The 10 Best Movies We Saw at Cannes 2024

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From the misadventures of a Brooklyn sex worker to Francis Ford Coppola’s mega-epic — the movies that made this year’s film festival unforgettable

It was the best of Cannes, it was… well, not exactly the worst of Cannes, though the consensus throughout the first half of the festival was that it was a bit of a slow-burning edition this year.

Unlike the 2023 fest — which dropped Anatomy of a Fall, May December and The Zone of Interest before the halfway point — the competition took its time getting warmed up. “Divisive” didn’t begin to describe the reaction to films as varied as Francis Ford Coppola’s sprawling, apocalypse-already-in-progress epic Megalopolis and Jacques Audiard’s transgender-druglord musical Emilia Pérez. And while plenty of talent under the age of 70 showed up, the 2024 fest could be characterized as The Year of Old Masters Refusing to Go Gently Into the Night. Coppola’s riff on the Roman Empire was arguably his most ambitious work to date; George Miller gave us a Fury Road prequel, Furiosa, that matched the original in terms of demolition-derby destruction; both David Cronenberg (The Shrouds) and Paul Schrader (Oh, Canada) premiered late works rife with philosophical handwringing and filmmaking chops. Even Kevin Costner showed up with his own personal Megalopolis, i.e. the first installment of the multi-part Horizon: An American Saga, a partially self-funded, trad-grandad Western opus he’s been trying to make since the 1990s.

Once things begun to warm up in the festival’s second half, however, Cannes soon became a bounty of riches — the odds for what might walk away with the Palme d’Or began changing on an hourly basis with each new Grand Lumière gala screening. And when all was said and done, it was clear that what started out as a potentially mild year had more than its share of standouts. Here are the 10 best things (technically, 10 1/2) we caught at this year’s Cannes — from the misadventures of a Brooklyn sex worker to an indictment of social repression that forced a filmmaker to flee his country for his own safety.

(Honorable mentions go out to: the “Trump — The Early Years” biopic The Apprentice; a chilly character study courtesy of Ingmar Bergman’s grandson, Armand; writer-director-star Noemie Merlant’s dark farce The Balconettes; Andrea Arnold’s magical-realism meets kitchen-sink-miserablism drama Bird; Yorgos Lanthimas’ characteristically uncomfortable anthology Kinds of Kindness; the Corsican crime thriller The Kingdom; Alain Guiraudie’s surprisingly hilarious yer unsurprisingly horny Misericordia; Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson’s as-the-world-leaders-turn soap opera Rumours; and Cronenberg’s haunting mediation on perpetual mourning, The Shrouds.)

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