10 Cannes movies worth looking out for in a year of disappointments
After 10 days of crazed moviegoing at the Cannes Film Festival, Times film critic Amy Nicholson and Times film editor Joshua Rothkopf are all but spent. They leave with 10 recommendations (listed below in alphabetical order), including several titles youβll be hearing about during awards season, but also, admittedly, more reservations than usual.
Amy Nicholson: There are worse ways to spend your life than watching four movies a day in the south of France. For a week and half, we ran in and out of the dark theaters, blinking at the shock of the sun and bickering about what we just saw with the highest concentration of film lovers anywhere β most of us jacked up on espresso or rosΓ©. Yet, weβre flying home miffed that the movies themselves were mediocre. Cannes is meant to launch ambitious, prickly works by grandmasters and next-generation talents. This year, the programming looked like a party with an impressive invite list β Nicolas Winding Refn, Asghar Farhadi, Hirokazu Kore-eda β but upon arrival, all the guests felt like old acquaintances tapped out of anything interesting to say.
Iβm being harsh. Cannes had good movies, too. But I needed this yearβs Cannes to be great. Audiences trickling back into theaters deserve to see something fantastic. Instead, too many filmmakers took the crowdβs attention span for granted; even the strongest films in competition could delete a half-hour of dead air. Fittingly, the majority of my favorites came from Cannesβ kookier programming sections, Directorsβ Fortnight and Un Certain Regard β and I suspect many of yours did, too, oui?
Joshua Rothkopf: I did find a handful of films from the main competition that impressed me, but point taken: Nobody is served if we canβt admit that this yearβs edition was weaker than others. We could blame screenwriting or pacing (though paradoxically I was impressed by both the longest and the shortest movies in competition). Maybe itβs an overall lack of boldness. When a restored version of Ken Russellβs salacious 55-year-old βThe Devilsβ eclipses virtually everything else shown at the festival, a certain timidity is hard to deny. There were too many βniceβ films: perfectly respectable but not what I want Cannes to be.
Fortunately, we saw enough to sharpen up a list of favorites. Hereβs what stirred us.
βAll of a Suddenβ
Iβm not convinced that the utopian vision of end-of-life care presented in Ryusuke Hamaguchiβs drama has a fighting chance in America, but we deserve the opportunity to grapple with its compassionate turns and have that discussion. The director of βDrive My Carβ continues his process-centric exploration of workplace relationships in this quietly revelatory movie, one with a centerpiece conversation that merits comparison to the long walks of Richard Linklaterβs βBeforeβ movies. Virginie Efira and Tao Okamoto let a dayβs stroll linger into profundity, the twilight dimming and human connection brewing in all its possibilities. Is it too late for them? It doesnβt need to be. β Joshua Rothkopf
βThe Belovedβ
Esteban (Javier Bardem), a renowned bad boy Spanish filmmaker, returns to his homeland from New York to shoot a period picture in the desert. Off-screen, heβs gifted one of the four leading roles to his estranged daughter (Victoria Luengo), an aspiring actor who hasnβt seen her father in 13 years. Esteban failed as Emiliaβs dad. Can he succeed as her director, especially when her big break packs this much pressure? Not likely, especially as Emilia has inherited his disastrous boozing habits. βThe Belovedβsβ actual director, Rodrigo Sorogoyen, unleashes his leads to become a tag team of destruction, each blaming the other for whatβs going wrong on set. Theyβre both mired in clashing narratives of their relationship. Sorogoyen shows us the truth, as well as the visible frustrations of the film-within-a-filmβs cast and crew that risk shutting down this too-passionate passion project. β Amy Nicholson
βBitter Christmasβ
(Iglesias Mas / Sony Pictures Classics)
Pedro AlmodΓ³varβs self-flagellating film about his artistic process has a Charlie Kaufman-lite structure that Iβd rather let audiences discover on their own. In brief: Almodovarβs avatar, a filmmaker named RaΓΊl (Leonardo Sbaraglia), gets dragged over the artistic coals by the dramatic female characters heβs been writing for decades, one of whom dares him to simply coast on his legacy. Too many veteran filmmakers in his yearβs Cannes competition seem to have accepted that bargain, so when RaΓΊl got to the end of a new script and decided it wasnβt up to his standards, I nearly shouted βBravo!β Navel-gazing cinema about the creative process isnβt usually my bag, but AlmodΓ³var doesnβt take his own misery that seriously, even inserting a manic pixie dream hunk, a male stripper-slash-firefighter played by Patrick Criado, for a little bump and grind. β Amy Nicholson
βClarissaβ
