Cannes 2022: 10 movies to watch out for in this year’s festival | Peter Bradshaw – The Guardian

Elvis

Baz Luhrmann brings his trademark truckload of spangly glamour and sugar-rush showbiz to the story of Elvis Presley with Austin Butler as the King and Tom Hanks as his manipulative manager, Colonel Tom Parker.

Ukrainian film-maker Sergei Loznitsa returns to Cannes for a special screening of his new documentary, based on the book by WG Sebald about the horror of aerial bombardment during the second world war a subject with a special resonance today.

Cannes regular David Cronenberg returns with his own long-gestating script, about a future world in which people have to adapt to transhumanism. Evolution accelerates, bodies sprout new organs and human identities are in a state of flux.

Michelle Williams is the regular leading player for film-maker Kelly Reichardt, and she returns as Lizzie, a sculptor whose life is about to be turned upside down by a new show. Other stars include Andr 3000, Judd Hirsch and Amanda Plummer.

European cinema icon Claire Denis brings a movie with a hint of Peter Weirs The Year of Living Dangerously and her own keynote theme of colonial agony: Margaret Qualley and Joe Alwyn star as a journalist and businessman in 1980s Nicaragua.

Japanese auteur Hirokazu Kore-eda has made his first Korean language film, with Korean star Song Kang-ho, an intense emotional drama, based on a real case, about the baby boxes in which people can leave unwanted newborns.

Transgressive passion is the foundation of this movie from Mia Hansen-Lve, with La Seydoux as Sandra, a single mum with a young daughter, trying to find care for her elderly father, and embarking on an intense affair with an old friend.

A frisson of League-of-Gentlemen unease in a creepy English country village where all the men (played by Rory Kinnear) have a weird resemblance to each other: Jessie Buckley stars in this scary movie from Alex Garland.

Polish director Agnieszka Smoczyska takes on the story of the British silent twins. Letitia Wright and Tamara Lawrance star as identical twins June and Jennifer Gibbons who spoke to no one but each other, wrote outsider art novels and were eventually sent to Broadmoor for arson and theft.

Virginie Efira stars in Alice Winocours drama as a woman caught up in a terrorist attack in a Paris bistro. Some months later, stricken with PTSD and amnesia, and plagued with fragmented memories, she makes a determined attempt to reconstruct her past.

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Cannes 2022: 10 movies to watch out for in this year's festival | Peter Bradshaw - The Guardian

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Reviewed and Recommended by Erik Baquero
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