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Artist Christo takes small steps on Colo. project

DENVER (AP) — Construction of the proposed "Over the River" project in Colorado is on hold pending legal challenges, but artist Christo said Wednesday his team is doing other work so he can one day suspend nearly six miles worth of silvery fabric in sections over the Arkansas River.

Railroad tracks are being cleared along the project route that traces U.S. 50 between Canon City and Salida, and work is beginning to mitigate impacts to bighorn sheep.

Christo is also preparing for his upcoming e...

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A list of previous Palme d’Or winners at CannesComments Off

CANNES, France (AP) — For 66 years, the Cannes Film Festival‘s highest prize, the Palme d’Or, has been one of the most prestigious in movies. Winners have ranged from classic American films (Martin Scorsese‘s “Taxi Driver,” Francis Ford Coppola‘s “The Conversation”) to European classics (Federico Fellini‘s “La Dolce Vita”).

Ahead of Sunday’s presentation of this year’s Palme d’Or, here are the last 20 years of Cannes‘ Palme winners:

2012: “Amour,” Michael Haneke

2011: “The Tree of Life,” Terrence Malick

2010: “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives,” Apichatpong Weerasethakul

2009: “The White Ribbon,” Michael Haneke

2008: “The Class,” Laurent Cantet

2007: “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” Cristian Mungiu

2006: “The Wind That Shakes The Barley,” Ken Loach

2005: “L’Enfant,” Jean-Pierre Dardenne

2004: “Fahrenheit 9/11,” Michael Moore

2003: “Elephant,” Gus Van Sant

2002: “The Pianist,” Roman Polanski

2001: “La Stanza del Figlio,” Nanni Moretti

2000: “Dancer in the Dark,” Lars Von Trier

1999: “Rosetta,” Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne

1998: “Eternity and a Day,” Theo Angelopoulos

1997: “The Eel,” Shohei Imamura; and “Taste of Cherry,” Abbas Kiarostami

1996: “Secrets & Lies,” Mike Leigh

1995: “Underground,” Emir Kusturica

1994: “Pulp Fiction,” Quentin Tarantino

1993: “Farewell My Concubine,” Kaige Chen; and “The Piano,” Jane Campion

Palme d’Or race wide open at Cannes Film FestivalComments Off

CANNES, France (AP) — After two weeks, 20 films and parade after parade down the red carpet, the Cannes Film Festival has not produced a clear-cut frontrunner for the Palme d’Or.

The prestigious award, given to the best film in competition, will be handed out Sunday night, decided upon by a jury headed by Steven Spielberg. And while this year’s festival has boasted a cinematic feast, no single film is believed to have clearly set itself apart from the pack.

At least half a dozen films seem to have a realistic chance of winning Cannes‘ top prize, including the Coen brothers’ 1960s folk tale “Inside Llewyn Davis,” Paolo Sorrentino‘s rollicking Roman party “The Great Beauty,” Asghar Farhadi‘s domestic drama “The Past,” James Gray‘s 1920s Ellis Island melodrama “The Immigrant” and Abdellatif Kechiche’s lesbian coming-of-age tale “Blue is the Warmest Color.”

Consensus is always hard to come by in Cannes, but it does happen. Last year, Michael Haneke‘s “Amour” was the far-and-away favorite, and went on to win best foreign language film at the Oscars and earn the rare best picture nomination for a non-English film.

In 2011, Terrence Malick’s cosmic rumination “The Tree of Life” too was obvious Palme material. But the year before, Cannes was fairly shocked when Tim Burton’s jury picked the existential Thai film “Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.”

Palme d’Or oddsmaker Neil Young currently has Farhadi in the lead with 5-to-2 odds to win. The Iranian director, whose film is in French, was honored as the best foreign language film two years ago at the Academy Awards for another domestic drama, “A Separation.” Having grown into an internationally renowned filmmaker, Farhadi could be in position for the Palme.

But some found his film, with its succession of reveals of past misdeeds, more a feat of mystery novel-like plotting than revealing drama. Certainly, its star, Berenice Bejo (“The Artist”), as a single-mother balancing an ex-husband and a new fiancé, is a possible best actress winner.

So, too, is the star of “Blue is the Warmest Color,” Adele Exarchopoulos. The 19-year-old actress was one of the breakout stars of the festival in the three-hour French film.

But the American entries this year have been very strong. Perhaps no film was better received at Cannes than “Inside Llewyn Davis,” along with its newcomer star, Oscar Isaac, who performed live songs for the film. The Coens won the Palme in 1991 for “Barton Fink.”

Gray’s “The Immigrant,” starring Marion Cotillard and Joaquin Phoenix, divided critics between those hailing it as a classically made masterpiece and those unmoved by its operatic emotions. But the handsomely photographed, finely acted New York period piece may have played well with Spielberg’s jury.

“I’m trying to live in the bubble as best I can,” Gray said Saturday. “If a film’s reception is great, then you believe your own hype. If it goes poorly, then you think of yourself as a bum — neither of which is usually the case. Usually the case is you’re either hostage to or a beneficiary of a certain kind of festival gestalt.”

Alexander Payne’s father-and-son story “Nebraska,” starring Bruce Dern and Will Forte, could also stir the jury with its austere, black-and-white Midwest road trip.

Psychological guesswork of jury presidents is de rigueur at Cannes. This year, many expect Spielberg will steer away from rewarding a filmmaker from his native country. He leads a starry, international group of eight others: Ang Lee, Nicole Kidman, Christoph Waltz, Romanian director Cristian Mungiu, Scottish filmmaker Lynne Ramsay, Japanese director Naomi Kawase, French actor Daniel Auteuil and Bollywood star Vidya Balan.

