
Cannes 2025: Dardenne brothers' bid for third Palme d'Or wraps up wide-open race
In what has become a fixture of the world's most prestigious film festival, Cannes habitués Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne walked the red carpet on Friday for their 10th shot at the top prize, 26 years after they won their first of two Palme d'Or awards for 'Rosetta'.
Set in a shelter for teen mothers, their latest feature, 'The Young Mother's Home' follows five young women as they navigate the challenges of early motherhood, amid drug addiction, depression and tense encounters with prospective adoptive parents.
It was an instant favourite for festival veteran Alongkot Maiduang, pen name Kalapapruek from Thailand, a frequent contributor to the grids that track the preferences of a handful among the hundreds of film critics who descend on Cannes each year.
'It's a timely and deeply moving film with a documentary quality that makes it a perfect fit for a jury led by French film actress Juliette Binoche,' said the film critic from Bangkok. He predicted the Dardenne brothers would make history by becoming the first to win a record third Palme d'Or.
Earlier on Friday, Chilean director Diego Cespedes won the top prize in the festival's second-tier Un Certain Regard for his debut feature film, 'The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo', about a transgender commune living in the Chilean desert around the onset of the AIDS epidemic.
It was one of several movies this year to touch on diseases, real or imagined, in what may be a legacy of the Covid pandemic that brought much of the world to a standstill – and left the film industry on its knees.
The Best Director award went to Palestinian twin filmmakers Arab and Tarzan Nasser for their black comedy 'Once Upon a Time in Gaza', which the Gaza-born twin filmmakers described as a homage to a homeland that 'no longer exists'.
Political thrillers
The ongoing Israeli onslaught on the Gaza Strip was a frequent talking point during the festival, which opened with a tribute to Fatma Hassona. The 25-year-old Palestinian photojournalist is the subject of 'Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk', a documentary recording her efforts to capture the destruction in Gaza before she was killed in an Israeli strike last month.
There was no shortage of off-screen politics throughout the festival as film stars took turns in rubbishing US President Donald Trump and his threats to slap crippling tariffs on foreign films, which threw a wet blanket over the all-important Cannes Film Market.
Screen legend Robert De Niro set the tone on the opening night with a blistering attack on America's 'philistine' president, urging the industry to join the 'fight for democracy' as he picked up a career Palme d'Or.
Given the politically charged context, film critic Boryana Mateeva said she expected the main competition jury to lean towards movies with weighty topics. Her pick for the top prize was Kleber Mendonça Filho's 'The Secret Agent', a stylish thriller about an academic on the run in the cruel days of Brazil's 1970s military dictatorship.
'It's got everything you want from a Brazilian movie: politics, carnival, fantasy, gore, you name it. And a powerful musical score, too,' she said, describing the Cannes veteran's film as his most accomplished yet.
In the same vein, the Bulgarian critic said Tarik Saleh's Cairo-set 'Eagles of the Republic', about a film star forced to make a propaganda film in Abdel Fattah al-Sisi 's Egypt, was another strong contender, cementing the Swedish director's standing as a 'master of political thrillers'.
Techno road movie a critics' darling
Attending her first Cannes as film critic, Hanna Hromovetska from Ukraine sat through a whopping 35 films over 10 days, though she wished she could have fitted more into her crammed schedule.
Overall, she found the Palme d'Or contest underwhelming, preferring the 'raw energy' of the Directors' Fortnight event that runs parallel to the main festival, with more first-time filmmakers and fewer old-timers.
Louise Hémon's first feature 'The Girl in the Snow', about a 19th century teacher aiming to enlighten the inhabitants of a tiny Alpine hamlet, and Hasan Hadi's debut 'The President's Cake', set in Saddam Hussein 's Iraq, were her two standout movies of the festival.
Cinema publication Deadline said the latter film was 'head and shoulders above' some of the films in the running for the festival's Palme d'Or top prize, and 'could turn out to be Iraq's first nominee for an Oscar'.
In the main competition, Hromovetska had a soft spot for Oliver Laxe's techno-infused road movie 'Sirat', a critics' darling about a father and son joining a group of itinerant ravers in the deserts of Morocco. But she did not think 'Sirat' made for Palme d'Or material.
'For the top prize I would look for more of a balance between story and visuals,' she said. 'Like Iranian director Saeed Roustaee's 'Woman and Child', which has a very intricate screenplay while also being cinematically beautiful.'
A reward for Panahi's 'devotion to cinema'?
Roustaee's film, about a widowed mother trapped in the Iranian marriage market, was one of two competition entries by directors who have faced jail and filming bans in Iran due to their work. The other was 'A Simple Accident' by Jafar Panahi, on his first trip to the French Riviera gathering since 2003 due to repeated prison terms and travel bans.
10:45
Panahi's latest thriller, 'It Was Just an Accident', an indictment of the corruption and tyranny in his homeland, was a perfect fit for the Palme, according to film critic Arash Azizi, a fellow Iranian who is based in the US.
'We know that jury president Juliette Binoche is a fan of Panahi's cinema. And Panahi is a symbol of devotion to cinema,' Azizi explained. 'For years, in prison, under house arrest, in terrible conditions, he never stopped making films. His love for cinema is obvious, and I think all this will have an effect.'
