All of the Movies in Competitors on the 2024 Cannes Movie Pageant, Ranked from Greatest to Worst
The seventy-seventh annual Cannes Movie Pageant got here to a startling and joyous conclusion on Saturday evening, when the competitors jury, chaired by Greta Gerwig, awarded the Palme d’Or, the pageant’s highest honor, to “Anora,” a humorous, harrowing, and at last fairly shifting portrait of a intercourse employee’s madcap New York misadventures. It was startling as a result of the film, although one of many best-received within the competitors, had not been broadly tipped for the highest prize, which seldom goes to a U.S. movie; with “Anora,” Sean Baker turns into the primary American director to win the Palme since Terrence Malick did, for “The Tree of Life” (2011), 13 years in the past. And it was joyous not solely as a result of the award was bestowed on a worthy and memorable movie however as a result of Baker used the event to ship one of the best, most eloquent and impassioned acceptance speech I’ve ever heard a Palme winner give.
Studying from ready remarks, Baker singled out two different filmmakers within the competitors, Francis Ford Coppola and David Cronenberg, as amongst his private heroes. He devoted the award to intercourse employees in all places, a becoming tribute from a filmmaker who has put their lives entrance and heart, with drama, humor, and empathy, in motion pictures like “Starlet” (2012), “Tangerine” (2015), and “Pink Rocket” (2021). He tossed some beautiful shade within the course of the “tech corporations” behind the so-called streaming revolution—together with, presumably, Netflix, which got here away as one of many evening’s large winners; its main acquisition of the pageant, Jacques Audiard’s musical “Emilia Pérez,” received two prizes. And, in a second that drew rapturous applause, Baker delivered a plea on behalf of theatrical movies, declaring, “The way forward for cinema is the place it began: in a film theatre.”
I used to be lucky to see all twenty-two movies within the Cannes competitors on the massive display screen, projected below superior situations in homes full of fellow film lovers. It’s my hope that, when these motion pictures are launched within the U.S., as the nice majority of them probably shall be, you’ll seize the prospect to see them on the massive display screen as properly—even “Emilia Pérez,” which Netflix might not maintain in theatres for lengthy, however whose daring dramatic and stylistic dangers have one of the best probability of profitable you over if they’ve your undivided, wide-awake consideration.
I’ve ranked the flicks so as of desire, from greatest to worst. Right here they’re:
1. “Caught by the Tides”
Jia Zhangke, a Cannes competitors veteran, has lengthy been the cinema’s preëminent chronicler of contemporary China (“Mountains Might Depart,” “Ash Is Purest White”), mapping its social, cultural, and geographical complexities with nice formal acumen, and likewise with the longtime collaboration of his spouse, the excellent actress Zhao Tao. Jia’s newest work, drawing on an archive of footage shot in the midst of roughly 20 years, unfurls a narrative in fragments, a couple of lady (Zhao) and a person (Li Zhubin) who fall in love, bitterly separate, and have a melancholy reunion years later. It’s an achievement by turns fleeting and monumental: a sequence of interlocking time capsules, a wrenching feat of self-reflection, and a stealth musical, wherein Zhao dances and dances, standing in for tens of millions who’ve discovered to sway and bend to historical past’s tumultuous beat.
2. “All We Think about as Mild”
As the primary Indian function invited to compete at Cannes in almost three many years, Payal Kapadia’s narrative début (after her 2021 documentary, “A Evening of Figuring out Nothing”) could be notable sufficient; that the film is so delicately felt and sensuously textured is trigger for outright celebration. Winner of the pageant’s Grand Prix, or second place, it tells the story of two roommates, Prabha (Kani Kusruti) and Anu (Divya Prabha), who work as nurses at a Mumbai hospital. It teases out their private circumstances—Prabha’s estrangement from her unseen husband, Anu’s frowned-upon romance with a younger Muslim man (Hridhu Haroon)—with a quiet truthfulness that, just like the glittering lights of the town, lingers expansively within the reminiscence. (A forthcoming Sideshow/Janus Movies launch.)
3. “Grand Tour”
The Portuguese director Miguel Gomes (“Tabu,” “Arabian Nights”) delivered a few of the most virtuosic filmmaking within the competitors—because the jury acknowledged by giving him the Greatest Director prize—with this characteristically but terribly playful colonial-era travelogue. Shifting between colour and black-and-white, set in 1917 however filled with fourth-wall-breaking anachronisms, the film tells a narrative of types a couple of roving British diplomat (Gonçalo Waddington) and a fiancée (Crista Alfaiate) he’s in no hurry to marry. However its true fascination lies within the humid environment and wanderlust-inspiring splendor of its East and Southeast Asian areas, starting from Singapore and Bangkok to Shanghai and Rangoon. It’s a film to get misplaced in.
