This years Cannes Film Festival lineup has arrived, delivering titles from Jean-Luc Godard (Le Livre dImage), Spike Lee (BlacKkKlansman), and more. Asghar FarhadisEverybody Knows will be this years opening film among the 18 films in competition. David Robert MitchellsUnder the Silver Lake, distributed by A24, will make its debut, as will Oscar winner Pawel PawlikowskisCold War.
One thing this years lineup is sorely lacking is female filmmakers. There are only three with films competing for the Palme dor this year: Alice Rohrwacher (Lazzaro Felice), Eva Husson (Girls of the Sun), _and Nadine Labaki (Capernaum). Last year also only had three female directors in competition, and made bittersweet history when Sofia Coppola became the second woman—ever—to win the prestigious director prize. The first was Jane Campion in 1993. The lack of female inclusion was also the subject of a rousing speech by jury member Jessica Chastain, who was disturbed by the way female characters were presented in the film offerings that year.
This years lineup will also include a galactic screening of Solo: A Star Wars Story (out of competition) and Pope Francis: A Man of His Word from Wim Wenders. More titles will be announced in the days to come. In the Thursday press conference in Paris, Cannes director Thierry Frémaux gave a mysterious response about whether director Lars von Trier would return to the festival. (He was banned in 2011 for saying he had sympathy for Adolf Hitler and jokingly calling himself a Nazi.) “We will answer in a few days,” Frémaux replied, per Variety. Von Trier has the upcoming thriller The House That Jack Built, which stars Matt Dillon as a serial killer in the 1970s.
Frémaux also “hinted,” Variety notes, at possibly adding Terry Gilliams long-awaited (read: extremely cursed) drama The Man Who Killed Don Quixote, though it has been tangled up in legal issues. He also said they are still in talks with Paolo Sorrentino for his two-part film Loro.
As was announced on Wednesday, dont expect any offerings from Netflix this year. The streaming platform made a rocky debut at last years festival with two films, and, though it was previously reported that they would return again with five films, Netflix head Ted Sarandos declared on Wednesday that the company would be skipping the festival altogether. The culture clash between Frances strict cinematic sensibilities and Netflixs streaming-first mindset has proven to be fatal, for now at least.
“Theres a risk in us going in this way and having our films and filmmakers treated disrespectfully at the festival,” Sarandos said. “Theyve set the tone. I dont think it would be good for us to be there.”
However, Netflix executives will be on the ground to peruse titles that dont yet have distribution. And who knows, maybe Frémaux and Sarandos will patch things up by this time next year, finding common ground at the star-studded Palais.
Get Vanity Fairs HWD NewsletterSign up for essential industry and award news from Hollywood.Full ScreenPhotos:Celebrities-Turned-Activists Throughout the Years
Audrey Hepburn
In 1989, Hepburn—who survived World War II in the Netherlands as a child—was appointed as an ambassador to UNICEF, and, as the organization mentions on its Web site, she made up to 15 speeches a day for the group on behalf of children in need around the world. In a 1988 Global News interview, Hepburn, who lived in Switzerland and out of the public eye, said that she didnt have to think hard to take on this role to be an advocate for children. “Im moving around the world once again, but Im happy to do it, because for children, Id go to the moon.”Photo: By Peter Charlesworth/LightRocket/Getty Images.
Jane Fonda
Fonda was a vocal anti-war activist during the Vietnam War, sparking controversy with her infamous “Hanoi Jane” photograph. Since then, Fonda has been known for supporting and championing dozens of causes, including the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Power & Potential, for which she raised money at her big 80th birthday bash this past December. “If it didnt make a difference for famous people to speak out, the right wing wouldnt object. We are like repeaters,” she told Vanity Fair then. “Repeaters are the towers that you see at the top of mountains that pick up signals from the valley and carry them over the mountains to a broader audience. And thats what celebrities do, if were doing our job right. Were picking up the voices of people who cant be heard and broadcasting their story.”Photo: From Bettmann/Getty Images.
Harry Belafonte
The actor and singer, and friend of both Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Bobby Kennedy, has spoken up for civil rights and social causes for over 50 years. He helped organize the march at Selma in 1965, and even advised the organizers of the 2017 Womens March. Now at the age of 91, he is encouraging Americans to keep their chins up in the Trump era. “I guess the thing that I most want to get to is that the best of us is still in front of us; the worst of us were experiencing,” he said at the Robert F. Kennedy Ripple of Hope Awards last December.Photo: From Bettmann/Getty Images.
Elizabeth Taylor
When the Reagan administration did its best to ignore the AIDS crisis of the early 1980s, Taylor faced it. As Vanity Fair wrote in 2015, she reportedly ran an underground pharmaceuticals ring for AIDS medication out of her Bel Air mansion. “She was saving lives,” her friend Kathy Ireland said of the efforts. In 1991, she founded the Elizabeth Taylor Aids Foundation (E.T.A.F.) to provide grants to organizations that help those living with and affected by HIV and AIDS. Taylor was also a leading voice behind AmfAR, the foundation for AIDS research, and is still remembered as an advocate for the cause.Photo: By Jeffrey Markowitz/Sygma/Getty Images.
Mark Ruffalo
In 2011, Ruffalo founded Water Defense, an organization that works to ban hydraulic fracturing in the state of New York. “Fracking is an extreme form of oil and gas extraction that leads to water contamination, air pollution, earthquakes, illness, exacerbates climate change, and turns communities upside down,” he wrote on the blog EcoWatch in 2016.Photo: By D Dipasupil/Getty Images.
Ellen Page
After Page came out as gay in 2014, she became an active and vocal advocate for the L.G.B.T.Q. community, through Vices Gaycation series, as well as a loud voice for immigrants. At LAX last year, she posted videos during a protest of President Trumps travel ban and was right up in the thick of things. “I am young, yes, but what I have learned is that love, the beauty of it, the joy of it, and yes, even the pain of it, is the most incredible gift to give and to receive as a human being,” she said during her coming-out speech. “And we deserve to experience love fully, equally, without shame and without compromise.”Photo: By Kristina Bumphrey/StarPix/REX/Shutterstock.
George and Amal Clooney
The Clooney Foundation for Justice has supported a variety of causes in the past year, including bestowing a grant to the Southern Poverty Law Center following violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, last summer. The Clooneys most recently joined the March for Our Lives in Washington, D.C., and donated half a million dollars to the cause.Photo: Photograph by Justin Bishop.PreviousNext
Yohana DestaYohana Desta is a Hollywood writer for VanityFair.com.
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