Tag Archives: Cannes Film Festival

Screening at Cannes: Lynne Ramsay’s ‘Die, My Love’

Jennifer Lawrence in Die My Love Kimberly French/Courtesy of Cannes Film Festival

Although it eventually loses staying power, Lynne Ramsay’s ferocious relationship drama Die, My Love quickly seeps beneath your skin, practically holding you hostage in its initial half. Ramsay’s first feature in eight years—after the Cannes crime drama You Were Never Really Here—casts Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson in its leading roles, as Grace and Jackson, a pair of newlyweds who inherit a Montana farmhouse. This rural, isolated setting plays host to the couple’s steadily crumbling relationship, which its actors embody by jumping headfirst into raw, instinctive performances.


DIE, MY LOVE ★★1/2 (2.5/4 stars)
Directed by: Lynne Ramsay
Written by: Lynne Ramsay, Enda Walsh, Alice Birch
Starring: Jennifer Lawrence, Robert Pattinson, LaKeith Stanfield, Sissy Spacek, Nick Nolte
Running time: 118 mins.


At times, Ramsay practically films acting exercises with Lawrence and Pattinson, who crawl along the dusty floors, giving into feline animalism. Their sex is feral and playful, drawing the viewer into the lust and euphoria of their honeymoon stage. However, the movie quickly cuts to several months down the line, after they’ve had a child, and they’ve entered a rut that keeps them at loggerheads.

The film has been touted as one of postpartum depression—given the timing of the duo’s simultaneous breakdown—but this feels like a mis-categorization. If anything, the couple’s woes are catalyzed by Grace staying home to care for their, baby while Jackson spends more and more time away, at a blue collar job whose details we barely learn (we remain largely tethered to Grace’s point of view). The film’s brash, diegetic soundtrack, as Grace oscillates between playing early ‘60s rock and roll and ‘80s bubblegum glam at deafening volume, creates a hair-raising baseline, complemented by disembodied images of a forest on fire. Perhaps this is a premonition involving the woods surrounding the couple’s home, but its abstract nature speaks to how Grace and Jackson are being engulfed by some unseen force, born of their own anxieties.

Seamus McGarvey’s cinematography washes out the movie’s color palette, over-exposing it ever so slightly, so that every scene resembles what one might experience during a head-splitting hangover. His lensing also makes deft and dizzying use of swirling bokeh, imbuing the lush backgrounds with a sensation of vertigo and unease. In keeping with this approach, Ramsay gently twirls the camera around the characters too, introducing gradually more erratic movements for the first few scenes. There isn’t a moment of calm during Die, My Love, placing its most effective moments comfortably alongside Andrzej Żuławski’s 1981 discomforting romance Possession, in which Sam Neill and Isabelle Adjani turn a couple’s divorce into a focal point for psychological horror. Lawrence and Pattinson don’t quite stray that far into genre territory, but their full-bodied commitment proves alluring and amusing.

After laying its cards on the table, it isn’t long before Die, My Love plateaus both narratively and aesthetically. Its back-and-forth screenplay structure renders flashbacks confusing on occasion, forcing your brain to work overtime to scenes in chronological order, though figuring out its confounding emotional inner workings can be part of the fun. Still, the movie’s more esoteric machinations in the present don’t quite fit. Lakeith Stanfield, for instance, plays a minor role as a mysterious, helmeted biker who appears to stalk Grace when Jackson is away, piquing Grace’s curiosity as though he were some phantasmic stand-in for the masculinity and exciting romance Jackson no longer represents for her. But Stanfield’s role is so truncated as to lose even this symbolic meaning.

Beyond a point, the characters don’t brush up against the movie’s established emotional confines more than they do the first time we meet them. The evolution (or de-evolution) of Grace and Jackson’s marriage—alongside the parallel tale of Jackson’s mother (Sissy Spacek) dealing with her own terrifying isolation a few miles away—is a plot largely in stasis. Although the movie hints towards zigs and zags that might make things shocking, or make its drama more rigorous, the malaise the movie depicts is fixed, and unchanging.

On one hand, this mirrors the sensation of being stuck in a dead-end marriage with no excitement or unpredictability. But on the other hand, the movie fails to undergo any meaningful visual, auditory or tonal transformations even once Grace and Jackson find themselves moving through new and challenging phases of their relationship.

Die, My Love arrives like a lightning strike, snatching your attention with its sprawling shots of the couple’s new home through lengthy hallways—shot so that its doorways align, practically creating a deep-focus mise-en-abyme. But this recurring motif of frames-within-frames seldom gives way to deeper reflection on what troubles the young couple once they move to their new abode. Lawrence and Pattinson’s performances are wildly fun, and fearlessly embodied, but they’re forced to maintain a consistently timid emotional trajectory—an unwavering straight line, towards only slightly more discomfort—rather than serving a film that goes full-tilt through the wild mania of a home becoming an asylum, and unruly romance succumbing to malaise.

