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The Best of Cannes at NZIFF

The Best of Cannes at NZIFF
The Wild Pear Tree

We’re delighted to share with you our prize collection of 18 highly anticipated Cannes films that will premiere to New Zealand audiences at NZIFF.

These films represent the best of the best from around the world and we’re beyond excited to offer you the chance to view these cinematic spectacles in our own far-flung corner of the globe.

From psychotropic dance movie Climax to the beauty of Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s The Wild Pear Tree, to the striking debut trans drama Girl – which took home the award for best first feature at Cannes – or the deeply humane and moving Palme d’Or winner, Shoplifters, you’ll be left spellbound, moved, enlightened, and challenged by the diverse collection of feature length films we’ve accessed for your viewing pleasure.

Here’s five reasons to start creating your own shortlist:

Be the first to see films from the In Competition section of the premier festival

This year’s line-up includes the captivating Japanese-directed Palme d’Or winner Shoplifters, Jury Prize winner Capharnaüm and Best Screenplay winners (tied) 3 Faces and Happy As Lazzaro.

See stunning breakout performances by two talented teens

Wellington schoolgirl Thomasin Harcourt McKenzie turned heads at Cannes with her debut feature film lead in Leave No Trace, and Belgian-born Victor Polster’s performance as an aspiring transgender ballerina in Girl has been hailed as outstanding.

Read the books, see the films

Two of this year’s Cannes titles are based on existing short stories and books, so now’s your chance to read the literature before you catch the full cinema experience:

  • Leave No Trace: loosely based on My Abandonment by Peter Rock
  • Border: based on the short story of the same name by John Aivide Lindqvist

See Jean-Luc Godard’s The Image Book

At 87 years of age, Jean-Luc Godard looks at the world and does not like what he sees.  As described by Stephanie Zacharek of Time, this one is sure to divide audiences: “Disjointed and direct, exhilarating and soporific, cerebral and squirrelly… just watching [The Image Book] is a strange, melancholy pleasure, and an open window into the world of things that worry its creator”.

Be spellbound by the swirl of music, dance and true love in the dazzling Cold War

The new film from the director of Ida won him the Cannes Best Director award and closes this year’s NZIFF.

Explore the full Cannes collection on our Films page.

 

The full Dunedin programme will be online from 7pm on Monday 16 July and on the streets Tuesday 17 July with tickets on sale from 18 July.

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