The morning we move from Juan-les-Pins to Cannes is sunny and beautiful. We are in the last phase of an 11-day pleasure trip to the south of France which culminates at the Cannes Film Festival, where my husband has a film in competition.
I think back on our days at le Mas des Etoiles, our heavenly B&B in the Luberon Valley of Provence. Back to the natural sights of Rouisillon and the vineyards; the feast of art work in Bonnieux, Gordes and La Coste; the gluttony of fine dining on Isle-Sur-La-Sorgue, le Mas de Tourtellon and les Figuiers de Saint Esprit that have marked the past week. The stroll together along the ramparts as the sun fell over Antibes harbor, yacht railings shimmering in the pink light. We have enjoyed much beauty.
Our Cannes Home off La Croisette
Cannes is mobbed with glamorous women and a variety of white guys — in and out of suits — plus some more exotic people, as Hakan Gokgurler , our broker from Agence Elite-Concept (eliteconcept06@oranga.fr) , leads us to the elegant-gradnma style two-bedroom flat whose balcony overlooks the Croisette. The boys — our teen Regan and his roommate Tucker — have already spotted the Sparkling Nightclub and Fendi shop down the lane from our ritzy abode.
Barely in town long enough to find the felafel joint where we spend 80 euros on four gyros with a glass of water, we run into an old friend of Ron's who has two extra tickets to "The Beaver," the new Jodie Foster – Mel Gibson flick. It has a lot of buzz at the festival and getting a coveted Premier ticket is a huge score. We give the tickets to our two teens and they run back to the condo to change.
I write as soon as they leave in their tuxedos for the Red Carpet and we agree to meet at 9.30 for a Moroccan meal. Very handsome fellows. My husband and I dance with the intermittent Orange cable-modem internet connection and discuss strolling along the Vieux Port to find a glass of the yummy new rosé. We never leave the apartment.
Cannesdemonium Reigns at Cannes
My reporter friend Ralph Spielman has called it Cannesdemonium and it is. Very hard to get a ticket, tough to decipher which credentials give you entree to which screenings, overwhelming in its variety with the maddening Festival rules that no one knows. (We know Black Tie is required at all evening screenings and no sneakers allowed.)
The official program of Cannes Festival LXVI says to log onto their smartphone app each morning at 8.20 to request tickets to the night's Red Carpet premier, and we do, but there are never any tickets available. The boys scramble, too, waiting on many lines, never gaining entree. The only guaranteed seats we have are to the premier of Ron's film, our Friday night black tie event and its party and after-party.
Over the coming days, together we see a lot of short films, largely the work of student filmmakers, and enjoy them very much. The boys hook up with a British school chum whose family has a second home in the hills above Cap d'Antibes, and he takes them out partying all night to the private clubs where no one is carded. Heaven.
But Cannes is a very attractive port and the visuals of the people and billboards and 3D commercials for new films are wonderful. Between screenings, we roam the backstreets looking for worthy places to eat. Famous haunts like the Carlton Terrace outside the main hotel, or the Martinez or Majestic, are off limits to anyone except guests and guests of guests. More than 4,500 people are registered for the festival, and the tradition of roaming from cafe to cafe to do business has disappeared in the scrum.
Nonetheless, Ron continues to run into friends on the pedestrian lanes off the port giving it that small town feel he loves. We spend an evening at the villa of his Italian producers, Lucky Red, feasting on couscous and rosé in the garden and enjoying many laughs and memories of an America well traveled and a road movie well produced.
Big Day at Cannes – The Premier of Ron's Movie
It's very exciting to be here and be a small part of the Cannes Film Festival… Finally, Ron's film opens tonight. There is so much media interest in the film after the 8:30am screening that there is no room in the press conference. We gather with many other cast and crew in the lower level of Le Palais du Cinema, the festival headquarters. His Italian colleagues wait for the White Carpet — to begin.