 

 



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Screening at Cannes: Directing Debuts from Kristen Stewart, Scarlett Johannson and Harris Dickinson

Three actors made their directorial debuts at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival. From left, Kristen Stewart, Scarlett Johannson and Harris Dickinson. Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images; Lionel Hahn/Getty Images; Daniele Venturelli/WireImage

“Are you fucking kidding me? Okaay,” crowed Kristen Stewart at the world premiere of The Chronology of Water, her debut as a bona-fide filmmaker after eight years of struggling to adapt Lidia Yukovich’s acclaimed memoir for the big screen. Vibrating with nervous excitement during her opening remarks, she thanked all of her collaborators with a fierce joy, ending with a dedication to the book’s author. “To Lidia Yuknavitch,” she said, “for writing and spewing the very face of fuck! Thank you for your trickle, thank you for the gush. Thank you for everything! Now let’s rip off this bandage and watch this fucking movie!” 

Actors acted like directors this past week during the Cannes Film Festival, and their newfound roles were just as surprising and convincing as their acclaimed performances in front of the camera. Along with Stewart’s messy but vibrant debut, Scarlett Johannson debuted her rookie film Eleanor the Great, a touching work starring nonagenarian June Squibb that was sweetly reminiscent of quirky ’90s indie comedies. And up-and-coming Brit hottie Harris Dickinson followed up his steamy turn co-starring with Nicole Kidman in feminist sex fantasy Babygirl by getting behind the camera himself and making Urchin, a searing and startlingly mature piece of social realism.

The trio of films were not in the Official Competition at Cannes, instead appearing in the sidebar section Un Certain Regard, a less high-pressure berth that offers a more supportive showcase for new and emerging filmmakers. All three have enough commercial potential—and artistic merit—to guarantee a commercial release, if not an end-of-year awards campaign. (Sony Pictures Classics had already picked up Eleanor the Great before the festival selected it). But what’s so striking are their stylistic differences, and how they reflect each actor’s sensibilities.

True to form, The Chronology of Water is all Kristen Stewart—and might arguably be the most Kristen Stewart movie ever made: aggressively aggrieved, almost comically confrontational, hyperventilating with an in-your-face attitude that belies a self-consciously juvenile insecurity. At times, the drama delivers genuinely harrowing shocks; but interspersed are moments so over-thought and over-wrought—all lookkit-me camera angles, word-salad sound design, and flutter-cut montages—that it plays like the product of an addled film student more eager to provoke than impress. 

Imogen Poots in Kristen Stewart’s directorial debut, The Chronology of Water. Cannes Film Festival

And then there’s Imogen Poots. The wide-eyed intensity and physicality that Poots brings to her portrayal of Yuknavitch—from sexually abused teen to weathered-and-wise middle-aged mother—is revelatory. And that’s clearly due to Stewart’s clarity of vision. The way that Poots expertly delivers bursts of anger, fleeting moments of joy, wallowed self-pity and adrift soulfulness proves that an assured directorial hand is working behind the camera to modulate those mood swings.

The strongest parts of The Chronology of Water are those character reveals—especially the quieter ones, when a wrung-out Yuknavitch, after a punishing gauntlet of sex, drugs, and alcohol, slowly finds the path to redemption by writing her way out of personal oblivion. That’s when Stewart’s dogged devotion to the source material shines though in a way that signals a major filmmaking talent.

With Eleanor the Great, Johannson is taking a much less ambitious stab at directing, one that feels more like a test run than a full-throated attempt to become an auteur. It also feels like the project was inspired by her 94-year-old lead actor. “When we were shooting my film,” she said in her opening remarks at the film’s premiere, “I said, ‘if I do my job right, my dream is to see June on the Croisette in Cannes.’ And here we are! So it really is a dream come true.”  

Eleanor the Great is modest in style but emotionally rich, a comic drama where Floridian retiree Eleanor, after the death of her longtime best friend, moves back to New York City to be with her overworked adult daughter and genial but detached grandson. Faced with empty days and lonely nights, she starts to deliver little white lies that eventually snowball into an avalanche of deception. 

June Squibb in Scarlett Johannson’s directorial debut, Elenor the Great. Courtesy of Sony PIctures Classics

As a director, Johannson trusts Squibb to carry the film, letting the actor’s genial nature lead a light-hearted story into sadder depths. “It’s about friendship, it’s about grief, it’s about forgiveness,” said Johannson. “And I think those are all things that we can use a lot of more of these days.” 

