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Cannes Directors’ Fortnight Unveils 2025 Line-Up; ‘Enzo’ Opener & ‘Sorry, Baby’ Closer

April 15, 2025
in News
Cannes Directors’ Fortnight Unveils 2025 Line-Up; ‘Enzo’ Opener & ‘Sorry, Baby’ Closer
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Directors’ Fortnight will open its 57th edition with Enzo, written and developed by late Cannes d’Or winner Laurent Cantet before his death last April and directed by friend and collaborator Robin Campillo.

The film is among 18 features announced for the 2025 line-up of the Cannes parallel section – overseen by the French Directors Guild (Société des Réalisateurs de Films) – at a press conference in Paris on Tuesday.

Big screen debutant Eloy Pohu Enzo stars as the titular 16-year-old protagonist who defies his bourgeois family’s expectations by starting a masonry apprenticeship, which brings him into contact with charismatic Ukrainian workmate Vlad (Maksym Slivinskyi). Elodie Bouchez and Pierfrancesco Favino also feature in the cast.

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Cantet, who won the Palme d’Or for The Class in 2008, had been due to shoot the film last August. Campillo, who made waves in Cannes with 120 BPM (Beats Per Minute), picked up the directorial baton following the death of his friend, who he first met when they were film school students in the 1980s.  It is produced by Anatomy of a Fall producer Marie-Ange Luciani under the banner of Les Films de Pierre.

It is the second consecutive year Directors’ Fortnight has opened with a posthumous film, after Sophie Fillières’ final feature This Life of Mine, starring Agnès Jaoui as a woman whose sense of self starts to unravel as she turns 55, kicked off the section in 2024.

The section will close with Eva Victor’s drama Sorry, Baby, about an academic dealing with a traumatic event, which premiered in Sundance earlier this year and sparked a bidding war, won by A24.

Also from the U.S., is Lloyd Lee Choi’s first feature Lucky Lu.  Taiwanese actor Chang Chen (Happy Together) stars as a Chinese delivery driver in New York whose e-bike, and main means of making a living, is stolen just as his family are due to join him in the U.S. after many years apart.

Out of Canada, French Canadian director Anne Émond’s Peak Everything about a kennel owner who falls for a customer service representative and decides to track her down.

Eight of the selected features are first films but established directors have also made the cut including German director Christian Petzold with melodrama Miroirs n° 3 about a piano student from Berlin, who miraculously survives a car crash during a weekend trip to the countryside and is then taken in by a local family.

Continuing the section’s tradition of showcasing genre, the line-up also includes Australian director Sean Byrne’s IFC and Shudder-acquired thriller Dangerous Animals starring Hassie Harrison as a free-spirited surfer who is abducted by shark-obsessed serial killer and held on his boat.

The section will also debut animated feature Death Does Not Exist by French director Félix Dufour-Laperrière. It follows young political activist Helen who abandons her accomplices after a failed armed attack to overthrow figures of the establishment in their sumptuous villa and revisits her intimate and political choices as she hides out in the surrounding forest.

Documentary also features in the line-up with Ukrainian directors Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova and Simon Mozgovyi’s hard-hitting work Militantropos investigating the impact of the Russian-Ukrainian war on personal behavior as people adjust to life of combat and resistance.

As ever, there is a strong French presence with Anthony Cordier’s class-war comedy and fourth feature Middle Class, featuring an ensemble cast led by Laurent Lafitte, Elodie Bouchez and Laure Calamy; Louise Hémon’s alpine-set psychological thriller The Girl in the Snow; Thomas Ngijol’s Cameroon-set detective thriller Indomptables, and Prïncia Car’s female-driven drama The Girls We Want, featuring an amateur cast and shot in Marseille.

Films from territories seen more rarely on the big screen include Iraqi director Hasan Hadi’s The President’s Cake set in Iraq’s little filmed marshes area against the backdrop of President Saddam Hussein rule in the 1990s. At a time when the population is suffering from food shortages, a young girl finds herself obliged to make a birthday cake for her school mates to celebrate the president’s birthday.

Feature Selection

Enzo – OPENING FILMDirs. Laurent Cantet & Robin Campillo

Peak EverythingDir. Anne Émond

Brand New Landscape *Dir. Yuiga Danzuka

Middle ClassDir. Anthony Cordier

Dangerous AnimalsDir. Sean Byrne

The Foxes Round *Dir. Valéry Carnoy

The Girl in the Snow *Dir. Louise Hémon

The Girls We Want *Dir.  Prïncia Car

Girl on Edge *Dir. Jinghao Zhou

IndomptablesDir.  Thomas Ngijol

KokuhoDir. Lee Sang-il

Lucky Lu *Dir.  Lloyd Lee Choi

MilitantroposDir. Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova & Simon Mozgovyi

Miroirs n° 3Dir. Christian Petzold

Death Does Not Exist (La Mort N’Existe Pas)Dir. Félix Dufour-Laperrière

The President’s Cake *Dir. Hasan Hadi

Que Ma Volonté Soit FaiteDir. Julia Kowalski

Sorry, Baby * – CLOSING FILMDir. Eva Victor

Short and Medium Length Films

+10KDir. Gala Hernández López

Before The Sea ForgetsDir. Ngọc Duy Lê

The BodyDir. Louris van de Geer

Bread Will WalkDir. Alex Boya

Blue HeartDir.  Samuel Suffren

KarmashDir.  Aleem Bukhari

LoynesDir. Dorian Jespers

Death of the FishDir. Eva Lusbaronian

Nervous EnergyDir. Eve Liu

When The Geese FlewDir. Arthur Gay

The post Cannes Directors’ Fortnight Unveils 2025 Line-Up; ‘Enzo’ Opener & ‘Sorry, Baby’ Closer appeared first on Deadline.

Tags: CannesCannes Directors FortnightSorry Baby
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