Los Angeles Times

Cannes releases what-if f ilm list

While the event has been canceled, films by Wes Anderson, Steve McQueen and more will still receive the prestigiou­s label

- JUSTIN CHANG

While the storied fest has been canceled, it has selected the films that still can carry its ’20 label.

It’s been a remarkable season of ups and downs for the world’s most prestigiou­s film festival.

The Festival de Cannes’ 2019 edition was hailed as one of its strongest in years, with the premieres of much-lauded titles including “Pain and Glory,” “Portrait of a Lady on Fire,” “Once Upon a Time in ... Hollywood,” “Atlantics” and the South Korean thriller “Parasite,” which won the Palme d’Or, the festival’s top prize.

Nine months later, “Parasite” clinched the Academy Award for best picture, becoming the first film to pull off that twofer since “Marty” (1955) and marking a rare symbolic convergenc­e between Hollywood and the global film industry. Awards-season cachet isn’t everything, but it was still a striking turnaround for Cannes, which many in the industry had begun to discount as a significan­t Oscar launchpad next to its better-positioned rival festivals like Venice,

Telluride and Toronto.

Anticipati­on was thus running higher than usual for Cannes 2020. That event was originally scheduled to take place May 12-23, with the director Spike Lee presiding over the competitio­n jury. Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch,” Paul Verhoeven’s “Benedetta,” Sofia Coppola’s “On the Rocks” and the Pixar animation “Soul” were among the major titles widely expected to premiere on the Croisette, the storied boulevard that runs along the beach through the French Riviera town.

But then came a startling reversal of fortune, as the festival was forced to postpone and then finally cancel its 2020 edition in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. It was the first such major Cannes disruption since 1968, a year of sweeping political unrest that brought the festivitie­s to a screeching halt.

Under the artistic direction of its delegate general, Thierry Frémaux, Cannes deferred its cancellati­on announceme­nt for as long as possible. Even as other major events like South by Southwest and Tribeca

pulled the plug, Cannes organizers remained optimistic about hosting some version of the festival later in the summer. But as the pandemic worsened and the French government extended its ban on all largescale gatherings, it became clear the show simply could not go on.

Now, at least, we have an idea of what the show would have been. On Wednesday evening in Paris, Frémaux and the festival’s president, Pierre Lescure, unveiled a list of 56 films that had been chosen for the event’s official selection (which encompasse­s films that play in competitio­n as well as sidebar sections including Un Certain Regard, midnight screenings, special screenings and out of competitio­n).

It’s not exactly a picture of what the festival would have looked like without COVID-19. Some titles that may have played Cannes this year have instead opted to wait until next year (with Verhoeven’s film reportedly on that list), while others were removed from considerat­ion as their backers set their sights on other events.

However, in the absence of a physical gathering, all 56 films in the official selection will now receive a Cannes 2020 label, a badge of honor that will accompany them to their premieres at later dates and possibly other festivals partnering with Cannes, including Telluride, Toronto, San Sebastian and New York.

The first and least surprising title on Frémaux’s list was “The French Dispatch,” Anderson’s ensemble comedy set in the French foreign bureau of a Kansas newspaper, which conceivabl­y would have brought Benicio Del Toro, Tilda Swinton, Léa Seydoux, Bill Murray, Timothée Chalamet and other actors to the festival’s red-carpeted steps. The Searchligh­t Pictures release was originally scheduled to open July 24 in the U.S. but will now be released Oct. 16.

Another postponed title receiving the Cannes 2020 label is Pete Docter’s “Soul,” which features the voice of Jamie Foxx as a middlescho­ol music teacher who has an out-of-body experience. Co-directed by Kemp Powers and originally due this month but now set to open Nov. 20 through Disney, “Soul” would have marked the third consecutiv­e Cannes selection for Docter. His previous Pixar features, “Up” and “Inside Out,” launched to great success with out-of-competitio­n premieres on the Croisette.

One Cannes 2020 selection likely to stir considerab­le excitement wherever it ends up is “Ammonite,” a 19th century love story starring Kate Winslet and Saoirse Ronan. It’s the second feature and the second LGBT romance from the English director Francis Lee after his muchacclai­med debut, “God’s Own Country.”

The Oscar-winning British filmmaker Steve McQueen (“12 Years a Slave,” “Widows”) had a remarkable two new features selected for Cannes 2020, both titles from his BBC/Amazon anthology series. They are “Lovers Rock,” a love story set at a blues party in the early 1980s, and “Mangrove,” an account of the Mangrove Nine, a group of British black activists who were arrested in 1970 after demonstrat­ing against police harassment.

Frémaux acknowledg­ed “Mangrove’s” particular resonance in light of recent headlines, and, in a statement released for the festival’s announceme­nt, McQueen dedicated both films “to George Floyd and all the other black people that have been murdered, seen or unseen, because of who they are.”

Along with Anderson, Docter and McQueen, other Cannes alumni who would have returned to the festival this year included France’s François Ozon, with “Été 85,” and Maïwenn, with “DNA”; Japan’s Naomi Kawase with “True Mothers”; Denmark’s Thomas Vinterberg with “Another Round”; Spain’s Fernando Trueba with “Forgotten

We’ll Be”; Lithuania’s Sharunas Bartas with “In the Dusk”; Belgium’s Lucas Belvaux with “Home Front”; Japan’s Kôji Fukada with “The Real Thing”; and the U.S.’ Jonathan Nossiter with “Last Words.”

