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« Beyond Sight & Sound: An Alternative Canon | Main | The Way He Looks @ 10: Unlocking Queer Joy »
Thursday
Apr112024

Cannes 2024: Coppola and Cronenberg in Competition

by Cláudio Alves

Early this morning, journalists congregated around Thierry Frémaux for the announcement of the 77th Cannes Film Festival Official Selection. The director shared titles from various sections, confirming some suspected rumors and setting the world of cinephilia abuzz. As ever, the main focus is on the Competition titles, as the next Palme d'Or may be among the films already announced. But of course, a project or two are usually added before the festivities start at the Croisette, so our champion may remain in mystery. Many predicted Audrey Diwan's Emmanuelle remake to be selected, for instance, but the Happening director was notoriously absent from today's dispatch.

In the past few years, The Film Experience has had two parallel coverages, and we hope to keep the tradition. There's Elisa Giudici on the ground, reviewing new films through her festival diary. And then there's my Cannes at Home project, focused on past projects by the competing auteurs. Let's go down the list…

 

THE APPRENTICE, Ali Abbasi

After experiments in horror and the success of both Border and Holy Spider, Abbasi returns to the Official Competition with his first American film. A biopic of sorts, The Apprentice centers around a young Donald Trump, played by Sebastian Stan. Maria Bakalova and Jeremy Strong also star as Ivanka Trump and Roy Cohn.

 

MOTEL DESTINO, Karim Aïnouz

Described as a love story in the Brazilian Northeast, Motel Destino sees Aïnouz return to the Main Competition after Firebrand's lukewarm reception at last year's festival. I'll always be excited for new projects from this director, especially when they're lensed by such extraordinary artists as Hélène Louvart.

 

BIRD, Andrea Arnold

If the pattern continues, the British filmmaker will leave the Croisette with another Jury Prize in hand. She's won that honor thrice already for Red Road, Fish Tank, and American Honey. This latest effort marks a return to narrative film after her Cow documentary and counts Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski in its main cast.

 

EMILIA PEREZ, Jacques Audiard

One of the oddest projects on the list, this film should mark the French director's first foray into the realm of musical cinema. It's also a linguistic departure, supposedly spoken in Spanish within a Mexican setting. Zoe Saldaña, Selena Gomez, and Edgar Ramirez star in a story about some lawyer helping a cartel boss disappear and transition into womanhood. 

 

ANORA, Sean Baker

Most of this year's contenders will arrive at the Croisette without an international distributor, but not Sean Baker's latest. Anora is already a Neon property, which could mean a golden future. After all, the distributor has picked up the rights of many recent Palme d'Or winners - Parasite, Titane, Triangle of Sadness, and Anatomy of a Fall. Mikey Madison and Yura Borisov star in the story of a sex worker, set between New York and Las Vegas.

 

MEGALOPOLIS, Francis Ford Coppola

Will it be a masterpiece of bonkers late career cinema? Will it be an unmitigated disaster of self-imploding hubris? Who knows? As far as I'm concerned, I can't wait to find out. The long-gestating epic has been decried as an unsellable, anti-commercial and radical nightmare, with a starry cast and high production values bought by the Coppola's wine fortune. Cheers!

 

THE SHROUDS, David Cronenberg

After Crimes of the Future, I'm ready to follow Cronenberg into whatever path he sees fit on this phase of his career. Touted as a narrative enshrined in sorrow, it's the story of a grieving businessman trying to build a device to communicate with the dead. Vincent Cassel, Diane Kruger, and Guy Pearce star, with a crew composed of Cronenberg regulars like Howard Shore and Carol Spier.

 

THE SUBSTANCE, Coralie Fargeat

We rarely find a genre director making the leap into the Competition with their sophomore feature. Such is the case of Fargeat, whose only other feature is Revenge, a gruesome tale that nearly crosses over into body horror. Little is known about The Substance, but we have its main cast. Margaret Qually, Dennis Quaid, and Demi Moore are all involved.

