Sunday, May 27, 2012

The South rises again at the Cannes Film Festival

Via Southern Nationalist Network



Director Jeff Nichols couldn't help but to notice a big trend at this year's Cannes Film Festival – the Southern United States is extremely well-represented in the South of France.

There are six American films in competition and many of these films take place in the South – including his film Mud, a tear-jerking drama set around the Mississippi River.

There's also Lee Daniels' The Paperboy which takes places in 1970s small-town Florida and its steamy gator-infested swamps. John Hillcoat's Lawless is a Prohibition-era drama that takes place in bootlegging Franklin County, Virginia.

Beyond the main competition, the film Beasts of the Southern Wild is earning raves with its depiction of a fictional area on the very southern edge of Louisiana called "The Bathtub."

"It's cool," says Nichols. "Southerners are good story tellers. It's a very specific culture and voice."

Nichols, born in Little Rock, Arkansas, stood on stage with the co-stars in his film -- including Reese Witherspoon (raised in Tennessee) and Matthew McConaughey (the Texas-born actor stars in both Mud and Paperboy).

Nichols set his film on one of the most celebrated bodies of water in the world, the Mississippi River, and happily admits to borrowing from one of the great authors who depicted it – Mark Twain

"If you're going to steal stuff from someone, it might as well be someone really intelligent," said Nichols. "I stole things from Mark Twain."

But part of Nichols' film – and personal fears – is that this Southern world he depicts is disappearing.

"I felt it was important to capture something that might be dying," he said, choking up. "That's sad."

More @ USA Today

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