CANNES, France — Welcome to Cannes. The annual film festival is always a spectacle, but 2024's edition may be the most combustible in years. The 77th Cannes red carpet unfurls against a backdrop of war and protest. The #MeToo movement, so slow to take root in France, is now quickly tearing through the country's film industry. Festival workers have threatened to strike.
And yet, the usual cavalcade of celebrities and filmmakers from around the world are descending upon the French Riviera over the course of two weeks. And so is The Associated Press. This year, we're keeping a running diary of life at — and in — Cannes. Follow along for an insider's view from the festival.
SUNDAY, MAY 19
Kevin Costner premiered the first part of his Western epic ''Horizon: An American Saga,'' the buzzed-about ''Emilia Perez'' had its press conference and the body horror thriller ''The Substance,'' with Demi Moore, debuted.
— Accepting the Kering Women in Motion award, Universal chief Donna Langley noted she was not like past recipients, such as Michelle Yeoh and Isabelle Huppert, both of whom were among the attendees Sunday night. ''In many ways, I'm the killer of art,'' joked Langley. ''I'm the suit.'' The dinner, held beside a former monastery atop the old part of Cannes overlooking the whole city, is one of the swankier affairs of the festival. Part of the fun of this year's gathering was that it reunited, as Cannes president Iris Knobloch noted, the two women behind ''Barbenheimer'': Langley, who greenlit ''Oppenheimer,'' and ''Barbie'' director Greta Gerwig. The Cannes jury president fittingly wore pink for the occasion. At a Cannes where #MeToo is gaining new prominence, it was a moment to celebrate. Langley, the widely respected studio chief, noted roles like hers ''have the power and the privilege to say ‘yes.'''
— At the premiere of ''Horizon,'' Costner was visibly moved, tearing up during the standing ovation for the first installment of what the actor-director hopes will be four feature films. Surely that emotion was partly due to how much Costner has invested in ''Horizon,'' financing some of its $100 million-plus production himself. When I spoke to him ahead of its premiere, Costner said he was essentially ''an independent filmmaker'' in Cannes. "I'm here by myself.''
— Cannes isn't well known for gory genre movies, but it's gotten a bloody pair of standouts in the last 24 hours. First was Noémie Merlant's ''Balconnettes," which she scripted with her ''Portrait of Lady on Fire'' director Celine Sciamma. The midnight section entry, a kind of #MeToo ''Rear Window" if it was a horror comedy, is a delirious romp about sexual assault and revenge. Then came the body horror of Coralie Fargeat's ''The Substance,'' in which a middle-aged Hollywood star (Demi Moore), spawns a younger self that her older body must trade places with every week. It's not a subtle satire, nor does it skimp on the gore.
LA CITATION DU JOUR: ''To get into this kind of film by Jacques, you have to be like Jacques, who's a bit mad." — Karla Sofía Gascón, star of ''Emilia Perez,'' on director Jacques Audiard.