4. “The Seed of the Sacred Fig”
It’s not possible to soak up this blistering home drama with out pondering of its dissident director, Mohammad Rasoulof, who not too long ago fled Iran after being sentenced to jail and a flogging. (His look at his movie’s première made for probably the most emotional moments in latest Cannes reminiscence.) Shot completely in secret, the story follows a Tehran-based husband (Missagh Zareh) and spouse (Soheila Golestani) who’re more and more at struggle with their progressive-minded young-adult daughters (Mahsa Rostami, Setareh Maleki) throughout nationwide political protests led by girls. The result’s a thriller of propulsive talent and blunt emotional drive, marrying the muscularity of an motion movie to the psychological depth of a chamber drama. (A forthcoming Neon launch.)
5. “Anora”
The director Sean Baker is close to the peak of his storytelling powers with this dazzling (and now Palme d’Or-winning) portrait of a Manhattan strip-club dancer (a revelatory Mikey Madison) who impulsively marries the ultra-spoiled son (Mark Eydelshteyn) of a Russian oligarch. A lot comedian chaos ensues, a few of it pushed previous the brink of plausibility, however Baker’s multifaceted love for his characters proves infectious and sustaining, as does his perception that acts of surprising kindness can redeem even the darkest nights of the soul. (A forthcoming Neon launch.)
6. “The Shrouds”
Early on on this elegantly sombre but mordantly humorous new film, which stars Vincent Cassel, Diane Kruger, and Man Pearce, the director David Cronenberg, a grasp of cerebral horror, unveils his newest invention: a technologically superior burial shroud that enables individuals to look at a beloved one’s physique decomposing within the grave. So begins a drolly fluid inspection of basic Cronenberg themes—the deterioration of the flesh, the instability of the picture, the paranoia-inducing incursions of know-how into each facet of life—however imbued with a nakedly private dimension that the director has famous in interviews; the story was impressed by his spouse’s loss of life, in 2017, from most cancers.
7. “Megalopolis”
On this legendarily long-gestating ardour venture, which I’ve written about at size, Francis Ford Coppola posits that our fragile, battered civilization is headed the best way of the Roman Empire. The grimness of that prospect is unsurprising from a director accustomed to peering deep into the guts of American darkness (the “Godfather” motion pictures, “The Dialog,” “Apocalypse Now”). For all that, the filmmaking right here glows with a very hard-won optimism, even a welcome sense of play—borne out by an ensemble of actors, together with Adam Driver, Giancarlo Esposito, and particularly Aubrey Plaza, who absolutely embrace Coppola’s rhetorical and conceptual flights of fancy.
8. “The Substance”
Sympathetic or sadistic? Feminist or misogynist? Coralie Fargeat’s body-horror bonanza, which received the pageant’s award for Greatest Screenplay, has been one of many competitors’s extra polarizing hits, which is unsurprising; divisiveness ought to be anticipated from a narrative about an growing older actress and TV health guru who, determined to regain her youthful bod of yesteryear, successfully splits herself in two. Whether or not the outlandish premise (assume “The Image of Dorian Grey” by the use of “Loss of life Turns into Her”) and its blood-gushing fallout stand up to mental scrutiny, there’s no doubting the ferocity of the 2 leads, Demi Moore and Margaret Qualley, or Fargeat’s sheer filmmaking verve as she pushes her concepts to their sanguinary conclusions.
9. “Motel Destino”
Only a 12 months after the Brazilian director Karim Aïnouz appeared in competitors with a surprisingly stiff-corseted English interval drama, “Firebrand,” it was bracing to look at him rebound with the competitors’s most sexually uninhibited and flagrantly sexy title; corsets don’t apply right here, and even underwear proves blissfully non-compulsory. Set at a seedy roadside motel the place the clientele by no means stops moaning, it’s a feverishly shambling erotic thriller starring three very recreation actors (Iago Xavier, Nataly Rocha, and Fábio Assunção) in a romantic triangle that performs like James M. Cain with intercourse toys—“The Postman At all times Cock Rings Twice,” because it had been.
