‘Come Swim’
Kristen Stewart directs the short film about heartbreak: "That pain is so normal — everyone goes through that."
Kristen Stewart directs the short film about heartbreak: "That pain is so normal — everyone goes through that."
Joaquin Phoenix stars in the adaptation of Jonathan Ames' novel, which tells how a war veteran's attempt to save a young girl from a sex trafficking ring goes horribly wrong.
From left: Paul Dano, Ahn Seo-hyun, director Bong Joon-ho, Steven Yeun, Tilda Swinton, Byun Hee-bong, Jake Gyllenhaal and Lily Collins. Okja, which will be released by Netflix, played in competition.
The Moonlight actress hit the Croisette to help Swarovski toast the 10th anniversary of its Atelier Swarovski line.
Read more Swarovski Toasts Milestone With Naomie Harris, Stunning Views and Female Empowerment
Director Sofia Coppola and actress Elle Fanning pose for THR.
Sofia Coppola directs the reimagining, starring Nicole Kidman, Elle Fanning, Kirsten Dunst and Colin Farrell.
Read more 'The Beguiled': Sofia Coppola on Taking on a Genre Movie and Why It's Not a Remake
The actress stars in two Cannes titles: Sofia Coppola's The Beguiled and John Cameron Mitchell's How to Talk to Girls at Parties.
Alex Sharp stars in John Cameron Mitchell's film about a romance-starved South London teenager's night of otherworldly intoxication during the early days of punk.
Kyle Maclachlan hit the Croisette for a festival screening of the Showtime series.
From left: Jaden Michaels, director Todd Haynes and Millicent Simmonds.
"Although almost all my films have been period films, this was a double-period film, so that was exciting — the ways that one could jam ideas and images of 1920s Manhattan against New York in one of its most difficult, economically declining eras in the later ’70s," director Todd Haynes tells THR.
Elizabeth Olsen and her Avengers co-star Jeremy Renner reunite for Wind River, directed by Taylor Sheridan.
Sheridan, who wrote the scripts for Sicario and Hell or High Water, makes his directorial debut with Wind River.
Jeremy Renner stars as a game tracker enlisted to help solve a murder on a Native American reservation in Wind River, which screened at Cannes after debuting at Sundance.
Charlotte Gainsbourg stars alongside Marion Cotillard and Mathieu Amalric in French auteur Arnaud Desplechin's latest film, which opened the fest.
"I've met more actors in my life than women as an actress, and would like that to change actually," said Marion Cotillard at the fest. "I would love to be in more films with women actors, I have a passion for actresses and have long wanted to be in films with more actresses."
Brothers Josh (right) and Benny Safdie are the youngest directors in competition at Cannes with their film Good Time, starring Robert Pattinson.
Jane Campion and Elisabeth Moss debuted the miniseries' second-season opener at Cannes.
Elisabeth Moss is back as detective Robin Griffin in the followup to the 2013 hit.
Alice Englert plays an attractive, barbed-tongued 17-year-old, Mary.
In the second season of the miniseries, director Jane Campion and actress Alice Englert are also joined by Nicole Kidman.
Gwendoline Christie joins the miniseries in its second season.
Director Michael Haneke, two-time Palme d'Or winner, returns to Cannes with his latest film.
Isabelle Huppert stars in the French-language drama about a family set in Calais with the European refugee crisis as the backdrop.
Diane Kruger stars in her first German-language feature as Katja, a woman whose life collapses after the death of husband and son in a bomb attack. After the time of mourning and injustice, here comes the time of revenge.
Fatih Akin directs the drama.
Francois Mantello produced the underwater documentary with Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Arnold Schwarzenegger also narrates the doc, which takes audiences on a journey to discover the ocean while learning more about the threats that put it at risk.
Jean Jacques Mantello and Jean Michel Custeau co-directed the doc, which was filmed over three years, from Fiji to the Bahamas.
Jean Jacques Mantello is one of two co-directors.
Russian writer-director Andrey Zvyagintsev returns to Cannes with a tense drama centering on a couple who, while going through a divorce, must team up to find their son who has disappeared during one of their bitter arguments.
Alexei Rozin plays a middle-management desk jockey whose marriage is in its death throes.
Maryana Spivak plays the married beauty-salon owner.
Read more 'Loveless' Filmmakers Say They "Didn't Need to Embarrass" Russian Authorities After 'Leviathan'
From left: Vanessa Redgrave and Alfred Dubs.
Vanessa Redgrave directs her first documentary — a passionate, first-person call for governments to come to the aid of the child refugees flooding Europe.
Read more Why Vanessa Redgrave Stepped Behind the Camera for Refugee Doc 'Sea Sorrow'
Alfred Dubs, the politician who sponsored an amendment to the 2016 Immigration Act aimed at offering unaccompanied refugee children a safe passage to Britain, appears in the doc with Ralph Fiennes, Emma Thompson and Martin Sherman.
Naomi Kawase directs the Japanese-language drama about a passionate writer of film voiceovers for the visually impaired, who meets an older photographer who is slowly losing his eyesight.
Vladimir de Fontenay, Imogen Poots, Frank Oulton and Callum Turner.
Frank Oulton stars as the son of a young mother (Imogen Poots) trapped in a sex trafficking ring.
Callum Turner plays a dangerous, unstable boyfriend.
Vladimir de Fontenay directed the film.
Louis Garrel portrays as French film director Jean-Luc Godard who falls in love with 17-year old actress Anne Wiazemsky (Stacy Martin) while shooting a movie.
Berenice Bejo, who was nominated for a best supporting actress Oscar for her work in The Artist, reteams with director Michel Hazanavicius.
Stacy Martin portrays 17-year old actress Anne Wiazemsky who falls for the director.
Michel Hazanavicious, who helmed the Oscar best picture winner The Artist, returns to Cannes with Redoubtable, about Jean-Luc Godard.
Josh Hartnett, Atsuko Hirayanagi and Shinobu Terajima pose in Cannes ahead of the premiere of Oh, Lucy! in the Critics Week section.
Josh Hartnett stars in Atsuko Hirayanagi’s Oh, Lucy!, about an office worker in love with her teacher.
Atsuko Hirayanagi directed the film.
Josh Hartnett plays an English teacher in Tokyo in Oh, Lucy!, which is based on Japanese filmmaker Atsuko Hirayanagi's 22-minute MFA thesis short film.
Shinobu Terajima plays a woman who falls for her unusual English teacher.
Director Sean Baker poses with actors Brooklynn Prince, Valeria Cotto and Bria Vinaite.
Sean Baker directed the film.
From left: Kyle Mooney, Dave McCary, Kevin Costello, Kate Lyn Sheil and Greg Kinnear.
Dave McCary make his feature directorial debut with the title, in which a man raised since infancy in an underground bunker tries to cope with his new freedom by re-creating the kiddie TV series that sustained him all those lonely years.
Kate Lyn Sheil is also among the ensemble cast.