Ama Gloria
From Cannes Critics’ Week comes a heartbreaking and unforgettably tender portrait of a six-year-old French girl’s bond with her Cape Verdean nanny.
Read More →Anatomy of a Fall
Bristling with emotional depth, this Palme d’Or–winning courtroom drama puts the complexities of a relationship on trial.
Read More →Animalia
A mix of sci-fi genre-bending and apocalyptic tension, this debut uses an alien invasion to peer across the stakes of faith and family in Morocco.
Read More →Bad Behaviour
Jennifer Connelly and Ben Whishaw star in this blackly comic debut about an ex–child star who attends a spiritual retreat in search of enlightenment.
Read More →Banel & Adama
Franco-Senegalese director Ramata-Toulaye Sy’s first longform work is a haunting fable of star-cross’d lovers set in a rural village.
Read More →Blond Night
A chance encounter after dark offers an autistic man a moment of transcendence.
Read More →Come and Work
The first ever African film to screen at Cannes, this detailed investigation of village life is a profound meditation on time, memory and community.
Read More →Conann
A deliriously defiant, all-female reimagining of Conan the Barbarian that’s feted to become a new cult classic.
Read More →A Couple
Frederick Wiseman’s third foray into dramatic features centres on Sophia Tolstoy’s complicated marriage to her novelist husband.
Read More →Disco Boy
Franz Rogowski propels this mesmeric musing on wounded masculinity, which is ignited by French electro superstar Vitalic’s feverish soundtrack.
Read More →Fairplay
A dark comedy about a teenager craving recognition, a worker who’ll do anything to win the jackpot and a senior executive at the end of his career.
Read More →FROM.BEYOND
An arresting mockumentary about first contact and alien sex, which won the Méliès d’Or prize at Sitges.
Read More →Gods of the Supermarket
A playfully inventive queer pop collage that turns its gaze on mainstream media representations of the male body.
Read More →Golden Eighties
Chantal Akerman puts love and capitalism in the crosshairs in this acidly funny, vibrantly coloured musical set entirely within a shopping mall.
Read More →Heat Spell
Tensions rise along with the temperature gauge in this blistering snapshot of sibling rivalry.
Read More →Invincible
This deeply moving Clermont-Ferrand International Special Jury Prize winner follows a troubled teen’s last-ditch attempt at freedom.
Read More →It's Raining in the House
Winner of the French Touch Prize of the Jury at Cannes Critics’ Week, this coming-of-age drama is a stirring social-realist fiction debut.
Read More →I, Your Mother
“When will you return?” This haunting question – familiar to many an expat – is asked of a Senegalese student in West Berlin.
Read More →Last Summer
Catherine Breillat (Abuse of Weakness) returns with a daring portrait of a woman’s intimate relationship with her teen stepson, starring Léa Drucker.
Read More →Letter From My Village
This trailblazing work – the first feature made by a woman from Sub-Saharan Africa – sets a story of love and land against a postcolonial backdrop.
Read More →Little by Little
In her first foray into cinema, Safi Faye acts in Jean Rouch’s comedy about two Nigeriens whose Paris trip becomes a lesson in ‘reverse ethnography’.
Read More →Little Nicholas: Happy as Can Be
In this Annecy Best Feature–winning adaptation of the Le petit Nicolas comic books, a mischievous character meets the men who brought him to life.
Read More →Lou
An unprecedented and enlightening chance to witness the world through an autistic child’s eyes.
Read More →Meantime
A young man goes on a holiday to the countryside, where his would-be-peaceful wellness routine is assailed by the terrifying sounds of silence.
Read More →The Nature of Love
In this Cannes Un Certain Regard comedy, the ineffability of romance is put to the test by an unfaithful married philosopher.
Read More →Neneh Superstar
Put on your ballet shoes for this triumphant, feel-good tale of a 12-year-old Parisian dancer who overcomes the odds of institutional prejudice.
Read More →Omen
Four Congolese people accused of practising sorcery forge very different spiritual paths in this electrifying Cannes award-winning cinematic mixtape.
Read More →On the Adamant
Winner of the Berlinale Golden Bear, this empathetic film invites viewers to spend time with the residents of a floating art-therapy centre in Paris.
Read More →Passages
Love Is Strange (MIFF 2014) director Ira Sachs embraces the art of French cinema in this queer, Paris-set musing on a complicated relationship.
Read More →Return to Reason
Man Ray’s classic shorts are reimagined for their 100th anniversary alongside an ecstatic soundtrack from SQÜRL members Jim Jarmusch and Carter Logan.
Read More →Room 999
David Cronenberg, Baz Luhrmann, Claire Denis and a host of directors discuss cinema’s future in this riveting sequel to Wim Wenders’s 1982 classic.
Read More →Selbé: One Among Many
Safi Faye’s groundbreaking 1983 ethnographic documentary uses one Senegalese woman’s experience to comment widely on gender and society.
Read More →The Silent Ones
Obstinacy and recklessness lead a team of fishermen out into dangerous waters.
Read More →Simo
The rivalry between teenage brothers reaches dangerous heights in Toronto’s 2022 Best Canadian Short winner.
Read More →Trailer of the Film That Will Never Exist: 'Phony Wars'
From Cannes comes the final work by the late, legendary genius Jean-Luc Godard – a dazzling glimpse into a feature film that never came to be.
Read More →Trouble Every Day
Claire Denis’s divisive, seductively erotic horror film rises again, with Béatrice Dalle and Vincent Gallo in all their grisly, sensuous glory.
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