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Cannes Film Festival 2026: Read All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews
via Deadline · May 17, 2026

Cannes Film Festival 2026: Read All Of Deadline’s Movie Reviews

The 2026 Cannes Film Festival is underway with French filmmaker Pierre Salvadori’s The Electric Kiss serving as the opening-night pic. Among the headline filmmakers debuting new works on the Croisette this year are previous Palme d’Or winners Cristian Mungiu and Hirokazu Kore-eda…

The Story

The 2026 Cannes Film Festival is underway with French filmmaker Pierre Salvadori’s The Electric Kiss serving as the opening-night pic.

Among the headline filmmakers debuting new works on the Croisette this year are previous Palme d’Or winners Cristian Mungiu and Hirokazu Kore-eda, two-time Oscar-winning Iranian director Asghar Farhadi and American indie veteran Ira Sachs.

The Electric Kiss is joined by new films from stalwart auteurs including Pedro Almodóvar, Cristian Mungiu, Guillaume Canet, Nicolas Winding Refn and Paweł Pawlikowski

Read all of Deadline’s takes below throughout the festival, which runs May 12-23. Click on the title to read the full review (some films will be reviewed only on this page) and keep checking back as we update the list.

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Section: CompetitionDirector: Ryusuke HamaguchiCast: Virginie Efira, Tao Okamoto, Kyoza Nagatsuka, Jean-Charles Clichet, Maria Bunel, Romain CottardDeadline’s takeaway: All of a Sudden, a film that marks Hamaguchi’s first French-made film, has much to recommend about it, but the overall impact is diluted due to the length of some sequences which feel endless and almost more like an academic exercise than an actual movie. — PH

Section: Special ScreeningsDirector: Diego LunaCast: Anna Díaz, Adriana Paz, Luisa Huertas, Teresa Lozano, Guillermo Ríos, Adriana Jacomé, Sergio Bautista, Benny Emmanuel, Irene Escolar, Anna Alarcón, Dailyn Valdivieso, Charlie Rowe, Laura GómezDeadline’s mini-review: With strong guidance from Diego Luna returning to the director’s chair to tell a very personal story of family, the experience of leaving and being left, of racism, immigration, and finding new life in a foreign country, Ashes is a powerful and moving motion picture. It is also unique in dealing directly with the hot-button topic of immigration, but surprisingly in two countries that speak the same language. This separates it from the usual stories we have been seeing in America where Mexicans try to assimilate themselves in the U.S. and run into a government dead set on keeping them out. In this case though it is Spain, and Luna and his co-writers show that a shared language is not the antidote to hatred and being welcomed in a new land.

The opening of the film, shot in darkness and shadows, shows us a mother tearfully saying goodbye to her sleeping children. This is just the beginning of the long emotional journey for Lucila and Diego as they will find a way to reunite with their mother. Diaz as Lucila is a revelation and the heart and soul of Ashes, which is based on the book by Brenda Navarro. Paz is also effective as the mother who felt she was out of choices and made a fateful decision, one that has tragic consequences. Ashes becomes a rich, and undeniably timely, addition to film depictions of the experiences of immigrants in both heartbreaking and humane ways. — PH

Section: CompetitionDirector-screenwriter: Rodrigo SorogoyenCast: Javier Bardem, Victoria Luengo, Melina Matthews, Marina Fois, Malena VillaDeadline’s takeaway: Rodrigo Sorogoyen first Cannes Competition pic is an incredible achievement, and Javier Bardem’s career has been building up to this stunning moment. Certainly one of the best films about filmmaking since François Truffaut’s Day for Night, The Beloved might be the scariest since Peeping Tom.

Section: Directors’ FortnightDirector-screenwriter: Kantemir BalagovCast: Barry Keoghan, Talha Akdogan, Riley Keough, Harry Melling, Jaliyah RichardsDeadline’s takeaway: The machine has yet to be invented that can tie up all the loose ends in this puzzling family drama about a fragile father-son relationship that touches on familiar issues of masculinity in crisis but doesn’t take them anywhere new. Barry Keoghan tries his best with the material, but there’s not really much he can do with it. — DW

Section: Un Certain RegardDirector-screenwriter: Jordan FirstmanCast: Jordan Firstman, Cara Delvingne, Reggie Absolom, Kirby Howell-Baptiste, Colleen CampDeadline’s takeaway: Although a father-child relationship is very much the focus, Firstman uses the setup to explore other issues, notably the pressures of being a single gay man trying to extricate himself from such a transient environment. The film will strike a chord with any retired party animal who, as David Bowie once put it, suddenly realizes they don’t want to go out anymore — they just want to stay home and get things done. — DW

Section: Out of CompetitionDirector: Pierre SalvadoriScreenwriters: Benjamin Charbit, Benoit Graffin, Pierre SalvadoriCast: Pio Marmaï , Anais Demoustier, Gilles Lellouche, Vimala Pons, Gustave Kervern, Madeleine BaudotDeadline’s takeaway: Pierre Salvadori’s charming and very French rom-com touches on loss, grief, deception and renewed love of life and art. With subtle comedy and perfectly cast actors, it’s a crowd-pleaser that could work nicely for audiences seeking escapism. — PH

