The year Keanu Reeves reinvented the archetypal action hero by causing a glitch in the matrix and American Beauty brought an entire generation to puberty was the same year that film critic Anupama Chopra first attended the Festival de Cannes. It was 1999 and Chopra couldn’t have known how popular this prestigious arthouse film festival would become in the years to come.
“This year, it felt like there were even more people, if that’s even possible,” says Chopra, who returned to Mumbai last night. “It felt that the numbers in Cannes multiplied manifold because there was no table to be got at any restaurant for lunch or dinner, and the queues were incredibly long for every screening that I attended.”
Every attendee—whether a star in a gown or the star's entourage, or the eager hands that made Cannes a hotspot for long standing ovations—will attest to the fact that Cannes is insanely busy. “I go there for the movies, so there’s no time to relax. It’s just eight or nine days of watching everything I can from 8:30 am to however late I can last,” says Chopra, who, in 2008, was on Cannes’ coveted Un Certain Regard jury.
Here, she turns jury for The Nod, handpicking her favourite movies and performances, from should-have-been-blockbusters to must-be-lead actors. Scroll below for Anupama Chopra’s ultimate watch list from Cannes 2024.
A film that deserves a standing ovation: Emilia Pérez by Jacques Audiard.An actor who made me cry: Smita Patil in Shyam Benegal’s Manthan, which showed in Cannes Classics. Her fierce talent and beauty sears the screen.
An actor who made me laugh out loud: Radhika Apte in Sister Midnight and Jesse Plemons in Kinds of Kindness.
A film I had a hard time sitting through: Paul Schrader’s Oh, Canada!
A debutante who won my heart: Nykiya Adams in Bird.