Regan and Tucker are at another screening in Le Palais; we sit and swivel our heads from the monitor where Italian is being translated into French, to the TV where Italian is being translated into English. Very good questions, even better answers. One writer says knowingly, "This Must Be The Place" should be called "This Must Be The Film" as I am sure it will win the Palme d'Or." There is lots of buzz about the film because the new Almodovar film was not so well received last night and Lars von Trier, whose film was well liked, has made an insulting anti-Semitic comment at his press conference that may sway the judges.
Nine days in and it's been great weather so far, high 70s and sunny with that Med breeze. We have seen Jean-Paul Belmondo at Cinema sur la Plage, when movies are shown on a big screen set up on the beach. There are enough parties for the boys and they connect again with their connected college friend. We have had too much fun. Tout va bien.
The Red Carpet Begins the Race
Friday after the press conference was big time ticket trading. Who sits where, who rides with whom, who goes to dinner party, who goes to after party. Ron has many people from his much loved crew in town and there is a lot of two-cheek kissing and laughter. Then, lots of fussing and dressing, of course, for the big night.
Women wear incredibly short skirts here, Ron calls them belts. And let me say now that it's impossible to compete with les filles L'Oreal and les hommes Roberto Cavallo — lots of models in designer samples hit the Red Carpet among the filmmakers to do product placement (the cumulative physical beauty is almost overwhelming…)
We have lunched on the plage at a wonderful temporary seafood restaurant where elegant older men in linen jackets dine with young ladies in sort-of swimsuits. We have dressed and we have taken Black Tie pictures on the balcony of our French apartment on rue Frere Perignac. We must be seated by 7pm and Ron must be at the Carlton to meet the car escort by 6pm.
Le Palais du Cinema is a very large tiered theatre with big, cushy seats and great sound. They usher in the plebeians like us along the Red Carpet and get you seated first, then they let you watch the real filmmakers come in, almost one by one. Paolo Sorrentino, director, has won here before and is very loved by the French. The Red Carpet, called marche montee I think in French, takes about 30 minutes (45 if you work with Sean Penn who is always late.) It is broadcast live on the theatre screen so we see many unknown-to-us celebrities pause for pictures and words of wisdom to the entertainment press.
Ron looked very handsome: He did the limo arrival with the police escort and special flags on the cars. We saw it all, but did not see him broadcast on the Carpet because it really focuses on the cast and director. Great fun to see and to speculate on the personalities — here's a video that Raffaello Vignoli, Ron's assistant during the shoot, made as the VIPs arrive at their seats –
Screening is a Big Success
The film finally began, after an altercation between two evening-gowned women over a seat. We were all taken aback by their scuffle, quite undignified in the palace of cinema. Regan and Tucker loved the movie, really seemed to relate to it, but maybe that's the Euro atmosphere they were in. It is truly an "art" film in every sense, and quite wonderful.
The screening was quiet but engaged; it seemed like the audience sang along with the Talking Heads music (David Byrne composed the score and is in the film) and stayed with the storyline. Then the credits began to dance across the screen and the audience erupted, about 7-8 minutes of standing ovation. True jubilation.
There were cries of 'Paolo, Paolo' then 'Sean, Sean' and the applause would die down and one of them — director and star — would stand or wave and it would start again. 'Paolo, Paolo…' 'Sean, Sean…' 'Bravo, Bravo' punctuated the air.
We heard the record was 26 minutes at Cannes for a standing ovation (no one knew which film), so you have to take this adoration in perspective. But when I saw, in dramatic closeup through the big screen coverage of the orchestra, that my hero Pedro Almodovar left his seat to come and kiss Paolo, it was a very special praise.
You can see from the pictures taken from inside the Palais stairs out to the street that a huge fuss is made about all of this. Lots of people remained outside waiting to get into the next film ("Drive" which got very good reviews too) and also to see stars from Ron's film exiting.
Afterwards, there was a very nice, posh party at La Mandala, one of these fixed tent restaurants on the beach. Tons of champagne flowed, and slim young men passed around trays of tiny pate type hors d'oeuvres, then little plates of pasta, hamburgers and frites, crazy variety, little cups of gelato, who picked this menu?
