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Rimu Kuwaki Debut In Hirokazu Koreeda Film ‘Sheep In A Box.’

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Japanese newcomer Rimu Kuwaki makes his debut as a savvy robot child surrogate.

Japanese auteur Hirokazu Koreeda is a regular at the Cannes Film Festival, largely returning to present films that deal with issues of life, death and parenting, both good and bad. This year his Competition entry Sheep in the Box, offers a sci-fi twist on those familiar themes, marking the acting debut of Kuwaki, who will turn 10 years old during the festival. Haruka Ayase and Daigo Yamamoto play his parents. And Kuwaki? “I play a humanoid who looks exactly like their child, who died in an accident,” he explains, “and continues living in their place.”

Kuwaki was chosen from more than 200 contenders, despite having next to no acting experience. “I’ve never really had any acting lessons — almost none, to be honest — but I have appeared in one drama series. The lines were basically just me being myself, so I’m not sure if you could really call it acting.”

Nevertheless, Kuwaki took to the challenge, and praises Koreeda for helping him ease into the role. “Director Koreeda Hirokazu is very kind,” he says. “He would encourage me by saying, ‘Let’s do our best,’ so any feelings of fear or embarrassment just disappear. Every time after shooting a take, he would also say to me, ‘That was really great,’ which made me so happy and motivated me to do my best again the next day. The atmosphere on set was fun and relaxed.”

Read the digital edition of Deadline’s Disruptors/Cannes magazine here.

Not every take was perfect, however. “Sometimes I got a bit too excited and started running around,” he recalls, “and I was told, ‘Robots aren’t supposed to sweat.’ And when I had a little bit food around my mouth, the crew said, ‘Robots don’t eat sweets, right?’ So I realized I had to be more careful.”

Kuwaki also learned a lot from his screen parents. “They’re kind, beautiful, and cool — I love them very much,” he says. Did he hang out with them to prepare for the role? “Yes, I did. We spent time together having meals, looking at photos of me as a baby, and even giving each other shoulder massages! It was a really fun time. As for what I learned, I was really moved by their facial expressions and movements during the acting, and it made my heart ache at times. It made me realize how amazing acting can be.”

Any plans to act again? “I like both watching movies and acting in them, and I hope to continue acting in the future. I’ve already told my family about my decision, and I’m going to do my best to appear in three more films.” And in the meantime, what else keeps him busy? “I like baseball, soccer, video games, golf, dancing and fishing. I’m currently practicing golf and dancing so I can get better at them.”

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Guillaume Canet & Marion Cotillard On Their Cannes Title ‘Karma’

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Guillaume Canet and Marion Cotillard happily reflected on what they described as the close and collaborative experience they underwent to develop their Cannes Competition title Karma this afternoon during a press conference. 

Canet directed the film from a screenplay he also wrote. But the veteran filmmaker told the press room that he began the project as part of a theoretical task of developing a story that he could write specifically for Cotillard to star in. 

“I know Marion very well. We’ve worked together often, and I’d had this frustration as a director that I hadn’t really written a character commensurate with her talent,” Canet said. “She’s always extraordinary, but I wanted to be on a set with her for a long time to really make the most of her absolutely amazing talent. She’s exceptional and incredibly generous. She never does the same takes. It was a wonderful pleasure to have this experience as a director.” 

Discussing the experience, Cotillard said Canet approached her with several ideas for a feature film before providing her with a full script. 

“They were all actually good. I reacted to everything,” she said of Canet’s ideas. “But it was this particular idea that took shape and seemed very vibrant to me. We naturally realized it was the right topic.  I followed the creative process from the very beginning. There were times of doubt and questioning, but when I read the first script, which wasn’t the final script, I had a strong emotional reaction, and he knows when I have that reaction, I know we’re going in the right direction.”

Karma follows Cotillard as a woman with a troubled past whose new life is upended by a child’s disappearance. The film marks Cotillard and Canet’s sixth collaboration after Little White Lies, Blood Ties, Rock’n Roll, Little White Lies 2, and Asterix & Obelix: The Middle Kingdom.

