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Cannes Festival

Cannes reveals 22-film line-up featuring Coppola and Cronenberg

22 films have been picked to compete for the coveted Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in the south of France in May. The prize can give a major boost for arthouse films such as last year's winner Anatomy of a Fall that went on to win an avalanche of awards, including best original screenplay at the Oscars.

The Palme d'Or trophy pictured at Chopard Jewellery House in Meyrin near Geneva in 2022.
The Palme d'Or trophy pictured at Chopard Jewellery House in Meyrin near Geneva in 2022. AFP - PIERRE ALBOUY
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The 77th edition of the festival on the French Cote d'Azur, considered the most prestigious in the film industry, runs from May 14 to 25. 

This year's competition for the Palme d'Or, the festival's top prize, includes another team-up between Emma Stone and Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos – Kinds of Kindness – just weeks after Stone's Oscar win for their Frankenstein-style satire Poor Things.

The Apprentice, a biopic about the early years of Donald Trump by Iran-born director Ali Abbasi, is also expected to draw attention. 

And there's sure to be a buzz around Coppola's Megalopolis, that marks the return of The Godfather director to Cannes at the age of 85. 

'Honoured' to premier Coppola

Coppola has twice won the Palme d'Or – for The Conversation (1974) and, controversially, for Apocalypse Now, which was not even finished when it premiered at the festival in 1979.

The self-funded Megalopolis is said to be a Roman political drama transplanted to modern-day New York, featuring Adam Driver and Forest Whitaker. 

"We are overjoyed that he has done us the honour of coming to present this film," festival director Thierry Fremaux told reporters.

Just 4 female directors

The festival opens with Le Deuxième Acte (Second Act) by Quentin Dupieux, out of competition.

This year's jury is led by Barbie director Greta Gerwig, who "embodies perfectly the soul of the festival", said Cannes president Iris Knobloch.

Two highly topical films will have special screenings –La Belle de Gaza follows transsexual Palestinians moving to Israel, while The Invasion by Sergei Loznitsa centres on the war in his native Ukraine

The much-awaited Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga by George Miller is among those premiering, but out of competition.

While the festival set a record last year in terms of female representation, with seven female directors in the official competition, this year only four out of the 22 entries are directed by women. 

Films in competition for Palme d'Or (Golden Palm):

  • The Apprentice by Ali Abbasi
  • Motel Destino by Karim Ainouz
  • Bird by Andrea Arnold
  • Emilia Perez by Jacques Audiard
  • Anora by Sean Baker
  • Megalopolis by Francis Ford Coppola
  • The Shrouds by David Cronenberg
  • The Substance by Coralie Fargeat
  • Grand Tour by Miguel Gomes
  • Marcello Mio by Christophe Honore
  • Caught By The Tides by Jia Zhang-Ke
  • All We Imagine As Light by Payal Kapadia
  • Kinds of Kindness by Yorgos Lanthimos
  • L'Amour Ouf (lit. Crazy Love) by Gilles Lellouche
  • Wild Diamond by Agathe Riedinger
  • Oh Canada by Paul Schrader
  • Liminov - The Ballad by Kirill Serebrennikov
  • Parthenope by Paolo Sorrentino
  • The Girl With The Needle by Magnus von Horn   
  • The Seed of the Sacred Fig by Mohammad Rasoulof
  • The Most Precious of Cargoes by Michel Hazanavicius
  • Three Kilometres to the End of the World by Emanuel Parvu

Premiering at Cannes but out of competition:

  • Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga by George Miller
  • Horizon, An American Saga by Kevin Costner
  • A Second Act by Quentin Dupieux
  • She's Got No Name by Peter Ho-Sun Chan
  • Rumours by Evan Johnson, Galen Johnson and Guy Maddin
  • The Count of Monte-Cristo by Mattieu Delaporte and Alexandre de la Patellière
  • Twilight of the Warrior Walled In by Soi Cheang
  • The Surfer by Lorcan Finnegan
  • The Balconettes by Noémie Merlant
  • Veteran 2 (I the Executioner) by Seung Wan Ryoo

Competing in the Un certain regard festival, presided by Xavier Dolan:

  • Norah by Tawfik Alzaidi
  • The Shameless  by Konstantin Bojanov
  • Le Royaume by Julien Colonna | 1st film
  • Vingt Deux ! (Holy Cow) by Louise Courvoisier | 1st film
  • Le procès du chien (Dog on Trial) by Laetitia Dosch | 1st film
  • Gou Zhen (Black Dog) by Guan Hu 
  • The village Next to Paradise by Mo Harawe | 1st film
  • September Says by Ariane Labed | 1st film
  • L’histoire de Souleymane by Boris Lojkine
  • The Damned by Roberto Minervini
  • On Becoming a Guinea Fowl by Rungano Nyoni
  • Boku No Ohisama (My Sunshine) by Hiroshi Okuyama 
  • Santosh by Sandhya
  • Suri Viet and Nam by Truong Minh Quý
  • Armand by Halfdan Ullmann Tondel | 1st film
  • When Light Breaks by Runar Runarsson (opening film)
  • Niki by Céline Sallette
  • Flow by Gints Zilbalodis

(With AFP)

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