Cabriolet Film Festival Brings Beirut’s Gemmayze Back to Life

The audience sitting on the Gemmayze Stairs
The audience sitting on the Gemmayze Stairs
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Cabriolet Film Festival Brings Beirut’s Gemmayze Back to Life

The audience sitting on the Gemmayze Stairs
The audience sitting on the Gemmayze Stairs

“Our dreams are many, our ambitions are great, our art is magnificent, worldly, and reaches every sad corner of the world. We’re here, and we’re here to stay”, with these words, director Nadine Labaki addressed film buffs and invited them to attend the Cabriolet Festival for short films. This invitation is part of the festival’s promotional campaign. The festival will run from June 4 till June 6 on the Gemmayze Stairs in Beirut.

Nadine Labaki was chosen to host the festival’s 13th edition as a tribute to her work, as it is customary to have a Lebanese actor or director host the festival each year. This year’s theme is Exist, and 56 short films that address the festival’s theme will be screened. They were selected from 3,000 short films that had been submitted to the organizers.

The 56 films include documentaries, cartoons, science fiction, among other genres submitted from many countries across the globe. On the festival’s first day, 19 films will be shown, including the Lebanese film The System by Fayez Bou Khater and the Italian film Dead Times by Damiano Monaco and Lucio Lionello. The documentary Aida, by Lebanese director Hanan Abi Khalil, and Scaptegoat by Ramy Yazbek will also be shown on the first day of Cabriolet.

Nadine Labaki arrived at 6 pm Tuesday with several artists and cultural center directors. The guest artists participated in virtual scenes as part of discussions in which they talked about their artistic and educational experiences under the theme Heritage and Culture - Somewhere Between Crisis and Resilience.

With the Cabriolet festival, Gemmayze will hope to regain its leading role in the culture and art scene as life returns to it again. The area was the most affected by the August 4 Beirut port explosion.



'Gladiator 3' Already in Works, Say Director And Star

Paul Mescal says he would be "massively down" to appear in Gladiator III. Photo: AP PHOTO
Paul Mescal says he would be "massively down" to appear in Gladiator III. Photo: AP PHOTO
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'Gladiator 3' Already in Works, Say Director And Star

Paul Mescal says he would be "massively down" to appear in Gladiator III. Photo: AP PHOTO
Paul Mescal says he would be "massively down" to appear in Gladiator III. Photo: AP PHOTO

Ridley Scott's long-awaited "Gladiator" sequel has not even hit US theaters yet, but the veteran director is already hard at work on a third installment.
"Gladiator II," which arrives in North American cinemas Friday, stars Irish actor Paul Mescal ("Normal People") as Lucius, the son of Russell Crowe's Maximus from the multiple Oscar-winning original, AFP said.
A bloody, blockbuster epic of revenge, treachery and -- yes -- gladiators, it has drawn positive reviews and already hauled in a muscular $87 million at the global box office since opening in several countries last week.
"Given the performance in the rest of the world that we've seen yesterday, there's certainly going to be a 'Gladiator III,'" said Scott, in Los Angeles on Monday for the movie's glitzy US premiere.
"Because it also becomes financial, and you'd be insane not to consider a third version," said the British director of seminal films such as "Blade Runner" and "Thelma & Louise."
The plot of "Gladiator II" was also "planned to leave it wide open to a sequel," added Scott, a famously prolific filmmaker who is still directing roughly a film per year at the age of 86.
The second film opens with Lucius -- sent into exile by his mother to avoid certain death in Rome -- battling in vain to defend his adopted North African home city from the arrival of seemingly unstoppable Roman soldiers.
Captured as a prisoner of war, he is brought back to the imperial metropolis, where he must prove his worth in the Colosseum in order to exact revenge on invading general Marcus Acacius, played by Pedro Pascal.
Danish actress Connie Nielsen reprises her role as Lucilla from the 2000 original, while Denzel Washington is already earning Oscar buzz for his conniving, mercurial and highly flamboyant ringmaster, Macrinus.
"Jewelry, sandals and everything -- I just looked like a Roman pimp... I couldn't put on enough rings," joked Washington on Monday.
'Political'
Mescal -- whose character battles bloodthirsty baboons, rhinos and sharks in addition to humans in "Gladiator II" -- also expressed excitement about returning for another film.
But he said Scott had discussed a new direction for the plot that would not simply "go back to the arena as we know it."
"The last time I spoke to (Scott) he said he had nine pages. Yesterday, he said he had 14," Mescal told journalists.
"I would be excited for it to go into a more political sphere," with Lucius thrust into a world of court intrigue that he does not want to inhabit, like Michael Corleone in "The Godfather," added Mescal.
Asked how the second film's themes tackled power and politics differently, some 24 years after the original Scott said: "They're exactly the same."
"A super-rich man thinks he can take over the Empire. Is that familiar?" he said, just days after billionaire Donald Trump's re-election as US president.
"We don't learn anything historically. We keep repeating the same mistakes. We're going through exactly the same thing right now in several parts of the planet," he added.