The film is produced by Paris-based Iconoclast in co-production with Canet’s Caneo France. Pathé Films is handling French distribution and international sales.

Cannes runs until May 23. 

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‘Clarissa’ Review: Sophie Okonedo in a Sharp Take on ‘Mrs. Dalloway’

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With its stream-of-consciousness style and fragmented perspectives, Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway is a beguiling novel with understandably few adaptations. Marleen Gorris tried with her shaky 1997 film starring Vanessa Redgrave as the titular protagonist and Rupert Graves as the tragic Septimus. A film inspired by a book inspired by Woolf (Michael Cunningham’s The Hours) followed, and a handful of stage adaptations came and went. Now, Arie and Chuko Esiri, the twin brothers behind the critically acclaimed drama Eyimofe, attempt their own translation — and how lucky we are for that.

Premiering in the Directors’ Fortnight sidebar, Clarissa is a compelling interpretation of Mrs. Dalloway that transposes the action of Woolf’s novel from 1920s London to present-day Lagos. Clarissa, played with terrific restraint by Sophie Okonedo, is now a Nigerian society woman preoccupied by the infamously jammed Lagosian traffic, interactions with her housekeepers, and memories of youthful summers spent debating the meaning of democracy in Nigeria and the intellectual and political priorities of a developing nation-state.

Clarissa

The Bottom Line

A quiet revelation.

Venue: Cannes Film Festival (Directors’ Fortnight)
Cast: Sophie Okonedo, Ayo Edebiri, David Oyelowo, India Amarteifio, Toheeb Jimoh, Fortune Nwafor
Directors: Arie Esiri, Chuko Esiri
Screenwriter: Chuko Esiri

2 hours 7 minutes

Septimus (Fortune Nwafor, a revelation) is an off-duty military officer who has just returned from fighting the insurgent group Boko Haram in the northern region of the state. He struggles to fend off thoughts of conflict (ongoing since 2009) and anchor himself to his present-day reality, one in which he’s happily married to Aisha, a well-regarded Muslim seamstress (Modesinuola Ogundiwin).

The Esiri twins combine this new framework with a poetic register that has become increasingly popular since their feature debut premiered in Berlin six years ago. Clarissa embraces the cinematic grammar employed by filmmakers like Raven Jackson (All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt), Savannah Leaf (Earth Mama), RaMell Ross (Nickel Boys) and most recently Akinola Davies Jr. (My Father’s Shadow). Similar to the films by these directors, Clarissa revels in the splintered language of memory. Jonathan Bloom’s gorgeous cinematography (the film was shot on 35mm) and Blair McClendon’s disciplined editing display an intuitive understanding of the source text, finding rhymes and echoes in close-ups of a lip touching a knee or a kingfisher bird crying from a branch. Kelsey Lu’s spectral score threads these images together, adding to the dreamy quality of the film.

Clarissa begins on a slightly different note than Woolf’s novel. The Esiris (the film was directed by both but the screenplay was written by Chuko) eventually get to the flowers, but first they offer the image of a young Clarissa (India Amarteifio of Netflix’s Queen Charlotte) sneaking out of the room of young Peter (Industry’s Toheeb Jimoh). It is 1994 and the pair, along with other friends, are in Abraka, a verdant town in southern Nigeria’s Delta state. Their days are spent swimming in the lake, picnicking by the beach and debating poetry and literature. At the sound of morning prayers, an older Clarissa awakens from this dream and shuffles out to her lawn, where the leafy bush has been replaced with the industrial skyline of Lagos. So begins her day. The flowers must be procured, the tents put up in the garden, and the finishing touches added around the home before her guests arrive.

As Clarissa meanders through Lagos, a portrait of the bustling West African city emerges. Just as in their debut, the Esiris luxuriate in scenes of people at work and observations of an increasingly cosmopolitan locale, subtly revealing trenchant class differences. Nowhere is that more apparent than with Septimus, whose story comes to us in potent fits and starts. When looking at his Lagos, the camera often closes in, reflecting the kind of claustrophobia poverty tends to engender. Septimus lives in a small apartment with his wife, travels by danfo (communal minibuses) and struggles to acclimate to civilian life after a traumatic tour in the North. Just as Mrs. Dalloway sought to reveal how Britain abandoned veterans, Clarissa gestures at the power and collateral damage of Nigeria’s military. Nwafor, who starred in Eyimofe, is astounding; in his hands, Septimus becomes a heartbreaking symbol of a nation’s broken promises. His performance lives in his eyes, which manage to convey a sincere naïveté and a sullenness all at once.