10. “Emilia Pérez”
A trans-empowerment musical set towards the backdrop of Mexico’s drug cartels may sound like a doubtful proposition on paper, and, for the numerous detractors of this genre-melding large swing from the French director Jacques Audiard (“A Prophet,” “The Sisters Brothers”), what really made it onto the display screen was no higher. However I used to be disarmed from the beginning by Audiard’s quasi-Almodóvarian vibes, his touchingly imperfect embrace of song-and-dance stylization, and, most of all, his three leads: the outstanding discovery Karla Sofía Gascón, a scene-stealing Selena Gomez, and a never-better Zoe Saldaña. All three (together with Adriana Paz) had been acknowledged with the pageant’s Greatest Actress prize, awarded collectively to the film’s ensemble of actresses; Audiard additionally received the Jury Prize. (A forthcoming Netflix launch.)
11. “Oh, Canada”
After a tense trilogy of dramas about male redemption by way of violence (“First Reformed,” “The Card Counter,” “Grasp Gardener”), the author and director Paul Schrader has taken a gentler flip with an adaptation of “Foregone,” a 2021 novel by the late Russell Banks. (It’s his second Banks adaptation, after the 1997 drama “Affliction.”) In exploring the fragmented consciousness of an growing older documentary filmmaker (performed at totally different ages by Richard Gere and Jacob Elordi), Schrader bravely forsakes the narrative fastidiousness of his latest work and takes on grand themes of reminiscence, mortality, and creative self-reckoning, to formally ragged however sincerely shifting impact.
12. “The Lady with the Needle”
This stark and terrifying black-and-white drama from the Swedish-born, Polish-based director Magnus von Horn (“Sweat”) was maybe the competitors’s bleakest entry. Set in Copenhagen instantly after the First World Conflict, it pins us so mercilessly to the hard-bitten perspective of Karoline (a wonderful Vic Carmen Sonne), a manufacturing facility seamstress who turns into pregnant out of wedlock, that we scarcely discover her story shifting in a unique, extra sinister course. It’s a bitterly hard-to-stomach brew of a film, directly hideous and fantastically made, with a chilling supporting flip by Trine Dyrholm as a buddy whose interventions grow to be something however benign.
13. “Three Kilometres to the Finish of the World”
The setting of this well-observed however emotionally opaque drama, from the Romanian actor turned director Emanuel Pârvu, is a small rural village the place a closeted teen-age boy, Adi (Ciprian Chiujdea), is brutally overwhelmed after being caught in an intimate second with a male traveller. Pârvu teases out the authorized, psychological, and ethical fallout with the pitch-perfect performances and laserlike formal focus which have change into hallmarks of recent Romanian cinema. However, although the film is persuasive sufficient as an indictment of small-town non secular fundamentalism and homophobia, it proves curiously incurious about Adi’s perspective, to the detriment of its personal human pulse.
14. “Sorts of Kindness”
After his Oscar-winning interval romps “The Favorite” (2018) and “Poor Issues” (2023), the Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos scales again—however goes lengthy—with a sprawling, more and more tedious compendium of comedian cruelty. My favourite of the movie’s three disconnected tales, all that includes the identical actors, is the one the place Jesse Plemons (the ensemble M.V.P., because the jury acknowledged with its Greatest Actor award) performs Willem Dafoe’s Manchurian candidate; my least favourite is the one the place Emma Stone joins a sweat-worshipping intercourse cult. The one the place Stone slices off her finger and cooks it for Plemons falls—very similar to the film in Lanthimos’s over-all œuvre—someplace within the center. (A Searchlight Footage launch, opening June twenty first in theatres.)
15. “Fowl”
My admiration for the English filmmaker Andrea Arnold (“American Honey”) is such that I’m desperate to revisit her newest rough-and-tumble coming-of-age story and discover that I undervalued it. Arnold is actually expert at integrating recognizable actors, which on this case consists of Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski, into her grottily realist frames, and he or she has an interesting lead performer in Nykiya Adams, as a twelve-year-old woman who overcomes persistent abuse and neglect. However the story might lose you—because it misplaced me—with a magical-realist flip that magnifies, relatively than minimizes, the tortured-animal symbolism that has usually dogged Arnold’s work.
