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10 takeaways from the 78th Cannes Film Festival
10 takeaways from the 78th Cannes Film Festival

RTÉ News​

time27-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RTÉ News​

10 takeaways from the 78th Cannes Film Festival

There are years when Cannes feels like a ritual - and then there was this year, when the Croisette bristles with the kind of energy one can't manufacture, w rites Darragh Leen: red carpet risks, jaw-dropping debuts, and the comforting return of cinema that actually says something. Here are ten takeaways from the 2025 festival... 1. Trump's film tariffs spoil the party Just when the festival had reclaimed its post-pandemic, post-industry strikes buoyancy, US president Donald Trump cast an economic shadow over the Riviera. His proposed plan to impose tariffs on films made outside the US sent a jolt through the Marché. Tensions simmered among hesitant distributors and producers. If imposed, the tariffs could damage transatlantic co-productions and the already-fragile indie distribution pipeline. It wasn't the kind of drama Cannes was hoping for, but it certainly made for an anxious undercurrent. The stars had their say, as well. Robert De Niro called Trump the 'philistine' president while Richard Linklater scoffed at the tariff proposition exclaiming "That's not gonna happen right? That guy changes his mind like 50 times in one day". Robert De Niro shared a strong message against Donald Trump's tariff policies on art and cinema. #cannes2025 — Brut America (@brutamerica) May 13, 2025 2. Cannes bans red carpet nudity This year's red carpet came with another new set of rules. The festival decided to ban voluminous outfits and, most notably, nudity of any kind. Organizers insisted it was 'for decency reasons', but others pointed out that Cannes has become as much of a platform for fashion statements and performance art as an exhibition of cinema. Of course, there were still flourishes of defiance. Eva Longoria, Halle Berry and Heidi Klum all showed up in billowing attire while a few - including Miss Universe 2016, Iris Mittenaere - were in more of, let's say, a state of nature. The strict posture felt like an overcorrection but Cannes thrives on controlled chaos and on the red carpet rules are there to be broken. 3. Father-daughter dramas take the spotlight Some years are defined by form, others by theme. This year, the thematic clarion that called out was the complicated, often tender dynamic between fathers and daughters. Joachim Trier's Sentimental Value led the pack - a meditation on memory and reconciliation, anchored by show stopping performances. Wes Anderson's The Phoenician Scheme explores the strained relationship between wealthy businessman Zsa-Zsa Korda and his daughter Liesl, a nun. Korda appoints Liesl as sole heir to his estate, but this is as much a desperate attempt at winning her forgiveness as a shrewd business decision. Meanwhile, in Sirat, a father, driven by unconditional love, searches frantically for his daughter who disappears at a desert rave in Morocco. Queer Palm winner The Little Sister subverted the trope entirely, with the father's absence felt as a haunting void. In each case, we received truly affecting meditations on regret. 4. The preposterous standing ovations persist If applause was currency, Cannes could fund its own space program. The ritual of the standing ovation remains one of the festival's more absurd traditions - timed, documented, and weaponised for marketing. Trier's Sentimental Value film got 19 minutes, the third longest ever at Cannes. Jafar Panahi's It Was Just an Accident clocked 12. Ethan Coen's Honey Don't! somehow scraped six and a half. Do they mean anything? Not really. A warm four-minute ovation often says more than an arm-cramping 15. But Cannes, bless it, will never give up its cherished barometer of emotional excess. 5. Panahi's Palme makes It six for Neon Panahi's It Was Just an Accident, a cerebral portrait of fragmented memory in modern Iran, earned the Palme d'Or - marking film distribution company Neon's sixth consecutive win. It's not just an impressive feat; it's starting to feel like a monopoly. Neon's grip on the Palme has sparked rumours about a curation bias, but the quality of their choices remains beyond reproach. If you're betting on Cannes gold, Neon is the safest horse in the race. 6. MUBI emerges as a Cannes power player That said, If there was a breakout distributor this year, it wasn't Netflix or Amazon, but MUBI. What began as a streaming service for curious cinephiles has evolved impressively into a production powerhouse - with taste. They walked away from Cannes with multiple aquisitions under their belt in Competition, not to mention the statement $24m purchase of Lynne Ramsay's Die My Love (starring Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson) as well as buzzy acquisitions like Mascha Schilinski's enigmatic Sound of Falling and Grand Prix winner Sentimental Value. The company's brand of artful, politically alert cinema now rivals the prestige of A24 - only with less merchandise. Cannes has officially found a new heavyweight. 7. Actor-turned-director debuts shine bright There are regularly directorial debuts from actors that feel like vanity projects. Not this year. Kristen Stewart's The Chronology of Water introduced the former Twilight star as a filmmaking talent to watch while Harris Dickinson stunned with Urchin, a raw, deeply personal drama about homelessness and masculinity on the fringes of society. Scarlett Johansson's Eleanor the Great was a tender portrait of aging and friendship. It's not that actors can't direct, it's just rare that they do so with such precision and humility. 8. Eddington brings back bad memories Ari Aster's Eddington, a Covid-era quasi-Western set in a dustbowl New Mexico town, was far and away the most divisive film of Cannes' 78th renewal. It captures a harrowing time in very recent history and for some, that struck too close to home. The mere sight of a face mask was enough to send audience members home upset. Aster has garnered a reputation for making challenging, elliptical horror and, although it's had its champions, the reaction to Eddington has been mainly one of confusion and frustration. Either way, it left a mark, but not always the kind you'd hope for. 9. Paul Mescal delivers again, but History of Sound falls flat Mescal mania continues. With his performance in The History of Sound, the Kildare actor delivered another masterclass in restrained grief. Unfortunately, the much-hyped queer period drama fell flat. Despite an arresting premise - two young men recording folk songs across wartime America - the film never quite gelled and always felt a little too timid for its own good. Mescal and co-star Josh O'Connor have crackling chemistry, no doubt, but the film is afraid to push the boundaries and ends up coming off as uninspired. Still, one mis-step doesn't dull Mescal's ascent. He remains the real deal. 10. The best Cannes in years? Let's not bury the lede. This was one of the strongest Cannes slates in years. There wasn't a clear dud to speak of. Even the failures were noble. From Chinese sci-fi epics scored by M83 to Brazilian political thrillers, there was a sense that Cannes had found its taste again. It should be noted that Dublin and London-based film company Element Pictures won two awards, for the second year running, for a pair of notable feature debuts - Akinola Davies Jr.'s My Father's Shadow, and Harry Lighton's Pillion. No empty provocation. No gimmickry for gimmickry's sake. Just bold, sincere, frequently strange cinema.

