• About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily
Awards Daily
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
  • Let’s Talk Cinema
No Result
View All Result
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
  • Let’s Talk Cinema
No Result
View All Result
Awards Daily
No Result
View All Result

First Real Palme Contender

Sasha Stone by Sasha Stone
May 13, 2010
in AWARDS CHATTER, Cannes
0

It was a wholly different experience sitting in the Grand Theatre Lumiere and watching Robin Hood vs. the film I just saw, Rizhao Chongqing or Chongqing Blues. The non-response from the crowd primed me to think that the reception at screenings are as muted as they sometimes are at press screenings in LA. But the applause at the end of Chongqing, written and directed by Wang Xiaoshuai showed a different side of the journos and critics here. They will applaud but only if they like the movie.

Said the director Xiaoshuai about the idea behind it, based on a true story:

I am often on the lookout for small stories that are emblematic of contemporary China. In the newspaper and on the internet, I often read stories of this kind: news items relating hostage-ta- kings and police interventions that often end tragically. I find this all the more interesting that the image people have of China is that of a peaceful and danger-free country. These stories allow me to ponder over the changes that have recently taken place in China, and they become a starting point for a film.

I thought that this news item was rather simple and ordinary. However, it concealed the story of a family, of intertwined lives, and feelings. How do those who are close to him feel about this tragedy? He was a young man whose uneventful life got turned upside down when he committed a severe criminal offence. What was the reason for this? Was it just a simple act of juvenile de- linquency? The consequence of the father’s absence? Of the mother’s negligence? Of a human being’s corruption by society? Was it a question of passionate love?

A tough sit at 8:30am, Chongqing is a meditation on fatherhood, really. It is a heartbreaking story of a man who has returned from a “long fishing trip” to discover his abandoned son has wreaked havoc in a grocery store, or department store, stabbed two people and held another hostage. The father then sets about figuring out what his son’s last days were like, what his motives were, who he was and most importantly, what he looked like.

The father hadn’t seen him since he was a small child and would therefore not have any idea what his son looked like. The trick is that his son hates having his picture taken and thus, there is only a blurry video capture of his face.

Chongqing isn’t likely to set the critics aflame, nor make much of a splash stateside, but it is an example of a moving story well told. Haunting, mournful, and complete. It’s early yet, but this film will likely be on the list to win it. There are likely many more films this good and maybe better on the slate.

By the way, the Grand Theatre Lumiere is a heavenly way to see movies, even though I’m up in the balcony for the screenings. Plush seats, a wide screen and a deathly quiet crowd – perfection.

I am under the impression that, today, Chinese cinema is like a game, a pure product designed for the market, without meaning or depth. Everyone can be part of it. They all want to go to Hollywood to make films, explode box-office figures, and investors expect you to play by those rules.

Like a few other filmmakers of my generation, I stay out of this system. When you think diffe- rently, they don’t know what to do with you. My films have gained recognition abroad, but China is not interested in them because they are neither commercial nor entertaining enough. When my films are released, I no longer control anything, I can’t say anything. The public success of a film no longer depends on its quality, its director or its screenwriter, but on the amount of money invested to launch it. Culture is slowly fading away. Over a few years, we have shifted to a world centered exclusively on money, in which people no longer speak of quality, ideas or reflection.  -Wang Xiaoshuai