But of these three Cannes-fêted neophyte helmers, the twentysomething Dickinson is the one who delivers a real cinematic wallop with Urchin—a film he not only directed but also wrote. His look at the self-destructive patterns of a young man on the fringes of East London feels so fully formed, so confident in its plot points and performances, so strikingly restrained in its direction and so absolutely wrenching overall that the result feels preternaturally mature for such a young actor-turned-director. 

Skeptics might call Urchin a knock-off of iconic kitchen-sink miserabilists like Ken Loach and Mike Leigh—British masters who have devoted their astonishing careers to chronicling society’s disenfranchised and alienated. But there’s something different enough about Dickinson’s approach that he feels more like a successor to these directors than an imitator.   

Like Stewart and Johansson, Dickinson’s acting acumen certainly explains the uniformly absorbing performances—especially from lead Frank Dillane, a frustratingly charming mess too prone to self-sabotage despite his best efforts to resist the temptations of drugs and petty theft. But it’s the cumulative power of his storytelling, a slow-burn episodic script that builds confidently and irreversibly towards tragedy, that heralds Dickinson as such a promising new voice. There’s no doubt more will come from all three multi-hyphenate stars.



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Power outage hits Cannes Film Festival



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A brief power outage Saturday struck the star-studded Cannes Film Festival in France, along with about 160,000 households in the region. Authorities are investigating whether a fire at an electrical substation was responsible for the blackout.

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“It Was Just an Accident” wins Palme d’Or trophy at Cannes awards

Iranian dissident filmmaker Jafar Panahi’s revenge thriller “It Was Just an Accident” won the Palme d’Or at the Cannes Film Festival on Saturday, handing the festival’s top prize to a director who had been banned from leaving Iran for more than 15 years.

Cate Blanchett presented the award to Panahi, who three years ago was imprisoned in Iran before going on a hunger strike. The crowd rose in a thunderous standing ovation for the filmmaker.

Iranian director and screenwriter and producer Jafar Panahi delivers a speech after winning the Palme d’Or for the film “Un simple accident” (A Simple Accident) during the closing ceremony at the 78th edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France, on May 24, 2025.

SAMEER AL-DOUMY/AFP via Getty Images


He was among a number of Iranian artists, sports figures and other celebrities who had been detained after speaking out against the country’s government. Panahi, 64, had continued making award-winning films for over a decade despite being legally barred from travel and filmmaking.

The win for “It Was Just an Accident” extends one of the most unprecedented streaks in movies: The indie distributor Neon has backed the last six Palme d’Or winners. Neon, which acquired “It Was Just an Accident” for North American distribution after its premiere in Cannes, follows its Palmes for “Parasite,” “Titane,” “Triangle of Sadness,” “Anatomy of a Fall” and “Anora.”

The Cannes closing ceremony followed a major power outage that struck southeastern France on Saturday in what police suspected was arson. Only a few hours before stars began streaming down the red carpet, power was restored in Cannes.

The Grand Prix, or second prize, was awarded to Joachim Trier’s Norwegian family drama “Sentimental Value,” his lauded follow-up to “The Worst Person in the World.”

Kleber Mendonça Filho’s Brazilian political thriller “The Secret Agent” won two big awards: best director for Fihlo and best actor for Wagner Moura.

The jury prize was split between two films: Óliver Laxe’s desert road trip “Sirât ” and Mascha Schilinski’s German, generation-spanning drama “Sound of Falling.”

Best actress went to Nadia Melliti for “The Little Sister,” Hafsia Herzi’s French coming-of-age drama.

The Belgian brothers Jean-Luc and Pierre Dardennes won best screenplay for their latest drama, “Young Mothers.” The Dardennes are two-time Palme d’Or winners.

Cannes’ award for best first film went to Hasan Hadi, for “The President’s Cake,” making it the first Iraqi film to win an award at the festival.

Saturday’s ceremony brings to a close the 78th Cannes Film Festival, where geopolitics cast a long shadow, both on screen and off. Shortly before the French Riviera extravaganza, which is also the world’s largest movie market, U.S. President Trump floated the idea of a 100% tariff on movies made overseas.

Most filmmakers responded with a shrug, calling the plan illogical. “Can you hold up the movie in customs? It doesn’t ship that way,” said Wes Anderson, who premiered his latest, “The Phoenician Scheme” at the festival.

That was one of the top American films in Cannes, along with Spike Lee’s “Highest 2 Lowest,” the Christopher McQuarrie-Tom Cruise actioner “Mission: Impossible — Final Reckoning” and Ari Aster’s “Eddington.”

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Power outage hits Cannes Film Festival and traffic in southeastern France

CANNES, France — A major power outage struck southeastern France on Saturday, disrupting traffic and briefly halting events at the Cannes Film Festival as the prestigious event prepared to hand out its top prize.

About 160,000 households in the Alpes-Maritimes department lost electricity after a high-voltage line fell Saturday morning, electricity network operator RTE said on X. The outage came hours after a fire at an electrical substation near Cannes overnight had already weakened the grid.

