Scandal-Plagued Director Kechiche Returns with Festival Premiere
French-Tunisian film director Abdellatif Kechiche speaks during his masterclass at the Cinemed festival in Montpellier, southern France, on October 28, 2022. ©Pascal GUYOT / AFP

French-Tunisian filmmaker Abdellatif Kechiche is making a controversial comeback with the final part of his Mektoub My Love trilogy, six years after his last film was panned. The work will premiere in competition at Switzerland’s Locarno Film Festival.

A new film by award-winning but scandal-prone French director Abdellatif Kechiche has been selected by a Swiss film festival, marking a comeback six years after his last widely panned feature, organizers said Tuesday.

The third film of his Mektoub My Love trilogy — titled Mektoub My Love: Canto Due — is to show in competition at the Locarno Film Festival, which takes place from August 6 to 16.

"Thanks to the producer's trust, we're very proud to be able to present it in Locarno," the festival’s artistic director, Giona Nazzaro, told a press conference.

In 2019, the screening at Cannes of Mektoub My Love: Intermezzo, the second part of Kechiche's series set in southern France in the 1990s, sparked an uproar over its explicit sex scenes.

One actor, Ophélie Bau, walked the red carpet but left before the screening of the three-hour film, which showed young women dancing suggestively in a nightclub for extended periods.

The Hollywood Reporter called it "three-hours-plus of jiggling female butts," while others slammed its objectification of women and voyeuristic style.

The Tunisian-born director won the top prize in Cannes, the Palme d'Or, in 2013 for Blue Is the Warmest Color.

Weighed down by controversy, Mektoub My Love: Intermezzo was never released in cinemas and Kechiche vanished from the public eye.

He reappeared in 2022 at a cinema event in Montpellier, southern France, where he said he still hoped to complete his trilogy.

"I’ve been spending all my time on it these past years. That’s practically all I’ve done," said the filmmaker, whose appearance prompted a small protest by demonstrators denouncing his "sexism" and working methods.

With AFP

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