
-
European court faults France over sexual consent rules
-
Rain adds to misery of Afghan quake survivors
-
Rubio eyes tough-security ally in Ecuador
-
Afghanistan quake deadliest in decades, killing over 2,200
-
Coffee and cash: how Hamas pays its civil servants in secret
-
Stock markets mixed with eyes on US jobs data
-
China's Xi holds talks with North Korea's Kim in Beijing
-
Seniors back to work as ageing Germany battles pension burden
-
Spence on brink of history as first Muslim England player
-
Portugal holds day of mourning as crash toll rises to 17 dead
-
Taiwan star Shu Qi channels her childhood trauma into directorial debut
-
France's Ozon under the gun with big screen take on Camus classic
-
Zelensky meets European leaders on Ukraine security guarantees
-
Kolisi returns but won't captain Springboks against All Blacks
-
French women's boxing team barred from world champs over late gender test results
-
Asia markets mixed as Chinese stocks lose steam
-
'Biggest' Women's Asian Cup can help drive change, says top official
-
Searchers retrieve bodies as Afghan quake toll expected to rise
-
China's Xi at centre of world stage after days of high-level hobnobbing
-
Australia's Schmidt warns of 'super tough' Argentina test
-
Daniel Craig leads Hollywood stars to Toronto for 50th film fest
-
Trump admin asks Supreme Court for 'expedited' ruling on tariffs
-
Digital loan sharks prey on inflation-hit Nigerians
-
Climate change made heat behind deadly Iberian fires 40 times more likely: study
-
Campaign event for Argentina's Milei ends with skirmishes
-
Open mic caught Xi, Putin discussing immortality
-
Olympic champ Kennedy, Gout Gout headline Australia worlds squad
-
Skipper Wilson back as Wallabies face Argentina threat
-
Sinner powers into US Open semis, Anisimova gains Swiatek revenge
-
'Blood Moon' to rise during total lunar eclipse Sunday night
-
Sinner tames Musetti to march into US Open semi-finals
-
Gattuso begins Italy salvage operation with World Cup on the line
-
Sabalenka in Pegula US Open rematch as Osaka faces Anisimova
-
Immigration opposition fuels English national flag frenzy
-
Asia markets tick up after Wall Street rebound
-
Zelensky to meet European leaders after Putin vows to fight on
-
'Pink and green' protests call for a reset in Indonesia
-
Peruvian ex-presidents face courts in separate corruption trials
-
Wimbledon rewatch inspires Anisimova to US Open revenge
-
Ecuador eyes US security accords during Rubio's visit
-
Kyrgios predicts easy win over Sabalenka in 'Battle of the Sexes'
-
Osaka downs Muchova to reach US Open semi-final
-
Anisimova gains Swiatek revenge, faces Osaka in US Open semis
-
Colombia coal exports plummet after ban on Israel sales
-
Guyana's President Irfaan Ali: oil industry 'puppet' or visionary?
-
Australia skipper Cummins to do 'whatever it takes' to play Ashes
-
Car-crash season with Ferrari weighing on Hamilton ahead of Monza homecoming
-
Guyanese President Irfaan Ali claims election victory
-
Jury tells Google to pay $425 mn over app privacy
-
Made in China? The remarkable tale of Venice's iconic winged lion

France's Ozon under the gun with big screen take on Camus classic
French director Francois Ozon has dared to do what so many other filmmakers have shied away from -- adapting one of French literature's most-read classics, Albert Camus's "The Stranger", for the big screen.
The "8 Women" director said this week he had rediscovered Camus's 1942 novel after first reading it in school like so many other French teenagers -- but not really understanding its deeper absurdist meaning.
"I was shocked reading it because the book was still so strong, so powerful, so mysterious and so I was excited," Ozon told journalists at the Venice Film Festival where "The Stranger" premiered on Tuesday.
"It was a big challenge because when I decided to make it, so many French people told me, 'It's my favorite book, I'm curious to see what you will do', so it was a big pressure."
Ozon said it was crucial to bring a more contemporary view to the novel, which takes place in 1930s Algeria under French colonialism, where Meursault, the Algerian-born French protagonist, kills an Arab man, who is never named in the book.
It was "impossible" for the Arab victim to remain nameless, said Ozon, who gives him a name in the film while fleshing out the character of his sister, whose honour the murdered man tried to defend.
"It was important to give a name to this man who is dead because during the trial (of Mersault), we never speak about him," he said.
He said that choice was "political, especially today where there is a real invisibility of the victims in Gaza, for example."
The only other well-known film version of "L'Etranger", whose stage adaptation is a fixture in French theatres, is a 1967 film by Italian maestro Luchino Visconti starring Marcello Mastroianni.
Ozon said he told Camus's daughter Catherine that a too-faithful rendering of the book -- as he believes Visconti did -- would not work.
"I said to her, 'We have to look at the story with the eyes of today.' It's impossible to follow the book like someone in 1942," he told AFP.
- Colonial tensions -
Filmed in Morocco and starring Benjamin Voisin as the detached Meursault -- who is sentenced to be beheaded for his crime -- Ozon's "The Stranger" is set under a blinding sun and shot in black and white.
"For me it was quite obvious to shoot in black and white, to show the sun... to have something very abstract, very pure and not to be disturbed by colours," Ozon said.
The film begins with archival footage of Algiers -- images of the wealthy white French elite in Algeria contrasted with those of Algerians -- that hint at the tensions simmering just under the surface of colonial rule.
"I wanted to be realistic about the situation in Algeria. I wanted to show both communities. I wanted to show that these two communities live side by side," he said.
The Hollywood Reporter said Camus's classic "works splendidly on the page but does not necessarily translate well to the screen."
Yet it said Ozon's new adaptation "gets many, many things right".
Variety called it "a superb portrait of disaffection".
L.Durand--AMWN