16. “Beating Hearts”
An alternate of insults at a high-school bus cease offers a saucy meet-cute for woman (Mallory Wanecque) and a ne’er-do-well boy (Malik Frikah); so begins a raucous and endearing love story for the ages, wherein the director Gilles Lellouche, with outsized glee and little self-discipline, merrily appropriates the conventions of basic Hollywood musicals and gangster flicks. The result’s a lot too lengthy at almost three hours—the story spans a number of years, with Adèle Exarchopoulos and François Civil enjoying older variations of the 2 leads—however I can’t say I didn’t heat to its rambunctious cornball attraction.
17. “Limonov: The Ballad”
Why make a movie about Eduard Limonov, the globe-trotting Russian dissident poet and punk provocateur reviled for his pro-fascist sympathies? The filmmaker Kirill Serebrennikov by no means musters a satisfying reply on this muddled English-language bio-pic, regardless of an energetically uninhibited central efficiency by Ben Whishaw and a cheeky panoply of filmmaking methods—jittery camerawork, prolonged monitoring photographs—meant to catch us up within the épater-la-bourgeoisie exuberance of Limonov’s revolt. Contemplating his earlier work, I favor the rebel-youth vibes of “Leto” (2018) and the dazzling cinematic assaults of “Petrov’s Flu” (2021), each of which additionally screened in competitors right here.
18. “Parthenope”
Practically each new image from the Italian auteur Paolo Sorrentino may very well be moderately known as “The Nice Magnificence,” the title of his attractive 2013 cinematic tour of Rome. (It left that 12 months’s Cannes empty-handed, however received the Oscar for Greatest Overseas Language Movie.) His newest work stays most intriguing for its ambivalent however nonetheless sensually overpowering imaginative and prescient of the director’s dwelling city, Naples, from which springs a modern-day goddess, named after Parthenope, a Siren from Greek mythology. She’s performed by Celeste Dalla Porta, an excellent magnificence certainly and an empathetic display screen presence, although solely fitfully does her character appear worthy of this film’s epic enshrinement.
19. “Wild Diamond”
One other disquisition on magnificence and its discontents, this time from the débuting French author and director Agathe Riedinger. She hurls us the life and busy social-media feed of a nineteen-year-old, Liane (a terrific Malou Khebizi), who has nipped, tucked, and tailor-made each a part of herself to comprehend her dream of being chosen for a scorching new reality-TV sequence. Half influencer-culture cautionary story, half bad-girl Cinderella story, the film glancingly suggests the soul-rotting results of magnificence worship, but it surely falls sufferer to the entice that Liane is attempting to keep away from: in a sea of worthy candidates, it doesn’t particularly stand out.
20. “The Apprentice”
Donald Trump’s attorneys have threatened authorized motion to dam the discharge of this drama about his early rise to fame and wealth below the mentorship of the legal professional Roy Cohn (Jeremy Robust). It speaks to the ineffective proficiency of Ali Abbasi’s film that the prospect of such censorship provokes extra indifference than outrage. Shot to evoke cruddy nineteen-eighties VHS playback, the film is properly acted by Robust, Maria Bakalova as Ivana Trump, and an more and more makeup-buried Sebastian Stan as Trump himself, depicted from the beginning as a sack of shit that will get progressively shittier. It’s not dismissible, but it surely’s hardly the stuff of revelation, both.
21. “Marcello Mio”
On this trifling meta-comedy from the French filmmaker Christophe Honoré (beforehand within the 2018 Cannes competitors with the stunning “Sorry Angel”), the actress Chiara Mastroianni embarks on a strainedly whimsical private odyssey to look at the legacy of her late father, the legendary Italian actor Marcello Mastroianni, and her personal conflicted place therein. To that finish, she spends a lot of this overstretched film in “8½” and “La Dolce Vita” black-suited drag as she navigates a roundelay of trade in-jokes; among the many French cinema luminaries making appearances are Fabrice Luchini, Nicole Garcia, and, most welcome, Chiara’s mom, Catherine Deneuve.
22. “The Most Treasured of Cargoes”
The French director Michel Hazanavicius continues his uneven post-“The Artist” run with this animated Second World Conflict fable, tailored from a 2019 novel by Jean-Claude Grumberg (and narrated by the late Jean-Louis Trintignant). It has an affecting opening stretch, wherein a child woman, thrown by her determined father from an Auschwitz-bound practice, is rescued and raised in secret by a woodcutter’s kindhearted spouse. However when the kid’s provenance is found, stoking native antisemitism, the film turns into a bathetic wallow in Holocaust imagery, drowned in an Alexandre Desplat rating whose each surge turned my coronary heart more and more to stone. ♦