Cannes Film Festival organizers confirmed the outage affected the early activities of Saturday and said the Palais des Festivals — the Croisette’s main venue — had switched to an independent power supply.

“All scheduled events and screenings, including the Closing Ceremony, will proceed as planned and under normal conditions,” the statement said. “At this stage, the cause of the outage has not yet been identified. Restoration efforts are underway.”

Still, screenings at the Cineum, one of the festival’s satellite venues, were briefly suspended, the festival added.

Traffic lights in parts of Cannes and the surrounding city of Antibes stopped working after 10 a.m., leading to traffic jams and confusion in city centers. Most shops along the Croisette remained closed, and local food kiosks were only accepting cash. Train service in Cannes was also disrupted.

Authorities said restoration efforts were ongoing and urged residents to remain cautious during travel.

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For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival.

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Power outage disrupts last day of Cannes Film Festival; police investigating possible arson

A major power outage struck southeastern France on Saturday morning, disrupting traffic and briefly halting events at the Cannes Film Festival as the prestigious event prepared to hand out its top prize.

Power was restored around 3 p.m. local time, as music began blasting again from beachfront speakers. The end of the blackout was greeted with loud cheers from locals.

Earlier, about 160,000 households in the Alpes-Maritimes department lost electricity after a high-voltage line fell Saturday morning, electricity network operator RTE said on X. The outage came hours after a fire at an electrical substation near Cannes overnight had already weakened the grid.

Police have opened an investigation into possible arson.

“We are looking into the likelihood of a fire being started deliberately,” said a spokesperson for the French national gendarmerie.

Traffic lights are switched off during an electricity outage in Cannes, southern France, Saturday, May 24, 2025.

Lewis Joly / AP


Cannes Film Festival organizers confirmed the outage affected the early activities of Saturday and said the Palais des Festivals — the Croisette’s main venue — had switched to an independent power supply.

“All scheduled events and screenings, including the Closing Ceremony, will proceed as planned and under normal conditions,” the statement said. “At this stage, the cause of the outage has not yet been identified. Restoration efforts are underway.”

Traffic lights in parts of Cannes and the surrounding city of Antibes stopped working after 10 a.m. local time, leading to traffic jams and confusion in city centers. Most shops along the Croisette remained closed, and local food kiosks were only accepting cash. Train service in Cannes was also disrupted.

Screenings at the Cineum, one of the festival’s satellite venues, were briefly suspended, the festival added.

The lineup was unveiled last month for Cannes.

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Screening at Cannes: Denzel Washington and A$AP Rocky In Spike Lee’s ‘Highest 2 Lowest’

Spike Lee, A$AP Rocky and Denzel Washington at the Highest 2 Lowest premiere during the 78th Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 19, 2025 in Cannes, France. Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

“Knicks! Knicks! Knicks!” yelled Spike Lee to the glitterati of Cannes as he entered the black-tie Lumière screening for his latest film, the kidnapping thriller Highest 2 Lowest. Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals was the following night—his beloved team facing off against the Indianapolis Pacers at Madison Square Garden—so Lee had basketball on his mind, rolling up on the Croisette in an orange-and-blue pinstripe zoot suit, sporting a blue felt hat ribboned with orange along with blue eyeglasses rimmed with orange highlights.

Denzel Washington, the film’s star, wore a more sober black suit and looked a bit less cavalier on the red carpet. He had just flown in from New York a few hours earlier and had to boomerang right back to the airport once the film started. Still in the thick of his sold-out run as Othello on Broadway, Washington had no time to spare, so the Cannes Film Festival deliberately programmed the movie on a Monday, the one night when Broadway is dark.

Washington didn’t have time to stick around and watch Lee’s swaggering Gotham update of Akira Kurosawa’s classic nail-biter High and Low. But, once everyone was seated, he did stay long enough for the festival’s president Iris Knobloch and general delegate Thierry Frémaux to award a surprise honorary Palme d’Or.

“Because, Denzel, you are here,” announced Frémaux from the stage. “We want to make something special for you. A gift!”

“A bag of money?” Washington cracked under his breath to Lee as they sat in their seats.

“A way to show our admiration,” replied Frémaux with a laugh.

After the festival played a tribute reel with highlights from his most acclaimed performances—including clips from his two Academy Award-winning turns in Glory and Training Day, as well as his four previous collaborations with Lee (Mo’ Better BluesMalcolm XHe Got Game, and Inside Man), Lee and Washington joined Frémaux for the presentation.

“This is my brother, right here!” said Lee. “I love him, I love him, and I’m glad you’re here for all the people who love you.”

