Foreign Film Thriving in Pandemic, Says Michael Mann

US director Michael Mann spoke at the launch of Los Angeles-based French film festival COLCOA Michael TRAN AFP
US director Michael Mann spoke at the launch of Los Angeles-based French film festival COLCOA Michael TRAN AFP
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Foreign Film Thriving in Pandemic, Says Michael Mann

US director Michael Mann spoke at the launch of Los Angeles-based French film festival COLCOA Michael TRAN AFP
US director Michael Mann spoke at the launch of Los Angeles-based French film festival COLCOA Michael TRAN AFP

The growth of streaming and binge-watching during the pandemic have switched more audiences onto foreign cinema, veteran director Michael Mann said Monday at the launch of Hollywood's French film festival.

"Heat" and "The Last of the Mohicans" director Mann was speaking at the 25th anniversary opening night of COLCOA, which celebrates French movies in Los Angeles, but was canceled last year due to Covid-19.

This year's edition is somewhat scaled back, in part as a ban on European travelers imposed at the start of the pandemic remains in place until next week. But COLCOA still boasts a field of 55 movies and series designed to showcase the best in Gallic cinema, AFP reported.

It opened Monday with "Between Two Worlds," in which Oscar-winner Juliette Binoche -- alongside a largely non-professional cast -- goes undercover to expose the insecurity of the gig economy.

"I think the combination of streaming and Covid, where people spend so much time watching video on-demand and streaming, has opened up the whole world of cinema in a really terrific way," Mann told AFP on the red carpet.

The debut earlier this year of French-language TV mystery "Lupin" became Netflix's third most-watched season. Even that was recently dwarfed by the success of South Korea's "Squid Game," watched by 111 million accounts less than a month after its September release.

Thanks to a new generation of filmmakers and streaming platforms, "there is a way to consume, to discover and to be interested in different genres, and so effectively the American public is opening up to the world," said COLCOA festival director Francois Truffart.

In a year that also saw French television shows such as "Call My Agent" gain global fans, COLCOA is putting increased emphasis on series such as Emile Zola adaptation "Germinal," and Julie Delpy's middle-age comedy "On The Verge."

Films include "Lost Illusions," adaptated from Honore de Balzac's novel, and "Onoda: 10,000 Nights in the Jungle," about a Japanese soldier who refuses to believe World War II has ended and fights on for decades.

COLCOA, which stands for "City of Lights, City of Angels" -- the nicknames of Paris and Los Angeles, respectively -- runs until Sunday.



'Romeo and Juliet' Star Olivia Hussey Dies Aged 73

Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey starred in the 1968 adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet". CHRIS DELMAS / AFP
Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey starred in the 1968 adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet". CHRIS DELMAS / AFP
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'Romeo and Juliet' Star Olivia Hussey Dies Aged 73

Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey starred in the 1968 adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet". CHRIS DELMAS / AFP
Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey starred in the 1968 adaptation of "Romeo and Juliet". CHRIS DELMAS / AFP

Olivia Hussey, who starred as a teenage Juliet in Franco Zeffirelli's 1968 film "Romeo and Juliet," garnering her a Golden Globe, died Friday at age 73, her family announced.
"Olivia was a remarkable person whose warmth, wisdom, and pure kindness touched the lives of all who knew her," her family said in a statement posted to her Instagram account.
Buenos Aires-born Hussey was 15 when she and her co-lead Leonard Whiting starred in the Oscar-winning adaptation of William Shakespeare's tragedy, AFP said.
In 2023, the two actors filed a lawsuit against the studio alleging child abuse over a controversial nude scene featuring the pair, who were minors at the time.
A judge dismissed the lawsuit later that year.
In a 2018 interview with entertainment trade publication Variety, Hussey said Zeffirelli had shot the nude scene tastefully.
"Everyone thinks they were so young they probably didn't realize what they were doing," Hussey said.
"But we were very aware. We both came from drama schools and when you work, you take your work very seriously."
Whiting told Variety the pair had supported each other through the daunting experience.
"Olivia was very, very nervous and frightened as well, but we really were very fond of each other and we helped each other get through the whole thing," he said in 2023.
Born to an Argentine opera singer and a British legal secretary, Hussey moved with her family from Buenos Aires to London when she was seven years old.
She studied at the Italia Conti drama school and was already a working actor as a teenager when she was cast in Zeffirelli's film.
Hussey, who received a "New Star of the Year" Golden Globe for her performance, would later star in the 1974 slasher film "Black Christmas" and the 1978 adaptation of Agatha Christie's "Death on the Nile", among other projects.
She is survived by her husband David Eisley, their three children and a grandchild.