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168
WORLD SHOWBIZ & ENTERTAINMENT BREAKING NEWS
Anti-Bush film tops Cannes awards Director Michael Moore's controversial anti-Bush documentary Fahrenheit 9/11 has won the prestigious Palme d'Or best film award at the Cannes festival.
It was the first documentary to win the top prize since Jacques Cousteau's The Silent World in 1956. The film received a 15-minute standing ovation when it was screened on Monday. Fahrenheit 9/11 explores the Iraq war and alleges connections between President George W Bush and top Saudi families, including the Bin Ladens. The documentary uses Moore's customary satirical style to accuse Mr Bush of stealing the presidential election in 2000, ignoring terrorism warnings before 11 September 2001 and fuelling fears of more attacks to secure Americans' support for the war in Iraq. "What have you done? I'm completely overwhelmed by this," Moore said in his acceptance speech. "I want to make sure if I do nothing else for the rest of this year that those who died in Iraq have not died in vain." Thanking the jury headed by cult director Quentin Tarantino, he added: "You will ensure that the American people will see this movie...You have put a huge light on this." Among other awards at Cannes: 1- The film Old Boy, by South Korean director Park Chan-wook, won the Grand Prize 2- Jury Prizes went to Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul's film Tropical Malady and to actress Irma P. Hall for her part in The Ladykillers . 3-French film-maker Tony Gatlif won the director's award for his film Exiles .4- Yagira Yuuya, a 14-year-old Japanese boy, was named best actor for his role in the film Nobody Knows . 5- The best actress award went to Maggie Cheung from Hong Kong for her performance in the film Clean . 6- Keren Yedaya's Or won the Golden Camera award for best film by a first-time director.
Positive:
Michael Moore's film was originally set to be released in the US through
Disney subsidiary Miramax, before Disney blocked it. It is now expected to be
released through a third party. The critical reaction to the film has
generally been positive, with praise coming from The Washington Post, Time
Magazine and British newspapers including the Independent and the Telegraph.
However, others have been more critical of the film. The Hollywood Reporter
said Moore was "pioneering a reality film as an election device." And trade
paper Variety described it as "rather less incendiary than expected" and said
it was "a blatant cinematic 2004 campaign pamphlet". Fahrenheit 9/11 was
competing against 18 other films for the Palme d'Or.
Moore's film shows 'US Iraqi abuse'
It appears in his new documentary, Fahrenheit 9/11 which also explores alleged connections between the Bush and Bin Laden families. The abuse "occurred in the field - outside the prison walls", Moore told the film festival. The White House declined to comment on this issue. Moore's film, which received its world premiere in Cannes, France, on Monday, shows what appear to be US soldiers putting hoods on Iraqi prisoners.

Moore, who won an Oscar last year for Bowling For Columbine, said he sent three under-cover film crews to Iraq. "You saw this morning the first footage of abuse and humiliation of these Iraqi detainees," he told reporters on Monday. The world had seen now notorious photographs from Abu Ghraib prison, near Baghdad - but no photos or footage from outside a prison until now, he said. He also slated the relationship between UK Prime Minister Tony Blair and Mr Bush, saying: "The one thing you can say about Blair is that he's smart. What is he doing hanging out with this guy? They make the weirdest couple I've ever seen. "I know his misses his old buddy Bill Clinton - but to settle for this? Brits, aren't you embarrassed?" On Saturday, President Bush said he would not allow any more abuses by US troops in Iraq. But he also said the abuses were restricted to Abu Ghraib. Soldiers in Moore's film were shown outdoors ridiculing a man covered in a blanket on the ground, calling him "Ali Baba". "It was an older man who was actually drunk, and it was early in the morning, and he was lying on the ground on a stretcher with a blanket over him," Moore said.
Continues on the following pages.