 

GRAND TOUR, Miguel Gomes

Obviously, going into the festivities blind, I'll be rooting for my countryman Miguel Gomes. The Portuguese director is one of my favorite artists working today, and his latest has been described as a vague return to some of the same milieus he explored in Tabu – which should have won the Berlin Bear! Set across Asia in 1917, the film was shot by an enviable team of cinematographers. Gui Liang, Sayobhu Mukdeeprom, and Rui Poças share the credit, promising one of 2024's most visually ravishing features.

 

MARCELLO MIO, Christophe Honoré

Transgressing the porous barrier between fiction and non-fiction, Marcello Mio is a comedy reflecting on the legacy of Marcello Mastroianni. Playing a version of herself, Chiara Mastroianni decides to embody her father, and doing it with such conviction, others start to call her "Marcello." Catherine Deneuve, Melvil Poupaud, Fabrice Luchini, and Nicole Garcia also star, perchance playing themselves.

 

CAUGHT BY THE TIDES, Jia Zhangke

Described as the story of a Chinese woman living to herself in silence, this mysterious picture is meant to celebrate the Belle Epoque with songs and dance. Yet, it's also contemporary and involves a robot, judging by the first released still. Tao Zhao stars in the lead role, as is usual in director Jia's cinema, and she's sure to be extraordinary. She always is. Maybe she can even win the Best Actress prize she has deserved multiple times before.

 

ALL WE IMAGINE AS LIGHT, Payal Kapadia

Despite being one of the biggest film industries in the world, Indian cinema is seldom selected for Cannes. Payal Kapadia's latest endeavor marks the first such title in three decades. It's even more impressive when you consider the nature of the director's past works, blending experimental technique and documentary pursuits. Her feature debut, A Night of Knowing Nothing, won the Golden Eye prize for Best Documentary at Cannes 2021.

 

KINDS OF KINDNESS, Yorgos Lanthimos

Hot on the heels of his Golden Lion and Oscar-winning Poor Things, the Greek director is back with another English-language project. This one is supposedly fragmented across various stories, starring a cast of past collaborators and some new names. Emma Stone, Willem Dafoe, Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons, Hong Chau, Mamoudou Athie, Hunter Schafer, and Joe Alwyn are all involved. Efthimis Filippou also returns as Lanthimos' co-writer after being absent from the director's features since 2017's The Killing of a Sacred Deer.

 

BEATING HEARTS, Gilles Lellouche

Across more than a decade, the actor-turned-director follows the relationship between a middle-class girl and the lower-class boy she falls in love with, separated by circumstance and a prison sentence. Audrey Diwan is one of three co-writers while rising stars Raphaël Quenard and Adèle Exarchopoulos are among the cast. Some reports say this is a musical, pointing to an interesting double feature with Audiard's Emilia Perez.

 

WILD DIAMOND, Agathe Riedinger

The only first feature of this lot, Wild Diamond concerns a teenager wallowing with dreams of stardom in Southern France. Propelled by her aspirations, she auditions for a reality show. While the cast features many unknowns, the crew is full of promising new names in French cinema, like cinematographer Noé Bach (Animalia), designer Astrid Tonnellier (The Wild Boys), and composer Audrey Ismael (Consent).

 

OH CANADA, Paul Schrader

Though Master Gardener could have made for a beautiful film testament, Paul Schrader is back with another directorial effort. Oh Canada centers on a draft dodger who escaped the US to Canada, and stars Jacob Elordi, Uma Thurman, Richard Gere, and Michael Imperioli. Even if the film fails to meet expectations, I can't wait to listen to the score written by Phosphorescent.

 

LIMONOV – THE BALLAD, Kirill Serebrennikov

The dissident Russian filmmaker has been unmoored from his home country for years now, trying to find a place for his cinema in a circuit growing hostile to Russian art in response to the war on Ukraine. Still, he perseveres, returning to the Main Competition after his 2021 biopic, Tchaikovsky's Wife. This is another project in that vein, following Ben Whishaw as the Soviet poet Eduard Limonov.

 

PARTHENOPE, Paolo Sorrentino

Categorized as a fantasy, the latest project from Sorrentino concerns a woman who bears the name of her city. "Is she a siren or a myth?" asks the film's cryptic description, enticing the imagination and curiosity. Though the project seems based in Italy, Gary Oldman stars in a central role. I'd like to see how that'll work, especially since I'm a hit-or-miss with the director.

