Cannes Film Festival
‘La Gradiva’ Review: A Stunning Debut Depicts French Teens in the Throes of Art, Angst and Ecstasy With a Rare Emotional Honesty
Cinematographer turned director Marine Atlan’s first feature ‘La Gradiva’ follows a class of high school seniors on a trip to Naples.
‘Red Rocks’ Review: Bruno Dumont’s Beautifully Shot French Riviera Kids Flick Is a Minimalist Drama Mostly for Adults
The latest from Cannes Grand Prix winner Bruno Dumont features little rascals acting out a romantic tragedy on the shores of the Mediterranean.
‘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.
‘Everytime’ Review: An Intriguingly Understated Grief Drama Delivers Its Best Moments a Bit Too Late
Austrian writer-director Sandra Wollner’s third feature, ‘Everytime,’ chronicles a family in the wake of a major tragedy.
‘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.
Na Hong-jin’s ‘Hope’: First Reactions From the Premiere
Na Hong-jin launched his feature Hope at the Cannes Film Festival and immediately after the premiere, the film has generated buzz as a genre classic.
‘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.