I attended Cannes Film Festival for the 1st time. These are the movies I'd tell you to see — and skip — when they arrive in theaters.
I didn't expect to spend most of my time at the Cannes Film Festival in the beautiful French Riviera with my eyes glued to my phone, furiously refreshing the ticketing pages to get a coveted seat at a screening, but it paid off. I saw 11 movies over the course of six days.
Over the last few years, Cannes has become a major hot spot for filmmakers hoping to have their movies considered for the Oscars. In 2024, it gave us Best Picture winner Anora, buzzed-about box office shocker The Substance and the awards season villain of the century, Emilia Pérez. This year, the festival's top prize (the Palme d'Or) went to It Was Just an Accident, with other highly anticipated films like The Secret Agent, Sentimental Value, Sirât and Sound of Falling nabbing other accolades. This might be the last time you hear about those titles until January, but trust me, they'll be back for awards season in full force.
Often at festivals, movies screened for cinephiles on the ground never make it to a wider audience. But Cannes is now the battleground for trendy film distributors hoping to get movie lovers talking for the rest of the year and during awards season. Many of the movies I saw will be coming soon, and I wouldn't be surprised if they're all snatched up in the next few weeks for theatergoers' viewing pleasure.
I left after the first week of screenings, so I was crushed to miss out on buzzy flicks like Sentimental Value, The Secret Agent and It Was Just an Accident. The ones I did get to see have been haunting me in the best way, though. Here are my favorites from the festival — and the ones I've already forgotten.
Jennifer Lawrence is already an Oscar winner and a legend, but her brief time away from the spotlight was clearly refreshing because she turns this sad story about how a woman becomes increasingly unhinged after having a baby into a riveting masterpiece.
It's visually stunning, and Robert Pattinson is delightfully pathetic, but Lawrence steals every scene. It sold for a whopping $24 million, and if Lawrence doesn't get an Oscar nod for this one, I'll eat my Cannes-branded tote bag.
I had a particularly intense Mission: Impossible screening complete with the cast and my first-ever standing ovation, which went on for 7.5 minutes, but the movie is objectively big, loud and fantastic even without all of the pageantry of a premiere.
The alleged final movie of the franchise is in theaters now, so you won't have to wait to see it, but try to go IMAX if you can! You'll want to see Tom Cruise defying gravity and logic in the sanctuary of a big-screen theater, because it's truly a religious experience.
All you need to know about Sirât is that a father goes with his son to find his missing daughter at a rave, and it gets worse from there. The movie has an infectious score, and the plot is so jaw-droppingly unsettling and unexpected from start to finish that I was white-knuckling my seat.
Several people walked out of my screening, and when it ended, I ranted to my husband for five minutes straight about how upsetting it was. The next morning, I woke up realizing I had seen a masterpiece. Thank goodness Neon is bringing it to theaters.
I was particularly invested in Eddington because I spent hours standing in line to get a glimpse of its star-studded cast members like Pedro Pascal and Austin Butler, but the COVID-era Western satire fell flat for a lot of critics.
When my screening ended, a man in front of me stood up, shouted 'Boo!' and briskly exited the theater. It might be a little too soon for anyone to fully appreciate the uncanniness of pandemic life onscreen, but the polarizing movie comes to theaters July 18 regardless.
Plenty of actors premiered their directorial debuts at Cannes this year: Kristen Stewart, Scarlett Johansson and Harris Dickinson all had buzzy screenings. But I was lucky to see Urchin, which Babygirl standout Dickinson wrote and directed, as my final movie of the festival.
I loved how evident it was in the film that Dickinson's acting talent comes from his deep emotional intelligence. His directing elevated what could have been a depressing film about a man struggling to break out of the cycle of addiction and homelessness into a poignant tale that will haunt me.
Nouvelle Vague, or New Wave, is Richard Linklater's French-language, black-and-white ode to director Jean-Luc Godard. It recreates the filming of Godard's most iconic movie, Breathless, in 1959, and all the antics that ensued when the chaotic director pieced together a masterpiece based solely on vibes. That might sound a little pretentious and inaccessible to most audiences, and maybe it is, but this was Cannes, baby!
There was so much witty banter and so many references to influential filmmakers that my heart turned into a glowing ball of cinephilic pride. It felt like being in a college film class again. It's coming to Netflix, so you can have that feeling in your own living room.
If you've seen a Wes Anderson movie before, you'll be familiar with what goes down here: Quirky characters, elaborate set pieces and a series of ultra-famous faces.
Benicio del Toro stars as a businessman who taps his nun daughter (newcomer Mia Threapleton) as his sole heir, but assassins and business rivals — including Tom Hanks and Bryan Cranston, who they must defeat in a basketball game — cause trouble for them along the way. Michael Cera is particularly delightful in his role. It's just a blast.
I was expecting a slow and sweet romantic drama to be Cannes's opening night movie, but I wasn't prepared for it to be a musical. The film follows a celebrity chef who must return to her hometown after a family emergency and reconnects with an old crush. It was a lot like The Bear, but with singing.
