Best of Cannes 2025

From directors including Kristen Stewart, Joachim Trier and Jafar Panahi, traversing Australia, Nigeria, Iran, Brazil and more, our crew selects fifteen highlights from the 2025 Cannes Film Festival for your watchlists.

LIST: THE FIFTEEN BEST FILMS FROM CANNES 2025

Cannes can feel like a make believe place, even if you’re there: a tiny French town transformed by glamor (the gowns!) once a year, it is, above all else, a supremely dedicated celebration of cinema and a true goldmine of boundary-pushing storytelling that sets the bar every year. There are the red carpets and there are the standing ovations, but there’s also just some really good movies. Being on the ground, whoever you are, is a privilege that cannot be taken for granted: so we have a duty to bring home, to you, the riches worth tuning in for.

A lot of big names made their way to the Croisette in 2025, filmmakers we’ll be talking about for the next ten months and beyond (Anora, Parasite and Portrait of a Lady on Fire were all recently born here, after all), but there were also countless artists deserving of (and receiving!) your attention beyond the bright lights, already bubbling under in your reviews. So here are some for your watchlists: the films our team on the ground could not stop thinking about, the ones we still can’t stop talking about—titles for your watchlists, your best-of lists, and almost definitely your forever Four Faves one day soon. We don’t take that responsibility lightly.

Picks below from Ella Kemp, George Fenwick, Iana Murray, Isaac Feldberg and Rafa Sales Ross.


The Chronology of Water

Directed by Kristen Stewart
Written by Stewart and Andy Mingo

All eyes were on Kristen Stewart as her directorial debut premiered in the festival’s Un Certain Regard section this year. But what’s revelatory about The Chronology of Water is the way it shatters any preconceived notions of the actor’s until-now-unproven instincts as a feature filmmaker by channeling pure artistic abstraction from its first frame. Eight years in the works, Stewart’s adaptation of a memoir by American swimmer-turned-artist Lidia Yuknavitch—who survived not only abuse and addiction but the patterns of self-destruction those traumas etched into her—is a raw, bracing triumph.

Neither a traditional biopic nor a vanity project, the film succeeds through the formal ingenuity and conviction with which Stewart translates the intensity of her protagonist’s embodied experience. Flowing alongside, and somehow inside of, Imogen Poots’ portrayal of Yuknavitch across arduous and often electrifying periods of self-discovery, Stewart’s precise yet impressionistic stream of images captures the fluidity of pleasure and pain, and the slippery poetics of sense memory, that Yuknavitch so powerfully distilled through her prose.

As Stewart tells Letterboxd, it’s a film made from her own blood, sweat and tears, but also deeply inspired by the expressionistic gaze of Lynne Ramsay and Catherine Breillat. “It’s clear that this woman grew up with film in her veins,” writes Ana. Calling the film “so angry, so desperately honest, so frenetic, so unrestrained,” Claira reflects on feeling “a scream building in my chest from start to finish, and the inability to let it out has left me with bruised ribs and a too-frantic heartbeat.” Left equally breathless, Cookie also confirms, “They made this in a lab for arthouse bisexuals.” IF

Dangerous Animals

Directed by Sean Byrne
Written by Nick Lepard

Dangerous Animals injected the Directors’ Fortnight sidebar with a ruthless shot of adrenaline, mashing the shark movie with a serial killer story to create a vastly entertaining, unapologetically brutal and proudly schlocky horror-thriller, the likes of which Australia does so well. Sean Byrne, acclaimed director of The Loved Ones, directs this script from Nick Lepard about a deranged skipper named Tucker (Jai Courtney) who captures young women and feeds them to sharks off Australia’s Gold Coast. Yellowstone’s Hassie Harrison is Zephyr, the American vagabond surfing her way through Australia who is kidnapped by Tucker, forcing her into a battle of wills to survive.

As the title suggests, the sharks aren’t the only threatening creature Zephyr has to contend with, and Dangerous Animals wrings as much terror out of Tucker’s unhinged thirst for blood as it does from the sharks—which are filmed, if anything, with a reverence and beauty that rebuffs the damage done by shark movies before it. Courtney gets to flex acting muscles we’ve never seen before, playing Tucker with a delicious mix of charisma and mania, while Harrison expertly crafts a wounded-but-headstrong heroine who becomes a thrill to root for as she attempts to outsmart her mercurial captor.

