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Cannes 2025 Unveils Lineup (Updating Live)

The Cannes Film Festival is unveiling the films that will compete in its 78th edition, which will run May 13-24, on Thursday.

Cannes delegate general Thierry Frémaux and president Iris Knobloch, are presiding over the festival’s official press conference, kicking off in Paris at 11 a.m. local time (2 a.m. PT).

You can watch the live stream of the press conference on the Cannes YouTube channel here.

Knobloch opened the press conference with a plea for tolerance and diversity, saying that for almost 80 years, the Cannes film festival has been in “dialog with the world, embodying a France that is brave, curious and open.” She also paid tribute to the victims of the L.A. fires, praising the resilience of the U.S. industry in the wake of the devastation.

Frémaux said the festival screened 2,909 features in its selection process, an all-time record.

Cannes reaffirmed its position as the world’s number one film festival last year, with Cannes 2024 selections racking up a total of 31 Oscar nominations, and nine wins, led by Sean Baker’s 2024 Palme d’Or winner Anora which rode its success on the Croisette all the way to 5 Academy Awards, including best picture. Last year’s festival also produced the break-out successes of Emilia Pérez, The Substance and animated winner Flow, further stoking interest in this year’s selection.

The 2025 competition line-up is packed with auteur heavyweights, including Kelly Reichardt, who returns to Cannes competition with The Mastermind, an art-heist drama starring Josh O’Connor and John Magaro, set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War; Norwegian filmmaker Joachim Trier, who returns to the Croisette after his 2021 triumph (with The Worst Person of the World) with Sentimental Value, also featuring Renate Reinsve; and Richard Linklater’s Nouvelle Vague, a French-language feature that tells the story of Jean-Luc Godard making his classic Breathless.

Cannes on Tuesday confirmed this year’s worst-kept festival secret: Tom Cruise will return to the Croisette for the world premiere of Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning, which will have an out-of-competition bow in Cannes ahead of its May 23 global release by Paramount.

Among the out of competition highlights this year are Jodie Foster-starrer Vie Privée, directed by Rebecca Zlotowski, the music documentary Bono: Stories of Surrender from Blonde and Killing Them Softly director Andrew Dominik, about the U2 frontman; Amrum, the latest feature from German director Fatih Akin, starring his In the Fade collaborator Diane Kruger; Sebastián Lelio‘s Spanish-language feminist musical The Wave; and The Disappearance of Joseph Mengele from Russian director Kirill Serebrennikov.

Cannes’ Un Certain Regard sidebar will be packed with directorial debuts, including Eleanor the Great, Scarlett Johansson’s first turn behind the camera, which stars June Squibb; Harrison Dickinson’s Urchin, a British drama about a homeless man in London; and My Father’s Shadow, a hotly-anticipated debut from British-Nigerian filmmaker Akinola Davies starring Gangs of London and Slow Horses actor Sope Dìrísù.

French star and Oscar winner Juliette Binoche will head up the 2025 Cannes jury, which is picking the Palme winners, as president. Robert De Niro will be honored with an honorary Palme d’Or for lifetime achievement at the Cannes opening ceremony this year.

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