Cannes
Cannes Embraces Ira Sachs’ ‘The Man I Love’
The 80s-set drama, starring Rami Malek was greeted with a stirring standing ovation at its competition premiere in Cannes.
‘The Man I Love’ Review: Rami Malek Is a Revelation in Ira Sachs’ Achingly Observed Portrait of Art, Love, Desire and Mortality in 1980s New York City
Rami Malek stars as a queer stage artist in 1980s New York in ‘The Man I Love,’ Ira Sachs’ tender drama also featuring Tom Sturridge and Rebecca Hall.
‘Double Freedom’ Review: Lisandro Alonso’s Sequel to His Slow Cinema Debut Adds a Major Twist, but Stays True to its Roots
Cannes regular Lisandro Alonso’s seventh feature ‘Double Freedom’ once again chronicles a few days in the life of a solitary woodcutter in the Pampas.
‘Minotaur’ Review: Andrey Zvyagintsev’s Masterful Crime Thriller Is Also a Bold Indictment of Russia’s War Against Ukraine
Andrey Zvyagintsev returns to Cannes with ‘Minotaur,’ a loose remake of Claude Chabrol’s ‘The Unfaithful Wife.’
‘Her Private Hell’ Review: Sophie Thatcher and Charles Melton in Danish Bad Boy Nicolas Winding Refn’s Agonizingly Self-Indulgent Return to Filmmaking
Sophie Thatcher and Charles Melton star in Nicolas Winding Refn’s ‘Her Private Hell,’ a nostalgic horror thriller that premiered in Cannes.
‘Fjord’ Review: Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve in Cristian Mungiu’s Absorbingly Thorny Account of Parents Under Investigation
Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve get caught in a dizzying rush to judgement in ‘Fjord,’ Cristian Mungiu’s unflinching account of parents on trial.
‘Another Day’ Review: Adèle Exarchopoulos Shines as a Woman Under the Influence in an Otherwise Loose-Limbed Portrait of a Functioning Alcoholic
Jeanne Herry’s ‘Another Day’ stars Adèle Exarchopoulos stars as a struggling thespian who can’t put don’t the bottle long enough to sustain a job.
‘Too Many Beasts’ Review: Hunting Season is Open in a Grippingly Offbeat French Crime Flick
Alexis Manenti and Ella Rumpf star in director Sarah Arnold’s ‘Too Many Beasts,’ which chronicles a feud between hunters, farmers and gendarmes.
‘Hope’ Review: Korean Action Maestro Na Hong-jin’s Rip-Roaring Sci-Fi Creature Feature Has Instant Cult Classic Written All Over It
Korean action maestro Na Hong-jin’s ‘Hope’ is a breathless sci-fi thriller about rural villagers fending off what appears to be a violent invasion.
Why Scarlett Johansson Dodged James Gray’s Cannes FaceTime Call
The director went straight to voicemail when he tried to call Johansson during the standing ovation after the Cannes premiere of ‘Paper Tiger.’