At 1am we left the boys to party a bit more and roam la Croissette, the seaside promenade, looking for fun. We oldies went home to sleep, but only after Ron caught the very positive review from Variety.com. The Italian trades have come in, very positive too. And of course it's been sold to the US, to a distributor who is known for recutting much of what he buys, so no one really knows the fate of the wonderful arthouse film we have seen.
Last Day and Night in France
On Saturday we ran around, had lunch in the city with a German cast member and his wife, and listened to her and Tucker trade stories about their days in Moscow. We have loved this international veneer to all our days in France and I think it's part of what makes this experience so special for Regan. After lunch I insisted I wanted to see Grasse, but the boys refused to go on a perfume factory tour so we continued up into the hills to see Vallauris, where Picasso did his ceramics. In that old compound, there is a very pretty chapel that he did a mural for.
After all the last minute shopping, cleaning, packing, Tucker took us all to a fabulous meal at L'Oasis, a beautiful stone courtyard under huge chestnut trees in the nearby town of La Napoule. We drove our Renault along the seashore (the Croissette of Cannes was closed to traffic for the last night's film) and watched the sun glimmer over the yachts, the bobbing bouys now vacant after their film tenants have sailed away, teens at the end of a beach day still holding hands.
The meal was fabulous, that's all I can really say since I don't speak that vocabulary. A Michelin-rated chef, impeccable service (someone escorts you to the bathroom…) in a low-key and very pretty Relais & Chateau inn. Tucker ordered a rose champagne — the restaurant has its own vineyard — and that epitomized the life we had led in the south of France. We all had the chef's selection: pureed gelee style bouillabaise in a tiny espresso cup, then asparagus with baby octapus and kumquats to start; a filet of sea breem over seasonal vegetables minced to look like a bed of couscous. Then, a breast of pigeon with morels and a goose liver pate…
Wait, there's more. A big bowl of the madeleines, a tray of chocolates, a pretty waitress with a dessert tower from which to choose, then a plate of tiny loucoumi, then some green and silver-striped marshmallow type things… I promise I won't write more, but you can imagine the deliciously prolonged and savory feast.
We walked a bit after supper and got home quite late after failing to digest everything. Last night in France, so the boys stayed up to watch movies online and leaned over our balcony to admire the club action on the street below. We crashed of course, up at 6am to pack.
And the Winner Is…
The Cannes Film Festival Awards were given out while we were mid-air. Terence Malick's controversial film, "The Tree of Life," won the Palme d'Or. Ron's movie won an Ecumenical Prize, we were told for its themes of revenge and redemption. Since the film was sold to the US market at the festival, Ron and the Italians are already super pleased, so we are happy. The flight home whizzes by.
Wish you all could have been here!
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I poured my heart and soul into this!!! Hope you people enjoy! =)
Wow, this is wonderful! You are so lucky to have gotten this opportunity. You looked absolutely gorgeous at the show and the red carpet. Thanks for sharing this, it really made me smile. I used to have the biggest crush on Joe Jonas.. hahah!
Amazing trip!
I hope that my story will inspire and enrich your lives; even if it doesn’t touch you as much as it has touched me. I hope that this will be passed on and that people will take a few minutes just to read what I had to say and try to be in the mind of these children. Try to change your day and see your house, your possessions, your income, and those many great things that you possess and find a way to share them with others. We all need a wakeup call sometimes, a message to straighten us out and look at the life we were given. I hope to go back next year to repeat the experience all over again and try to change myself even more, I love those children and I love their compassion and selflessness. Words can’t fully express what I felt or what I witnessed but my words are clear, these people see the world much differently than us, they treat possessions differently and they know how to work as a community.
This is about when my family and I took a trip down to Central Florida for our Family Vacation.
Hope you enjoy!
This was a vacation that taught me a lot about how my religion is organzied and gave me more appreciation for it.
