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10 Must-See Movies From the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

From a new Spike Lee joint to shark-infested waters, these are the highlights from the most exciting film festival in the world.

May 21, 2025|Written by Eric Kohn, Artistic Director

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The Cannes Film Festival continues into next weekend, with many movies set to premiere in the days ahead. This is always the tricky challenge for Cannes audiences as they scramble to track all the highlights and inevitably miss out on a few. This Saturday, the festival will announce the winner of the coveted Palme d’Or, which last year went to future Oscar Best Picture winner Anora.

While we await that update, here are 10 movies that stood out as my favorites from the festival’s first half, some of which are still seeking distribution.

Highest 2 Lowest

highest 2 lowest

Spike Lee’s most vibrant, exciting movie in years reteams him with Denzel Washington for a spirited remake of Akira Kurosawa’s High to Low. The lively thriller finds Washington’s successful record executive tracking down a kidnapper who has nabbed his son. In the process, the movie explores the nature of the creative process as Washington’s character reexamines his priorities in life. It’s a total blast from start to finish, from Washington’s brilliantly domineering performance to the playful jabs at the entrepreneurial energy of the music business. Apple and A24 will release the movie in late August.

Sirat

sirat

French director Oliver Lax’s mesmerizing portrait of a father looking for his missing daughter at a rave in the desert splits the difference between Hardcore and Mad Max: Fury Road. Produced in part by Pedro Almodovar, the movie works with dizzying momentum as it utilizes the thumping bass of rave music to heighten the tension of the soul-searching journey at hand. This is breathtaking filmmaking of the highest order. Still seeking U.S. distribution.

Die, My Love

die my love

Filmmaker Lynne Ramsay (You Were Never Really Here) follows a troubled young married couple (Jennifer Lawrence and Robert Pattinson) as they contend with postpartum depression in the woods. A haunting and powerful character study about the bonds of marriage under the constraints of nascent parenthood, Die My Love is a powerful atmospheric achievement as well as an actors’ showcase. MUBI has acquired the film for release later this year.

Yes

yes nadav lapid

Israeli director Nadav Lapid is one of his country’s most celebrated filmmakers. (His previous feature, Syndromes, won the Golden Bear at the prestigious Berlinale.) His latest effort is a frenetic look at a hard-partying Israeli couple who struggle to make sense of their country’s war, while constantly distracted by the hedonism of their daily lives. After a lively series of party sequences that define their lifestyle, Yes shifts into a more somber and contemplative tone for its second half as the couple’s marriage reaches a possible breaking point. Alternately wacky and philosophical, Yes delivers a robust cinematic achievement sure to instigate many heated debates. Still seeking U.S. distribution.

The Secret Agent

secret agent

Kleber Mendoza Filho has steadily become Brazil’s most exciting and original filmmakers with cryptic and surprising achievements such as Neighboring Sounds and Bacurau. A former critic and lifelong cinephile, Filho has made one of his personal works with this mesmerizing look at a solitary man (the great Wagner Moura) in the late 1970s who arrives in his old hometown to confront his past. While rekindling his relationship with his estranged son, he also faces the boundaries of life under dictatorship as eerie events begin to unfold. Equal parts Twin Peaks and Roma, this is an authentic and intoxicating immersion into a time and place rich with hidden meanings at every turn. Still seeking U.S. distribution.

Nouvelle Vague

Nouvelle Vague

In 1960, Jean-Luc Godard changed film history forever with the success of his black-and-white crime caper Breathless, which wasn’t really a crime caper at all. It was, instead, a playful homage to gangster movies that treated hip cinematic style as an art form unto itself. Director Richard Linklater (Boyhood) delivers his first-ever French language production with his charming look at the history of the Breathless production and why, in its giddy, lo-fi fashion, it had a seismic effect on filmmaking for generations to come.

Eddington

eddington

While director Ari Aster was mainly known for his horror movie instincts with the disturbing one-two punch of Hereditary and Midsommar, he continues to prove that his abilities extend far beyond that genre. First came the Freudian dark comedy Beau is Afraid, and now he’s entered a much broader satiric arena with Eddington. Reteaming with his Beau star Joaquin Phoenix, Aster delivers a highly unpredictable and bizarre look at a small desert town in the midst of the 2020 pandemic. Phoenix’s wily sheriff goes head-to-head with the powerful local mayor (Pedro Pascal) as a range of tensions mount that reflect the broader sense of confusion in the rest of the world. The premise builds to a bold, violent climax loaded with ambiguity and a kind of cartoonish subversiveness reminiscent of R. Crumb cartoons. It’s designed to make some viewers uncomfortable and scratch their heads, but trying to figure out the hidden meanings of Eddington are exactly what make it such a transgressive thrill. A24 will release it later this summer.

The Wave

the wave lelio

Sebastian Lelio won the Oscar for Best International Feature Film with his touching drama A Fantastic Woman, and here expands on the themes of feminist rage and repression found in his earlier movies. With The Wave, Lelio recounts the 2019 feminist protests on college campuses across Chile that informed national conversations. A lively and inventive musical drama, the movie follows one student as she contends with the risks of speaking out about her experiences, and how she galvanizes the community around her as a result. Loaded with rousing song-and-dance numbers (many of which appear to take place in the main character’s head), The Wave manages to embody the angry energy of the movement itself. Still seeking U.S. distribution.

Splitsville

splitsville

Director Michael Covino and his writing partner Kyle Marvin first explored buddies who friendship was broken by infidelity with their celebrated debut The Climb. Now they expand that premise to a friendship broken by the tenuous boundaries of an open marriage. Co-starring the writer-director pair alongside Dakota Johnson and Adria Arjona, Splitsville is the kind of rowdy, foul-mouthed comedy we don’t see enough these days, and it speeds along with delirious comedic energy throughout. Neon will release it in August.

Dangerous Animals

dangerous animals

With only a handful of features, Australian director Sean Byrne has established himself as one of the most satisfying horror directors out there, from his Texas Chainsaw-inspired The Loved Ones to the heavy metal shocker The Devil’s Candy. He returns with his first feature in a decade, a bloody and satisfying twist on the shark movie genre in which it’s not the sharks who are the villains. Instead, it’s a demented fisherman who catches unsuspecting women and feeds them to the beasts below. Loaded with a series of wacky twists right down to its shocking finish, Dangerous Animals delivers the goods for diehard horror fans and injects new energy into the shark movie subgenre. IFC Films releases it this summer.