Malaysian Short Film 'Bleat!' Wins Queer Palm Award At Cannes Film Festival 2025
Malaysian Short Film 'Bleat!' Wins Queer Palm Award At Cannes Film Festival 2025

Hype Malaysia

time26-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Hype Malaysia

Malaysian Short Film 'Bleat!' Wins Queer Palm Award At Cannes Film Festival 2025

Earlier in April, the Malaysian-Tamil short film 'Bleat! (கத்து!)' made history as the first Malaysian short film to compete in the Critics' Week section at the Cannes Film Festival. A month later, the project achieved another milestone after it won the Queer Palm Award. 'Bleat!' is a Malaysian-French-Filipino comedic drama short film directed and written by Malaysian filmmaker Ananth Subramaniam. The movie tells the story of an elderly Malaysian-Tamil couple who discovers their male goat is pregnant. As the goat was raised for a ceremonial slaughter, the couple faces the dilemma of proceeding with the ritual or risking divine consequences. On 24th May 2025, the 2025 Cannes Film Festival closed out and awarded the winning movies of the year. 'Bleat!' won the Queer Palm award under the short film category, making history as the first Malaysian short film to win the award. The Queer Palm is an independently sponsored prize for selected LGBT-relevant films in the Cannes Film Festival. The award recognises films for their treatment of LGBT themes. Upon winning the award, Director Ananth Subramaniam shared a touching speech with the crowd. He said, ' There are some in the older generation who are so oblivious to change. Even when the change hits them right in the face, they feel the need to ignore it. But tonight, in this space, among you, I feel the opposite. I feel seen. I feel our stories are being heard, our truths acknowledged, and our joys celebrated.' Ananth's speech continues, 'Bleat! was born out of defiance, but it grew in tenderness. It's a film about the voice that breaks the silence, even when it trembles. About bodies that don't conform but still dance. About queerness not just as identity, but as resistance and reinvention.' Ending his speech, he said, 'To the Queer Palm jury — thank you for holding space for films that don't ask for permission. And to the older generation, may you someday listen, not to correct, but to understand.' The comments were filled with congratulations from local and international movie buffs. We would also like to congratulate Ananth and the 'Bleat!' team for their historic win. May this be the first award of many to come! Check out the official trailer for 'Bleat!' below: Sources: China Press, Instagram (1)(2)

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