
At his new hangout,
Glenn Kenny reports on Jack Black's
Kung Fu Panda shenanigans -- and the gruesome aftermath. More
Cannes updates from
GreenCine Daily:
Blindness,
Waltz with Bashir,
Four Nights with Anna, and
Lion's Den. If you time it right, you can watch the red carpet arrivals at IFC's
Cannes Cam -- and we have a photo gallery from the
Blindness premiere. Oh, and
Angelina is having, uhm,
twins.
Legendary German director Werner Herzog is everywhere these days. His new film Encounters at the End of the World is about to open at Film Forum, he just announced a remake of Abel Ferrara's Bad Lieutenant with Nicolas Cage in the Harvey Keitel role, and now Gregg Goldstein brings news that he's going to collaborate with David Lynch on My Son, My Son, "a horror-tinged murder drama based on a true story." In the same item, we also learn that Lynch will also be producing Alejandro Jodorwosky's "metaphysical gangster movie" King Shot, starring Asia Argento, Udo Kier, and Nick Nolte.
Online viewing: Chris Ware's latest animation for This American Life, Isabella Rosselini's Green Porno, and ad-supported streaming movies on Jaman.

The 61th Annual
Cannes Film Festival kicks off tomorrow on the French Riviera with
Blindess by Fernando Meirelles' (
City Of God,
The Constant Gardener). Based on a novel by Nobel Prize-winning Portuguese writer José Saramago, the science fiction fable stars Julianne Moore as an ophthalmologist's wife who ends up as the last survivor with sight in a city racked by an onset of mass vision loss. The international cast also includes Mark Ruffalo,
Sandra Oh,
Gael Garcia Bernal, Don McKellar and
Alice Braga. (An
exclusive clip can be viewed on the
LA Times website.)
This year's festival showcases 57 feature lengths films from 31 countries. As expected, their will be big Hollywood premieres, bringing a parade of celebrities to the red carpet. Steven Spielberg's Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull makes its premiere at Cannes, as well as Woody Allen's latest, Vicky Cristina Barcelona, starring Javier Bardem, Scarlett Johansson and Penelope Cruz, a romantic comedy that is rumored to be the director's most erotic film to date.
Twenty-two films have been selected to screen in this year's competition. The highlights are many: two-time Palme d'Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne are back with The Silence of Lorna; Steven Soderbergh's Che, a two-part double feature starring Benicio Del Toro as revolutionary icon Che Guevara; A Christmas Tale by French filmmaker Arnaud Desplechin (Kings and Queen), starring the legendary Catherine Deneuve and Mathieu Amalric; screenwriter Charlie Kaufman's directorial debut Synecdoche, New York with Philip Seymour Hoffman as a theater director; Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan's Adoration, a tale of the relationship between teens and new technology starring Scott Speedman of Felicity fame; Wim Wender's thriller/romanceThe Palermo Shooting, starring Milla Jovovich, Dennis Hopper and Italian actress Giovanna Mezzogiono; from China, Jia Zhangke's 24 City; and Clint Eastwood's prohibition drama Changeling, starring Angelina Jolie as a mother whose child vanishes in Los Angeles.
Oscar-winning actor and director
Sean Penn is leading the luminous nine-member jury that will select this year's Palme D'or winner. The jury also includes Natalie Portman, Alfonso Cuaron, Sergio Castellitto,
Apichatpong Weerasethakul, and
Alexandra Maria Lara. German director Fatih Akin will award the best film in the Cannes film festival's
Un Certain Regard, which focuses on the works of emerging filmmakers.
The festival runs from
May 14-25.