Italian film-maker Bernardo Bertolucci, best known for Last Tango in Paris, was honoured by the Cannes film festival today in recognition of his long career.
Wheelchair-bound at age 71, Bertolucci told journalists that he had briefly lost confidence in his ability to make movies, only to rediscover it after watching 3D films like James Cameron's 2009 blockbuster Avatar.
"I was convinced that I could no longer shoot [movies], but then I realised a year ago that I was still able to imagine the camera's movements," Bertolucci, who is working on a 3D movie titled Me and You, told a news conference.
"I very much liked Avatar . . . 3D is fascinating to me, but I don't understand why it should be reserved to science fiction or horror movies," he added.
Bertolucci will receive his award - which honours an influential filmmaker who has never received the top prize at Cannes - from jury president Robert De Niro at the festival's opening ceremony today.
"He is very laconic. . . . We'll see if he has a few words to say, that would be good," Bertolucci said referring to De Niro, who starred in his 1976 epic film 1900.
A poet and writer before turning to the silver screen, Bertolucci came of age as a director during the heyday of Italian cinema in the mid-1960s and went on to make over 20 films, from sweeping historical epics to intimate dramas.
His production budgets have grown with his reputation over the past half century, culminating with the 1987 biopic The Last Emperor, which won nine Academy Awards including best picture.
Known by movie buffs for his rich treatment of colour on-screen, Bertolucci also sealed his reputation as a fearless director and provocateur early in his career with the 1972 classic Last Tango in Paris.
The film, which features graphic love scenes between Marlon Brando and a much younger Maria Schneider, shocked audiences in the United States, where censors rated it "X" as a pornographic film, but it delighted critics and audiences alike in France.
In Italy, the movie garnered frenzied attention at the box office in the days after its release but was soon banned by an order of the Supreme Court. It was only allowed to be released officially 15 years later.
Reuters