Following the success of “Parasite” at a festival that has always paid strong attention to South Korean cinema, Frémaux also announced the selection of two Korean pictures: Im Sang-soo’s “Heaven: To the Land of Happiness” and Yeon Sang-ho’s “Peninsula,” a follow-up to his hit 2016 zombie thriller, “Train to Busan.”

Under normal circumstan­ces, the press conference announcing the Cannes official selection lineup is an exciting, noisy and sometimes contentiou­s affair. Journalist­s usually pepper Frémaux with questions about the glaring omissions of any films from this or that country, and about the absence of titles that were widely expected to have made the cut.

Wednesday’s live-streamed announceme­nt proved quieter and more bitterswee­t, partly because the lineup was a purely theoretica­l one and partly because of COVID-19 physical distancing restrictio­ns. No reporters were in attendance, which meant there were none of the usual questions and criticisms that have consistent­ly greeted the Cannes selection.

Journalist­s have hammered Frémaux and his selection committee in recent years for the routinely low percentage of women directors who are chosen for the main competitio­n. Those criticisms have only grown in intensity with the rise of the #MeToo movement — which began partly in response to the allegation­s against Harvey Weinstein, a longtime regular at Cannes — and the light it has shed on gender inequality throughout the film industry. (In 2018, Cannes committed to the 5050 x 2020 Pledge, promising to make strides for gender parity and greater transparen­cy.)

The number of women directors who would have had films in competitio­n this year is unknown, but 13 of the 56 films listed, or about 23%, feature a female director. That percentage falls to about 20% if you consider that there are 64 directors named in the official selection, and 51 of them are men. (The reason for the discrepanc­y is that several films have multiple directors, including the omnibus film “Septet: The Story of Hong Kong,” which is credited to six directors, only one of whom, Ann Hui, is a woman.)

Cannes is regularly criticized for its longtime loyalty to “usual suspect” auteurs, sometimes at the expense of new talent. But the festival has made a strong effort to right that balance in recent years with a greater focus on younger, less establishe­d filmmakers, among them Mati Diop (“Atlantics”) and Ladj Ly (“Les Misérables”), who both won major prizes at Cannes last year.

In keeping with that commitment, the festival will grant labels to 18 features from first-time directors, including France’s Charlène Favier (“Slalom”), Armenia’s Nora Martirosya­n (“Si le Vent Tombe (Should the Wind Fall)”), the U.S.’ Pascual Sisto (“John and the Hole”), China’s Wei Shujun (“Striding Into the Wind”) and Israel’s Dani Rosenberg (“The Death of Cinema and My Father Too”).

Cannes 2020 would have hosted the internatio­nal premieres of Michael Dweck and Gregory Kershaw’s well-regarded documentar­y, “The Truffle Hunters,” and Viggo Mortensen’s directing debut, “Falling,” in which he also stars. Both films premiered earlier this year at Sundance, one of the few 2020 festivals to go off without a hitch before the pandemic.

Cannes’ reluctance to cancel even in the wake of a global health crisis became its own magnet for ridicule in recent months, cited as the latest evidence that the festival is an arrogant monolith, stubbornly wedded to tradition and protocol in a fastchangi­ng media environmen­t. Well before the pandemic, industry observers took Cannes to task for its ongoing refusal to allow Netflix films to play in competitio­n, due to rules requiring that competitio­n titles play afterward in French theaters. (The streaming giant responded to the competitio­n ban by skipping Cannes in 2018 and 2019. And though Frémaux recently told trade publicatio­n Screen Internatio­nal that Lee’s upcoming Netflix film “Da 5 Bloods” would have been an out-ofcompetit­ion premiere this year, it was not included in the official selection announceme­nt.)

While Cannes’ enormous film market is planning a virtual edition this year so as to keep business flowing during the pandemic, Frémaux has said that he never seriously considered the idea of taking the festival digital. That dogged commitment to the theatrical experience may mark Cannes as something of a dinosaur, but it has also marked it as one of the industry’s last remaining cultural and technologi­cal standard bearers. And that still means something: While it remains to be seen how the Cannes 2020 films fare on their own, the label will almost certainly ensure more than the usual media and industry attention as these films make their way into the outside world.

Frémaux noted on Wednesday that despite this year’s unpreceden­ted disappoint­ment and upheaval, many had expressed gratitude that he and his organizers hadn’t given up on Cannes so easily.

“We’re very much touched by the signs of affection,” he said before joking, “We’ve decided to call off next year’s festival. We get more compliment­s when we cancel.”

 ?? Disney/Pixar ?? A MIDDLE-SCHOOL band teacher (voiced by Jamie Foxx) would rather be playing jazz in Disney/Pixar’s “Soul,” a Cannes selection.
Disney/Pixar A MIDDLE-SCHOOL band teacher (voiced by Jamie Foxx) would rather be playing jazz in Disney/Pixar’s “Soul,” a Cannes selection.
 ?? Neon ?? KATE WINSLET, left, and Saoirse Ronan star in “Ammonite,” a 19th century love story from Brit director Francis Lee.
Neon KATE WINSLET, left, and Saoirse Ronan star in “Ammonite,” a 19th century love story from Brit director Francis Lee.
 ?? Searchligh­t Pictures ?? BILL MURRAY in “The French Dispatch,” the Wes Anderson film that had been set for a Cannes premiere.
Searchligh­t Pictures BILL MURRAY in “The French Dispatch,” the Wes Anderson film that had been set for a Cannes premiere.
 ?? Amazon Prime Video ?? LETITIA WRIGHT stars in “Mangrove,” one of two Steve McQueen films selected for the Cannes festival.
Amazon Prime Video LETITIA WRIGHT stars in “Mangrove,” one of two Steve McQueen films selected for the Cannes festival.

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