seeing for a while now, but I think that I’m most intrigued by “Goodbye to Language.” We’ve seen before that when placed in the capable hands of auteur filmmakers – Wenders and Herzog, as you mentioned, as well as Martin Scorsese with “Hugo” – 3D can be an exciting and nuanced means of artistic expression in cinema. Knowing Godard’s penchant for being cutting-edge and unique, I can only imagine the new heights to which he has elevated the medium. It’s definitely one of the must-see films of the year (or next year, depending on when the film gets its general release).
Thanks. You are right ‘Hugo’ was very well done, James Cameron was the stereoscopic supervisor and advisor on that one.
I forgot to add Ang Lee and Alfonso Cuaron for ‘Life of Pi’ and ‘Gravity’, both of which lose some impact when not seen in 3D and they have absolutely clean 3D with no image ghosting, something only animated movies can usually claim.
“Godard made a 3D film” has to be one of the most attention-drawing headlines I could see. To be able to view this and Breathless back-to-back is just insanity.
I’m most excited for Goodbye to Language, Leviathan, and Winter Sleep, but I haven’t given up on Assayas’s film even though it didn’t win because Summer Hours is one of my favorites.