Here are the twenty-one films in competition for the Palme d’Or at the 75th Cannes Film Festival, five of which are directed by women.
“Les Crimes du futur” by David Croenberg
The director of “Crash” (1996) is not used to sparing his audience: at 79, the Canadian should prove it once once more, with this film which is regarding transhumanism and the ablation of organs. With Viggo Mortensen and Léa Seydoux.
“Holy Spider” (“Nights of Mashhad”) by Ali Abbasi
Revealed in “Un Certain Regard” in 2018 with “Border”, the Dane of Iranian origin follows a journalist from Tehran investigating a series of feminicides. These crimes would be the work of a man who claims to purify the city of its sins.
“Triangle of Sadness” de Ruben Ostlund
The most scathing of Swedish directors is seeking a second Palme d’or, following “The Square” (2017), with this satirical comedy where he follows the passengers of a luxury cruise, stranded on a desert island and led by a captain of Marxist ship.
“Broker” (“The Good Stars”) by Hirokazu Kore-eda
After his Palme d’or for “A family affair” (2018), the great regular on the Croisette took a side step towards South Korea, embarking the star of “Parasite”, Song Kang-ho, for a new family story, where it’s regarding baby boxes.
“Decision to leave” de Park Chan-Wook
He marked the Croisette with the ultra violent “Old boy” (Grand Prix 2004); the Korean Park Chan-Wook should once more intrigue with an investigator who must elucidate the murder of a man, with the main suspect: the wife of the victim.
“Showing up” de Kelly Reichardt
A great figure in independent cinema, the American in minimalist cinema (“First Cow”) reunites with one of her favorite actresses, Michelle Williams, for a film regarding the daily life of an artist and the way she draws inspiration from her life. .
“Boy from Heaven” de Tarik Saleh
After the success of “Confidential Cairo” (2017), the Swede of Egyptian origin Tarik Saleh reconnects with his favorite actor, Fares Fares, and films a power struggle between the religious and political elites of the country.
“Tchaikovsky’s Wife” by Kirill Serebrennikov
The terrible child of the Russian scene, settled in Berlin following leaving Russia in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine, is in competition for the third time, with a historical film regarding the private life of the composer Tchaikovsky.
“Les Amandiers” by Valeria Bruni Tedeschi
The Franco-Italian actress who went on to direct successfully is one of the five women vying for the Palme d’Or. His film on the theater school of Amandiers, founded by the French director Patrice Chéreau in the Paris region, has as its backdrop the raging AIDS.
“Tori and Lokita” by Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne
The Dardenne brothers, famous representatives of social cinema, already twice palmed in Cannes, this time content the friendship of two African teenagers exiled in Belgium and living in precarious conditions.
“Armageddon Time” de James Gray
After “Ad Astra”, the American director returns to Earth with a chronicle of adolescence carried by Anne Hathaway and Anthony Hopkins and located in the heart of New York in the 1980s, in a school governed by the father of Donald Trump.
“Nostalgia” by Mario Martone
For his first steps in competition, the Neapolitan Mario Martone pays homage to his city through a dramatic adaptation of the novel “Nostalgia” by the Italian writer and journalist Ermanno Rea.
“Stars at noon” de Claire Denis
Rewarded in February for “Avec amour et acharnement” at the Berlinale, the French director Claire Denis returns with a “film of expectation, atmosphere, on the edge of the diplomatic thriller” – according to the general delegate of the Cannes Film Festival Thierry Frémaux – filmed in Central America.
“Close” de Lukas Dhont
His first film “Girl” on transidentity won him the Camera d’or in 2018. With “Close”, the Belgian Lukas Dhont deals with friendship through two teenagers separated by a tragedy.
“Brother and Sister” by Arnaud Desplechin
In the continuity of his “Conte de Noël” (2008), the French director Arnaud Desplechin films a family drama with a brother and a sister in longtime conflict reunited by the death of their parents. With Marion Cotillard and Melvil Poupaud.
“RMN”, by Cristian Mungiu
Palme d’or for “4 months, 3 weeks, 2 days”, a drama on abortion and corruption, Cristian Mungiu continues to examine the ills of Romania with a film, shot in a village in Transylvania, evoking the effect of European policies, relations between communities and the destiny of a country.
“Leila’s Brothers” by Saeed Roustaee
The Iranian Saeed Roustaee has already impressed with his punchy thriller, “The Law of Tehran”, on drug trafficking. He arrives in Cannes with “Leila’s Brothers”, regarding a young woman whose family is riddled with debt, who tries to start a family business.
“Hi-han” (EO), de Jerzy Skolimowski
At 84, this great name in Polish cinema, pillar of the New Wave in this country in the 1960s, returned to Poland following living in California, tells the story of a donkey rejected from a Polish circus to a stable. of horses, before being driven to the Alps through numerous adventures.
“Pacification – Torment on the Islands” by Albert Serra
Spaniard Albert Serra, who filmed “The Death of Louis XIV” in 2016 with Jean-Pierre Léaud in the role of the dying sovereign, settled in Tahiti for this story of love and writing, with Benoît Magimel as a French diplomat.
“A Little Brother” by Léonor Serraille
Third Frenchwoman in competition, Léonor Serraille, noticed in 2017 with “Jeune fille”, tells the story of a family of immigrant origin, from the end of the 1980s to the present day in the Paris suburbs.
“Les huit montagnes” (“Otto Montagne”) de Charlotte Vandermeersch et Felix Van Groeningen
Actress Charlotte Vandermeersch adapts, with the director of “The Merditude of Things” and “Alabama Monroe” the novel by Italian Paolo Cognetti, on the bond of friendship between Pietro and Bruno, a boy from the city and another of the mountain.