2017 Cannes Film Festival Lineup; Four Nicole Kidman Projects to Hit the Croisette

Published by
Share

The lineup for the 70th Cannes Film Festival has been announced but this year it might as well be called the Nicole Kidman Film Festival as the Oscar-winning actress, and former Cannes jury member, has no less than four projects set to debut at on the Croisette, including two films In Competition. The Beguiled, from Sofia Coppola, and The Killing of a Sacred Deer, from Yorgos Lanthimos, will give the actress a double shot at a prize next month. John Cameron Mitchell’s How to Talk to Girls at Parties will show Out of Competition and Jane Campion’s second season of Top of the Lake will show episodes to the public.

This year’s festival features 49 films from 29 countries, including nine feature debuts and 12 women directors.

The major Hollywood studios are curiously all but absent this year. Warner Bros, 20th Century Fox, Sony, Universal – all studios that have major films this year have decided to eschew the world’s biggest film festival for whatever reason, giving us a much more esoteric and independent lineup.

Television and streaming studios, including Netflix and Amazon, may be a part of that reason. Netflix will have Boon Joon-Ho’s Okja and Amazon will have Todd Haynes’s Wonderstruck in competition this year.”The Cannes Film Festival’s commitment to giving an exceptional platform to distinct stories from the world’s most acclaimed auteurs is second to none,” Netflix’s chief content officer Ted Sarandos said on Thursday. David Lynch will show parts of his new season of Twin Peaks ahead of its Showtime debut on May 21st and the above-mentioned Top of the Lake will hit screens as well. Both Lynch and Campion are no strangers to Cannes; both have won the top prize of the festival, the Palme d’Or.

Politics will be playing a major part of the festival as the sequel to the Oscar-winning An Inconvenient Truth (An Inconvenient Sequel), Sea Sorrow, the feature debut from Oscar-winning actress Vanessa Redgrave, which deals with the migrant crisis and a film about North Korea will populate the French Riviera this year.

The 70th Cannes Film Festival runs May 17-28.

Jury President: Pedro Almodovar

Jury: Jessica Chastain, Will Smith, Fan Bingbing, Gabriel Yared, Paolo Sorrentino, Maren Ade, Agnès Jaoui, Park Chan-wook

Opening Night Film

“Ismael’s Ghost” directed by Arnaud Desplechin

In Competition
L’amant Double directed by François Ozon
120 Battements Par Minute directed by Robin Campillo
The Beguiled directed by Sofia Coppola
The Day After directed by Hong Sangsoo
A Gentle Creature directed by Sergei Loznitsa
Good Time directed by Benny Safdie and Josh Safdie
Happy End directed by Michael Haneke
In the Fade directed by Fatih Akin
Jupiter’s Moon directed by Kornél Mandruczo
The Killing of a Sacred Deer directed by Yorgos Lanthimos
Loveless directed by Andrey Zvyagintse
The Meyerowitz Stories directed by Noah Baumbach
Okja directed by Bong Joon-ho
Radiance directed by Naomi Kawase
Le Redoutable directed by Michel Hazanavicius
Rodin directed by Jacques Doillon
The Square directed by Ruben Östlund
Wonderstruck directed by Todd Haynes
You Were Never Really Here directed by Lynne Ramsay

Out of Competition

Based on a True Story directed by Roman Polanski
Blade of the Immortal directed by Takashi Miike
How to Talk to Girls at Parties” directed by John Cameron Mitchell
Visages, Villages” directed by Agnès Varda

Un Certain Regard

Jury President: Uma Thurman

Jury:
Mohamed Diab – Director (Egypt)
Reda Ketab – Actor (France)
Joachim Lafosse – Director (Belgium)
Karel Och – Artistic director of Karlovy Vary International Film Festival (Czech Republic)

April’s Daughter directed by Michel Franco
Lucky directed by Sergio Castellitto
Jeune Femme directed by Léonor Serraille
Western directed by Valeska Grisebach
Wind River directed by Taylor Sheridan
Directions directed by Stephan Komandarev
After the War directed by Annarita Zambrano
Dregs directed by Mohammad Rasoulof
Out by György Kristóf
The Nature of Time directed by Karim Moussaoui
Before We Vanish directed by Kurosawa Kiyoshi
L’atelier by Laurent Cantet
Beauty and the Dogs by Kaouther Ben Hania
Barbara directed by Mathieu Amalric
Closeness directed by Kantemir Balagov
The Desert Bride directed by Cecilia Atan and Valeria Pivato

