The Cannes Film Festival returns in July this year with a rich official selection competing for the Palme d'Or after the Covid pandemic robbed the world's leading film festival of its 2020 edition.
Here are the 24 films competing from July 5 to 17 for the prestigious prize awarded by a jury headed by US director Spike Lee:
From 'Robocop' to 'Basic Instinct' to 'Starship Troopers', Dutch director Paul Verhoeven has always walked a fine line between gaudy schlock and cinematic genius. His latest tale recounts a lesbian affair in a 17th-century convent, starring Virginie Efira and Charlotte Rampling.
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Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard star as a glamourous celebrity couple whose lives are upended by the arrival of their first child. The first film in a decade from auteur Carax is also the first in English from the eccentric French mind behind arthouse favourites 'Holy Motors' and 'The Lovers on the Bridge'.
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Exactly 20 years after winning the Palme d'Or with 'The Son's Room' and nine years after heading the main jury at Cannes, Moretti is back with his first-ever adaptation of a novel, which looks at three families who live on three different floors, in three chapters.
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Adapted from a work by French writer Charles Peguy, who was killed in battle in the first months of World War I, the film charts the fall from grace of a star TV reporter whose life crisis is shown against a backdrop of contemporary France.
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After his 2015 smash hit adaptation of 'Macbeth' starring Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard, and his take on the Assassin's Creed video game in 2016, the Australian director looks at events leading up to the Port Arthur mass shooting in Tasmania, in which 35 died and led to reforms of Australian gun control laws.
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Tilda Swinton stars as a Scottish horticulturist in the Thai director's first film since 'Cemetery of Splendour,' and 11 years after he won the Palme d'Or for the dreamlike 'Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives'.
Shot in Colombia, 'Memoria' explores the relationship of Swinton's character with a French archaeologist and a musician as she tries to understand sudden strange sounds in the night.
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Set in the outskirts of N'Djamena, 'Lingui' tells the story of an adolescent whose unwanted pregnancy puts her in conflict with her country's traditions and the law. Haroun lives in France, but most of his films have been produced in his birth country, which he left during unrest there in the 1980s.
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A film by the veteran Palme d'Or winner, based on three graphic novels by US author Adrian Tomine and set in a mixed neighbourhood of the French capital, about three young women and a young man who are sometimes friends, sometimes lovers, and sometimes both.
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A film about love and its complications, Trier's 'Worst Person' -- the third of Trier's Oslo trilogy -- looks at Julie, who turns 30 and is looking for answers in a new relationship only to realise that the much-hoped-for new perspective on life is not really happening.
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Two strangers -- a Finnish woman and a gloomy Russian -- share a compartment of a train winding its way up to the Arctic circle in a road movie set against the backdrop of the 1980s Soviet Union, by the Finnish director who claims that "the only way to be free is to accept the absurdity of life".
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After winning prizes in Locarno, Cannes and Berlin for his first three films, Lapid explores two battles waged by an Israeli director, one against the death of freedom and one against the death of a mother, both of which are doomed to failure.
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Featuring Lea Seydoux, who starred in 'Blue Is The Warmest Colour' that won Cannes in 2013, Enyedi's film kicks off with a bet by a sea captain that he'll marry the first woman who walks in. The film is based on a novel by Milan Fust.
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