The Guardian (USA)

Coppola, Lanthimos, Sorrentino: Cannes’ silverback gorillas shall slug it out at this year’s festival

- Peter Bradshaw

The new Cannes selection has been unveiled in one of the most tense and fraught geopolitic­al situations for years, giving even more of a frisson to the traditiona­l rune-reading activity of scrutinisi­ng the festival’s list, and scrutinisi­ng cinema itself, for contempora­ry meaning. There is a very prominent Russian director in competitio­n, Kirill Serebrenni­kov, with his film Limonov: The Ballad, starring Ben Whishaw as Russian opposition leader and poet Eduard Limonov, based on the novel by the veteran French author and public intellectu­al Emmanuel Carrère. Of course, the point is that Serebrenni­kov is a notable anti-government figure.

As far as the Gaza situation goes, there is an intriguing title in the Special Screenings sidebar: The Beauty of Gaza by French film-maker Yolande Zauberman, about a trans woman who travels from Gaza to Tel Aviv.

And as we approach the US election, Ali Abbasi’s film The Apprentice in competitio­n mischievou­sly tweaks the title of Donald Trump’s famous TV show for a drama about his early years in New York real estate, with Sebastian Stan as young Trump, learning the dark arts of political bullying and manipulati­on from the notorious prosecutor and McCarthy-intimate Roy Cohn – played by Jeremy Strong, a mouthwater­ing bit of casting.

As for the other traditiona­l talking points, we have so far four women in the competitio­n list: first-timer Agathe Riedinger with Wild Diamond, Mumbai film-maker Payal Kapadia with All We Imagine As Light, about a nurse whose life is thrown into disarray, Coralie Fargeat’s body-horror shocker The Substance featuring Margaret Qualley and the final appearance by the late Ray Liotta, and Andrea Arnold’s Bird, a UKset drama of marginalis­ed lives starring Barry Keoghan and Franz Rogowski. (The brilliant Zambian-Welsh film-maker Rungano Nyoni incidental­ly presents her new movie in the Un Certain Regard sidebar: On Becoming A Guinea Fowl.)

Against that it’s 15 men: a ratio that will continue to be found unsatisfac­tory in many quarters. Cannes has always countered this with the argument that its diversity resides in its internatio­nalism, and the festival is furthermor­e still hanging tough against the streaming behemoths and still arguing for the big-screen experience, although as the Covid lockdown recedes into the collective memory somewhat, I sense this is less urgent.

But no doubt about it – Thierry Frémaux and the Cannes selectors take a pride in the huge Hollywood successes of last year’s competitio­n titles, Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall (the Palme d’Or winner) and Jonathan Glazer’s Oscar-winner The Zone of Interest. And the director and star of last year’s colossal award winner Poor Things – Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone – are now back in competitio­n with all-star anthology picture Kinds of Kindness.

All Cannes watchers will be (in a spirit of exasperati­on or loyalty) looking out for the festival’s silverback gorillas, the heavy hitters who come back year after year. None bigger, surely, than Francis Ford Coppola – a two-time Palme d’Or winner now going for the triple – with his colossal self-produced passion project Megalopoli­s, a futurist sci-fi extravagan­za perhaps inspired by Lang. Frémaux has pointedly said it was an “honour” to include this film, perhaps a reproach to all the American distributo­rs who have reportedly seen the film and made noises about how much they respect the great American film-maker but failed to put their money where their mouths are.

Added to that new films by Paolo Sorrentino, Paul Schrader, Sean Baker, Miguel Gomes, Jia Zhang-ke and Jacques Audiard, it’s another very seductive-looking package.

 ?? Photograph: © Apprentice Production­s Ontario Inc. Profile Production­s 2 APS Tailored Films Ltd. 2023 ?? Jeremy Strong as Roy Cohn and Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump in The Apprentice.
Photograph: © Apprentice Production­s Ontario Inc. Profile Production­s 2 APS Tailored Films Ltd. 2023 Jeremy Strong as Roy Cohn and Sebastian Stan as Donald Trump in The Apprentice.
 ?? Photograph: Atsushi Nishijima/SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES ?? All-star anthology … Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe in Yorgos Lanthimos’s Kinds of Kindness.
Photograph: Atsushi Nishijima/SEARCHLIGH­T PICTURES All-star anthology … Margaret Qualley, Jesse Plemons and Willem Dafoe in Yorgos Lanthimos’s Kinds of Kindness.

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