Exotic dancer drama Anora wins Cannes Film Festival’s top prize
CANNES, France — Anora, a darkly funny and touching drama about a young exotic dancer who becomes involved with a Russian oligarch’s son, won the Cannes Film Festival’s top prize, the Palme d’Or, on Saturday.
The film by US director Sean Baker beat the 21 other films in the competition line-up, including entries by established directors like Francis Ford Coppola and David Cronenberg.
Anora continues a streak of sex worker-focused films by Mr. Baker, including the 2021 Cannes entry Red Rocket and 2017’s The Florida Project starring Willem Dafoe.
This win is dedicated to “to all sex workers past, present and future,” he said as he accepted the award, while also thanking the film’s star, Mikey Madison, as well as Samantha Quan, his wife and producer.
“This has been my life’s goal, so to reach this place is… I’m going to have to do some thinking tonight about what’s next,” Mr. Baker told Reuters after the ceremony.
Jury president Greta Gerwig, the director behind the pink-hued hit Barbie, called Anora an “incredibly human and humane film that captured our hearts” when announcing the award that was handed out by George Lucas, of Star Wars fame.
Mr. Lucas was on stage to receive an honorary award during the festival’s closing ceremony from his longtime friend Mr. Coppola, whose passion project Megalopolis was also in competition.
“I’m just a kid who grew up in the middle of California, surrounded by vineyards, and made films in San Francisco with my friend Francis Coppola,” said Mr. Lucas at the ceremony.
The Grand Prix, the second-highest prize after the Palme d’Or, was awarded to All We Imagine As Light, marking the first time an Indian director had won the prize.
Director Payal Kapadia’s debut feature about the friendship between three women was the first Indian film in competition in 30 years.
“The fact that we could be here is a testament that if you stick to one thing and don’t give up hope, then the film could possibly be made, and we are here,” she said.
Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof, who was in Cannes about two weeks after announcing he had gone into exile, was given a special award for The Seed of the Sacred Fig, about an Iranian court official who grows increasingly controlling and paranoid as protests begin to swell in 2022.
DOUBLE HONORS
Emilia Perez, a musical about a Mexican cartel boss who transitions from male to female, was doubly honored.
Director Jacques Audiard received the jury prize on stage, while the best actress prize was expanded to include all the film’s female stars, with jury member Lily Gladstone saying Emilia Perez celebrated the “harmony of sisterhood.”
Zoe Saldana, Selena Gomez, Karla Sofia Gascon, and Adriana Paz all star in the film that Vanity Fair magazine called “a movie unlike any other.”
“I want to dedicate this to all the women, trans and non-trans, in the world, this is for you, for all the minorities who are not left in peace when we simply want to go on living,” said Ms. Gascon, who is the first transgender actress to win the prize.
Jesse Plemons was named best actor for playing three different parts — a struggling police officer, a cult member, and a man whose every action is controlled by his boss — in director Yorgos Lanthimos’ absurdist triptych Kinds of Kindness.
Best screenplay went to The Substance, a Demi Moore-led body horror about the perils of youth and beauty, while Miguel Gomes took best director for Grand Tour, an eclectic trip through Asia by a British civil servant and his pursuing fiancée.
BLACK DOG WINS UN CERTAIN REGARD
Black Dog, about a man released from prison who returns home to his remote town in China to rid it of stray dogs before the Olympics, only to befriend one of them, won the Cannes Film Festival’s Un Certain Regard competition on Friday.
Un Certain Regard focuses on arthouse films and runs parallel to the main competition, the Palme d’Or.
Eddie Peng, who stars as Lang in the film by director Guan Hu, attended the ceremony at Cannes along with greyhound Xin. It was the second prize in one day for Xin, who donned the Palm Dog red collar after being picked for the Grand Jury Prize at a separate ceremony celebrating canine performances.
The Un Certain Regard jury prize went to the French film The Story of Souleymane, director Boris Lojkine’s feature about a Guinean immigrant’s struggle to survive in Paris.
The best director prize was given to both Italy’s Roberto Minervini for The Damned and Zambian-Welsh auteur Rungano Nyoni for On Becoming a Guinea Fowl, while Norah, by Saudi Arabian director Tawfik Alzaidi, received a special mention.
Canadian filmmaker and actor Xavier Dolan headed this year’s five-strong jury. There were 18 films in total competing for the prize. — Reuters