One thing that pervaded my jet-lagged mind during the screening, though, was how much I loved the main character's haircut. Should I get bangs?
Though I came to Cannes hoping to see controversy and critical accalaim, I was quietly moved by The Little Sister, which stars Nadia Melliti in her first-ever role as a Muslim teenager secretively coming to terms with her queer identity.
The movie demands patience and attention — a tall order for a long day of screenings — but delivers with one particularly gorgeous scene between the protagonist and her mother in which not much is said directly. I won't spoil it, but I promise it's worth it, and Melliti unexpectedly won Cannes's Best Actress prize for it.
Case 137 is about a detective investigating an act of violence by police officers — a timely premise that I have, unfortunately, seen played out on nearly every season of Law and Order in a tight 40 minutes.
What I will remember far longer than anything that happened in the movie, though, is the fact that one of its stars was banned from walking the red carpet at the premiere because of rape allegations against him. It was the first ban of its kind at Cannes, and it sparked quite a bit of discourse on the Croisette.
I was low on energy and worried about time when I slipped into the premiere screening of this German-language film about girls growing up in the same farmhouse over the span of 100 years. How many times could I watch generational trauma unfold without getting bored and worn down? Endless, apparently.
Its stars, who I had never heard of, delivered performances I'll never forget, and the plot went places I'd never think to go. The standing ovation was cut short for time — Mission: Impossible premiered after this one — but Sound of Falling was the best of the festival for me. I may give it my own standing ovation when it comes to theaters stateside.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
27 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Sean Penn Reacts (30 Years Later) to Madonna Calling Him the Love of Her Life
In her 1991 documentary Truth or Dare, Madonna declared that Sean Penn was the love of her life. And more than three decades later, the actor is sharing his thoughts on it. In an interview on The Louis Theroux Podcast posted Monday (May 12), Penn said that his superstar ex-wife was 'very sweet' for her remarks in the Alek Keshishian-directed doc when asked whether he recalled what she'd said. 'I do,' he told Theroux. 'Look, she's been a good friend for a lot of years.' More from Billboard Madonna Teams Up With Shawn Levy and Netflix For a Limited Series Based on Her Life: Report Twenty One Pilots Fans Jumped Into Veronica Mars Mode After Someone Took Off With One of Josh Dun's Bespoke Drums Palm Tree Festival to Debut in St. Tropez With Headliners A$AP Rocky & Swedish House Mafia The two-time Oscar-winning actor went on to reflect on his four-year marriage to Madge, with whom he also co-starred in 1986's Shanghai Surprise. After their divorce in 1989, the exes stayed friends. 'It didn't take us long to realize that we had mistaken a good first date for a wedding partner,' Penn said. 'It didn't take us long to recover after we got divorced, maybe a year, in a friendship. I have a lot of fond memories of it – it's not all jail.' The actor added: 'But there was a lot of alcohol and she'd be fairly accusing me of that.' Following her split from Penn, the 'Material Girl' singer would go on to marry Guy Ritchie in 2000 before they separated in 2008. Penn was married to Robin Wright from 1996 to 2010, followed by Leila George from 2020 to 2022. Penn's thoughts on the Truth or Dare documentary come just after a report that a long-awaited biopic about Madonna's life is finally in the works. According to Deadline, the star has teamed up with Shawn Levy for a Netflix limited series about her life and career. Madge is also currently working on new music with producer Stuart Price, who worked on her Billboard 200-topping 2005 album Confessions on a Dance Floor. It's been about six years since the 'Vogue' singer last dropped a proper album, releasing Madame X in 2019. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart
Yahoo
33 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jury deliberations begin in Harvey Weinstein's sex crimes retrial
NEW YORK (AP) — Jurors started deliberating Thursday in Harvey Weinstein 's New York sex crimes retrial, tasked with deciding — again — a case that encapsulated the #MeToo movement. The seven-woman, five-man jury is considering two counts of criminal sex act and one count of rape, each relating to a different accuser and a different date. In this case, the criminal sex act charge is the higher-degree felony. The jury got the case after a juror was replaced by an alternate after she couldn't come to court due to illness. Weinstein, 73, has pleaded not guilty. Nearly eight years ago, a series of sexual misconduct allegations against the Oscar-winning movie producer propelled the #MeToo movement. Some of those accusations later generated criminal charges and convictions in New York and California. The New York conviction from 2020 was subsequently overturned, leading to the retrial before a new jury and a different judge. Jurors heard more than five weeks of testimony, including lengthy and sometimes fiery questioning of Weinstein's three accusers in the case. Jessica Mann said he raped her in 2013, when she was trying to build an acting career. Miriam Haley accused him of forcibly performing oral sex on her in 2006, when she was looking for work in entertainment production. Kaja Sokola, who wasn't involved in Weinstein's first trial, told jurors that he forced oral sex on her, too, during 2006. At the time, she was a teenage fashion model trying to break into acting. 