It’s not reinventing the wheel, but Dangerous Animals is a breathlessly fun diversion out to the terrifying ocean, well worth seeing on the big screen, as Mitch recounts, “The vibe in the cinema was absolutely electric—people cheering, groaning, moaning, hooting and hollering. Applause erupted multiple times.” GF

Die, My Love

Directed by Lynne Ramsay
Written by Ramsay, Alice Birch and Enda Walsh, from a novel by Ariana Harwicz

It can be frustrating to be promised the moon with big names and beloved directors, only to find yourself searching the screen for scraps of humanity—but this is never a problem when it comes to Lynne Ramsay. The Scottish filmmaker always makes the wait worthwhile, and could not have mined more from her actors, this story, or her whole beating heart, for Die, My Love. Robert gets to the nub of it: “Lynne Ramsay shaking the audience by the shoulders screaming: Feel something goddamit!” As new mother Grace, Jennifer Lawrence gives herself entirely to the film in a performance for the ages, a primal scream of postpartum psychosis and full-throated humanity that swallows you whole. It’s different from mother!, never feral for the sake of it, always holding hands with the promise of love and the possibility of coming back from the edge.

Die, My Love is not a straight line nor a cautionary tale, just an invitation to get it. We’re edging close to A Woman Under the Influence, and always aiming for a higher emotional truth, as Isaac writes: “Drawing as much from poets like Plath and Lispector as from film auteurs like Scorsese and Lynch; visually there’s also plenty of Wyeth and Wood thrown in, though Ramsay’s punishing sound design and structural grammar suffer few comparisons gladly.” A film to be lived in as much as seen, difficult to bottle in writing and indeed in hype—but when you watch it (cinematographer Seamus McGarvey making sure you’ll never forget it), there is as much comfort and reflection as chaos: you were never crazy, you simply needed to be understood. EK

It Was Just an Accident

Written and directed by Jafar Panahi

Over two decades stood between the last time Iranian auteur Jafar Panahi walked the Cannes red carpet with his Un Certain Regard-winning thriller Crimson Gold and now, as the Palme d’Or winner for It Was Just an Accident. Within that time, the filmmaker was persecuted by his home country, convicted of “propaganda against the state” of Iran, repeatedly imprisoned, and banned from filmmaking for twenty years. The latter has, of course, not stopped Panahi, who has made some of his greatest films within this period, including Taxi and This Is Not a Film. It Was Just an Accident, like many of Panahi’s work, delves into the devastating consequences of the regime. While the filmmaker doesn’t step in front of the camera this time around, the picture feels perhaps his most personal, a searingly vulnerable look into how injustice feeds anger that feeds vengeance that feeds guilt.

On the surface, this is the story of the titular simple accident. A father runs over a dog; the dead animal kills the engine; the father heads to a mechanic; there he meets a man whose darkest nightmares have been scored to his voice. What follows is part thriller, part absurdist comedy, leading to the greatest end scene of the year so far. It’s a film of high stakes, with Enzo, Nicolas, and more calling it a “masterpiece,” and Julian aptly pointing out its central question: “Can we move on from atrocities perpetrated by those on the other side of the blindfold, and is it even worthwhile if that means finding oneself embracing that other side to do so?” RSR

Left-Handed Girl

Directed by Shih-Ching Tsou
Written by Tsou and Sean Baker

Last year’s Palme d’Or winner Sean Baker quietly made his return to the Croisette this year with Critics’ Week entry Left-Handed Girl, directed by his longtime producer Shih-Ching Tsou. But make no mistake: though Baker has co-writing and editing credits, this film belongs to Tsuo, making her solo directing debut. She has crafted an intimate, personal and delightful film, set in Taipei where a single mother and her two daughters are settling into hectic city life.

Shot on an iPhone, Tsuo’s camera gets close to her characters, gliding alongside the many scooter rides on Taipei’s busy streets. In her vivid portrait, this is a city that really never does sleep—bright lights illuminate the bustling night markets while tobacco shops hide covert exchanges under a fluorescent glow. It’s all anchored by the three generations of women at its center, whose difficult yet loving relationships are, as Josefine notes, “poignant, endearing and slightly problematic just like the universal mother-daughter relationships.”

Following the rich history of Taiwanese cinema, Kya compares the innocent gaze of youngest daughter I-Jing to Yang-Yang from Edward Yang’s Yi Yi. For Matty, the DNA of Tsou’s work with Sean Baker is everywhere in the film: “The rough iPhone look of Tangerine, the child performances of The Florida Project, the warmth of Starlet, the working class solidarity of Take Out,” he writes. “It’s a mish-mash of all of their collabs into one beautiful, goofy package.” IM

Lucky Lu

Written and directed by Lloyd Lee Choi

If there was ever proof that cinema really is timeless, look no further than Lucky Lu, Lloyd Lee Choi’s slice of American neorealism which updates Bicycle Thieves for the age of Uber Eats. Chang Chen stars as the titular Lu, a New York transplant making ends meet as a food delivery driver. On one fateful shift, his bike is stolen at the worst imaginable time: on the day his wife and young daughter are flying in to him after years apart. A cruel East Coast winter feels even colder in this film, where towering buildings don’t signal opportunity so much as they indicate how low in the capitalist hierarchy Lu finds himself.

