<p>The Cannes Film Festival returns next week, promising to bury the long months of darkness and solitude under an avalanche of celebrity, champagne and chin-stroking arthouse cinema.</p>.<p>It is billed as nothing less than a resurrection. "Cinema is not dead!" festival supremo Thierry Fremaux declared last month.</p>.<p>It is the first major fully-fledged film festival since the pandemic, and a truckload of Hollywood stars — from Timothee Chalamet to Nicole Kidman to Matt Damon — are expected on the Croisette between July 6 and 17.</p>.<p>It's not quite a return to normal, of course, even if France's Covid numbers have been steadily improving and most restrictions lifted.</p>.<p>There will be no "bises" — the French-style peck on the cheeks — at the top of the fabled steps to the Palais des Festivals.</p>.<p>And some of the glitz will be toned down, with many after-parties cancelled and the big galas cutting their invite lists in half to meet social distancing guidelines.</p>.<p>Organisers are also slowly waking up to the fact that the sight of celebrities and moguls arriving on private jets and mega-yachts doesn't seem so chic in an age of impending climate disaster.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/covid-19-makes-the-cannes-parties-even-more-exclusive-1003886.html" target="_blank">Covid-19 makes the Cannes parties even more exclusive</a></strong></p>.<p>So this year: no plastic, lots of electric cars, and most symbolic of all: a red carpet that is half the size and made from recycled material.</p>.<p>But our collective need to gawp at megastars on the Cote d'Azur will not be denied.</p>.<p>One film in this year's competition accounts for an outsize share of the celeb-count: Wes Anderson's "The French Dispatch" includes Chalamet, Benicio del Toro, Bill Murray and many more.</p>.<p>Two other stars of that film — Tilda Swinton and Lea Seydoux — will be near-ubiquitous on the Croisette, with appearances in a remarkable eight movies between them.</p>.<p>Damon is in town for the premiere of his latest thriller, the Marseilles-set "Stillwater".</p>.<p>But Cannes is all about the filmmakers, and after last year's edition was cancelled due to the pandemic, a particularly rich crop of festival alumni is competing for the Palme d'Or.</p>.<p>Among those submitting themselves to the famously blunt audiences of Cannes are several past winners: Italy's Nanni Moretti with his new film <em>Tre Piani</em>, France's Jacques Audiard (<em>Les Olympiades</em>) and Thailand's master of the slow-burn Apichatpong Weerasethakul with his English-language debut (<em>Memoria</em>).</p>.<p>The opening night film is also a first in English for France's Leo Carax, directing Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard in what is certain to be a bizarre and visually arresting musical about a celebrity couple and their mysterious child, <em>Annette</em>.</p>.<p>Dutch shockmeister Paul Verhoeven, who made his name with Hollywood megahits like <em>Robocop</em> and <em>Basic Instinct</em>, continues his late run of (slightly) more subtle European fare with "Benedetta" about lesbian nuns in 17th century Italy.</p>.<p>Sean Penn will also be hoping for a personal resurrection after his catastrophic Cannes appearance in 2016, when his Africa-based humanitarian love story <em>The Last Face</em> was mercilessly booed.</p>.<p>He is aiming for a warmer reception to <em>Flag Day</em>, starring himself and his daughter Dylan.</p>.<p>Also in the competition are Iran's two-time Oscar winner Asghar Farhadi, who returns with <em>A Hero</em>, and Russia's Kirill Serebrennikov, who is unable to attend due to an embezzlement conviction that is widely seen as punishment for criticising Vladimir Putin.</p>.<p>The panel judging the 24 entries is headed by US director Spike Lee — the first time a black man has led the jury — and includes <em>The Serpent</em> star Tahar Rahim and US actress Maggie Gyllenhaal.</p>.<p>With just four female directors in the competition, the festival's tendency to pick the usual (male) suspects of the arthouse elite is once again under scrutiny.</p>.<p>Only one woman has won the top Palme d'Or prize in 73 editions of the festival: Jane Campion for <em>The Piano</em> in 1993.</p>.<p>The selection is more balanced in the other sections, however, with over half the entries in the independent Directors' Fortnight and International Critics Week coming from women directors.</p>.<p>US actor-director Jodie Foster will likely field questions on the subject as she picks up an honorary Palme.</p>.<p>There is plenty happening outside the competitions, including a first showing of Oliver Stone's new documentary about the JFK assassination, updating his feature-length conspiracy theory from 1991.</p>.<p>That will play in the new Cannes Premiere section, along with other intriguing documentaries: one about troubled star Val Kilmer (<em>Val</em>) and Charlotte Gainsbourg's ode to her mother Jane Birkin (<em>Jane</em>).</p>