 

THE GIRL WITH THE NEEDLE, Magnus von Horn

A few years ago, von Horn dazzled me with Sweat, a considered character study that had more to say about human relationships with social media than much bigger movies considering the same themes. His latest is supposed to be a fairytale on the verge of horror, perchance a period piece in shades of silver and shadow.

 

To my great discontent, this is a very Euro-American list, with only one film from Latin America, two Asian representatives, and nothing at all from Africa or Oceania. The Cannes programmers remain reluctant to look past their favorite regions, presenting a skewed vision of world cinema. Moreover, the record of women directors in the Official Competition remains seven, from last year. One wonders why other festivals like Venice, Berlin, and Locarno have no issue finding worthwhile pictures from women behind the cameras, but the French flounder every year. But what's more irritating is what happens when you look past the Competition and glance at artists relegated to secondary sections.

For example, during his presentation, Frémaux spoke about Peter Ho-Sun Chan's upcoming She Has No Name as one of the year's most important Chinese films. Then why isn't it in Competition? It's especially galling when the director is enjoying some rekindled appreciation thanks to Criterion's spotlighting of his Comrades, A Love Story. There's also the matter of Zhang Ziyi in the lead, marking her return to world-renowned prestige after a few years spent in more commercial and televisual fare. The Special Screenings program is another treasure trove containing new works from respected non-fiction filmmakers like Claire Simon, Raoul Peck, and Sergei Loznitsa. Cannes could do with more documentaries vying for the Palme. 

Still in that section, Yolande Zauberman's La Belle de Gaza seems like the festival making a political stance by programming a Palestinian film about the trans experience. Yet, wouldn't that stance be even more powerful if Zauberman was competing in the main section? Moving into the dreaded Cannes Premieres section where Lisandro Alonso and Victor Eríce were dropped last year, we find another cadre of enticing possibilities that might have enriched the Competition. I'm thinking of Nabil Ayouch's Everybody Loves Touda and Rithy Panh's Rendez-vous avec Pol Pot, among other big names.

When one makes such complaints, I understand that a follow-up question tends to be – but what titles should have been left out, then? Having not seen the films, it's difficult to say for sure, but some things are undeniable. With Baker, Cronenberg, Coppola, and Schrader, plus international productions from Abbasi, Audiard, Fargeat, Lanthimos, and Serebrennikov, North American cinema feels overrepresented. Furthermore, I can't wrap my head around Lellouche's selection. Though commercially successful and a hit with the César Awards, his few directorial efforts have lacked the artistic ambition one usually associates with a Cannes Competition slot. I'm eager to be proven wrong.

 

What about you, dear reader? What do you think of this year's Main Competition at the Croisette? Also, which titles would you like to see covered in Cannes at Home?

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Reader Comments (17)

Swooning at that still of Richard and Uma. What a combo.

Two CERTIFIED. MOVIE. STARS. looking hot in their fourth (his fifth?) decade working. Both are so singular and underrated; She should have an Oscar for Kill Bill and he for Arbitrage. Both legends and so fun to see them together. Can’t wait.

April 11, 2024 | Registered CommenterDK

I'm very excited for the Arnold, the Cronenberg, and the Schrader.

April 11, 2024 | Registered CommenterScottC

Is Paul Schrader dying?

April 11, 2024 | Registered Commenterchoog

What a beautiful and varied selection of films, eagerly awaiting for most of them!

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterAd_Mil

It's really a candy store this year!

From Abbassi passing throught Arnold, Baker, Coppola, Cronenberg, Lanthimos and Sorrentino the list of directors is very exciting.

Sebastian Stan in on on the road for a golden year winning at Berlin and now whith this movie in competition.

Love to see Thurman, Gere and Bakalova in the mix.

With Gerwig as president this year I suspect that a certain movie of a certain greek director could go home empty-handed.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterGallavich

"Moreover, the record of women directors in the Official Competition remains unbroken at four."

It's not true - last year there were 7 women in the competition. And I guess that even this year there will be more than 4 as they are still going to add two or three titles to the lineup.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterDavus

DK -- I'm especially curious about Gere, since I still think his greatest performance is in Schrader's AMERICAN GIGOLO.

