Entertainment

David Cronenberg returning to Cannes film competition

David Cronenberg and Guy Maddin are among the high-profile Canadians returning to this year's Cannes Film Festival. 

Iconic director is one of several Canadians involved in this year's festival

A man waves at a crowd while he exits a car.
Canadian film director David Cronenberg waves as he leaves the hotel at a film festival in San Sebastian, northern Spain, in 2022. Cronenberg's latest film The Shrouds will premiere at next month's Cannes Film Festival. (Alvaro Barrientos/The Associated Press)

David Cronenberg and Guy Maddin are among the high-profile Canadians returning to this year's Cannes Film Festival, which begins May 14. 

Cronenberg, known for sci-fi and horror films going all the way back to the 1970s, will compete for the main prize with The Shrouds, a horror flick shot in Toronto about a grieving widower played by Vincent Cassel.

The widower invents a device that lets people monitor deceased loved ones in their burial shrouds, and when his wife's grave is desecrated one night, he sets out to track down the perpetrators.

"Being selected for the Cannes Film Festival is an immense honour, but to return for the seventh time is incredibly humbling," Cronenberg said in a statement. "I look forward to sharing this film with the world on such a prestigious stage." 

The 81-year-old, whose works include Videodrome, Naked Lunch and A History of Violence, made his last Cannes appearance with 2022's Crimes of the Future

WATCH | David Cronenberg says movie theatres are over:

Canadian filmmaker David Cronenberg says movie theatres are over

2 years ago
Duration 7:54
Acclaimed Canadian filmmaker David Cronenberg talks about why he couldn’t make his latest movie in Toronto, getting shut down by Netflix, the death of cinemas, and that one time he almost directed a Star Wars movie.

The Shrouds was produced in part by Martin Katz for Prospero Pictures, whose founder and president Martin Katz called it "an audacious and human film, so apt for our times." 

Cronenberg will compete for the Palme d'Or against the likes of Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things, The Lobster), who will debut Kinds of Kindness, and George Miller's Mad Max spinoff Furiosa

Francis Ford Coppola, known for Apocalypse Now and The Godfather trilogy, will debut Megalopolis starring Adam Driver, his first movie in more than a decade and one of this year's most anticipated events. 

Another attention-grabbing entry is Ali Abassi's The Apprentice, a biographical drama about Donald Trump's real estate career in New York in the 1970s and 80s.

The official selection for the festival's 77th edition was announced at a Thursday press conference in Paris. 

Two men speak behind a podium while a man in a suit looks on.
Evan Johnson, left, and Guy Maddin, right, pictured at the Toronto Film Critics Association Awards in 2016, will debut a dark comedy called Rumours at this year's Cannes Film Festival, along with another Winnipeg director Galen Johnson. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

Dark Canadian comedy about G7 to screen outside main competition

A trio of Winnipeg directors, Guy Maddin, Evan Johnson and Galen Johnson, co-directed Rumours, which will screen out of competition at Cannes. The dark comedy is about world leaders who meet at the G7 and get lost in the woods while trying to compose a joint statement. The trio previously worked together on 2017's The Green Fog

Star Wars director George Lucas will attend this year's festival to receive an honorary Palme d'Or while Kevin Costner will present his new Western Horizon, an American Saga

Montreal filmmaker Xavier Dolan, whose film Mommy won the 2014 Cannes Jury Prize, will head the jury for the festival's Un Certain Regard section, which presents films with unusual styles and non-traditional stories. 

Dolan wrote, directed, produced and starred in his first feature film, I Killed my Mother, at age 19, and it earned Canada's submission for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film. In 2010, his film Heartbeats screened in Un Certain Regard when he was just 21.

Xavier Dolan poses for photographers upon arrival at the 76th Cannes Film Festival.
Xavier Dolan, pictured at the Cannes film festival last May, will return to the festival this year to preside over the jury of the Un Certain Regard section, which highlights unusual styles and non-traditional stories. (Vianney Le Caer/Invision/The Associated Press)

"I am humbled and delighted to return to Cannes as president of the Un Certain Regard jury," Dolan said in a statement. "Even more than making films myself, discovering the work of talented filmmakers has always been at the very heart of both my personal and professional journeys."

The Cannes main competition jury will be headed by Barbie director Greta Gerwig.

The film festival runs from May 14 to May 25. 

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story described the device referenced in the film The Shrouds as one that helps people connect with the dead. In fact, the device lets people monitor deceased loved ones in their burial shrouds.
    Apr 12, 2024 12:47 PM ET

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kevin Maimann

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Kevin Maimann is a senior writer for CBC News based in Edmonton. He has covered a wide range of topics for publications including VICE, the Toronto Star, Xtra Magazine and the Edmonton Journal. You can reach Kevin by email at [email protected].