Spike Lee on stage with Denzel Washington, after receiving an honorary Palme d’Or at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 19, 2025 in Cannes, France. Sameer Al-Doumy/Pool/Getty Images

Washington, who hadn’t been to Cannes since his first visit in 1993 with Kenneth Branagh’s all-star Much Ado About Nothing, was a bit stunned by the unexpected accolade and the audience’s extended standing ovation. “This is a total surprise for me, so I’m a little emotional,” he said. ‘It’s a great opportunity to collaborate with my brother-from-another-mother Spike. We’re a very privileged crowd in this room—that we get to make movies and wear tuxedos and get dressed up and paid for it as well. We’re blessed beyond measure. So, thank you, from the bottom of my heart.”

“Thierry did a sneak attack!” said Lee during a panel interview at the American Pavillion the next day. “It was a secret. This was on the low-low. I asked Denzel, ‘You gonna put it on the shelf between your two Oscars?’ And eight shows a week of doing Othello—that ain’t no joke.”

But Lee was more tickled at the synchronicity of the previous night’s timing, since Highest 2 Lowest premiered on the same day, and in the very same theater, as Do the Right Thing in 1989. And May 19 was also the 100thbirthday of Malcolm X. “Just put that together!” said Lee. “It’s numerology. Things. Line. Up. That’s beautiful.”

A remake of High and Low had been knocking around for decades—certainly since 1999, when, during Cannes, the trades announced that Martin Scorsese was in talks to put together a version that David Mamet was planning to write and direct, potentially starring Steve Martin, William H. Macy and Joe Mantegna.

But it was Lee and Washington who finally got it made. As Washington’s music producer character David King says in the opening minutes of Highest 2 Lowest, “It’s not a risk. It’s a rebirth.” That bravado is also an apt summary for Lee’s brassy update, his most commercial movie since 2006’s Inside Man (not coincidentally his last Washington collaboration) and a powerful showcase for the actor’s skills.

Denzel Washington in Spike Lee’s Highest 2 Lowest. David Lee

King, the embattled head of once-great record label Stackin’ Hits, had cashed out a controlling interest to enjoy his success. But now outside investor Stray Dogs Enterprises wants to pay handsomely to control 100% of Stackin’ Hits’ roster of legacy artists for commercial-licensing revenue. “They’ll squeeze out every drop of black culture and integrity,” he sneers at the offer, hatching his own plan: pour every penny of his personal wealth, including mortgaging his penthouse duplex and Sag Harbor house, into a scheme to buy back the company.

What’s beautiful about Highest 2 Lowest is how Lee portrays the Black culture King talks about in the character’s posh apartment on Front Street, referred to in the film as the “DUMBO Olympia” of Brooklyn overlooking the East River. King’s walls are covered in priceless paintings and photos by icons like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Romare Bearden and Gordon Parks. “A lot of that stuff is my own art,” said Lee. “We made copies of it. My wife and I have Beardens, Basquiats. This is a type of Black excellence, you know? It’s inspiring when, in my office and my home, I’m surrounded by great artists and people who I love and respect.”

King’s plans to retake his company get complicated when a kidnapper calls and says he has King’s 17-year-old son Trey (Aubrey Joseph) and wants $17.5 million for his safe return. But then Trey comes home alive; and they all realize the one that got nabbed is actually Trey’s best friend Kyle (Elijah Wright), the only child of King’s widowed driver Paul (Jeffrey Wright). Does King still pay all the money—and go bankrupt to save another man’s son?

Adding a meta level to the anguish is the fact that Spike cast Jeffrey Wright’s real-life son Elijah. “I had very little to do with it,” said Wright at the film’s press conference. “I had no idea. He sent Spike some tape. And then I hear that Elijah’s reading with Denzel. And then I get a call from Denzel saying, ‘Yeah, we tried but I don’t think it’s going to work out. He did his best, but maybe the next one.’ And I said, ‘Man, you’re calling from Elijah’s phone! Stop playing with me!’”

A$AP Rocky plays the heavy in Highest 2 Lowest, and his two extended scenes with Washington—filled with tense provocations, psyche-out bluster, and flat-out threats—are electric showdowns. At the root of it all, though, is money. “It’s on the poster, and I made Denzel say this line twice: All money ain’t good money,” said Lee at the press conference. “We all have our own specific morals, and what you’ll do for money. And that’s what makes Kurosawa’s film so great. Denzel, he’s jammed up. He’s faced with a moral dilemma.”

“That’s where the moral dilemma is,” added Wright. “Is it money or love? And what do you do for that? But that’s the world we’re living in now, where everything is for sale, and everybody is for sale. Everything is transactional. I think we can do better.”

“Maybe we have to, right?” said Lee. “We have to.”