Section: CompetitionDirector: Paweł PawlikowskiCast: Sandra Hüller, Hanns Zischler, August Diehl, Anna MadeleyDeadline’s takeaway: Fatherland is peak Pawlikowski. In 82 studiously controlled minutes, it follows the elderly Nobel-Prize winning writer Thomas Mann on a journey through Germany, cutting a swathe through all of postwar history. A masterclass in artistic discipline, it will be a hell of a movie that stands between this and the festival’s Palme d’Or. — SB

Section: CompetitionDirector-screenwriter: Marie KreutzerCast: Léa Seydoux, Laurence Rupp, Jella Haase, Catherine DeneuveDeadline’s takeaway: Why something with the punch of classical tragedy — love destroyed from within by an inexplicable streak of evil — had to be so over-egged is baffling. If only the narrative had been as uncluttered as Kreutzer’s cleanly defined framing; she pays attention to close-ups, making the most of Léa Seydoux’s fiercely felt performance. — SB

Section: Out of CompetitionDirector: Guillaume CanetCast: Marion Cotillard, Leonardo Sbaraglia, Aron Ramo, Denis Menochet, Luis Zahera, Marta Etura, David TalbotDeadline’s takeaway: Marion Cotillard has one of the most intense roles of her career in Guillaume Canet‘s pulsating French thriller. With themes of cults, adoption, a missing person, cults and eascaping a troubled past, the film successfully navigates the line between arthouse and genuine commercial prospects. — PH

Section: CompetitionDirector-screenwriter: Kōji FukadaCast: Takako Matsu, Shizuka Ishibashi, Ken’ichi Matsuyama, Waku Kawaguchi, Kiyora Fujiwara, Sawako FujimaDeadline’s takeaway: Nagi Notes could fittingly be described as scenic cinema; slow for sure but revealing in the same way a slow train can really open up the passing landscape. LGTB+-positive in a most unexpected and human way, it’s a modest film that charms by stealth and understatement. — DW

Section: CompetitionDirector-screenwriter: James GrayCast: Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson, Miles Teller, Gavin Goudey, Roman Engel, Yavor Vesselinov, Victor PtakDeadline’s takeaway: This noirish little gem is right up there with the very best James Gray films. And it’s some of the finest work stars Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson and Miles Teller have done. This superbly crafted story keeps you engaged at every turn by Gray, who knows how to twist a crime-genre tale into something fresh and pulse-pounding.

Section: CompetitionDirector: Asghar FarhadiCast: Isabelle Huppert, Virginie Efira, Vincent Cassel, Pierre Niney, Adam Bessa, India Hair, Catherine DeneuveDeadline’s takeaway: What Farhadi has brilliantly cooked up ultimately feels wholly original and deliciously crafted on every level, and with the help of a perfectly chosen cast there isn’t a false step even in a tricky scenario like this one. This may be the filmmaker’s best-ever in terms of style and pure picturemaking skill, and for me certainly his finest since A Separation. — PH

Section: CompetitionDirector-screenwriter: Hirokazu KoreedaCast: Haruka Ayase, Daigo, Kuwaki RimuDeadline’s takeaway: A light yet somehow very profound study of grief that deals with death in an unusual but surprisingly cathartic way. By the end, it is clear that Koreeda has taken the stuff of dystopian cyberpunk nightmares and turned it into an elegant, wistful fairytale, fashioning a beautiful allegory in which all the main characters are reborn. — DW

Section: MidnightDirector-screenwriter: Marion Le CorrollerCast: Mara Taquin, Karin Viard, Kim Higelin, Sami Outalbali, Stefan CreponDeadline’s takeaway: Built around a fantastic scream-queen performance from Mara Taquin, Le Corroller’s film follows firmly in the trail pioneered by Julia Ducournau but brings its own thoughts to the woman-in-a-man’s-world body-horror genre. Its squishy mayhem taps into the sinister sci-fi paranoia that feeds David Cronenberg’s early movies and throws in a hefty dose of social satire that recalls Nicolas Ray’s Bigger Than Life. — DW

Section: Un Certain RegardDirector-screenwriter: Jane SchoenbrunCast: Hannah Einbinder, Gillian Anderson, Patrick Fischler, Eva Victor, Dylan BakerDeadline’s takeaway: Jane Schoenbrun’s instant midnight-movie classic is a psychedelic tribute to the slasher-horror cycle of the early ’80s that subversively reclaims the genre from the traditional male gaze. Hannah Einbinder helps pull it off with the strength and vulnerability that is necessary to make a trippy, gory and still somehow perversely romantic love story the film’s beating, bloody heart. — DW

Section: CompetitionDirector: Charline Bourgeois-TacquetCast: Léa Drucker, Mélanie Thierry, Charles Berling, Laurent Capelluto, Marie-Christine BarraultDeadline’s takeaway: Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet’s solid female-centric drama is not what you might call thrilling cinema, but it is worthwhile, and in Léa Drucker’s hands we have a character who is something special to behold. — PH

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