Despite how unrelentingly bleak Lucky Lu might be, it’s never lacking in comion for the protagonist’s struggle. A powerfully restrained Chen plays Lu as stoic and stone-faced until the cracks show, and Alejandro praises the actor for “carrying the weight of quiet turmoil and endless obstacles with gripping intensity.” As the story of a first generation immigrant, several were struck by how closely the film mirrored their own histories, while Andy had his own singular viewing experience: “I can’t count how many times I muttered ‘that sucksss,’” he says of watching Lu’s tumultuous journey. Lu isn’t so lucky after all. IM

My Father’s Shadow

Directed by Akinola Davies Jr.
Written by Davies Jr. and Wale Davies

This year has brought quite the crop of high-profile feature debuts to Cannes, from Kristen Stewart’s kaleidoscopic The Chronology of Water to Harris Dickinson’s politically sharp Urchin, but very few other first outings have proved as unanimous as Akinola Davies Jr.’s beautifully layered, often heartbreaking Un Certain Regard entry My Father’s Shadow—the first-ever Nigerian film to feature in Official Selection at Cannes. The director, who wrote the screenplay with brother Wale, casts real-life brothers Godwin and Chibuike Marvellous Egbo as Akin and Remi, two young boys elated to be reunited with distant father Fola (a stunner of a performance by Ṣọpẹ Dìrísù) after months of separation.

The kids are even more thrilled to hear their dad is planning a day trip to Lagos, the three setting off on a journey of great mishaps but even greater teachings. In My Father’s Shadow, Davies Jr. captures the labyrinthine Nigerian capital through the eyes of the two boys who, in the space of a day, come to understand their dad as a full human being—perfect and flawed and theirs. Letterboxd have fallen in love with this tender portrayal of family, with Douglas calling it “a winding, wondrous film about what it’s like to never know someone, but for that person to spend their life in search of your safety and happiness” and Lillie praising the film’s tangible sense of place and time, noting “to see the world through the eyes of another is one of the greatest gifts of being alive.” RSR

Nino

Directed by Pauline Loquès
Written by Loquès and Maud Ameline

Théodore Pellerin won the Critics’ Week Rising Star Award—presented by jury member Daniel Kaluuya—for his leading role in Nino, a moving slice-of-life drama that makes quiet exchanges of tenderness between friends feel like the whole world. Pauline Locquès’ debut feature opens on a Friday as Nino (Pellerin), a young Parisian man feeling untethered from life, is given a diagnosis that sends him falling back down to earth: he has throat cancer. What’s more, the treatment will render him infertile, so he has until Monday to bring his sperm to be frozen. Heading home to sort that out, he discovers he’s lost his keys.

The rest of the film stays with Nino over the next three days as he meanders through Paris, crashing alternately with his mom, his friends and a new crush as he reckons with his diagnosis. Setting a movie about cancer in the days immediately before the character begins treatment is Locquès’ masterstroke, and it sets Nino apart from other stories on the topic; right before the shape of Nino’s life changes completely, the audience is with him as he undergoes the psychological transformation that precedes the physical, as he is forced to consider his mortality for the first time.

Locquès wrings moments of staggering beauty out of Nino’s interactions with his friends, as he gently opens himself up to reconnection; he helps his friend with fertility injections in the bathroom at a party, and has a charmingly hilarious non-physical sexual encounter with his crush later in the film; both are shot with a fly-on-the-wall softness by Locquès. Though it’s working on a small scale, Nino is “captivating, gentle,” writes Alissane, “a surge of vitality even as death comes knocking.” GF

Pillion

Written and directed by Harry Lighton

Harry Lighton’s adaptation of the novel Box Hill by Adam Mars-Jones is a slick, smart and surprisingly heartfelt exploration of sub-dom relationships, with Harry Melling delivering a brave, affecting performance as Colin, a shy young man taken on as a submissive by an astoundingly handsome and assertive biker (Alexander Skarsgård). Throughout Pillion, their dynamic ranges from awkward to painful to sweet, with Lighton’s concise, intelligent script—winner of the Un Certain Regard Best Screenplay award—closely examining the quiet emancipation of a young man learning how to safely and proudly express his kinks and desires.

