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Adapted to memoir on avoiding abuse through swimming
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Emojen Poots praised for performance
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The film competes in a certain art-house section at the United Nations
By Hanna Rentla and Miranda Murray
Cannes, France, – Christon Stewart said on Saturday that the Cannes started his direction with “The Chronology of Water” at the Film Festival felt to send a child to send a child to school for the first time.
“I am very proud of this. It’s like seeing your child going to school,” Stewart told Reuters a day after the premiere of his film.
“It looks like all the things I just wanted to do for everyone at the same time,” the actor said, who got up for fame with the “Twilight” series and received an Oscar nomination for her performance as Britain’s Princess Diana in the film “Spencer”.
“My head is moving, but in the best way,” he said.
His film has been adapted to the 2011 memoirs of the same name Lidia Yukenwich, which is the author’s attempt to escape an derogatory home through competitive swimming in the 1980s and the last route to become a respected writer.
British actor Emojen Poots, “Green Room” and “28 Vix are known for the latter,” Rolling Stone appreciated as “All-or-Nathing type performance”.
“The book has a line that wanted me to make it a film, which is like this, ‘Can you catch life and death in the same sentence?” And this is what the cinema can do, “Stewart said.
“With this film, we can just talk about the fact that things that happen do not matter as much as you process those things and define them within your body,” she said.
Stewart’s film is competing in a certain section of the second-tier United Nations, where actors Scarlett Johansson and Harris Dicinson are also marking their first time as directors.
“The Cronology of Water” was found with positive reviews, with a deadline “raw and complicated on a biopic” and the guardian gave it to three out of five stars.
This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without amending the text.
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