By Jake Coyle, Film Writer
CANNES, France (AP) --In Todd Haynes' tonally shape-shifting "May December," the first announcement of the movie's playful intentions comes with a theatrical zoom in, a few lushly melodramatic piano notes and the frightful announcement that there no more hot dogs in the fridge.
That moment — which Haynes says signals "that there's something coy happening in the language of the film" — is just a taste of what's to come in "May December," a delicious and disquieting drama laced with comedy and camp that Haynes premiered over the weekend at the Cannes Film Festival.
Natalie Portman stars as an actor researching an upcoming film that's to dramatize a scandal from 20 years earlier. She comes to Savannah, Georgia, to spend time with Gracie Atherton-Yoo (Julianne Moore), who years earlier become tabloid fodder for a sexual relationship with a seventh grader. Now, she's seemingly happily married to him, Joe Yoo (Charles Melton), with kids of their own and suburban barbeques to host.
The film, scripted by Samy Burch, takes a light but deliberate touch in navigating through thorny themes of performance and identity. As Portman's character grows increasingly like Gracie, ethical borders begin to tumble away.
"It was tonally such an amazing script and so rigorous," Haynes said in an interview alongside Portman. "It kept shifting the way you felt about or trusted one character versus another. That whole process as it maneuvered through the course of the script was such a compelling experience. And I just thought: Wow, how could you translate into visually?"
"May December" (for which Netflix reportedly bought the North American rights), marks the first time Haynes (who has regularly worked with Moore) has made a movie with the 41-year-old Portman. For her, "May December" was a chance to not only work with a director she's long admired but explore some of her own fascinations.
"It poses a lot of the questions I'm most obsessed by about performance, about the purpose of art, about innocence," says Portman, also a producer on the film.
"When you explore all those layers — playing someone who's playing someone, making a movie of a movie in a movie — there's so many layers of artifice, and what truth we can get out of artifice — which is the kind of alchemy of what we do," adds Portman. "We're using lies to tell the truth, and it's magic."
"May December" has some unofficial roots in reality. Gracie isn't very different in certain ways from Mary Kay Letourneau, a Washington State schoolteacher who went to prison after a relationship with a boy in her sixth grade class.
Questions of identity and artifice have run through Haynes' filmography, including the sumptuous '50s romance "Carol," the Douglas Sirk-inspired melodrama "Far from Heaven" and his most recent film, the documentary "The Velvet Underground." In Portman, he found an actor who shared a similar approach to film.
"A lot of narrative filmmaking and fiction-making has an internal desire to redeem oneself through the process, to sort of affirm one's own aims. That's the thing that I'm not particularly interested in as a director," says Haynes. "And I'm drawn to actors who feel similarly, who are actually interested in creating a distance between maybe their own values and ideas and those portrayed in the character."
He praised Portman's eagerness to engage with "and lean into the most disquieting aspects of the character."
Portman has famously played some real-life figures, like Jacqueline Kennedy ("Jackie"), which required copious amounts of research. But in "May December," she plays an actor far more reckless than herself. Yet even in a performance that could have easily slid into satire, Portman deftly inhabits her.
"Most artists who tell stories want to hold up their ethical standpoint in the light. It can be vampiric to take human emotion and human story and capitalize on it and tell a story," Portman says. "But hopefully the energy that you come to it with is empathy and the curiosity to explore someone's human behavior and someone's inner self. That it's an act of empathy and not an act of bloodsucking."
There were long conversations with Haynes and Moore as they prepared to make "May December" in a 30-day shooting spring. But, unlike her character, Portman's preparation for the part was mostly already done.
"Well," Portman says smiling, "I've spent my whole life researching how to be an actress."
Taylor Swift Wins Big At MTV Video Music Awards, Ties Beyoncé’s Record
Taylor Swift 's dominance continued at the MTV Video Music Awards, where she took home seven awards — including the night's biggest, the trophy for video of the year.
In her speech Wednesday night, Swift thanked her "boyfriend, Travis" for being on set of the "Fortnight" music video and cheering her on. Fans rewarded the mention of NFL star Travis Kelce with loud screams.
"Everything this man touches turns to happiness and fun and magic," she said, before shifting gears to the 2024 presidential election and instructing her fans who are over 18 to register to vote.
Swift did, however, avoid discussing Kamala Harris' presidential bid on stage. On Tuesday night, Swift endorsed the vice president, moments after Harris' debate with former president Donald Trump ended.
Swift's awards haul brings her to a career total of 30, tying her and Beyonc for the title of most-awarded musician in VMA history. Eminem is now the male artist with the most VMAs, at 14.
Swift and Post Malone also took home the first televised award of the VMAs for best collaboration, for "Fortnight," handed to them by Flavor Flav and Olympian Jordan Chiles.
Swift started that speech by giving remembrance to everyone who lost their lives and loved ones during 9/11, 23 years ago.
"I've just been thinking about what happened 23 years ago, everyone who lost a loved one and everyone that we lost and that is the most important thing about today," she said. "And everything that happens tonight falls behind that."
She then turned to discussing Malone.
"There is a reason Post Malone is everyone in music's favorite person to collaborate with," she shifted her attention to him. "It has taken forever for me to get him to stop calling me... Read More