Itβs been 101 years since Virginia Woolf first published βMrs Dalloway,β a novel about persnickety party hostess Clarissa Dalloway colliding with her former lovers, one male and one female. The plot seems simple, but every glare and sigh tells a whole story about modernization, capitulation, cynicism and violence. Twin brothers Arie and Chuko Esiri have transplanted the tale to present-day Nigeria and stacked the cast with Sophie Okonedo, Ayo Edebiri, Nikki Amuka-Bird, David Oyelowo and the staggeringly talented India Amarteifio as the diva in her captivating youth before she married a tedious oilman and started bullying the help. βClarissaβ makes several smart adjustments, swapping in a traumatized Boko Haram soldier for a shell-shocked veteran of the Great War, and cocking an eyebrow at the shiny new yoga studios and coffee shops littering Lagosβ once-lush waterfront. Better still, itβs sexy as heck β the flashbacks are one swimsuit party after another. β Amy Nicholson
βClub Kidβ
The one-sentence pitch of Jordan Firstmanβs debut dramedy β a gay nightclub promoter sobers up when he discovers he has a 10-year-old boy β sounded as fun as snorting a line of aspartame. I stand corrected. βClub Kidβ is a blast: a spicy, surprising and irreverent comedy that rarely peddles the audience anything artificially sweet. Firstman stars as Peter, a debauched millennial aging out of a New York scene that never cared about him as a person in the first place. His business partner Sophie (Cara Delevingne) is a horror; his selfish squatter-roommate Nicky (Eldar Isgandarov) is even worse and so hilarious Iβd watch a spin-off sequel just about him. Peterβs shock son Arlo (Reggie Absolom) has a casual charm that pickpockets your heart, but itβs the scriptβs sour quips that will have you urging people to get past the treacly set-up and go see βClub Kidβ themselves. β Amy Nicholson
βThe Diary of a Chambermaidβ
Art punk Radu Judeβs latest satire is about a Romanian immigrant with a burlesque double life. By day, Gianina (Ana DumitraΘcu, fantastic) is the live-in housemaid of a daft Parisian family; by night, sheβs an actress in a turn-of-the-20th century slapstick farce about a housemaid whose master suckles her patent leather boots. In neither world can she openly say what she thinks (although in her native tongue, she curses her employers and their young son plenty). Fast, crisp and snide, βThe Diary of a Chambermaidβ gives equal weight to the monotony and the absurdity of Gianinaβs grind. And Jude isnβt above including a mocking slow-motion shot of a spoiled French boy totally whiffing a soccer kick. β Amy Nicholson
βFatherlandβ
The tension at the heart of PaweΕ Pawlikowskiβs period piece, set in a ravaged, fallen Germany after the end of World War II, is one that goes unresolved. All thatβs left are defensive denials, evasions of Nazi collaboration and the faint hope that something higher has survived. I could watch this kind of guilt-ridden post-apocalyptic movie for hours; instead, this lasts a scant 82 minutes. The conclusion, a wordless moment between father and daughter set to the strains of Bach played on a broken pipe organ, was the most devastating passage of the entire festival. βFatherlandβ shows off Pawlikowskiβs exquisite way with black-and-white evocations of European tragedy, but heβs never summed them up as poetically. β Joshua Rothkopf
βFjordβ
People at the festival called this one complex; I found myself disagreeing. Itβs actually a fairly straightforward story about a religious but mostly level-headed family flung into conflict with an overly sensitive branch of child protection services β and maybe with the whole of agnostic Norwegian progressivism. As reactionary as that sounds, I was totally rapt. Partly thatβs due to a beautifully plotted courtroom scenario and the immersive performances of Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve, reuniting after βA Different Man,β as parents increasingly out of their depths. But mainly, I credit Romanian director Cristian Mungiu, who knows a good story when he sees one, crystallizing its potency with every camera choice. β Joshua Rothkopf
βMinotaurβ
The ice-chilled return of Russian filmmaker Andrey Zvyagintsev (after a multiyear battle with long COVID) is worth the wait: a condensation of everything he does well into something so purely distilled, it should come with a proof warning. The movie kicks off as a casual portrait of the vacant nouveau riche lifestyles of the mini-oligarchs: fancy dinners, divorces, bathroom gossip. Then it becomes an erotic thriller (itβs based on Claude Chabrolβs 1969 βThe Unfaithful Wife,β as was Diane Laneβs βUnfaithfulβ). But the best comes last, as the situation gets fixed in broad daylight with breathtaking brutality. The war in Ukraine? Someone elseβs problem. βMinotaurβ takes on the whole of Putinβs dissociative society and puts its winners above the blackened clouds, looking down at the rest of us. β Joshua Rothkopf
βTeenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasmaβ
I am growing to love Jane Schoenbrunβs exfoliation of β80s horror obsessions, especially for the movieβs nonjudgmental embrace: Let these movies be free in all their βproblematicβ badness and let them work on you. The fact that βTeenage Sexβ sometimes plays like a bottle episode of βHacksβ doesnβt hurt. Hannah Einbinder brings vulnerability to a project that needs her brand of self-excoriating fearlessness. Points, too, for not turning this into yet another celebration of some forgotten male director reclaimed as a genius. Rather, the opposite: Itβs about an abused scream queen (Gillian Anderson, gamely campy), a liminal, wintry campground and the exhilaration of running in the woods in your pajamas. β Joshua Rothkopf