Enter the Void  

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-The 62nd annual '''[[Cannes Film Festival]]''' will be held from May 13 to May 24, 2009. French actress [[Isabelle Huppert]] will be this year's President of the Jury. It was announced on March 19, 2009 that [[Pixar]]'s film ''[[Up (2009 film)|Up]]'' would open the festival. This marks the first time that an animated film will open the festival and also the first time a film in 3-D will open the festival. 
-==Feature film competition==+'''''Enter the Void''''' is a French film written and directed by [[Gaspar Noé]], labeled by Noé as a "psychedelic [[melodrama]]". It stars [[Nathaniel Brown]] in his debut role, [[Paz de la Huerta]] and Cyril Roy, also in his first role on film. The story is set in Tokyo and focuses on Oscar, a young American drug dealer who gets shot by the police, but continues to watch over his sister Linda as a ghost. The camera follows Oscar from behind his head during scenes in which he is alive. After his death, the view hovers over Tokyo through walls and across buildings.
-===Festival line-up===+
-'''Opener'''+
-* ''[[Up (2009 film)|Up]]'' (by [[Pete Docter]] and [[Bob Peterson]], United States)+
-'''Closer'''+Having been the director's dream project for many years, the film was made possible due to the commercial success of ''[[Irréversible]]'', the previous feature film by Noé. ''Enter the Void'' was primarily financed by [[Wild Bunch (film company)|Wild Bunch]] while Fidélité Films led the actual production. Co-producers included the visual effects studio [[BUF Compagnie]], which also provided the [[computer-generated imagery]]. Principal photography took place on location in Tokyo and involved many complicated crane shots. The film makes heavy use of imagery inspired by experimental cinema and [[psychedelic drug]] experiences.
-* ''[[Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky]]'' (by [[Jan Kounen]], Netherlands)+
-===Films in competition===+A rough version of the film premiered at the [[2009 Cannes Film Festival]], but post-production work continued and it was not released in France until almost one year later. A cut down version was released in the United States and United Kingdom in September 2010. The critical response has been sharply divided.
-The following films will compete for the [[Palme d'Or]].+
-* ''[[A l'origine (film)|A l'origine]]'' (by [[Xavier Giannoli]])+==Plot==
-* ''[[Antichrist (film)|Antichrist]]'' (by [[Lars von Trier]])+After their parents die in a car crash, Oscar and his younger sister Linda make a pact to never leave each other. However, they end up being separated in foster care.
-* ''[[Bright Star (film)|Bright Star]]'' (by [[Jane Campion]]) +
-* ''[[Fish Tank (film)|Fish Tank]]'' (by [[Andrea Arnold]])+
-* ''[[Inglourious Basterds]]'' (by [[Quentin Tarantino]])+
-* ''[[Kinatai]]'' (by [[Brillante Mendoza]])+
-* ''[[Looking for Eric]]'' (by [[Ken Loach]])+
-* ''[[Les Herbes folles]]'' (by [[Alain Resnais]])+
-* ''[[Los Abrazos Rotos]]'' (by [[Pedro Almodovar]]) +
-* ''[[Map of the Sound of Tokyo]]'' (by [[Isabel Coixet]])+
-* ''[[Un prophète]]'' (by [[Jacques Audiard]])+
-* ''[[Soudain le vide]]'' (by [[Gaspar Noe]])+
-* ''[[Spring Fever (2009 film)|Spring Fever]]'' (by [[Lou Ye]])+
-* ''[[Taking Woodstock]]'' (by [[Ang Lee]])+
-* ''[[Thirst (2009 film)|Thirst]]'' (by [[Park Chan-Wook]]) +
-* ''[[The Time That Remains]]'' (by [[Elia Suleiman]]) +
-* ''[[Vengeance (2009 film)|Vengeance]]'' (by [[Johnnie To]]) +
-* ''[[Vincere]]'' (by [[Marco Bellocchio]])+
-* ''[[Visages]]'' (by [[Tsai Ming-Liang]])+
-* ''[[The White Ribbon]]'' (by [[Michael Haneke]])+
-==Juries==+Oscar, now 20, lives in Tokyo and has saved enough money through drug dealing to reunite with Linda. As she becomes acquainted with the local scene, Linda becomes a stripper and gets into a relationship with her boss. Oscar disapproves of their relationship, while Linda disapproves of Oscar's addiction.
-====International competition====+
-* [[Isabelle Huppert]] (president)+
-* [[Asia Argento]]+
-* [[Nuri Bilge Ceylan]]+
-* [[Lee Chang-dong]]+
-* [[James Gray]]+
-* [[Hanif Kureishi]]+
-* [[Shu Qi]]+
-* [[Robin Wright Penn]]+
-* [[Sharmila Tagore]]+
-====Cinefoundation and short films====+Oscar's mentor Alex gives him the ''[[Bardo Thodol|Tibetan Book of the Dead]]'', which describes one's experiences after death and before the next rebirth. Alex expresses his attraction towards Linda.
-* [[John Boorman]] (president)+ 
-* [[Bertrand Bonello]]+Oscar's client Victor discovers that Oscar has had sex with Victor's mother. Just after Oscar has smoked [[Dimethyltryptamine|DMT]] (a powerful hallucinogenic), Victor orders drugs from him to be delivered right away in a nightclub called The Void. When Oscar enters, Victor apologizes to him, and there is a drug bust. Oscar flees into the toilet and gets rid of his supply of drugs, while police order him to open the locked door. They shoot through the door and kill Oscar. Alex calls Linda, but she's having sex with her boss and ignores the ringing telephone. Afterwards she is devastated by Oscar's death.
-* [[Ferid Boughedir]]+ 
-* [[Leonor Silveira]]+The deceased Oscar now has an aerial view of the world. He watches as Linda receives the news of his death and breaks down; Alex goes on the run, since the police are after him, and Victor falls out with his parents. Victor goes to Linda's house to apologize (apparently for assisting the police in setting up Oscar), but Linda tells him to kill himself. Interspersed through these scenes are Oscar's memories of his past; his relationships with his sister and mother are both sexually suggestive. The last scene is decided by the viewer: it is shot from the perspective of a baby being born to Oscar's mother. It is up to the viewer to decide if this is a flashback to Oscar's birth; either genuinely or as a false memory; or if his life starts over again.
-* [[Zhang Ziyi]]+
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Enter the Void is a French film written and directed by Gaspar Noé, labeled by Noé as a "psychedelic melodrama". It stars Nathaniel Brown in his debut role, Paz de la Huerta and Cyril Roy, also in his first role on film. The story is set in Tokyo and focuses on Oscar, a young American drug dealer who gets shot by the police, but continues to watch over his sister Linda as a ghost. The camera follows Oscar from behind his head during scenes in which he is alive. After his death, the view hovers over Tokyo through walls and across buildings.

