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Cannes 2019

Cannes lines up Loach, Malick, Dardenne and younger women directors

The Cannes Film Festival has revealed 19 films in competition for the Palme D'Or, the Golden Palm award, in its 72nd year. The age and experience-range of filmmakers is wide this year, even older than the festival itself, led by more-than-four-score aged British director Ken Loach. "He's just as young as ever," said Festival director (délégué générale) Thierry Frémaux.

Cannes Film Festival President Pierre Lescure (L) and director Thierry Frémaux (R) presented the 72nd Cannes Festival selection in Paris
Cannes Film Festival President Pierre Lescure (L) and director Thierry Frémaux (R) presented the 72nd Cannes Festival selection in Paris REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes
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Some old favourites, one might say, have made it to the 2019 final séléction with a number of returnees, and indeed repeat Golden Palm winners like Ken Loach with his tale of a struggling, self-employed delivery man in Sorry We Missed You. The Dardenne brothers are in the running with their Young Ahmed and like Loach, have been twice crowned at Cannes.

The people factor

Welcomed back with open arms, it's the 7th time Fists in Pockets' director Marco Bellochio's films have been selected for the Palme D'Or since 1980 with A Leap in the Dark. His entry is a mafia biopic, The Traitor, about Tomasso Buscetta. For Terence Malick's first time at Cannes since winning the top prize in 2011 for A Tree of Life, his is an Austrian Second World War biopic about a conscientious objector, Franz Jägerstatter in The Hidden World.

Young, and French, hopefuls

"Ken Loach said 'why me again? Why don't you leave me out and pick someone younger?'" confided Thierry Frémaux as he recounted Loach's generous reaction on learning his nomination this year.

British director Ken Loach won the Palme d'Or at the 69th Cannes Film Festival in 2016 for his 'I, Daniel Blake'.
British director Ken Loach won the Palme d'Or at the 69th Cannes Film Festival in 2016 for his 'I, Daniel Blake'. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

Frémaux and his selection panels have neither left out Loach, nor ignored younger talent, especially women.

43-year-old Romanian director Corneliu Porumboiu has two Cannes Festival awards and half a dozen features under his belt, his entry is The Whistlers.

Les Misérables is 41-year-old Malian-born French director Ladj Ly's debut feature. He worked with filmmaker Stéphane Freitas on the acclaimed 2016 documentary A voix haute, which follows first-generation French students in training for a French university-level public-speaking contest. Les Misérables is a feature about a policeman who is transferred to the anti-crime brigade of a northern Paris suburb.

Hooray for Africa

With one film from a Moroccan film maker, Maryam Touzani, one from Algerian-born Mounia Meddour and one from a Senegalese first-generation French woman, Maty Diop, Thierry Frémaux recognised that "these women directors are part of the renewal of cinema made-in-Africa. They have a certain way of making films, of telling their stories."

French and female

Thirteen female directors are so far included in the line-up this year, four of them could win the Golden Palm. Céline Sciamma's Portrait of a Young Woman on Fire is her second film at Cannes after the 2007 La Naissance des Pieuvres (The Birth of Octopi) which was slotted into the Un certain regard section. Maty Diop's Atlantic is shot in Senegal, her parents birthplace. Little Joe by Jessica Hausner is about genetic modification, and Sibyl, about a psychotherapist finding inspiration for a new life through her old job, is from Justine Triet, who like Sciamma and 36-year-old Diop, is part of the French contingent. In the Special Screenings section, Syrian Waad al Khateab's film For Sama, made with Edward Watts, is a woman's life during of the conflict in Syria.

Arnaud Desplechin is among the other French directors whose works have been selected this year. His film is set in his native town in the north of France and called, Roubaix, une lumière. There's also Bruno Dumont and Zabou Breitman with Eléa Gobé Mévellec, with a film set in Afghanistan, as well as Christophe Honoré with films in the Un certain regard.

Film fare for fans

Out of competition the festival always reserves space for some irresistible movies. Among them in 2019, Claude Lelouch's new sequel to his landmark 1966 film, A man and a woman. Les plus belles années d'une vie (The best years of a life) will star the same actors, Jean-Louis Trintignant and Anouk Aimée. The original film won the Palme d'or award 53 years ago.

Trailer for 2016 digitally restored version of Un homme et une femme by Claude Lelouch

If that's not your idea of fun, you could opt for Rocketman, Dexter Fletcher's biopic on Elton John, who may well attend.

Presenting TV

Cannes in recent years has made a place for the popular television series format which has attracted so many well-loved directors and cinema actors. In the Out of Competition section Nicolas Winding Refn will be previewing two episodes, four and five, of Too Old To Die - North of Hollywood, West of Hell. Filming for different formats, big screen public viewings, TV and mobile devices will be one of the subjects in this year's masterclass series.

The Cannes Film Festival announces 2019 official lineup

The list of 2019 Palme D'Or contestants below:

  • The Dead Don't Die - Jim Jarmusch (opening film on 14 May)
  • Dolor y Gloria (Pain and Glory) - Pedro Almodovar
  • Il traditore (The Traitor) -  Marco Bellocchio
  • Parasite - Bong Joon-Ho
  • Young Ahmed - Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne
  • Roubaix, une lumière (Roubaix, a light) - Arnaud Desplechin
  • Nan Fang Che Zhan De Ju Hui (The Wild Goose Lake) - Diao Yinan
  • Atlantiques - Mati Diop
  • Matthias & Maxime - Xavier Dolan
  • Little Joe - Jessica Hausner
  • Sorry We Missed You - Ken Loach
  • Les Misérables (The Miserable Ones) - Ladj Ly
  • Nighthawk - Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles
  • The Whistlers - Corneliu Porumboiu
  • Frankie - Ira Sachs
  • Portrait de la jeune fille en feu (Portrait of a young woman on fire) - Céline Sciamma
  • It must be Heaven - Elia Suleiman
  • Sibyl - Justine Triet

The festival said on Thursday that more films may be added to the list in the coming days.

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