<p>The Cannes Film Festival returns next week, promising to bury the long months of darkness and solitude under an avalanche of celebrity, champagne and chin-stroking arthouse cinema.</p>.<p>It is billed as nothing less than a resurrection. "Cinema is not dead!" festival supremo Thierry Fremaux declared last month.</p>.<p>It is the first major fully-fledged film festival since the pandemic, and a truckload of Hollywood stars — from Timothee Chalamet to Nicole Kidman to Matt Damon — are expected on the Croisette between July 6 and 17.</p>.<p>It's not quite a return to normal, of course, even if France's Covid numbers have been steadily improving and most restrictions lifted.</p>.<p>There will be no "bises" — the French-style peck on the cheeks — at the top of the fabled steps to the Palais des Festivals.</p>.<p>And some of the glitz will be toned down, with many after-parties cancelled and the big galas cutting their invite lists in half to meet social distancing guidelines.</p>.<p>Organisers are also slowly waking up to the fact that the sight of celebrities and moguls arriving on private jets and mega-yachts doesn't seem so chic in an age of impending climate disaster.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/covid-19-makes-the-cannes-parties-even-more-exclusive-1003886.html" target="_blank">Covid-19 makes the Cannes parties even more exclusive</a></strong></p>.<p>So this year: no plastic, lots of electric cars, and most symbolic of all: a red carpet that is half the size and made from recycled material.</p>.<p>But our collective need to gawp at megastars on the Cote d'Azur will not be denied.</p>.<p>One film in this year's competition accounts for an outsize share of the celeb-count: Wes Anderson's "The French Dispatch" includes Chalamet, Benicio del Toro, Bill Murray and many more.</p>.<p>Two other stars of that film — Tilda Swinton and Lea Seydoux — will be near-ubiquitous on the Croisette, with appearances in a remarkable eight movies between them.</p>.<p>Damon is in town for the premiere of his latest thriller, the Marseilles-set "Stillwater".</p>.<p>But Cannes is all about the filmmakers, and after last year's edition was cancelled due to the pandemic, a particularly rich crop of festival alumni is competing for the Palme d'Or.</p>.<p>Among those submitting themselves to the famously blunt audiences of Cannes are several past winners: Italy's Nanni Moretti with his new film <em>Tre Piani</em>, France's Jacques Audiard (<em>Les Olympiades</em>) and Thailand's master of the slow-burn Apichatpong Weerasethakul with his English-language debut (<em>Memoria</em>).</p>.<p>The opening night film is also a first in English for France's Leo Carax, directing Adam Driver and Marion Cotillard in what is certain to be a bizarre and visually arresting musical about a celebrity couple and their mysterious child, <em>Annette</em>.</p>.<p>Dutch shockmeister Paul Verhoeven, who made his name with Hollywood megahits like <em>Robocop</em> and <em>Basic Instinct</em>, continues his late run of (slightly) more subtle European fare with "Benedetta" about lesbian nuns in 17th century Italy.</p>.<p>Sean Penn will also be hoping for a personal resurrection after his catastrophic Cannes appearance in 2016, when his Africa-based humanitarian love story <em>The Last Face</em> was mercilessly booed.</p>.<p>He is aiming for a warmer reception to <em>Flag Day</em>, starring himself and his daughter Dylan.</p>.<p>Also in the competition are Iran's two-time Oscar winner Asghar Farhadi, who returns with <em>A Hero</em>, and Russia's Kirill Serebrennikov, who is unable to attend due to an embezzlement conviction that is widely seen as punishment for criticising Vladimir Putin.</p>.<p>The panel judging the 24 entries is headed by US director Spike Lee — the first time a black man has led the jury — and includes <em>The Serpent</em> star Tahar Rahim and US actress Maggie Gyllenhaal.</p>.<p>With just four female directors in the competition, the festival's tendency to pick the usual (male) suspects of the arthouse elite is once again under scrutiny.</p>.<p>Only one woman has won the top Palme d'Or prize in 73 editions of the festival: Jane Campion for <em>The Piano</em> in 1993.</p>.<p>The selection is more balanced in the other sections, however, with over half the entries in the independent Directors' Fortnight and International Critics Week coming from women directors.</p>.<p>US actor-director Jodie Foster will likely field questions on the subject as she picks up an honorary Palme.</p>.<p>There is plenty happening outside the competitions, including a first showing of Oliver Stone's new documentary about the JFK assassination, updating his feature-length conspiracy theory from 1991.</p>.<p>That will play in the new Cannes Premiere section, along with other intriguing documentaries: one about troubled star Val Kilmer (<em>Val</em>) and Charlotte Gainsbourg's ode to her mother Jane Birkin (<em>Jane</em>).</p>