 



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Screening at Cannes: Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson In ‘Die My Love’

Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson attend the Die My Love red carpet at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 17, 2025 in Cannes, France. Daniele Venturelli/WireImage

Crawling on all fours like a cat in heat. Letting her own breast milk drip down onto an ink-pooled paintbrush. Rubbing her sex-starved crotch insatiably. Throwing herself through a glass-paned door. Never let it be said that Jennifer Lawrence doesn’t commit—especially when she’s playing a character who might just end up committed.

The semi-surreal, wildly expressionistic Die My Love, based on the 2017 novel by Ariana Harwicz, had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival this past weekend, and left viewers wide-eyed at Lawrence’s no-holds-barred portrayal of Grace, a woman suffering from such severe post-partum depression she literally walks through fire. It’s the kind of head-turning star turn that Cannes audiences witnessed when Demi Moore brought The Substance here last year. No surprise that, within 24 hours of its debut, deep-pocketed distributor MUBI, which steered Moore to an Oscar nomination and a Golden Globe win, snapped up U.S. rights (and a few international territories) to the picture for $24 million.

Jennifer Lawrence in Die My Love Kimberly French

Lynne Ramsay’s feral film, intensely experiential, also stars Robert Pattinson as Jackson, the hapless and helpless husband who doesn’t know how to stop Grace’s descent, preferring to disappear for days at a time on unspecified work trips—and leaving his wife alone with their 6-month-old boy, a cavernous house in the middle of nowhere and an unruly pet mutt she never even wanted.

The duo, transplanted from New York City to an unspecified flat rural landscape, moved into a house previously owned by Jackson’s Uncle Frank, found dead from a mysterious self-inflicted wound. Just down the road is Jackson’s addled father Henry (Nick Nolte), suffering from Alzheimer’s and near death himself; as well as patient mother Pam (Sissy Spacek), who has a habit of sleepwalking outside with her shotgun.

A late addition to the Cannes competition lineup, and still fresh from the editing room, Die My Love is designed for maximum discomfort, with frenzied physicality, haunting cinematography and a soundtrack full of chirping crickets, wild horses, buzzing flies and incessant dog barking. But the unnerving drama still earned a 6-minute standing ovation from the black-tie crowd, which left Ramsay visibly shaken and deeply touched.

“Thanks so much!” the Scottish filmmaker chirped to the room in an exhausted Glaswegian accent. “C’mon—let’s get out of here. It’s a bit overwhelming.” She then marched out of the packed 2200-seat Grand Theâtre Lumière, where festival director Thierry Frémaux was waiting in the lobby with open arms and a huge smile. “Well, that went well,” she confided. “I’m mean, there are still things I’m like, ‘What the fuck? I’m going to change that.’”

Robert Pattinson came up behind, his face full of wonder, expressing his delight to Frémaux. “It’s very different from the last time I saw it,” said Patterson.

Robert Pattinson, Lynne Ramsay and Jennifer Lawrence during the Die My Love press conference at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 18, 2025 in Cannes, France. Corbis via Getty Images

Lawrence, a co-producer on the film, was thrilled by the material the moment Martin Scorsese sent the book to her office and suggested it might be a great project for her. She agreed, and then approached Ramsay about possibly directing and adapting the material (she co-wrote the script with Enda Walsh and Alice Birch).

“I’ve wanted to work with Lynne Ramsey since I saw Ratcatcher, and I was just like, ‘There’s no way,’” Lawrence said at the film’s press conference the next day. “We took a chance and we sent it to her, and I cannot believe that we’re here with you and this happened!”

Lawrence first became a mother in 2022, and just had her second child earlier this year—experiences that clearly informed her decision to produce this film as well as how she would portray Grace. “It was really hard to separate what I would do as opposed to what she would do,” Lawrence said. “When I first read the book, it was so devastating and powerful. Lynne said it was dreamlike. I had just had my first child, and there’s not really anything like post-partum. It’s extremely isolating.”

Grace and Jackson’s move to the country, and not having any friends nearby, is by definition even more isolating for the troubled duo. “But the truth is, extreme anxiety and extreme depression is isolating no matter where you are,” she added. “You feel like an alien. And so it deeply moved me.”

Ramsay also saw the novel as being about more than post-partum depression, which helped her envision the film adaptation in more universal terms. “It was about post-natal, but It’s also about being stuck, and being stuck creatively—and dreams and fantasies and sex and passion,” she explained. “Jennifer sent it to me and I thought about it for a while. Maybe I can’t do this, but I’m gonna try, I’ll do an experiment. It’s like a love story, and that kind of gave me a way in.”

The tumultuous couple go from writhing on the floor in naked ecstasy to shouting matches and shocking moments of self-harm—at one point, Lawrence slams her head into a mirror; in another she scratches the wallpaper in her bathroom with such a frenzy that her fingers are bloody pulps. She’s tormented, and he’s paralyzed with indecision about how to make her feel better. He’s also frustrated to the point of chilly cruelty.