I will never forget the time I spent in Germany.
I hope you guys enjoyed my story!
Best luck.
South Africa is this amazing country that not only is beautiful for its animals and scenery but for its people and for its ability to overcome the greatest oppression: apartheid, the discrimination of the majority. I am so glad I was given the gift of traveling to South Africa. It is an experience I will never forget!
It was a great trip!
I hope everyone who takes the time to read The Awakening enjoys learning about my bus ride to reality.
My typed essay about my vacation in Vietnam. It seem poorly written or should I say typed :\
Bryan Gray Europe Tour.
My vacation to Panama became suprisingly meaningful, contrary to what I had initially expected.
Thank you
This was a fun and yet difficult project i truely have enjoyed sharing my vaction with you.
Mahalo,
Have you ever been to Maine? What did you like best?
This is such an amazing story and essay!!
Their were many more memories from this trip that impacted me as much as the ones that were included, but I just didnt have enough room. So, I shortened it and tried to write the best description of the trip without exceeding the word limit. But the trip was, indeed, as remarkable as I said it was.
Washington is a really nice place. It has many museums and historical places. it also has very delicious foods. Chinatown was my favorite place to eat.
Thank you for this scholarship opportunity!
IB York was a great experience, and a great opportunity to explore new ideas and innovations
So now I head to college without my classmates but i will always have this wonderful experience.
🙂
This is one of my many travel adventure stories from my trip to Europe in the beginning of the summer. Besides Prague, I traveled to Berlin, Munuch, and Nuremberg in Germany, Innsbruck in Austria, Liechtenstein, Switzerland, and France. My favorite place was Switzerland, but my favorite story was the one I shared. I hope you enoy reading it as much as i enjoyed experiencing it!
I want everyone to be able to expericence something like I did.:) Everyone desevers happines!
I hope you enjoyed my travel blog and I hope you plan to take your mom to the Peaks of Otter Lodge for the best brunch you will ever eat. For more information click on this link:
http://www.peaksofotter.com/
Finished product. I love PERU!
This eye-opening opportunity has shaped my conviction toward making change and developing the community. It is a great pleasure to meet all those Leadership Award Honorees and other49 ANNpower fellows from 24 states in the U.S. I will continue to make change and build a dynamic community, excursively to ethnic, social, political gender aspects of advantage, as my milestone to become a great leader!
This eye-opening opportunity marks the culmination of my junior year. I am so glad to meet all those wonderful women leaders from all around the world and 49 other ANNpower fellows from other 24 states. I will continue to explore the world and make change with eagerness and confident, and overcoming disadvantage exclusively toward the milestone of a great leader!
I hope everyone enjoys my trip to Catalina and Ensenada!
This trip was the best trip regarding family time. It is unforgettable.
To see more photography from the trip, check out my photojournal: http://www.facebook.com/pages/A-Photojournal-of-My-Grecian-Travels/213497035367351.
What a testimony!! Thanks for posting. You don't know how impactful this is. Let Jesus keep using you for His glory. 😉
I was saved in August of 2009. I was in my parents's room and we all prayed for m, becuase I was tired of not having a desire for God. There I gave my life to Him and let Him be my Lord. I already excepted Him as Savior, but though it was a license to sin. Thatt day, though I wanted to repent of my sin and let God lead me. Lord and Savior go hand-in-hand. My life is changed. Now I have convictions and am learning so much about seeking God, because He is seeking me. It's awesome to live in the security and hope of knowing I will see Him one day in heaven. I am so glad He lives in me, because my goodness outside of Him is nothing. I don't know what I would do without Him.
Jesus used that park to bring you and your dad back together. How beautiful 🙂
Each place I go, I leave a peice of myself. And everyplace I go leaves a peice of itself in me. The people I have met along the way have changed me in the deepest way. Their lives have touched mine and I can never return to life as was usual. Likewise, my life has touched many along the way. It is my hope that nobody I meet along the way may return to life as was their usual. This is how each thead pulls coth and fabric together as we the people of the world cover it like a quilt. We must double stitch each peice so not to fall apart or leave holes. We need one another.