Having been the director's dream project for many years, the film was made possible due to the commercial success of Irréversible, the previous feature film by Noé. Enter the Void was primarily financed by Wild Bunch while Fidélité Films led the actual production. Co-producers included the visual effects studio BUF Compagnie, which also provided the computer-generated imagery. Principal photography took place on location in Tokyo and involved many complicated crane shots. The film makes heavy use of imagery inspired by experimental cinema and psychedelic drug experiences.

A rough version of the film premiered at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival, but post-production work continued and it was not released in France until almost one year later. A cut down version was released in the United States and United Kingdom in September 2010. The critical response has been sharply divided.

Plot

After their parents die in a car crash, Oscar and his younger sister Linda make a pact to never leave each other. However, they end up being separated in foster care.

Oscar, now 20, lives in Tokyo and has saved enough money through drug dealing to reunite with Linda. As she becomes acquainted with the local scene, Linda becomes a stripper and gets into a relationship with her boss. Oscar disapproves of their relationship, while Linda disapproves of Oscar's addiction.

Oscar's mentor Alex gives him the Tibetan Book of the Dead, which describes one's experiences after death and before the next rebirth. Alex expresses his attraction towards Linda.

Oscar's client Victor discovers that Oscar has had sex with Victor's mother. Just after Oscar has smoked DMT (a powerful hallucinogenic), Victor orders drugs from him to be delivered right away in a nightclub called The Void. When Oscar enters, Victor apologizes to him, and there is a drug bust. Oscar flees into the toilet and gets rid of his supply of drugs, while police order him to open the locked door. They shoot through the door and kill Oscar. Alex calls Linda, but she's having sex with her boss and ignores the ringing telephone. Afterwards she is devastated by Oscar's death.

The deceased Oscar now has an aerial view of the world. He watches as Linda receives the news of his death and breaks down; Alex goes on the run, since the police are after him, and Victor falls out with his parents. Victor goes to Linda's house to apologize (apparently for assisting the police in setting up Oscar), but Linda tells him to kill himself. Interspersed through these scenes are Oscar's memories of his past; his relationships with his sister and mother are both sexually suggestive. The last scene is decided by the viewer: it is shot from the perspective of a baby being born to Oscar's mother. It is up to the viewer to decide if this is a flashback to Oscar's birth; either genuinely or as a false memory; or if his life starts over again.




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