The jury could otherwise opt for an even darker tale of bureaucratic oppression with 'Two Prosecutors' by Ukraine's Sergei Loznitsa, a Kafkaesque nightmare set in the Stalin era.
By Saturday morning, just hours ahead of the closing ceremony, Loznitsa's movie was tied with Panahi's at the top of Screen Daily's film critic grid. Bearing in mind, however, that Cannes juries and critics seldom think alike.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
9 hours ago
- France 24
Rock bands Last Train and HotWax gear up for summer festivals
Culture 12:40 Issued on: From the show With music festival season in full swing, we chat to Last Train frontman Jean-Noël Scherrer. His band have just had a sold-out tour here in France and played extensively in Germany, the UK and other European countries. We also speak to Tallulah Sim-Savage of up-and-coming English trio HotWax, whose debut album is a punchy blend of grunge and rock 'n' roll. Plus we take a look at Pulp's first album in 24 years, as the cult 1990s British indie band also head to the festival circuit.


France 24
5 days ago
- France 24
Dua Lipa, public figures urge UK to end Israel arms sales
Actors, musicians, activists and other public figures wrote the letter calling on Prime Minister Keir Starmer to "end the UK's complicity in the horrors in Gaza". British-Albanian pop sensation Dua Lipa has been vocal about the war in Gaza and last year criticised Israel's offensive as a "genocide". Israel has repeatedly denied allegations of genocide and says its campaign intends to crush Hamas following the deadly October 2023 attack by the Palestinian militants. Other signatories include actors Benedict Cumberbatch, Tilda Swinton and Riz Ahmed, and musicians Paloma Faith, Annie Lennox and Massive Attack. "You can't call it 'intolerable' and keep sending arms," read the letter to Labour leader Starmer organised by Choose Love, a UK-based humanitarian aid and refugee advocacy charity. Sports broadcaster Gary Lineker, who stepped down from his role at the BBC after a social media post that contained anti-Semitic imagery, also signed the letter. Signatories urged the UK to ensure "full humanitarian access across Gaza", broker an "immediate and permanent ceasefire", and "immediately suspend" all arms sales to Israel. "The children of Gaza cannot wait another minute. Prime Minister, what will you choose? Complicity in war crimes, or the courage to act?", the letter continued. Earlier this month, Starmer slammed Israel's "egregious" renewed military offensive in Gaza and promised to take "further concrete actions" if it did not stop -- without detailing what the actions could be. Last September the UK government suspended 30 out of 350 arms export licenses to Israel, saying there was a "clear risk" they could be used to breach humanitarian law. Global outrage has grown after Israel ended a ceasefire in March and stepped up military operations this month, killing thousands of people in a span of two months according to figures by the Hamas-run health ministry. The humanitarian situation has also sparked alarm and fears of starvation after a two-month blockade on aid entering the devastated territory. Over 800 UK lawyers including Supreme Court justices, and some 380 British and Irish writers warned of Israel committing a "genocide" in Gaza in open letters this week. Hamas killed 1,218 people, mostly civilians, in their October 2023 attack on Israel, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Militants also took 251 hostages, 57 of whom remain in Gaza, including 34 who the Israeli military says are dead. Israel's military offensive launched in response has killed 54,084, mostly civilians, in Gaza according to its health ministry, displaced nearly the entire population and ravaged swathes of the besieged strip.


Euronews
5 days ago
- Euronews
First Arab and African director to win Cannes Palme d'Or dies aged 91
Algerian director Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina, whose 1975 drama Chronique des Années de Braise (Chronicles of the Years of Fire) won Cannes' Palme d'Or in 1975, has died aged 91. He was the oldest living recipient of the Palme d'Or and Chronicles of the Years of Fire remains Africa's only Palme d'Or to this day. Lakhdar-Hamina's family said the producer and director died at his home in the Algerian capital of Algers on 23 May. Coincidently, the Cannes Film Festival screened Chronicles of the Years of Fire in its Cannes Classics program that day, in celebration of the 50th anniversary of the film's Palme d'Or. Set between 1939 and 1954, the movie retells the Algerian War of Independence through the eyes of a peasant farmer, depicting the harshness of French colonial rule. Lakhdar-Hamina competed for the Palme d'Or four times, with The Winds of the Aures, which won the best first film prize in 1967, as well as Sandstorm (1982) and Last Image (1986). After a 30-year break, Lakhdar-Hamina directed Twilight of Shadows, which was Algeria's submission to the Best Foreign Language Film category of the 88th Academy Awards in 2016. Born on 26 February 1934 in M'Sila in the Aurès region of north-east Algeria, Hamina studied in the southern French town of Antibes. During the Algerian war, his father was tortured and killed by the French army. He was called up to the French army in 1958 but deserted to join the Algerian resistance in Tunis, where he did an internship with Tunisian news. He ran Algeria's news service, the l'Office des Actualités Algériennes (OAA) from shortly after the revolution to 1974. He was also head of the Algerian National Office for Commerce and the Film Industry between 1981 and 1984. French distributor Les Acacias Distribution will theatrically re-release Chronicles of the Years of Fire in cinemas in France on 6 August.