Tags: Cannes 2010Palme d'Or
Previous Post

Blanchett sur la Croisette, époustouflant et ravissant

Next Post

Odds on Palme Have Loach Out Front

Next Post

Odds on Palme Have Loach Out Front

AD Predicts

Oscar Nomination Predictions

See All →
Best Picture
  • 1.
    One Battle After Another
    92.3%
  • 2.
    Sinners
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Hamnet
    92.3%
  • 4.
    Marty Supreme
    92.3%
  • 5.
    Sentimental Value
    92.3%
  • 6.
    It Was Just an Accident
    84.6%
  • 7.
    Frankenstein
    76.9%
  • 8.
    The Secret Agent
    69.2%
  • 9.
    Train Dreams
    53.8%
  • 10.
    Bugonia
    46.2%
Best Director
  • 1.
    Paul Thomas Anderson, One Battle After Another
    84.6%
  • 2.
    Ryan Coogler, Sinners
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Chloe Zhao, Hamnet
    84.6%
  • 4.
    Jafar Panahi, It Was Just an Accident
    61.5%
  • 5.
    Josh Safdie, Marty Supreme
    38.5%
Best Actor
  • 1.
    Timothee Chalamet, Marty Supreme
    84.6%
  • 2.
    Leonardo DiCaprio, One Battle After Another
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Michael B. Jordan, Sinners
    84.6%
  • 4.
    Wagner Moura, The Secret Agent
    84.6%
  • 5.
    Ethan Hawke, Blue Moon
    69.2%
Best Actress
  • 1.
    Jessie Buckley, Hamnet
    84.6%
  • 2.
    Rose Byrne, If I Had Legs I'd Kick You
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Renate Reinsve, Sentimental Value
    84.6%
  • 4.
    Chase Infiniti, One Battle After Another
    61.5%
  • 5.
    Emma Stone, Bugonia
    30.8%
Best Supporting Actor
  • 1.
    Stellan Skarsgard, Sentimental Value
    84.6%
  • 2.
    Benicio Del Toro, One Battle After Another
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Paul Mescal, Hamnet
    76.9%
  • 4.
    Jacob Elordi, Frankenstein
    76.9%
  • 5.
    Sean Penn, One Battle After Another
    61.5%
Best Supporting Actress
  • 1.
    Amy Madigan, Weapons
    76.9%
  • 2.
    Teyana Taylor, One Battle After Another
    84.6%
  • 3.
    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Sentimental Value
    61.5%
  • 4.
    Ariana Grande, Wicked: For Good
    38.5%
  • 5.
    Wunmi Mosaku, Sinners
    46.2%
View Full Predictions
Nextgen Oscarwatcher: Takeaways from the Critics Choice
featured

Nextgen Oscarwatcher: Takeaways from the Critics Choice

by Scott Kernen
January 5, 2026
27

Following the first major televised precursor of the year—the Critics Choice Awards—we finally have a robust set of winners that...

One Battle After Another Greatest Film of All Time, According to Critics

One Battle After Another Greatest Film of All Time, According to Critics

January 5, 2026
The Undeniable Brilliance of Hamnet

One Battle After Another Tops the Critics Choice Awards

January 5, 2026
Producers Guild and Screen Actors Guild Preview and Predictions

Producers Guild and Screen Actors Guild Preview and Predictions

January 4, 2026
One Battle After Another Clean Sweeps the Critics Awards with National Society of Film Critics Joining the Chorus

One Battle After Another Clean Sweeps the Critics Awards with National Society of Film Critics Joining the Chorus

January 3, 2026
2026 Oscar Predictions: Will One Battle After Another Sweep the Oscars?

2026 Oscar Predictions: Will One Battle After Another Sweep the Oscars?

January 2, 2026
Critics Choice Awards Preview and Predictions

Critics Choice Awards Preview and Predictions

January 1, 2026
Let’s Talk Cinema

Let’s Talk Cinema

December 31, 2025
2026 Oscars:  The Best Films in a Year That Almost Broke Hollywood

2026 Oscars: The Best Films in a Year That Almost Broke Hollywood

December 30, 2025
Contest! Predict the Critics Choice Awards

Contest! Predict the Critics Choice Awards

December 30, 2025

Oscar News

Oscars 2026: Shortlists Announced!

Oscars 2026: Shortlists Announced!

December 16, 2025

2026 Oscars: How to Survive a Race That’s Already Over Before it Even Begins

2026 Oscars: Contenders Bringing the Glam to the Governors Awards

2026 Oscars — Best Director: There is Ryan Coogler and Everyone Else

2026 Oscars: What Five Best Actor Contenders Will Get Nominated? [POLL]

“Politically Charged” One Battle After Another Dazzles Crowds at Early Screenings

EmmyWatch

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

July 18, 2025

The Gotham TV Winners Set the Consensus to Come

Gothams Announces Television Nominees

White Lotus Finale – A Deeply Profound Message for a Weary World

  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.