One of the boldest, most ambitious films in competition was Sorrentino’s “The Great Beauty,” which stars Toni Servillo as a Rome journalist who begins to question a lifetime of late nights. Wildly stylistic but also emotionally personal, it was one of the biggest critical hits at Cannes.

On the outside are wild cards like Steve Soderbergh‘s Liberace melodrama “Behind the Candelabra,” Kore-eda Hirokazu’s switched-at-birth drama “Like Father, Like Son” and Chad-born Mahamat-Saleh’s disabled dancer tale “Grigris.”

Soderbergh’s film, starring Michael Douglas, will air on HBO in the U.S. just hours after the Cannes closing ceremony. The director is withdrawing from moviemaking, so a win at Cannes would be fitting symmetry. His first film, “Sex, Lies, and Videotape,” won the Palme d’Or in 1989.

On the first day of the festival, jury member Lee said he was praying the jury would be overwhelmed by a self-evident Palme winner, so they would have to avoid “rationalizing” their choice through debate. Perhaps the jury was hit by a thunderbolt that didn’t resound as clearly for festivalgoers. But most likely, Lee’s prayers went unanswered.

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

Iranian director facing jail appears in CannesComments Off

CANNES, France (AP) — “Manuscripts Don’t Burn” tells the story of an Iranian author secretly writing his memoirs and authorities’ attempts to destroy the manuscript — a topic the director, Mohammad Rasoulof, knows quite a bit about.

Rasoulof is also Iranian, his movies are banned in his homeland and he’s been sentenced to jail by the Islamic regime there.

Still, Rasoulof, who managed to make it to the Cannes Film Festival to show his film, says “Manuscripts” shouldn’t be construed as his life.

“It’s not a documentary, it’s fiction inspired by an event which is very much true. I mean, we know the details of the event because there are survivors, there is testimonies, writings, memories about that thing,” Rasoulof said in an interview on Friday after the film debuted here.

“I have met some of those people, the key people involved in that. So it’s very much a true story, a real thing, but from that point on it’s an inspiration. I was inspired by a true story and then I tell my own story based on it.”

Two years ago, Rasoulof and fellow director Jafar Panahi were arrested in Iran for filming without a permit. The pair received six years In prison and were banned from filmmaking for 20 years on charges that included “making propaganda” against the ruling system, but Rasoulof’s sentence was later reduced to a year on appeal. He is currently on bail.

His film “Goodbye” won a prize at Cannes in 2011, but the director wasn’t allowed to travel to France to accept it. Somehow, he managed to get to Cannes this year to show “Manuscripts Don’t Burn,” which is competing in the sidebar competition, Un Certain Regard.

Rasoulof said he wanted to do the movie to explore the “dark points in the intellectual history of Iran.

“I’ve always been attached to understanding those dark points and getting in to those dark points and digging into them and trying to find out what, why and how of these dark points in the intellectual history.”

“Manuscripts Don’t Burn” was made clandestinely in Iran, and the names of its cast and crew do not appear on the credits.

Rasoulof said he knew from the start he had a big task on his hands.

“I knew that is was going to be almost mission impossible. There is going to be no legal permit, license, the government is going to be opposed to it, authorities and everything,” he said.

He added: “We knew that the only way to do it is if we stick together. … We heavily relied on ourselves and the team and that was the only way we could do it.”

Much of the film appears to have been shot in Iran, but Rasoulof, who produced the movie himself, was staying tight-lipped about how he managed to get the film made without getting caught.

“Let me keep my procedures and secret thing,” he said. “Maybe I want to use them for the next movie.”

There was much speculation about the film in the run-up to the Cannes festival, which ends Sunday. When the Cannes lineup was announced last month, Rasoulof’s entry was listed simply as “Anonymous.”

Actor Tyler Perry donates $100K to Ohio schoolsComments Off

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Filmmaker and actor Tyler Perry has surprised middle school students in Ohio by showing up at a musical concert and donating $100,000 to help student athletes in the city’s South-Western schools.

The Columbus Dispatch (http://bit.ly/13Qe0uR ) reports that Perry was drawn to Finland Middle School on Friday after seeing a TV report about teacher Mary Mulvany starting a foundation to raise scholarship money to cover fees.

South-Western schools earned national attention when athletics and extra-curricular activities were eliminated after a failed levy in 2009. The ballot request was later approved by voters, and sports, clubs and other activities were resurrected for a fee.

Perry says he wants to sponsor as many children as possible and wants part of the money to go toward Finland and some to the foundation.

Mulvany says hundreds of children will be helped by Perry’s contribution.

Stone Temple Pilots sue ex-frontman Scott WeilandComments Off

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Stone Temple Pilots have accused the band‘s former frontman Scott Weiland of hijacking its name and songs to promote his solo career.

The lawsuit filed Friday in Los Angeles also accuses Weiland of being chronically late to concerts when he was with the band and having a lawyer interfere with airplay of a new single by the group.

The 45-year-old Weiland and Stone Temple Pilots parted ways in February, and the singer said at the time that he learned of his ouster from a statement released to the media.

A phone message left for his manager Andrea Pett-Joseph was not immediately returned.

The band’s hits include “Vasoline,” ”Interstate Love Song” and “Plush,” which won a Grammy in 1993 for best hard rock performance with vocal.

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