To whoever reading this, I am the person wearing blue shirt and white shorts, sligtly leaning on the panda bear statue.
My essay that talks about my experience traveling to Lima, Peru aims toward encouraging others who are not too familiar with it to visit and appreciate the fun life changing experience they're gauranteed to get.
What a great contest! Hope to see lots of terrific teen travel stories here!
It was difficult for me to type a 600 word blog about an amazing experience I had in the month of July. It was also difficult for me to choose certain pictures from the ones that I have chosen, so I uploaded the pictures of my time at NeiHu elementary school. I really wished that I could have used more sightseeing photos, but unfortunately, those were too big to upload.
This trip was amazing and it also tested who I am becoming as a person. Seeing the woman in Central Park living out her dream, to the woman selling fruit throughout the day; New York is made of dreamers and hardworking people. I loved it. Hope I get the chance to go back.
This was an amazing experience! I am so grateful for everything it taught me!!
From research, I believe the ice cream shop was called Eisdiele Eddy. More information about the exchange program can be found at http://www.aatg.org/study-trip-faq as well as at the bottom of the page at http://www.aatg.org/NGE-awards.
These Picutures are both of my own creation (one being an acrylic painting). When I took this picture at the western wall in Israel, the man in the photo was crying his heart out wearing a tattered down bath robe, I thought it would make for an intersting picture. So it did, it also inspired to me to create a painting in which I showed the world what I believe he really is. A man who is down on his luck but seems to still find peace in his life.
My sophomore year of high school I went to Donner Pass in California with a group called The Woods Project (www.thewoodsproject.org) . I had to apply to go , I was really anxious and scared that I wasn’t going to get. When I got my acceptance letter I was excited. I was also nervous because I had never been away from home for more than a week and The Woods project was going to last for two weeks. I had chosen to go to Donner Pass because I wanted to experience something new. I was going to go backpacking for one week and hiking the other. I had never gone backpacking before. When I told my friends that I was going backpacking they started to laugh because I am the smallest girl in my whole school and they didn’t think I was going to make it. Getting that response from my friends made me super scared of going to the trip. I thought I was going to die while backpacking!
My dad went to go drop me off at the airport and then he left. I was already scared and freaking out at the fact that he had just left me there and I did not know anybody! . I got in the plane to California and I was already regretting going on the trip. I was going to be with complete strangers for two weeks! When we got to California we all got split .There were three groups going to different places, one to Yosemite, another to Marine Headlines and then mine, to Donner Pass. I got in a van and that’s where I met the people who I was going to spend two weeks with. We were in that van for hours! When we finally got to our cabin we had to go up a hill to get to the door.
The first cabin we stayed in was named Clair Tappan Lodge. It was really nice . It was made out of wood, had a pool table, personal chef, jacuzzi and hot water in the showers. I loved it there! Too bad it only lasted for two days then it was time to go backpacking. They gave us our backpacking materials. I tried on the backpack and almost fell over. My backpacking week had started. We went up and down mountains, through rivers and lakes, and I thought we were never going to set up our tents. When it started to get dark we finally started cooking. The food we had was not good at all. We couldn’t bring a lot of food because of the bears and other animals. My second day of backpacking went better than the first. Everybody in my group started to know each other better and soon we became really close. We would sing while backpacking to make time pass faster and at night we didn’t want to sleep because we would play games. While backpacking I got to experience many things I hadn’t before. Even though I was the smallest girl going backpacking I was always the leader of the line because of my stamina.
When our backpacking week ended it was time to hike. I had gotten the hardest part of the trip over with so I knew hiking was going to be a piece of cake. We would hike in the morning and hanged out at night. It was the best experience I had ever had! When it was time to go back home I didn’t want to because I knew I would miss my friends.
To watch my video go to : http://youtu.be/FLd7W71EnyU
My experience as a first time camper.
i hope i win