Special Screenings

12 Jours directed by Raymond Depardon
They directed by Anahita Ghazvinizadeh
An Inconvenient Sequel directed by Ronni Cohen and Jon Shenk
Top of the Lake: China Girl directed by Jane Campion & Ariel Kleiman
Promised Land directed by Eugene Jarecki
24 Frames directed by Abbas Kiarostami
Napalm directed by Claude Lanzmann
Come Swim directed by Kristen Stewart
Demons in Paradis” directed by Jude Ratman
Sea Sorrow directed by Vanessa Redgrave
Clair’s Camera directed by Hong Sangsoo
Twin Peaks directed by David Lynch

Midnight Screenings

The Villainess directed by Jung Byung Gil
The Merciless directed by Byun Sung-Hyun
Prayer Before Dawn directed by Jean-Stephane Sauvaire

 

Director’s Fortnight (Quinzaine des Réalisateurs)

Un beau soleil intérieur – Claire Denis (Opening Film)
A Ciambra – Jonas Carpignano
Alive in France – Abel Ferrara
L’Amant d’un jour – Philippe Garrel
Bushwick – Cary Murnion & Jonathan Milott
Cuori Puri – Roberto De Paolis
The Florida Project – Sean Baker
Frost – Sharunas Bartas
I Am Not A Witch – Rungano Nyoni
Jeannette – Bruno Dumont
L’intrusa – Leonardo Di Costanzo
La defensa del dragón – Natalia Santa
Marlina si pembunuh dalam empat babak – Mouly Surya
Mobile Homes – Vladimir de Fontenay
Nothingwood – Sonia Kronlund
The Rider – Chloé Zhao
Ôtez-moi d’un doute – Carine Tardieu
West Of The Jordan River – Amos Gitai
Patti Cake$ – Geremy Jasper (Closing Film)

 

Camera d’Or

Jury President: Sandrine Kiberlain

Jury:
Patrick Blossier – Cinematographer (France)
Elodie Bouchez – Actress (France)
Guillaume Brac – Director, producer (France)
Thibault Carterot – President M141 (France)
Fabian Gaffez – Writer, cinema critic (France)
Michel Merkt – Producer (France)

Critics’ Week (Semaine de la Critique)

Competition
Ava by Lea Mysius
La Familia by Gustavo Rondon Cordova
Gabriel and the Mountain by Fellipe Gamarano Barbosa
Makala by Emmanuel Gras
Oh Lucy! by Atsuko Hirayanagi
Los Perros by Marcela Said
Tehran Taboo by Ali Soozandeh

Special Screenings
Sicilian Ghost Story by Fabio Grassadonia & Antonio Piazza (Opening Film)
Bloody Milk by Hubert Charuel
A Violent Life by Thierry de Peretti
Brigsby Bear by Dave McCary (Closing Film)

 

Short Films (Cinéfondation et Courts Métrages)

Jury President: Cristian Mungiu

Jury:
Clothilde Hesme – Actress (France)
Barry Jenkins – Director, screenwriter (United States)
Eric Khoo – Director, screenwriter, producer (Singapore)
Athina Rachel Tsangari – Director, screenwriter, producer (Greece)

Cannes Classics

1946: La Bataille du Rail (Battle of the Rails) by René Clément (1h25, France): Grand Prix International de la mise en scène and Prix du Jury International.
Presented by Ina. Film digitized and restored by Ina with the support of the CNC. 2K restoration made from an acetate interpositive and an answer print. Technical means: Jean-Pierre Peltier. Coordination: Bénilde Da Ponte, Brice Amouroux.

1953: Le Salaire de la peur (The Wages of Fear) by Henri-Georges Clouzot (1952, 2h33, France, Italy): Grand Prix.
Presented by TF1 Studio in collaboration with la Cinémathèque française and the support of the CNC, of the Archives audiovisuelles de Monaco, of Kodak and the CGR cinémas. 4K Restoration from nitrate image negative and a sound duplicate made by Hiventy. Please note that this presentation is the preview of a major Clouzot event scheduled in France in the fall of 2017.

