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Brazil rebuts UN complaint about COP30 security, but boosts presence
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Swiss Gruyere crowned world cheese champ
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MLS to align calendar with world's top football leagues
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BBC says sorry to Trump, but rejects defamation claim
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Mbappe, Olise star as France seal spot at 2026 World Cup
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Ronaldo sent off as Ireland stun Portugal in World Cup qualifier
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England cruise against Serbia with Bellingham reduced to cameo role
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Osimhen strikes twice as Nigeria set up World Cup clash with DR Congo
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Alcaraz beats Sinner to year-end world number one after defeating Musetti at ATP Finals
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25 oil-supplying states accused of 'complicity' in Gaza war
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Eagles aim to keep rolling despite Brown turmoil
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Alcaraz to end year as world number one after seeing off Musetti at ATP Finals
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Schmidt eager for fan's eye view before last Dublin clash as Wallabies boss
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Strong first-half profits keep Alstom firmly on rails
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Boeing union votes to end strike, accept new contract
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Farrell says Hansen 'ready and able' to step-in at full-back for Ireland
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Osimhen strikes twice as Nigeria keep World Cup hopes alive
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Wales boss Tandy 'excited' to see Rees-Zammit start against Japan
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UK artist turns 'money for old rope' into £1m art exhibition
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Nagelsmann backs Woltemade to shine for injury-hit Germany
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Zelensky sanctions associate as fraud scandal rocks Ukraine
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Starbucks baristas launch strike on chain's 'Red Cup Day'
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Fiji unchanged for France Autumn Nations Series trip
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All Blacks boss Robertson at ease with 'respectful' England challenge to haka
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Stocks on the slide despite end of US shutdown
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Church bells ring as France marks decade since Paris attacks
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France scrum-half Serin commits for two more seasons to Toulon
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Starlink, utilised by Myanmar scam centres, sees usage fall nationwide
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YouTube superstar MrBeast opens pop-up park in Saudi Arabia
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'Black Klimt' steps out of shadows and into political tug-of-war
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Australia turn to O'Connor in search of Ireland inspiration
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Mexican car industry fears higher tariffs on China will drive its demise
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Battle brews over Australia or Turkey hosting next COP
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Hansen and Prendergast start for Ireland against Australia
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McIlroy two shots off the lead as Kim top after round one in Dubai
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Stocks sluggish as US government shutdown ends
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De Minaur knocks out Fritz to keep ATP Finals hopes alive
'Palme d'Or whisperer': Tiny US distributor Neon wins fifth straight Cannes prize
A tiny movie distributor founded seven years ago has won at the Cannes Film Festival for a stunning fifth consecutive time on Saturday.
Neon, a New York-based indie movie outfit, has been dubbed "the Palme d'Or whisperer", for a track record that turns the world's most powerful movie producers green with envy.
"Parasite", "Titane", "Triangle of Sadness" and "Anatomy of a Fall" -- the last four winners in Cannes -- were all released in US theatres by Neon, under deals struck before they won the prize.
And they did it again on Saturday with "Anora", US indie director Sean Baker's raw and often-hilarious story about a New York erotic dancer who strikes gold with a wealthy client.
"Palme d'Or X five. Merci, Cannes," the company posted on social media, adding a photo of five-time NBA basketball champion Kobe Bryant.
Neon purchases -- and more recently, has produced -- movies that it then distributes to theatres, as well as running marketing and awards campaigns for the films.
It bought North American rights to "Anora" weeks before Cannes kicked off, in a move that will now only accelerate the company's soothsaying reputation.
Last week, just days after its director secretly escaped from Iran, Neon also snapped up "The Seed of the Sacred Fig", which won a special jury prize on Saturday.
That film -- about a family's struggles amid political unrest in Tehran -- was made by Mohammad Rasoulof, who fled an Iranian prison sentence for "collusion against national security" days before Cannes kicked off.
- Weinstein, Chan -
Neon founder Tom Quinn had spent decades working in indie films with producers including Harvey Weinstein, before deciding to branch out on his own.
In 2016, he struck a deal with China's Sparkle Roll Media, fronted by screen legend Jackie Chan.
Their first film was "Colossal", an oddball sci-fi starring Anne Hathaway.
Neon was officially launched the following year. Critical success soon came with ice-skating comedy "I, Tonya", which won an Oscar for star Allison Janney.
Following the election of Donald Trump as United States president, Chinese investors swiftly departed, replaced by Texas billionaire Dan Friedkin.
But film-buying remained in the hands of Quinn, who had worked for years and on multiple films with South Korean director Bong Joon-ho.
"It didn't matter what he was going to do next -- it was going to be a Neon film," Quinn said in a recent interview.
"We were going to go for broke, and pre-buy it," he told "The Town" podcast.
That film turned out to be "Parasite", the stunning, genre-hopping drama about a poor family infiltrating a rich family's home, which became a sensation.
Not only did it win the Palme d'Or in 2019, but it went on to become the first non-English-language film to win best picture at the Oscars.
Since then, Cannes has proven to be a happy hunting ground for Neon, which has grown to around 55 staff.
Neon bought body horror "Titane" almost two years before it won the 2021 Palme d'Or.
And the company won bidding wars for both "Triangle of Sadness" and "Anatomy of a Fall" immediately following their Cannes premieres, but before the prizes were unveiled.
Named after an ephemeral gas that glows when captured inside a glass tube, the company caught lightning in a bottle again Saturday.
L.Davis--AMWN