
THE WORLD’S GREATEST FILM FESTIVAL RETURNS, AND SO DOES OUR ANNUAL CANNES MAGAZINE
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TABLE OF CONTENTS


Cannes Market Preview: An Industry, and a Market, in Flux
“Return to normal” has been the hopeful theme of the Cannes Film Festival market for the last few years as the industry attempted to recover from the pandemic. But the theme of 2024 should probably be “return to new normal” as the industry experiences an ongoing period of contraction following the burst of activity brought on by the streaming boom.
BY ADAM CHITWOOD


Our Critic’s Take: Cronenberg and Coppola are among the key names at the 77th Cannes
Writing in this space in 2015, TheWrap’s Alonso Duralde likened the Cannes Film Festival to the anti-Comic-Con: a kind of One For Them/One For Me point of exchange where promising stars could cash in franchise loyalty for a shot at prestige. Our critic was spot-on then and all the more prescient now: How else could one describe a 77th edition that might turn a superhero soldier into an awards darling on the strength of a certain hot-button political biopic?
BY BEN CROLL


Directors Portfolio: 36 of the Biggest Filmmakers at This Year’s Festival
As we do every year, TheWrap is celebrating the Cannes Film Festival by spanning the globe in photos of directors from all sections of the festival. This year’s portfolio consists of three dozen directors shot in 18 cities on four continents and stretches from Buenos Aires to Burbank, Avignon to Zgierz, Shanghai to Strasbourg — with, as usual, plenty of stops in Paris, Los Angeles and New York.

Kevin Costner, “Horizon, An American Saga,” Out of Competition

Yorgos Lanthimos, “Kinds of Kindness,” Main Competition

Ron Howard, “Jim Henson: Idea Man,” Cannes Classic

David Cronenberg, “The Shrouds,” Main Competition

Noémie Merlant, “The Balconettes,” Midnight Screenings

Oliver Stone, “Lula,” Special Screening

Oliver Stone, “Lula,” Special Screening

Emma Benestan, “Animale,” Critics’ Week: Special Screenings

Raoul Peck, “Ernest Cole: Lost and Found,” Special Screenings

Karim Aïnouz, “Motel Destino,” Main Competition

Jacques Audiard, “Emilia Perez,” Main Competition

Sandhya Suri, “Santosh,” Un Certain Regard

India Donaldson, “Good One,” Directors’ Fortnight

Federico Luis, “Simon of the Mountain,” Critics’ Week

Sean Baker, “Anora,” Main Competition

Louise Courvoisier, “Holy Cow,” Un Certain Regard

Antoine Chevrollier, “La Pampa,” Critics’ Week

Sergei Loznitsa, “The Invasion,” Special Screenings

Boris Lojkine, “The Story of Souleymane,” Un Certain Regard

Constance Tsang, “Blue Sun Palace,” Critics’ Week

Magnus Von Horn, “The Girl With the Needle,” Main Competition

Hiroshi Okuyama, “My Sunshine,” Un Certain Regard

Payal Kapadia, “All We Imagine as Light,” Main Competition

Michel Hazanavicius, “The Most Precious of Cargoes,” Main Competition

Carson Lund, “Eephus,” Directors’ Fortnight

Matthew Rankin, “Universal Language,” Directors’ Fortnight

Peter Ho-Sun Chan, “She’s Got No Name,” Out of Competition

Konstantin Bojanov, “The Shameless,” Un Certain Regard

Jonathan Millet, “Ghost Trail,” Critics’ Week: Special Screenings

Tyler Taormina, “Christmas Eve in Miller’s Point,” Directors’ Fortnight

Julien Colonna, “Le Royaume,” Un Certain Regard

Jonás Trueba, “The Other Way Around,” Directors’ Fortnight

Laetitia Dosch, “Dog on Trial,” Un Certain Regard

Roberto Minervini, “The Damned,” Un Certain Regard

Halfdan Ullmann Tøndel, “Armand,” Un Certain Regard

Emanuel Parvu, “3 Kilometers to the End of the World,” Main Competition

Kirill Serebrennikov, “Limonov—The Ballad,” Main Competition


Painful Truths: Diane Kruger on Art, Death and Cannes
For Diane Kruger, Cannes is a lifelong personal experience. The world’s most potent and dazzling film festival, now in its 77th year, has been the locale for many of the significant twists in the German actress’ singular career. This year, Kruger returns with David Cronenberg’s highly anticipated “The Shrouds.”
BY JOE MCGOVERN

‘The Apprentice’: Mentoring Trump
Donald Trump has had a presence at Cannes in recent years, notably in James Gray’s semi-autobiographical “Armageddon Time” two years ago. But a movie about the real estate mogul turned president, by the Iran-born, Denmark-based director of the dark and dramatic films “Border” and “Holy Spider”? That’s the fascinating and frightening prospect of Ali Abbasi’s “The Apprentice.”
BY STEVE POND