1956: Körhinta (Merry-Go-Round/Un Petit carrousel de fête) by Zoltán Fábri (1955, 1h30, Hungary): in Competition.
Presented by the Hungarian National Film Fund – Hungarian National Film Archive. A 4K Scan and Digital Restoration from the original 35mm image & sound negatives plus additional materials: the original dupe positive and another film positive. Restoration made by the Hungarian National Film Fund – Hungarian Filmlab.

1957: Ila Ayn? (Vers l’inconnu ?) by Georges Nasser (1h30, Lebanon): in Competition.
Presented by Abbout Productions and Fondation Liban Cinema. With the generous support of Bankmed – Lebanon. The original 35mm Fine Grain Master Positive was scanned in 4k, retouched and color-corrected in a resolution of 2K. All works were carried out by Neyrac Films – France. Sound restoration by db Studios – Lebanon. In collaboration with The Talkies. World Sales: Nadi Lekol Nas.

1967: Skupljači Perja (I Even Met Happy Gypsies/J’ai même rencontré des Tziganes heureux) by Aleksandar Petrović (1h22, Serbia): in Competition, Grand Prix Spécial du Jury ex-æquo, Prix de la Critique Internationale – FIPRESCI ex-aequo
Presented by Jugoslovenska Kinoteka/The Yugoslav Film Archive and Malavida.
New 35mm print from the original negative in perfect shape then scanned in 2K and cleaned up.

1967: Blow-up by Michelangelo Antonioni (1966, 1h51, United Kingdom, Italy, United States of America): Grand Prix International du Festival.
Presented by Criterion, Cineteca di Bologna and Istituto Luce – Cinecittà, in collaboration with Warner Bros and Park Circus. Restoration work carried out at Criterion, New York and L’Immagine Ritrovata, Bologna under the supervision of Director of Photography Luca Bigazzi.

1969: Matzor (Siege/Siège) by Gilberto Tofano (1h29, Israel): in Competition.
A presentation of the Jerusalem Cinematheque – Israel Film Archive, in partnership with United King Films and the support of the Rabinovich Foundation. The original 35mm black and white negatives were scanned in 4K by Cinelab Romania. It was digitally restored and finalized in 2K by Opus Digital Lab in Tel Aviv. Restoration and color grading lead by Ido Karilla, supervised by DOP David Gurfinkel.

1970: Soleil O (Oh, Sun) by Med Hondo (1h38, Mauritania-France): Semaine de la critique.
Presented by The Film Foundation. Restored by Cineteca di Bologna at L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory in collaboration with Med Hondo. Restoration funded by the George Lucas Family Foundation and The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project.

1976: Babatu, les trois conseils by Jean Rouch (1h33, Nigeria-France): in Competition.
Pressented by the CNC, Inoussa Ousseini, the Comité du film ethnographique and the Fondation Jean Rouch. Digital restoration made from the 2K digitization of the 16mm negatives. Restoration carried out by L21.

1976: Ai no korîda (In the Realm of the Senses/L’Empire des sens) de Nagisa Oshima (1h43, France-Japan): Quinzaine des Réalisateurs.
Presented by Argos Films and TAMASA. Digization and 4K resoration from the original negative by Eclair. Sound restoration from the original magnetic sound by L.E. Diapason. The film will be released in French theaters.

1980: All that Jazz (Que le spectacle commence) by Bob Fosse (1979, 2h03, United States of America): Palme d’or ex-æquo.
Presented by Park Circus. 4K restoration by Twentieth Century Fox and the Academy Film Archive in collaboration with The Film Foundation. The restoration was produced from the original camera negative at Sony Colorworks in Culver City California.

1981: Człowiek z żelaza (Man of Iron/L’Homme de fer) by Andrzej Wajda (2h33, Poland): Palme d’or. 
A presentation of the ZEBRA Film Studio (Studio Filmowe ZEBRA) with the collaboration of the Polish Film Institute. 2K film restoration from original colour 35 mm negative. Restored sound from original magnetic tape. Restoration lead by Daniel Pietrzyk, colour grading lead by Aleksandra Kraus, at Yakumama Film, Warsaw. Sound restoration lead by Tomasz Dukszta.
Artistic supervision by: Andrzej Wajda (director), Jerzy Łukaszewicz (DOP), Piotr Zawadzki (sound).