'They all had dreams of pursuing careers in the defendant's world, the entertainment industry,' prosecutor Nicole Blumberg told jurors in her closing argument Tuesday. She contended that Weinstein let the women think he was interested in their careers when what actually interested him were their bodies, and "he was going to have their bodies and touch their bodies whether they wanted him to or not.' Weinstein chose not to testify. His defense called other witnesses, including some former friends of Sokola's and Mann's. Weinstein's attorneys argued that all three accusers consented to Weinstein's advances because they wanted help with their Hollywood aims. All three stayed on friendly terms with him afterward, a point the defense emphasized. 'It's transactional, folks. Yes, he wants to fool around with them, and yes, they want something from him,' defense lawyer Arthur Aidala said in his summation Tuesday. The Associated Press generally does not identify people without their permission if they say they have been sexually assaulted. Sokola, Mann and Haley have agreed to be named.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
In fiery 'Ballerina,' Ana de Armas is more than 'a female John Wick'
In fiery 'Ballerina,' Ana de Armas is more than 'a female John Wick' Show Caption Hide Caption 'Ballerina': Ana de Armas faces Keanu Reeves in 'John Wick' spinoff Ana de Armas plays a dancer-turned-assassin on a mission of revenge and Keanu Reeves makes an appearance as John Wick in the action movie "Ballerina." LAS VEGAS – Ana de Armas sobbed the first time she set a guy on fire. Her assassin character in the 'John Wick' franchise spinoff 'Ballerina' (in theaters June 6) uses all manner of weaponry when dealing with various villains, including a flamethrower. Before filming a rather fiery sequence, de Armas had a harrowing moment rehearsing with a stuntman where she felt the reality of the fiction they were creating. 'He's standing in front of me and I'm like, 'OK, easy. Just going to do it,' and, of course, he's performing,' de Armas recalls. 'But I dropped the thing and started crying because he is burning. It was not a good image. 'I had to unzip the (fireproof) onesie that they put on me and go for a walk. He came and showed me he was OK. But the first impression was really intense. I was not prepared for that. And then I burned like 106 people,' she adds with a proud smile. Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox After "little tastes" of action in 'Ghosted' and 'The Gray Man,' plus one memorable sequence in the James Bond movie 'No Time to Die,' de Armas, 37, wanted more in her movie career. The Oscar-nominated actress got way more with 'Ballerina.' In the film, Eve Macarro (Ana de Armas) is brought up as a dancer and killer in the criminal Ruska Roma organization after the tragic death of her father when she was a child. Eve is unleashed on the underworld, but when she discovers the cult that killed her dad, she goes rogue on a violent mission of vengeance that ultimately puts her at odds with Wick (Keanu Reeves) himself. 'This is a character with a very strong conviction, or you could say also she's very stubborn,' de Armas says of Eve. 'Most of the movie's about revenge, but then in the end, there's a beautiful twist about trying to change someone else's life.' Franchise regular Ian McShane sees the addition of de Armas to the 'Wick' world as 'a gift. She's lovely, she's talented and she can act. What more can you ask?' And Reeves loves watching her 'be heroic' as Eve, like John, fights powers beyond her control. 'It's cool to see Ana have that opportunity to have the John Wick challenge of 'Against all odds!' and 'Another kind of revenge!' ' he says. However, it was extremely important to both de Armas and director Len Wiseman that Eve not be 'a female John Wick.' The filmmaker wanted her to be dynamic but also deal with the fact that de Armas isn't going to look unstoppable going up against, say, a 6-foot-3 assassin. 'We wanted to play the reality. Unless she's thinking more clever about how that fight unfolds, she is going to get her ass kicked,' Wiseman says. 'You see action movies where a female lead is just plowing through all these huge dudes, and me as an audience member just loving action, I go, 'Really?' So I was glad that Ana's like, 'Oh, no. Yeah, I should get thrashed.' ' That meant coming up with a signature style for Eve: In the Ruska Roma, she's taught to 'fight like a girl,' which means she needs to adapt, to improvise and to cheat. 'We thought about that line a lot, and it's like, are people going to take it right?' de Armas says. In creating the character's action choreography, de Armas leaned into her disadvantages. 'I wanted every kick and every punch, and every time I get slammed against the wall or whatever's happening, it hurts,' the actress said. 'She gets tired and she's overwhelmed and they keep coming at her. And the only thing that keeps her going is the motivation that she has.' But Eve is also extremely crafty and can make any object dangerous. She uses dinner plates, forks and candleholders in brawls, duct tapes a knife to a gun (so she can stab one bad guy while shooting another in the face) and, in the super-cool flamethrower faceoff, does damage with a firehose. (Which needed no extra practice, for the record. 'That I did on the spot on the day,' de Armas reports.) Wiseman came up with one of de Armas' favorite off-the-wall weapons: an ice skate that Eve sticks her hand in and uses like a boxing glove on an enemy. 'That could either be really lame and stupid or really cool and brutal,' the director says. The actress recalls the pitch: 'I was like, 'What did you just say?' ' she says with a laugh. 'It was really crazy when he thought of it, but then it all made sense. It's painful to even watch it.' De Armas 'never imagined' that her acting career was going to take this action-packed path, she says, and with 'Ballerina,' she got what she asked for – and more. 'After going through this, I was pretty satisfied.'