“I’m quite attracted to characters who are incredibly abrasive and quite obscure,” said Pattinson. “But there’s something quite universal and interesting for me, when you’re dealing with partners going through post-partum or any kind of mental illness or difficulties. Trying to deal with her isolation and trying to figure out what your role in the relationship is, is incredibly difficult—especially if you don’t have the vernacular. And he’s just kind of hoping the relationship will go back to what it was in its purest form, not understanding why it’s intruded into the relationship. I guess it’s a fear that everyone has.”



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All the Best Red Carpet Fashion From the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

The annual Cannes Film Festival is here, which means it’s time for the biggest and brightest in the movie industry to descend upon the French Riviera for 12 days of uninterrupted glamour. The 2025 Cannes Film Festival begins on May 13 and runs through May 24, celebrating international cinema and bringing with it an array of glitzy red carpets, movie premieres and after parties.

Juliette Binoche will serve as jury president of the main competition at the 78th Cannes Film Festival, taking over duties from Greta Gerwig. At the opening ceremony, Robert De Niro will received the Honorary Palme d’Or award. The cinematic festivities will open with the French film Bye Bye, directed by filmmaker Amélie Bonnin. While the films might be the driving force of Cannes, the fashion is a close second. A-listers go all out on La Croisette throughout the 12-day affair, which is one of the most extravagant and exciting red carpets of the entire year.

Just one day before the red carpet festivities began, however, the Cannes Film Festival explicitly updated its dress code, sharing on the official website that for “decency reasons,” nudity and “voluminous outfits, in particular those with a large train,” are prohibited on the red carpet. The updated rule also notes that anyone who doesn’t follow the dress code will not be able to access the red carpet or other areas of the festival. While the film festival has always had a notoriously strict code, requiring black tie attire. This is a new subsection of the rules, though, and it’ll be interesting to see if everyone follows the new addendum. The Cannes red carpet has, after all, been the setting of many a rather gorgeous sheer dress over the years, from Kendall Jenner’s layered tulle Schiaparelli to Bella Hadid’s nude Saint Laurent frock. We’re just going to have to wait and see how it plays out on the 2025 red carpet.

Last year’s film festival in the South of France also brought us dazzling sartorial moments like Anya Taylor-Joy in old Hollywood Dior, Naomi Campbell in sparkling sequined Chanel and Demi Moore in sculptural Schiaparelli, and there’s no doubt that the 2025 iteration will bring with it even more gorgeous ensembles. We’re keeping you updated with all the best fashion from the Cannes Film Festival red carpet throughout the entire spectacle. Below, see the best red carpet looks.