ScottC -- Cronenberg leaves me the most curious, yet Arnold hasn't made a film I disliked. I'm more cautious about OH CANADA.

choog -- No, but he has been talking about retiring. During the MASTER GARDENER press tour, he mentioned how he needed to get that one out before retirement. Then he announced this new project, so it seems he's decided to continue his work.

Ad_Mill -- I'm excited about most of these. Even more excited about some of the parallel sections.

Davus -- That is true. I was writing from old notes that I had forgotten to update. As ever, thank you for the correction and the article has been changed accordingly. Fingers crossed your prediction comes true. Some potential additions include Diwan, Athina Rachel Tsangari, and Dea Kulumbegashvili.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

Not to belabor the political point, but women direct something like 22% of all movies produced each year. They represent 4 of the 20 titles in competition here or 20%, likely a higher percentage when all's said and done.

As mentioned, last year women contributed 7 films, which actually overrepresents the output of female directors in the industry. Not a bad thing! Just to say—female directors statistically have the same shot (at least) as men getting their film into Cannes.

Similarly, 5 of the last 20 Best Director Oscar nominees have been women—20%. Awards and festivals are actually doing a decent job lately reflecting the industry as it exists.

But visiting frustrations on Cannes (or the Oscars) when this is really a pipeline problem always rubs me the wrong way. More movies by women should be financed and made. Then we can talk about 50-50 parity in these downstream areas.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterDK

DK -- This is my perspective informed by experiences specifically in Portugal - having worked in the distribution side of things, I know what you call downstream areas actually have a lot of impact. Festivals and Oscars help dictate what gets distributed and ultimately seen, especially on an international scale. And, consequently, what gets produced and financed in the first place. It’s all connected one way or the other. I feel it's naïve, at best, disingenuous at worst, to presume otherwise.

Also, if Berlin, Locarno, and Venice can regularly select half a dozen women filmmakers at minimum, why not Cannes?

For the past five years, no matter how I approach the matter, the response has been the same every time I touch on such disparities in any of my articles. There are always negative comments. I appreciate your feedback - especially when I get data wrong - but it seems some people just want to keep everything as it is and never complain. To me, the way to change the status quo is to challenge it in whatever way we can. Not to shoot down any and all criticism against it.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

It's hard to advance the idea that women should be (statistically, based on output) overrepresented in festivals, awards lineups, etc. without suggesting one or both of these:

1. Women are inherently superior filmmakers to men.
2. Women's films should be held to a lower standard so more of them can be included.

I just don't agree with either of those ideas, I think the first is false and the second is patronizing to all the great women filmmakers who're making strides in the business. The obvious solution to me (where I locate the need for action) is allowing more women to make their bad, fair, good and excellent films. The more of those there are, the more will be considered, the more will make it into these spaces.

This Cannes lineup suggests that men and women are equally good at making films and both have the same odds of making it into a festival when they do. I see that as a good thing, not a bad thing.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterDK

@DK

No one has suggested either of those positions. I think it’s fair to say that men have been historically over-represented in film festivals, and I don’t think this influx of female filmmakers getting their projects exhibited at previously unseen levels at film festivals is an actual problem. Neither you nor anyone else deserve the room to argue that adding more female filmmakers inherently means decreasing standards when so many films by men have been grandfathered into the festival purely on prestige - prestige they only accumulated from the exposure Cannes gave them. It’s not even about the quality of the films per say, but the recurring lack of opportunity this festival and other film bodies have provided.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterNick Taylor

The lack of films from spanish language countries is just ridiculous.

And I notice a tendency to prefer Asian and European films when are starring by celebrities from Hollywood

Just makes cinema snobish

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterCésar Gaytán

Nick Taylor -- Thanks for articulating it so well.

César Gaytán -- It's maddening. 2023 was a banner year for Spanish-languge cinema yet you would never know from looking at last year's selection. Shoving CLOSE YOUR EYES and EUREKA in Cannes Premiere still stings.