While Clarissa’s life seems more expansive — wider shots accompany her thread — it is also chillier. Okonedo captures that steeliness well, communicating the oppressive nature of the character’s life within the context of Nigerian society. Clarissa married Richard, a respectable and doting man in politics played by Jude Akuwudike, but she still thinks of her former lover Peter (played in the present by a fine David Oyelowo) and the intensity of her relationship with Sally (played by Ayo Edebiri as a youth and Nikki Amuka-Bird as an older woman). The only person she seems to still be in touch with is Ugo (Danny Sapani), whom they all used to lightly tease and who now operates as a kind of town crier, offering news and gossip alike.

In flashbacks, an attraction blooms between a young Clarissa and Sally. Amarteifio and Edebiri have an understated chemistry that makes the covert passion between these two women believable. To Clarissa, Sally represents an effortless cool — a composite of countercultural standards that she secretly wishes to embody. While there’s an understandable obliqueness to their relationship, one does wish that the filmmakers had afforded more space to their intellectual sparring. There’s something alluring about Sally, who’s never far from a cigarette or a book, and how her beliefs counter Clarissa’s traditional ones. Some of the best scenes in Clarissa are when the young friends gather around the table to debate the state of postcolonial literature and the irony of a newly democratic nation under military rule.

There’s a radical bent to the Esiris’ interpretations of and deviations from Mrs. Dalloway. Woolf wrote the novel to reveal the madness of a post-war society and the disjointed nature of a nation undergoing significant change. And for all the ways she sharply articulated the oppressed condition of women, she also relied on a colonial framework and deployed racist tropes. A sly achievement of Clarissa is in how it not only acknowledges this history, but upends it too.

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Aaron Eckhart Underway In Bulgaria On Action-Thriller ‘The Walk-In’

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EXCLUSIVE: The Dark Knight and Olympus Has Fallen star Aaron Eckhart has begun principal photography in Bulgaria on action-thriller The Walk-In, which Film Bridge International is launching at the Cannes market.

Roel Reiné, who directed Eckhart in 2024 action film Classified with Tim Roth and Abigail Breslin, is directing the movie, which is shooting on location across Sofia and throughout Bulgaria.

Written by Scott Windhauser, the film follows “former CIA operative Hayes (Eckhart), who uncovers a conspiracy connected to an imminent terrorist attack targeting the G7 Summit.”

Film Bridge has secured a host of international distribution partners on the film, including Eagle Pictures (Italy), Vertigo Films (Australia), Wildbunch (Germany, France), Mediasquad (Poland), Falcon Films (Middle East), Kinolights (South Korea), ADS Services (Hungary), Paradise/MGN (CIS&Baltics), AKC Sinema Televizyon (Turkey), Scanbox Entertainment (Scandinavia), Cinesky (Airlines), Karpat Media (Romania), Foxx Media (Czech Rep & Slovakia), Vertical (UK) and YouPlanet Pictures (Spain).

Producers include Film Bridge International’s Ellen Wander (Spinning Man), Gabriel Georgiev (Savage Hunt) of Midwest, Choice Film’s Summer Crockett Moore (Killing Faith) and Zori Davidkova (Killing Faith).

The Film is funded by Calgary-based Orogen Entertainment where Blair Ward, Anders Erdén, Lauren Case, and Jeremy Gilman will act as executive producers on the film.

Reiné, whose credits include Halo, Black Sails and Knightfall, stated: “After the success of Classified, working with Aaron again felt like the perfect next step. He brings a grounded intensity and emotional depth that elevates every scene. The Walk-In is bigger, darker, and even more ambitious — a character-driven action thriller with real scale and tension.”

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