Amal Clooney. Corbis via Getty Images

Amal Clooney

in John Galliano 

Kristen Stewart. Getty Images

Kristen Stewart

in Chanel 

Helena Christensen. FilmMagic

Helena Christensen

Petra Nemcova. WireImage

Petra Nemcova

Lux Pascal. Getty Images

Lux Pascal

in Georges Chakra Couture 

Natalie Portman. Variety via Getty Images

Natalie Portman

in Dior 

Rooney Mara. Variety via Getty Images

Rooney Mara

in Givenchy

Angelina Jolie. PA Images via Getty Images

Angelina Jolie

in Brunello Cucinelli

Julia Garner. Variety via Getty Images

Julia Garner

in Tom Ford

Juliette Binoche. Variety via Getty Images

Juliette Binoche 

in Giorgio Armani 

Ariana Greenblatt. Variety via Getty Images

Ariana Greenblatt

in Louis Vuitton 

Alessandra Ambrosio. Corbis via Getty Images

Alessandra Ambrosio

in Balmain 

Alexa Chung. Mike Marsland/WireImage

Alexa Chung

in Celine

Jeremy Strong. WireImage

Jeremy Strong

Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu. WireImage

Philippine Leroy-Beaulieu

in Schiaparelli

Emma Stone. WireImage

Emma Stone

in Louis Vuitton 

Cindy Bruna. AFP via Getty Images

Cindy Bruna

in Jean Paul Gaultier

Irina Shayk. Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Im

Irina Shayk

in Elie Saab 

Andie MacDowell. Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Im

Andie MacDowell

in Alberta Ferretti 

Diane Kruger. FilmMagic

Diane Kruger

in Prada

Ariana Greenblatt. WireImage

Ariana Greenblatt

in Cong Tri 

Gabbriette. Mike Marsland/WireImage

Gabbriette

Hannah Waddingham. Getty Images

Hannah Waddingham

in Pamella Roland 

Andie MacDowell. Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

Andie MacDowell

in Mugler 

Zoe Saldana. Getty Images

Zoe Saldana

in Saint Laurent 

Halle Berry. Corbis via Getty Images

Halle Berry

in Celia Kritharioti 

Angela Bassett. Getty Images

Angela Bassett

in Burberry 

Eva Longoria. Corbis via Getty Images

Eva Longoria

in Elie Saab 

Hayley Atwell. Mike Marsland/WireImage

Hayley Atwell

in Giambattista Valli

Irina Shayk. Getty Images

Irina Shayk

in Saint Laurent 

Juliette Binoche . Getty Images

Juliette Binoche

Bella Hadid. Getty Images

Bella Hadid

in Saint Laurent 

Halle Berry. Getty Images

Halle Berry

in Jacquemus

Heidi Klum. Corbis via Getty Images

Heidi Klum

in Elie Saab

Alessandra Ambrosio. Mike Marsland/WireImage

Alessandra Ambrosio

in Zuhair Murad 

Eva Longoria. WireImage

Eva Longoria

in Tamara Ralph

Isabeli Fontana. WireImage

Isabeli Fontana

in Nicolas Jebran 

Julia Garner. FilmMagic

Julia Garner

in Gucci

Juliette Binoche and Jeremy Strong. Getty Images

Juliette Binoche and Jeremy Strong

Binoche in Dior, Strong in Loro Piana  

Irina Shayk. AFP via Getty Images

Irina Shayk

in Armani Privé



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French actor Gérard Depardieu found guilty of sexual assault on a 2021 film set

PARIS — French movie star Gérard Depardieu ’s fall from grace is now complete.

Depardieu was found guilty Tuesday of sexually assaulting two women on the set of a movie in which he starred in 2021 and given an 18-month suspended prison sentence. He was also fined a total of 29,040 euros (around $32,350), and the court requested that he be registered in the national sex offender database.

The actor, 76, has been convicted of having groped a 54-year-old set dresser and a 34-year-old assistant during the filming of “Les Volets Verts” (“The Green Shutters”). The case was widely seen as a key post-#MeToo test of how French society and its film industry address allegations of sexual misconduct involving prominent figures.

Depardieu, who has denied the accusations, didn’t attend the hearing in Paris. Depardieu’s lawyer said that his client would appeal the decision.

“It is the victory of two women, but it is the victory of all the women beyond this trial,” said Carine Durrieu-Diebolt, the set dresser’s lawyer. “Today we hope to see the end of impunity for an artist in the world of cinema. I think that with this decision we can no longer say that he is not a sexual abuser. And today, as the Cannes Film Festival opens, I’d like the film world to spare a thought for Gérard Depardieu’s victims.”

Depardieu’s long and storied career — he told the court that he’s made more than 250 films — has turned him into a French movie giant. He was Oscar-nominated in 1991 for his performance as the swordsman and poet Cyrano de Bergerac.

During the four-day trial in March, Depardieu rejected the accusations, saying he’s “not like that.” He acknowledged that he had used vulgar and sexualized language on the film set and that he grabbed the set dresser’s hips during an argument, but denied that his behavior was sexual.

The set dresser described the alleged assault, saying the actor pincered her between his legs as she squeezed past him in a narrow corridor.

She said he grabbed her hips then started “palpating” her behind and “in front, around.” She ran her hands near her buttocks, hips and pubic area to show what she allegedly experienced. She said he then grabbed her chest.

The woman also testified that Depardieu used an obscene expression to ask her to touch his penis and suggested he wanted to rape her. She told the court that the actor’s calm and cooperative attitude during the trial bore no resemblance to his behavior at work.

The other plaintiff, an assistant, said that Depardieu groped her buttocks and her breasts during three separate incidents on the film set.

The Associated Press doesn’t identify by name people who say they were sexually assaulted unless they consent to be named. Neither women has done so in this case.

Paris’ public prosecutor had requested that Depardieu be found guilty and given an 18-month suspended prison sentence and a fine of 20,000 euros ($22,200). The prosecutor denounced the actor’s “total denial and failure to question himself.”

Some figures in the French cinema world have expressed their support for Depardieu. Actors Vincent Perez and Fanny Ardant were among those who took seats on his side of the courtroom.

Depardieu has been accused publicly or in formal complaints of misconduct by more than 20 women, but so far only the sexual assault case has proceeded to court. Some other cases were dropped because of a lack of evidence or the statute of limitations.

The actor may have to face other legal proceedings soon.

In 2018, actor Charlotte Arnould accused him of raping her at his home. That case is still active, and in August 2024 prosecutors requested that it go to trial.

For more than a half-century, Depardieu stood as a towering figure in French cinema, a titan known for his commanding physical presence, instinct, sensibility and remarkable versatility.

A bon vivant who overcame a speech impediment and a turbulent youth, Depardieu rose to prominence in the 1970s and became one of France’s most prolific and acclaimed actors, portraying a vast array of characters, from volatile outsiders to deeply introspective figures.

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Samuel Petrequin contributed to this report.

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