DK -- I think much of our disagreement pertains to the difference between equality and equity, but that's probably beside the point. If you want to speak quality, the following is a list of films directed by women that premiered at Cannes in the past ten editions. None of them were screened in the most prestigious section, the Main Competition:

2023
HOW TO HAVE SEX, Molly Manning Walker
MAMBAR PIERRETTE, Rosine Mbakam
THE FEELING THAT THE TIME FOR DOING SOMETHING HAS PASSED, Joanna Arrow
THE MOTHER OF ALL LIES, Asmae El Moudir

2022
AFTERSUN, Charlotte Wells
CORSAGE, Marie Kreutzer
ONE FINE MORNING, Mia Hansen-Løve
THE BLUE CAFTAN, Maryam Touzani

2021
PRAYERS FOR THE STOLEN, Tatiana Huezo
THE SOUVENIR: PART II, Joanna Hogg
UNCLENCHING THE FISTS, Kira Kovalenko

2019
AN EASY GIRL, Rebecca Zlotowski
SONG WITHOUT A NAME, Melina León
THE ORPHANAGE, Shahrbanno Sadat

2018
LEAVE NO TRACE, Debra Granik
RAFIKI, Wanuri Kahiu
SAUVAGE, Camille Vidal-Naquet

2017
FACES PLACES, Agnès Varda & JR
JEUNE FEMME, Léonor Serraille
LET THE SUNSHINE IN, Claire Denis
WESTERN, Valeska Grisebach

2016
IN BED WITH VICTORIA, Justine Triet
RAW, Julia Ducournau
RISK, Laura Poitras

2015
MUSTANG, Deniz Gamze Ergüven
SONGS MY BROTHER TAUGHT ME, Chloé Zhao

2014
AMOUR FOU, Jessica Hausner
GIRLHOOD, Céline Sciamma

2013
BASTARDS, Claire Denis
THE BLING RING, Sofia Coppola
THE SELFISH GIANT, Clio Barnard


If you believe that my advocacy for the inclusion of such films in the Main Competition implies a belief that women should be held to lower standards than men, I don't know what to tell you.

Also, for perspective, during the same period, the Main Competition included such critically-reviled pictures as Atom Egoyan's THE CAPTIVE, Michel Hazanavicius' THE SEARCH, Gus Van Sant's THE SEA OF TREES, Sean Penn's THE LAST FACE, Abdelatif Kechiche's MEKTOUB, MY LOVE: INTERMEZZO, among many others.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

I'm most looking forward to Emilia Perez by Jacques Audiard. I'm always happy to see a musical and I'm curious to see the lead, as well as Saldana and Ramirez (who are always great, if underutilized). This also sounds like a really interesting take on a transnarrative, though I do remain a bit nervous about how Audiard depicts it.

I'm least excited by the Apprentice. Even if it screens at Cannes, I do hope this film doesn't come out until 2025 stateside. It just doesn't feel like something we need during an election year. I also can't imagine what it has to say that will be interesting at this point in time. It feels 20-30 years too early.

I really like your comments on women directors at Cannes. It really does feel as if Cannes sees itself as reflecting Euro-American cinema, rather than trying to advance it (as say, Berlin or Venice do).

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterJoe G.

Wow... a lot of films that I really want to see. I think I will do a Cannes marathon this year as I think I have found a way to watch as many films during the duration of the festival.

April 12, 2024 | Registered Commenterthevoid99

@ DK:

"If Berlin, Locarno, and Venice can regularly select half a dozen women filmmakers at minimum, why not Cannes?" Just circle back to this.

@ Cláudio Alves:

Thank you for articulating this. You are more way level-headed than I am.

It frustrates me when institutions pretend that they do their best in representing talents and then give stupidly half-assed results like this. Again, going back to your statement about other festivals doing much better.

Another thing that irks me big time are the people who pretend that this isn't a chicken and egg situation. You want more female-directed films produced first before seeing them have more Cannes presence? The industry does look at awards and festivals (whether we like it or not) as one of their north stars to see what gets prioritized.

I mean, we haven't even gone to the fact that only two Asian titles are in the Main Competition. Or do others think that we should also do first before we get more representation?

Selections like this give a (false) impression that the best of world cinema is highly male-directed and European. I don't know about you, but that's some bullsh*t if I've ever seen one.

April 12, 2024 | Registered CommenterJuan Carlos Ojano

"MEGALOPOLIS".
I-CAN'T-WAIT!

April 14, 2024 | Registered CommenterFabio Dantas Flappers
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