1982: Yol – The Full Version (The Way/La Permission) by Yilmaz Güney, directed by Serif Gören (1h53, Switzerland): Palme d’or ex-æquo, Prix de la Critique Internationale – FIPRESCI
Presented by DFK FILMS LTD. Zürich. Restoration from the original 35mm negative, from the interpositive and the positive print. Restoration and new sound mix from the original digitized tapes. International Sales: The Match Factory.

1983: Narayama Bushikō (Ballad of Narayama/La Ballade de Narayama) by Shôhei Imamura (2h13, Japan): Palme d’or.
Presented by Toei. 4K Scan, image restoration ARRISCAN and sound Golden Eye in 2K from the 35mm original negative, a duplicate and video tapes.

1992: El sol del membrillo (Le Songe de la lumière) by Victor Erice (2h20, Spain): Prix du Jury ex-æquo, Prix de la Critique Internationale – FIPRESCI
Presented by the Filmoteca de Catalunya and Camm Cinco SL. 6K scan, restoration and color-grading from the 35mm negatives and other original video tapes. Digitazing and sound restoration from 35mm magnetic tapes. Technical support made by the Filmoteca de Catalunya, supervised by Victor Erice. Variations on the initial editing brought by the director.

1951-1999: A short history of short films presented by the Festival de Cannes. A program curated by Christian Jeune and Jacques Kermabon.
Spiegel van Holland (Miroirs de Hollande) by Bert Haanstra (1951, 10mn, The Netherlands) / La Seine a rencontré Paris by Joris Ivens (1958, 32mn, France) / Pas de deux by Norman McLaren (1968, 13mn, Canada) / Harpya by Raoul Servais (1979, 9mn, Belgium) / Peel by Jane Campion (1986, 9mn, Australia) / L’Interview by Xavier Giannoli (1998, 15mn, France) / When the Day Breaks by Amanda Forbis and Wendy Tilby (1999, 10mn, Canada)

Other events, other restored prints, other guests

Madame de… by Max Ophüls (1953, 1h45, France)
A Gaumont restoration. A show to pay a tribute to Danielle Darrieux for her birthday and presented by Dominique Besnehard, Pierre Murat and Henri-Jean Servat who will screen the latest filmed interview of Danielle Darrieux.

L’Atalante by Jean Vigo (1934, 1h28, France), restored 35mm print
Presented by Gaumont, la Cinémathèque française and The Film Foundation of Martin Scorsese. First digital restoration in 4k and conversion to a 35mm print. A new discovery of the closest version of the director’s work thanks to Gaumont, Luce Vigo and historian Bernard Eisenschitz. Restoration carried out at L’Image Retrouvée laboratory in Bologna and Paris.

Native Son (Sang noir) by Pierre Chenal (1951, 1h47, Argentina)
A presentation by Argentina Sono Film. Restoration with the collaboration of the Library of Congress.

Paparazzi by Jacques Rozier (1963, 18mn, France)
Presented by Jacques Rozier and la Cinémathèque française. 4K Digitization and 2K restoration works made from image and sound negatives at Hiventy laboratory, with the support of the CNC and in collaboration with Les Archives Audiovisuelles de Monaco, la Cinémathèque Suisse and Extérieur nuit.
The film will be introduced by Jacques Rozier.

Belle de jour (Beauty of the Day) by Luis Buñuel (1967, 1h40, France)
Presented by STUDIOCANAL. Digitization from the original negative and 4K restoration carried out by Hiventy laboratory for STUDIOCANAL with the support of the CNC, of la Cinémathèque française, of the Fonds Culturel Franco-Américain and the Maison YVES SAINT LAURENT. French theater distribution: Carlotta.

A River Runs Through it (Et au milieu coule une rivière) by Robert Redford (1992, 2h04, United States of America)
Presented by Pathé. 4K Scan and 4K restoration from original image and sound 35mm negatives. Restoration carried out by Pathé at Technicolor France laboratory for the image in collaboration with Philippe Rousselot, cinematographer of the film, and L.E. Diapason for the sound restoration.

Lucía by Humberto Solas (1968, 2h40, Cuba)
A presentation of the Film Foundation. Restored by Cineteca di Bologna at L’Immagine Ritrovata laboratory in association with Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos (ICAIC). Restoration funded by Turner Classic Movies and The Film Foundation’s World Cinema Project.

