‘Tangles’
From left: Sarah Leavitt, Samira Wiley, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Abbi Jacobson, Leah Nelson, Lauren Miller Rogen and Seth Rogen






















From left: Sarah Leavitt, Samira Wiley, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Abbi Jacobson, Leah Nelson, Lauren Miller Rogen and Seth Rogen
“There were a ton of drugs going on, and I was so naive that I did not realize this,” Julia Louis-Dreyfus joked about her ‘SNL’ days to the audience during her live taping of THR’s Awards Chatter podcast at Meta House. “I’m like, ‘Wow, they have a lot of energy.’ It was a topsy-turvy time.”
Rogen and his wife, Lauren, produced the animated film, which follows a young woman returning to her small, conservative town to care for her mother who is struggling with Alzheimer’s.
Leah Nelson
Samira Wiley
Sarah Leavitt
Abbi Jacobson
Lauren Miller Rogen
For the animated film, the ‘White Lotus’ and ‘Amadeus’ actor — and famed Brit — voices an introverted skater boy at a suburban Los Angeles high school.
From left: Will Sharpe, AJ Dungo and Phuong Mai Nguyen
AJ Dungo
Phuong Mai Nguyen
Among the many premieres, this year’s festival also feted the ‘Fast & Furious’ franchise for its 25th anniversary. Brewster reunited with her co-stars Vin Diesel and Michelle Rodriguez, as well as the daughter of the late Paul Walker, on the red carpet.
The ‘Hacks’ star opened the fest with ‘Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma,’ in a role that director Jane Schoenbrun told THR was deeply personal: “It’s helped her grow and think a lot about herself and her own life.”
From left: Jane Schoenbrun and Hannah Einbinder
Jane Schoenbrun
Talha Akdogan
‘In Russian’ director Kantemir Balagov’s first English-language project, ‘Butterfly Jam,’ Keough plays a Circassian immigrant running a suburban New Jersey diner with her brother (Barry Keoghan).
From left: Harry Melling, Jaliyah Richards, Talha Akdogan and Riley Keogh
Jaliyah Richards
Harry Melling
Adriana Paz
“The fear, the ignorance, the hate we are seeing around migration, this is the way to fight that,” says the director of his film Ashes, which follows a young woman (played by Anna Díaz) who leaves Mexico for Madrid. “[I’m] trying to get you close to understanding the story of just one person who can’t live where they belong.”
Diego Luna
From left: Adriana Paz, Anna Diaz and Diego Luna
Anna Diaz
Koji Fukada
Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet
Charline Bourgeois-Tacquet directs Léa Drucker (right) in ;A Woman’s Life,’ about a surgeon’s encounter with a novelist.
Lea Drucker
Manuella Martelli
“We see so many monetized versions of war, and this is something that you never get to see,” says the Boyd Holbrook of his Iraq War drama, adding that his search for authenticity went all the way to his wardrobe: “It was not, ‘I’m going to look like a cool soldier.’ ”
From left: Reed Van Dyk, Gheed and Boyd Holbrook
Gheed
Reed Van Dyk
“We were granted access to spaces that no one can even get to in life, let alone be filmed,” says Jordan Firstman (center) of the party scenes in his directorial debut, ‘Club Kid’ (which also stars Diego Calva and Cara Delevingne). “We were let in because I was already there partying, and these are my friends. The invitation was not taken for granted.”
Cara Delevigne
Diego Calva
Jordan Firstman
Odessa A’Zion, Jordan Firstman’s ‘I Love LA’ co-star, also was on hand — as part of Chopard’s annual contingent. (Trophée Chopard laureate, wearing Chopard jewelry.)
From left: Ira Sachs and Mauricio Zacharias
Ira Sachs
Mauricio Zacharias
The French film icon came to the Croisette to promote her role in Asghar Farhadi’s latest epic, ‘Parallel Tales,’ and to present next-gen talents Connor Swindells and Odessa A’zion with the Trophée Chopard. (Trophée Chopard Godmother, wearing Chopard jewelry.)
From left: Nicholas Athane and Marco Nguyen
“I’m very interested in people who achieve artistic excellence,” says director Ron Howard of his new documentary on photographer Richard Avedon. “I’m interested in the spark, along with the dues they had to pay and the cost to the other aspects of their life.”
Ron Howard
David Oyelowo stars alongside Sophie Okonedo and Ayo Edebiri in ‘Clarissa’ — a modern reimagining of the Virginia Woolf novel Mrs. Dalloway that THR describes as “a quiet revelation.”
From left: Chuko Esiri and Arie Esiri
From left: Nikki Amuka-Bird, David Oyelowo, Sophie Okonedo, Fortune Nwafor, Chuko Esiri, Arie Esiri, India Amarteifio and Toheeb Jimoh
Sophie Okonedo
Lukas Dhont
The director follows up a red-hot awards season — her ‘Hamnet’ lead actress Jessie Buckley won every major award — with a stint on the Cannes Film Festival jury.
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