Director Michael Haneke won the Golden Palm for best film for the second time at this year's Cannes Film Festival, which ended on Sunday. The jury just keeps giving prizes to the same people, the Web magazine Slate laments: "The 65th Cannes Film Festival ended with a depressing ceremony. Certainly, people say here that Michael Haneke's film Love isn't entirely without its merits. Nevertheless the list of prizewinners does nothing to change the impression that preconceived, academic ideas and a certain incoherence hold sway here at Cannes. In the same way good old Ken Loach with his harmless The Angels' Share has no place here. ... Carlos Reygadas, for his part, did deserve his prize for best directing (for Post Tenebras Lux), but he is practically invisible in such a context, when all the other award-winning films - with the exception of Beyond the Hills by Cristian Mungiu - flounder in the conventions of a tired and greying cinema. These awards send a sad signal. Such time-worn conformism only reconfirms the widespread - albeit in part unjust - idea that the greatest film festival in the world does nothing but shower endless accolades on the same old faces." (29/05/2012)
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