Documentaries about Cinema

La belge histoire du festival de Cannes (The Belgian’s Road to Cannes) by Henri de Gerlache (2017, 1h02, Belgium)
Presented by Alizé Production. Produced by Alizé Production, co-produced by RTBF (Belgian television) & Proximus.
A joyful road movie to discover the Belgian cinema which has been at Cannes for 70 years. The filmmakers of yesterday are talking with those of today to paint a picture of a free and heterogeneous cinema. A “Belgian story” of the biggest festival in the world.

David Stratton – A Cinematic Life by Sally Aitken (2017, 1h37, Australia)
Presented by Stranger Than Fiction Films. Produced by Stranger Than Fiction Films, with Screen Australia, ABC TV Arts, Screen NSW and Adelaide Film Festival.
An love adventure of film critic David Stratton with his adopted country, Australia, which led him to understand himself. It is also the glorious history of Australian cinema and its creators told by this Cannes-regular film-lover interested in the world.

Filmworker by Tony Zierra (2017, 1h29, United States of America)
Presented and produced by True Studio Cinema.
Young actor Leon Vitali abandoned his prosperous career after Barry Lyndon to become the faithful right hand of director Stanley Kubrick. For more than two decades, Leon has played a crucial role behind the scenes by helping Kubrick. A complex and interdependent relationship between Leon and Kubrick based on devotion, sacrifice and the harsh and joyful reality of creative process.

Becoming Cary Grant (Cary Grant – de l’autre côté du miroir) by Mark Kidel (2017, 1h25, France)
Presented by ARTE France and Showtime Documentary Films. Produced by YUZU Productions, coproduced by ARTE France, in association with ro*co films productions.
Cary Grant is one of the biggest Hollywood actors. In his fifties, he started a cure of  LSD to free himself from his demons. For the first time, with his words, he retraces his journey. The story of a man in search of himself and the love he did not find in his life. The words of Cary Grant are interpreted by Jonathan Pryce.

Jean Douchet, l’enfant agité by Fabien Hagège, Guillaume Namur, Vincent Haasser (2017, 1h30, France)
Presented and produced by Carlotta and Kidam.
Three young cinephiles follow Jean Douchet, question his friends and former students. This documentary reveals the man and his critical philosophy, a part of the history of the Cahiers du Cinéma and this Art of loving to which he has devoted his existence.

 

 

Erik Anderson

Erik Anderson is the founder/owner and Editor-in-Chief of AwardsWatch and has always loved all things Oscar, having watched the Academy Awards since he was in single digits; making lists, rankings and predictions throughout the show. This led him down the path to obsessing about awards. Much later, he found himself in film school and the film forums of GoldDerby, and then migrated over to the former Oscarwatch (now AwardsDaily), before breaking off to create AwardsWatch in 2013. He is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, accredited by the Cannes Film Festival, Telluride Film Festival, Toronto International Film Festival and more, is a member of the International Cinephile Society (ICS), The Society of LGBTQ Entertainment Critics (GALECA), Hollywood Critics Association (HCA) and the International Press Academy. Among his many achieved goals with AwardsWatch, he has given a platform to underrepresented writers and critics and supplied them with access to film festivals and the industry and calls the Bay Area his home where he lives with his husband and son.

Recent Posts

Director Watch Podcast Ep. 44 – ‘The Beguiled’ (Sofia Coppola, 2017)

Welcome to Director Watch! On this AwardsWatch podcast, co-hosts Ryan McQuade and Jay Ledbetter attempt… Read More

May 2, 2024

‘Sugarcane,’ ‘The Teacher’ Earn Awards at 67th San Francisco International Film Festival as SFFILM Enters a State of Change

SFFILM announced the winners of the juried Golden Gate Awards competition and the Audience Awards at the 67th San Francisco International… Read More

May 1, 2024

AppleTV+ Unveils ‘Presumed Innocent’ Trailer from David E. Kelley Starring Jake Gyllenhaal

Apple TV+ today debuted the teaser for Presumed Innocent, the upcoming, eight-part limited series starring… Read More

May 1, 2024

48th San Francisco International LGBTQ+ Film Festival to Kickoff with ‘Young Hearts’ and Juneteenth Celebration

Frameline48, the largest LGBTQ+ cinema showcase in California, runs June 19-29, 2024 and will announce… Read More

April 30, 2024

May the Force Be With You: Ranking All 11 Live-Action Star Wars Films

In what feels like a long time ago, in our own galaxy not far, far… Read More

April 30, 2024

This website uses cookies.