Cannes Film Fest 2025: Directors Fortnight Lineup–Petzold, Victor, Campillo

Directors Fortnight Lineup: Including Christian Petzold’s ‘Miroirs n.3,’ Eva Victor’s ‘Sorry, Baby,’ Robin Campillo’s ‘Enzo’

Miroirs n. 3

Directors’ Fortnight, the independent series running alongside Cannes Fest, has unveiled an eclectic lineup for its 57th edition, which will showcase Christian Petzold’s “Miroirs n.3,” Eva Victor’s “Sorry, Baby,” Robin Campillo’s “Enzo” and Lloyd Lee Choi’s “Lucky Lu.”

Curated by Julien Rejl, Directors’ Fortnight will open with “Enzo,” a film which was directed by Robin Campillo (“BPM Beats Per Minute)” who stepped in to helm the film after Laurent Cantet, longtime friend and collaborator, died in April. Cantet and Campillo had previously collaborated on the script of the Palme d’Or-winning The Class.

Produced by Marie-Ange Luciani (“Anatomy of a Fall”) at Les Films de Pierre, “Enzo” is set in Marseille and follows the journey of young apprentice mason who befriends a Ukrainian colleague. The film stars newcomers Eloy Pohu and Maksym Slivinskyi, alongside Élodie Bouchez and Pierfrancesco Favino.

Petzold’s “Miroirs n. 3” marks the German filmmaker’s fourth collaboration with Paul Beer, who stars as aspiring pianist whose life is shattered after car accident kills her boyfriend instantly. Petzold’s last film, “Afire,” won Berlin’s Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize in 2023 and was shortlisted as Germany’s official Oscar entry.

Lloyd Lee Choi’s “Lucky Lu,” which is based on the director’s life-action short “Same Old,” tells the story of a Chinese delivery driver in New York City who discovers his e-bike has been stolen. “With his family en route after many years apart, Lu must contend with a community that has turned its back on him while he tries to replace the only thing promising to keep his family afloat,” the plot reads. The movie shot in New York with Taiwanese actor Chang Chen (“Dune”).

Another English-language title is Sean Byrne’s “Dangerous Animals,” a serial-killer movie involving sharks which stars Jai Courtney (“Suicide Squad”), Hassie Harrison (“Yellowstone”) and Josh Heuston (“Dune: Prophecy”). “Dangerous Animals” follows Zephyr (Harrison), a rebellious surfer who is abducted by a shark-obsessed serial killer (Courtney). “Dangerous Animals” was bought by IFC Films and AMC Networks’ streamer Shudder.

Anthony Cordier’s comedy “Middle Class,” which stars popular French cast including Laurent Lafitte (“Elle”), Élodie Bouchez (“Beating Hearts”) and Laure Calamy (“Call My Agent!); and Thomas Ngijol’s “Indomptables,” a Cameroon-set detective thriller.

The roster includes Canadian director Anne Edmond’s “Peak Everything,” a romantic comedy following Adam, a modest kennel owner whose mundane life takes an unexpected turn when he meets Tina, who works for a company that sells light therapy lamps.

Directors’ Fortnight will also present “Militantropos,” a documentary directed by Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova and Simon Mozgovyi, on the impact of the Russian-Ukrainian war on people’s personal behavior.

Feature films: 18

“Enzo,” Laurent Cantet, Robin Campillo (Opening film)

“Amour Apocalypse,” Anne Émond

“Brand New Landscape,” Yuiga Danzuka

“Classe moyenne” (‘Middle Class’), Anthony Cordier

“Dangerous Animals,” Sean Byrne

“The Foxes Round,” Valéry Carnoy (belgian movie starring samuel kircher)

“The Girl in the Snow,” Louise Hémon

“The Girls We Want,” Prïncia Car

“Girl on Edge,” Jinghao Zhou

“Indomptables,” Thomas Ngijol

“Kokuho,” Lee Sang-il

“Lucky Lu,” Lloyd Lee Choi

“Militantropos,” Yelizaveta Smith, Alina Gorlova, Simon Mozgovyi

“Miroirs n. 3,” Christian Petzold

“La mort n’existe pas,” Félix Dufour-Laperrière

“The President’s Cake,” Hasan Hadi

“Que ma volonté soit faite,” Julia Kowalski

“Sorry Baby,” Eva Victor (closing film)

Share this:
Share this page via Email Share this page via Stumble Upon Share this page via Digg this Share this page via Facebook Share this page via Twitter