The nuance with which Lighton explores a BDSM relationship on-screen is remarkable, as TakeTheCannolis writes, “Nothing makes the audience cheer like kink and graphic sex used lovingly and without judgement to explore desire and identity.” Melling, meanwhile, expertly guides viewers through Colin’s kaleidoscope of emotions as he tests out what brings him pleasure, and quickly learns what doesn’t, with some of the film’s most cathartic moments arising as Colin discovers what asserting power as a sub might look like. “The film is a gay fever dream: raw and carnal,” Ali writes. “Filmmaking that still dares to seduce, to wound, and to tell the truth.” GF

Resurrection

Written and directed by Bi Gan

How does one even begin to explain Resurrection? Bi Gan’s mesmeric epic spans the entire history of cinema and then some, drifting between surreal dreams and gritty cityscapes. Divided into six parts, Resurrection begins as a fantastical silent picture straight out of Georges Méliès before jumping through decades: it transforms into a noir, then a plucky con man caper, culminating in a moonlit vampire romance shot in a stunning 30-minute oner (Bi Gan’s signature showstopper). Clocking in at two-and-a-half hours (thank you Cannes programmers for screening this at 10:30PM on the second to last day!), it’s a lot to take in—and as Douglas so eloquently puts it, “a loony, ambitious, and touching ‘fuck you’ to the idea of watching films as a ive exercise.” It’s a feature so undefinable, so gleefully impossible to grasp, that Juliette Binoche’s jury created a new award for it: the Prix Spécial.

Prepare yourself: this is a transportive experience. “I’d watch this again tonight, if only to be reminded how alive cinema still is,” Laura writes. “I don’t know where I went, but I’m not back yet.” Vojta concurs in a glowing five-star review, adding that “watching Resurrection means dreaming with your eyes open.” Aly even suggests the optimal conditions for a film like this: “I think the ideal watching experience of this would require two Celsius energy drinks and a hefty edible.” Sounds like a plan. IM

The Secret Agent

Written and directed by Kleber Mendonça Filho

Letterboxd member Kleber Mendonça Filho brought the carnival of Recife to the Cannes red carpet for the world premiere of his third feature to play in competition at the festival, a deliciously tropical take on the classic political thriller, The Secret Agent. The film—which entered a select club of those to win two awards at the festival, earning Filho a Best Director prize and star Wagner Moura Best Actor—trails Moura’s Marcelo as he arrives back in his hometown in the northeast, leaving behind a tumultuous season farther down south. This undefinable ride begins as a mystery and unfolds as something murkier, full of many pleasures, with Filho harnessing his cinephilia to build an homage not only to those unlawfully persecuted during Brazil’s nefarious military dictatorship but to the auteurs that helped provide the young director with a safe space as a child living through those years.

Our mighty Brazilian contingent on Letterboxd has gathered to one of their own with great force, with Lorenna highlighting how Filho has “a capacity to understand movie genre conventions, reinvent the tropes, emulate the iconography of Hollywood and put a ‘sugar on it’ or a Brazilian flavor,” and Michel echoing that by saying The Secret Agent “has the air of a ’70s American thriller with a Recife flavor that makes for a perfect connection between Hollywood and Brazil.” Shot in stunning anamorphic Panavision, this is one to be seen big, and luckily for us all, it has been snapped by NEON for the US, MUBI for the UK, and by many other major distributors worldwide. RSR

Sentimental Value

Directed by Joachim Trier
Written by Trier and Eskil Vogt

Few films that debuted on the Croisette this year were as universally beloved as Joachim Trier’s Sentimental Value. Following up The Worst Person in the World is a tough order, and yet the Norwegian director has done just that, reuniting with Renate Reinsve for a graceful, moving family portrait that excavates the fractured relationships between a father and his two daughters, and mends them back together again.

Stellan Skarsgård plays the patriarch, film director Gustav Borg, who has been largely absent from the lives of his daughters Nora (Reinsve) and Agnes (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas) until their mother es. Hoping for some kind of forgiveness, he offers Nora the leading role in his next movie, to which she declines. In Trier’s feature, art is a messy, loaded token of reconciliation, conveying everything that this family struggles to articulate through words alone.

