A jury led by director Ruben Ostlund announced on Saturday evening in France that Justine Triet's complex drama "Anatomy of a Fall" had won the Palme d'Or at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival. Merve Dizdar won an acting award for "About Dry Grasses." Triet was given the Palme by Jane Fonda. Triet became only the third woman to win the Palme after Jane Campion in 1993 for "The Piano" and Julia Ducournau in 2021 for "Titane."
The film was gained by Neon during the celebration, which makes it the fourth back to back Palme for that organization later "Parasite," "Titane" and "The Triangle of Bitterness."
According to TheWrap's review, "Anatomy of a Fall" is "part thorny family story, part whodunit, part courtroom drama, and part meditation on the nature of truth and fiction" and "takes two hours of conversations and makes them both provocative and propulsive."
Jonathan Glazer's harrowing Holocaust drama "The Zone of Interest," which many Cannes viewers had predicted would win the Palme, won the Grand Prix, which is essentially Cannes's second prize. "Fallen Leaves," a character study directed by Finnish director Aki Kaurismaki, won the Jury Prize, which was the third prize.
Tran Anh Hung won the award for best director for his romantic comedy about cooking and love, "The Pot-au-Feu."
Koji Yakusho, a Japanese actor, won the award for best actor for his role as a mild-mannered man who cleans toilets in Wim Wenders' low-key "Perfect Days." The best entertainer grant was won by Turkish entertainer Merve Dizdar for Nuri Bilge Ceylan's "About Dry Grasses."
The multi-perspective drama about young boys directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, "Monster," won the screenplay award for Sakamoto Yuji.
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Likewise at the service, Quentin Tarantino introduced an exceptional recognition for veteran low-spending plan chief maker Roger Corman, who got an extensive wildly energetic applause from the crowd at a celebration that regularly doesn't program the sort of movies he makes.
21 movies sought the Palme this year, with a record seven of them coming from female chiefs. Wes Anderson's "Asteroid City," Alice Rohrwacher's "La Chimera," Todd Haynes' "May December," and Ken Loach's "The Old Oak" are among the competing films.
Ruben Ostlund, the director of "Triangle of Sadness," headed the jury, which also included Denis Menochet, Brie Larson, Paul Dano, and Julia Ducournau, Rungano Nyoni, Atiq Rahimi, Damian Szifron, and Maryam Touzani.
The Vietnamese-Singaporean director Phan Thien An's "Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell" won the Camera d'Or, which is given to the festival's best first feature. The movie separated the Chiefs Fortnight sidebar at Cannes.
The short film Palme d'Or went to "27," by Verdure Ana Buda.
The victors:
The Palme d'Or: Life structures of a Fall," Justine Triet
Amazing Prix: " The Zone of Interest," Jonathan Glazer
Jury Prize: " "Fallen Leaves," directed by Aki Kaurismaki. Best Actor: Tran Anh Hung, "The Pot-au-Feu" Best Actress: Koji Yakusho, "Perfect Days" Best Screenplay: Merve Dizdar's "About Dry Grasses" Sakamoto Yuji, "Beast"
Camera d'Or (best first element): " Inside the Yellow Case Shell," Phan Thien An
Short film grants:
The short film "Pale d'Or": 27," Flora Ana Buda Special acknowledgement: Far"
Extra honors, recently declared:
Unconfirmed Regard:
Prize: "Uncertain Regard" Molly Manning Walker's "How to Have Sex" won the jury prize: Hounds,” directed by Kamal Lazraq; Asmae El Moudir, "The Mother, everything being equal"
New Voice Prize: " Baloji Ensemble Prize: "Omen" The Buriti Prize for Freedom: Goodbye Julia," winner of the Mohamed Kordofani La Cinef First Prize: Marlene Emilie Lyngstad, Second Prize: "Norwegian Offspring" Opening," Hwang Hyein
Third Award: " "Moon," which won the Zineb Wakrim The Golden Eye Documentary Prize, Kaouther Ben Hania's "Four Daughters" and Asmae El Moudir's "The Mother of All Lies"
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