Los Angeles-based director Gregg Araki, 50, has won the Cannes Film Festival's first ever Queer Palm award for Kaboom. Araki, best known for his adaptation of Scott Heim's Mysterious Skin and his Sundance hit The Living End
, told Hub Culture in this video interview that the midnight screening of Kaboom at the Grand Palais "was seriously probably the highlight of my entire life." The movie's relaxed plot revolves around film student Smith (Thomas Dekker) who has aimless sexual encounters with both women and men but refuses to use the label "bisexual."
The IndieWire critic Eric Kohn said the movie "offers a welcome return to Araki’s self-made universe" and
"Despite a rocky first act, the story drifts along with a persistent dedication to fun. The freely lackadaisical plot structure eventually reaches a crescendo of pure campy delight: Everything apparently builds toward something…and ends up, in a final outrageous punchline, building toward nothing at all."
IFC acquired distribution rights to Kaboom prior to its win. IFC is also releasing gay Canadian director Xavier Dolan's Heartbeats, which was awarded this year's Prix Regards Jeune, repeating his victory from last year for his debut, I Killed My Mother. Dolan is 21.
Apichatpong Weerasethakul won the Palm d'Or for Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives.
Actor Mathieu Amalric won best director for his Tournee.
Best actress was Juliette Binoche and the best actor award was shared by Spain's Javier Bardem and Italy's Elio Germano.