When Thierry Frémaux, artistic director of the Cannes film festival, held the traditional press conference in April to announce the lineup of the 72nd edition, one big name was conspicuous by its absence. Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, the auteur director’s take on late-60s, Manson-traumatised Los Angeles, was, Frémaux said, “not ready”; its failure to meet the deadline would be a big loss for the festival, depriving it of one of its favourite master directors and the immense firepower of its cast – Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Margot Robbie and Al Pacino.
Fortunately for all concerned, Once Upon a Time in Hollywood did manage to make the party: Frémaux was able to announce its inclusion a few days later, saying that Tarantino “has not left the editing room in four months”. Having won the Palme d’Or, the festival’s highest award, in 1994 for his second feature, Pulp Fiction, Tarantino will be able to join the other big beasts in Cannes, including the UK’s Ken Loach (with gig economy drama Sorry We Missed You), Spain’s Pedro Almodóvar (film industry memoir Pain and Glory) and the Dardenne brothers from Belgium with radicalisation drama The Young Ahmed. A Hidden Life, a new film by another American auteur, Terrence Malick, about anti-Nazi activist Franz Jägerstätter, is also due to premiere at the festival, but Malick has been a famously elusive figure for decades and is not likely to attend.
Behind the hoopla and star power, however, a number of controversies lie in ambush. Tarantino himself could well be in the firing line, as critics wait to see if Once Upon a Time in Hollywood crosses the taste and decency line in its treatment of the real-life savagery of the 1969 murder of Sharon Tate, the then-wife of film-maker Roman Polanski. Tarantino’s films have a record of extreme violence, and the director himself has not emerged from the industry reckoning over #MeToo with much credit, after accusations emerged of his treatment of Uma Thurman during the making of Kill Bill for which he apologised, and his 2003 comments about Polanski’s 1977 sexual abuse case, in which he said Polanski’s 13-year-old victim was “down with it”.
Cannes’ eager embrace of Tarantino also throws into sharp relief the sluggish progress the festival has made in including female film-makers in its selection. After Frémaux signed a pledge at the 2018 edition aiming to improve gender parity at the festival, this year only four films with female directors (out of 21 in total) have been selected for the prestigious competition section. This still represents a record – four women were also selected in 2011 – but is not enough to satisfy activists, who staged a silent protest on the Palais des Festivals’ steps in 2018. Melissa Silverstein, founder of campaign group Women and Hollywood, said: “There are different excuses each year. Instead of being defensive, we’d like [Frémaux] to embrace the issue and be a leader.” However Frémaux refused to say that Cannes was aiming for gender parity in its selection. At the festival’s opening press conference, he said: “People ask Cannes to do things they don’t ask other festivals to do … The Cannes film festival is asked to be impeccable and perfect. No one has asked me to have 50% of films made by women. That would show a lack of respect.”
Small improvements have been made with the introduction of family-friendly facilities, such as a nappy changing area and list of childminders; these complement the hotline to report harassment that was set up last year. On the other hand, the decision to honour veteran French actor Alain Delon with an honorary Palme d’Or has been greeted with dismay by campaigners, who point to Delon’s history of misogynist comments and far-right politics. French feminist organisation Osez le féminisme said: “Cannes is sending a negative signal to women and victims of violence by honouring Delon in spite of the fact that he admitted to having slapped women.” Frémaux responded by saying: “We’re not going to give the Nobel peace prize to Alain Delon … He is entitled to express his views. Today it is very difficult to honour somebody because you have a sort of political police that falls on you.”
Cannes’ other exposed flank is its continuing row with streaming giant Netflix, which remains unresolved. French distributors reacted angrily after two high-profile films – Okja and The Meyerowitz Stories – distributed by Netflix appeared in the 2017 competition, despite the streamer’s refusal to adhere to the French practice of allowing a 36-month window before release on a streaming service. Netflix boycotted Cannes in 2018, giving its plum project, the Alfonso Cuarón-directed Roma to Cannes’ Italian rival, the Venice film festival. No Netflix films will appear in 2019 either, although it appears the leading contenders – Martin Scorsese’s mob drama The Irishman and Steven Soderbergh’s Panama Papers investigative story The Laundromat – were not going to be completed in time.
The Cannes film festival runs from 14-25 May.
• This article was amended on 14 May 2019 to correct the description of the 36-month distribution window in France, which is not exclusively given to cinema release as an earlier version said.