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Sean Penn to head Cannes Film Festival jury in 2008
Claire Rosemberg
PARIS—Sean Penn, the Oscar-winning US actor-turned director once known
as Hollywood’s “enfant terrible”, is to head the jury of the 2008 Cannes
Film Festival, organisers said in a statement Thursday.
A blunt talker with a sharp political conscience and a career that has
gone from strength to strength, Penn seems perfect for the role next May
at a film extravaganza as well known for being a window on the world as
for its glam and its buzz.
“In the last few years,” said Penn in response, “there has been a
rejuvenation of cinema building worldwide, increasingly thoughtful,
provocative, moving and imaginative ... A new generation of filmmaking
may have begun.” “The Cannes Film Festival has long been the epicentre
in the discovery of new waves of filmmakers,” he added, “I very much
look forward to participating.”
The world’s paramount movie festival, kicking off on the French Riviera
on May 14, wraps up on May 25 with the jury awarding the Palme d’Or
prize for best film. The former Hollywood “bad boy”, whose wrenching
portrayal of a vengeful father seeking revenge in Clint Eastwood’s 2003
movie “Mystic River” earned him an Oscar, is currently full in the
spotlight of the film industry.
Now aged 47, Penn’s latest go at directing in the harrowing drama “Into
The Wild”, dominates nominations for this month’s Screen Actors Guild
Awards, regarded as a key Oscars indicator.
Once best known for his marriage to pop star Madonna, his divorce was
last week announced with his wife of 11 years, “Forest Gump” actress
Robin Wright Penn with whom he has two children aged 14 and 16. Born in
Los Angeles to actress Eileen Ryan and director Leo Penn, he dreamt of
being a lawyer but then took up acting, debuting as a military cadet in
“Taps” (1981) and winning some fame as a “surfer dude” in “Fast Times at
Ridgemont High” (1982).
But it was his stormy four-year marriage to “Material Girl” Madonna that
made the headlines until he took starring roles and enthused critics as
a cop in “Colours” (1988) or a brutal sergeant in Vietnam in Brian de
Palma’s 1989 film “Casualties of War.” In 1991 he made his directorial
debut with “The Indian Runner”, a Vietnam war-themed drama inspired by a
song from his friend Bruce Springsteen.
It was also in the 1990s that he won a first Oscar nomination for “Dead
Man Walking” (1995) and another for “Sweet and Lowdown” (1999). A
performer with a keen social conscience who makes no bones about his
criticism of the Bush administration, Penn last year paid a visit to
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and in 2005 penned his thoughts on Iran
after a visit there. His 2004 Oscar was seen as marking his acceptance
as a major talent by an industry that seldom rewards its unruliest sons. |