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Direct to you from Cannes

Direct to you from Cannes
Les Misérables

We’re thrilled to share our prize collection of 25 highly anticipated Cannes films set to premiere to New Zealand audiences at NZIFF.

From the thin blue line between cops and criminals in Jury Prize-winning Les Misérables, to the magnificent obsessions of French psychodrama Sibyl, to the deadpan musings of festival favourite Elia Suleiman’s It Must Be Heaven, to critical darling and Best Screenplay winner Portrait of a Lady on Fire, this year’s Cannes haul is second to none.

The Cannes Films are:

Bacurau

Fierce politics and top-notch furious filmmaking collide to potent effect in this Cannes-lauded portrait of a near-future fight for survival in the remote reaches of northern Brazil.

It Must Be Heaven

Palestinian director Elia Suleiman’s artfully composed, comedic contemplation of his place in the world discerns universal truths and absurdities in a shifting global context.

Les Misérables

In the crime-ridden suburbs of impoverished Paris, the line between corrupt cop and upstanding criminal is not so clearly defined, in this explosive, Cannes Jury Prize-winning thriller.

Portrait of a Lady on Fire

Winner of Best Screenplay and the Queer Palm at Cannes, Céline Sciamma’s striking 18th-century tale of romance between a painter and her subject burns bright with female desire and the craft of a masterful filmmaker.

Sibyl

Exploring psychotherapy, boundaries and obsession, Justine Triet’s film deliciously portrays the creative crisis of a shrink-wannabe-author, who steals her actress patient’s story for a novel.

Sorry We Missed You

A most worthy follow-up to I, Daniel Blake, Ken Loach’s new social-realist drama zeroes in on the life of an average British family at the mercy of the modern day ‘gig economy’.

The Whistlers

Breathing new life into the Romanian New Wave, Corneliu Porumboiu crafts a rollicking genre movie which travels between Romania and the sun-soaked Canary Islands, where the best laid plans of a bent cop hinge on learning a secret local whistling dialect.

The Wild Goose Lake

Gangland subterfuge tumbles into a dazzling nocturnal manhunt in Chinese director Diao Yinan’s film noir par excellence – a modern genre classic in the making.

La Belle Époque

A striking conceit and stellar cast mix winningly in this compulsively watchable, superbly executed French romantic comedy, where it’s never too late to relive the best day of your life again. And again. And again...

The Gangster, The Cop, The Devil

Bruising Korean box office star Ma Dong-seok is in full beast mode in this seriously entertaining action thriller, which pits a burly mob boss and an unhinged detective against a marauding serial killer.

Litigante

Set in Bogotá, Colombia, Franco Lolli’s excellent character study focuses on a lawyer struggling to care for her young son and ailing mother amidst a developing scandal at work.

A White, White Day

Evidence of a deceased wife’s affair tips a grieving ex-cop in remote Iceland over the edge, leading to a shocking spiral of events in search of the truth.

Vivarium

Jesse Eisenberg and Imogen Poots star in an unsettling tale about a couple whose search for a starter-home lands them in a strange housing development, where they remain trapped.

Deerskin

Georges (French megastar Jean Dujardin) becomes obsessed with the ‘killer style’ of his deerskin jacket and decides all other jackets must be obliterated in this oddball comedy that gets increasingly weirder and more unhinged.

The Orphanage

A touch of Bollywood fantasy enlivens this moving story of a savvy Afghan teen living in a Soviet-run orphanage in the late 1980s while a destructive war rages through the country.

Song Without a Name

Replete with starkly beautiful black and white photography, this affecting arthouse thriller from first time Peruvian director Melina León is based on a real-life case of child trafficking.

For Sama

Shot over five years, Waad al-Kateab’s intimate, Cannes award-winning film addresses her baby daughter and delivers a harrowing account of the war in Aleppo, the devastation wrought on the city, its people and children.

Take Me Somewhere Nice

Winner of the Special Jury Prize at Rotterdam, this delightfully absurdist road movie channels Jarmusch and Kaurismäki in telling the story of a young woman visiting Bosnia to find her estranged father.

Adam

Set in Casablanca’s Old Medina, this nuanced tale of female solidarity transcending temperamental difference captivates through the richly detailed performances of two superb actresses.

Beanpole

Talented Russian filmmaker Kantemir Balagov won Best Director at Cannes (Un Certain Regard) for this hugely impressive account of post-war Leningrad, and the friendship of two women at its devastated centre.

Fire Will Come

Oliver Laxe’s slow-burn Cannes gem combines arresting landscapes with the smouldering inner life of a reticent ex-con whose return to his mother’s home in the Galician countryside sparks tension.

Making Waves: The Art of Cinematic Sound

An ear-opening and revelatory history lesson on the unsung power of sound in cinema, Making Waves interposes fascinating interviews with dissected scenes to educate and exhilarate even the seasoned cinephile.

Nina Wu

This fiery Cannes title challenges the #MeToo movement’s popular discourse with a confronting and complicated tale of consent and abuse, based on its lead actress’ own experiences in the movie industry.

Port Authority

“Debuting writer-director Danielle Lessovitz weaves a boy-meets-trans girl romance about identity and belonging around the New York underground ballroom scene.” — David Rooney, Hollywood Reporter. Executive produced by Martin Scorsese.

The Invisible Life of Eurídice Gusmão

A saga of sisterhood for the ages, Madame Sata director Karim Aïnouz’s sensual ‘tropical melodrama’ won top prize at this year’s Cannes Un Certain Regard section

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