It’s a sentiment echoed by Emmet, who writes that Sentimental Value “really goes in depth about how a creative person can only express their feelings to the people around them by creating art.” Quietness is one of the film’s strengths, with Laszewicz highlighting that “Trier’s ability to turn the smallest gesture into something monumental is unreal.” The picture’s emotional potency comes through in its restraint—it’s no surprise then that many have already itted in their Letterboxd reviews that they cried. In the words of the great Charli XCX: Joachim Trier summer is here. IM

Sirât

Written and directed by Oliver Laxe

It starts at a rave in the Moroccan desert, bodies writhing between waves of pulsing bass, kicking up dust as the sun beats down. Their faces scarred and sunburned, some of them missing limbs, these people dance as if destined to do so until they drop. In Islamic eschatology, we’re told, the word “sirât” refers to a bridge—thinner than a hair and sharper than a sword—that connects heaven and hell, and that purgatorial place between ecstasy and agony is one that revelers in this scorching, remote expanse seem all too eager to reach. Into this desert daze wanders Luis (Sergi López) and his son Esteban (Bruno Nuñez), searching for his daughter, from whom they haven’t heard in months. As the military arrives, warning of a global crisis, father and son impulsively travel deeper into the desert, where another rave is to be held.

From there, Oliver Laxe’s fever dream of a fourth feature—which split Cannes’ third-place jury prize with Mascha Schilinski’s Sound of Falling—twists and turns like a snake over coals, pushing its characters past points of no return, through transcendent respites and shattering tragedy, even as Laxe retains mesmerizing control over the odyssey’s metaphysical tone. It’s “Hit the Road meets Sorcerer, set to an ambiently throbbing, washed-out, psychedelic rave score that lends the gut-punches an existential dread and the humor a pitch-black tone,” writes Luke. One of the first competition titles to premiere, Sirât floored Cannes audiences sensorially and psychologically; per Brother Bro, the film hits like “an existential shotgun to the chest,” while Dima calls it “the best bad trip ever.” IF

Sound of Falling

Written and directed by Mascha Schilinski

The Cannes competition got quite the kick off this year with Mascha Schilinski’s elusive sophomore feature, which won the Jury Prize in a tie with Oliver Laxe’s Sirât. Told non-linearly across four different generations of women living on the same German farm grounds from the Second World War to the present day, Sound of Falling is a searing look into the invisible ing threads of womanhood—itself a phantom limb, somewhat intangible, aching so deeply, continuously, it cuts through time. Schilinski’s fascinating offering is one best experienced without much prior knowledge, so I will spare you a more detailed look into its mysteries but, even if I proposed myself to delineate it, that would prove a futile task as this strange, uncanny tale of shared sorrows expertly eludes those who most eagerly try to cage it.

Instead, Schilinski’s movie lends itself to the sensorial, with several Letterboxd tapping into their feelings while watching it to best try to describe it. “Found myself growing increasingly desperate for the film to keep going, the gradual march toward the end leaving me hyperaware of my heart thrumming in my chest,” Claira beautifully says, with Zinc describing it as floating “as if in a vacuum, elusive and uncontrollable, yet leaves one infinitely yearning for that secret landscape between life and death.” Jack, Damian, and more have been quick to compare it to Sofia Coppola’s The Virgin Suicides, but I’d say that those most willing not to anchor this thorny offering into what came before are those who will get the most out of its riddles. RSR

Urchin

Written and directed by Harris Dickinson

The vibe across the Letterboxd reviews of Urchin circles a combination of iration and playful ire, to the tune of “how is Harris Dickinson so good at everything?” But as the dust settles over the Babygirl actor’s directorial debut, I think the film’s profound creativity and stark emotional truth will outlive its maker’s star power. That comes in large part from Dickinson’s lead (a shrewd move to not rely on his own proven talent to carry this thing) Frank Dillane, who won Best Performance in this year’s Un Certain Regard sidebar in Cannes. Playing rough sleeper Mike in Dickinson’s story of the inescapable cyclical nature of self-destruction and societal failure, Dillane delivers an incendiary breakout performance wise beyond his years, that leaves an impact not a million miles away from Frankie Corio’s major arrival on the Croisette with Aftersun a few years back.

Zachary calls Dillane “radiant” in Urchin, writing, “A testament to how actor and director are in lock step is in the ways the camera will linger on him for a bit too long for comfort before transitioning into the next moment—Dillane’s performance is less about acting, more about being.” The Mike Leigh (and Ken Loach, and Sean Baker) comparisons are ripe, but the way this thing moves speaks to a freshness and courage that only comes from this specific generation of filmmaking, and societal injustice, that we’re living through. I’m on the same page as Jente: “Gorgeous and ugly and harsh and tender, somewhere on a new plane between realism and the surreal.” It’s the singular, innovative work of a cinephile who’s been waiting years to show us what he could do. EK


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