Iñárritu’s first English-language feature since his 2015 Oscar-winning The Revenant, which brought DiCaprio his first Oscar after man noms, Digger is a darkly comic drama billed as “a comedy of catastrophic proportions.”
The film stars and is produced by Tom Cruise, who plays Digger Rockwell, “the most powerful man in the world,” as he races to prove he is humanity’s savior before the disaster he’s unleashed destroys everything.
The Warner Bros. and Legendary title has set an Oct. 2 release date, positioning it for a potential fall festival debut.
The cast includes Sandra Hüller, John Goodman, Michael Stuhlbarg, Jesse Plemons, Sophie Wilde, Riz Ahmed and Emma D’Arcy.
Venice Fest hosted Iñárritu premieres including his latest film “Bardo, False Chronicle of a Handful of Truths,” which was a flop, as well as “Birdman” and “21 Grams.”
Cannes also looms as a possibility given the director’s long-standing relationship with the festival dating back to “Amores Perros.”
Cruise loves Cannes, having premiered there “Top Gun: Maverick” and “Mission: Impossible. The Final Reckoning” there.
‘Disclosure Day,’ Steven Spielberg
Could Spielberg’s next film, “Disclosure Day,” bow on the Croisette? It’s surely on Fremaux’s radar since Universal Pictures has set a June 12 release date. The science-fiction movie stars Emily Blunt, Josh O’Connor, Colin Firth, Eve Hewson, Colman Domingo, Wyatt Russell and Henry Lloyd-Hughes. Spielberg developed the UFO story with screenwriter David Koepp, with whom he previously worked on “Jurassic Park,” “Jurassic Park: The Lost World,” “War of the Worlds” and “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.” If the movie launched at Cannes, it would most likely play out of competition where Spielberg presented “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull” in 2008, “The Color Purple” in 1986″ and “E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial,” which played as the closing night film in 1982. Cannes is also close to Spielberg’s heart because his first film, “Sugarland Express,” won best screenplay at the fest in 1974. He was also president of the jury in 2013.
‘Dune: Part Three,’ Denis Villeneuve
Besides “Digger,” Warner Bros. and Legendary Entertainment have another hot movie that could land a big festival premiere: Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune: Part Three,” whose cast is stacked enough to draw dozens of headlines and carry an entire festival. Based on Frank Herbert’s second “Dune” novel, “Dune: Part Three” sees Timothée Chalamet and Zendaya reprising their roles alongside Robert Pattinson, Florence Pugh, Jason Momoa, Josh Brolin, Rebecca Ferguson and Anya Taylor-Joy. Barbera, who hosted the world premiere for “Dune” out of competition at Venice in 2021, told Variety at Marrakech that he’s already talked to Villeneuve about coming back to the Lido with the third opus. “He just finished shooting the film,” Barbera said, adding that “It will be released in the fall of next year. So it could be a possibility.” In fact, Warner Bros. has set the release date for the winter, rather than the fall, on Dec. 18. The last installment, “Dune: Part Two” skipped festivals and bowed in London.
‘The Entertainment System Is Down,’ Ruben Östlund
One of our surest bets is the return of Östlund to Cannes’ competition with his next satirical black comedy, “The Entertainment System Is Down,” starring an ensemble cast including Kirsten Dunst, Keanu Reeves and Daniel Brühl. The Swedish provocateur spent four years making this new film — his most ambitious yet — after winning two Palme d’Ors back to back with “The Square” in 2017 and “Triangle of Sadness” in 2022. Acquired early on by A24 in an eight-figure deal, the big-budget project unfolds on a long-haul flight between England and Australia where the entertainment system fails, sparking chaos and rage among bored passengers. Östlund shot it in a real Boeing 747 which was acquired for the film. Speaking to Variety about the project a couple of years ago, Östlund said it will be “a study of how human beings interact in this little laboratory that is a plane” and “how modern human beings are wrecked under these circumstances.” Östlund also seemed confident that it “will cause the biggest walkout” in the history of Cannes Film Festival.
‘1949,’ Paweł Pawlikowski
Paweł Pawlikowski, the Oscar-winning Polish director of “Ida,” is now in post on “1949,” a period drama starring Sandra Hüller (“Zone of Interest,” “Anatomy of a Fall”) which marks his first film since his Oscar-nominated 2018 hit “Cold War.” The film is set at the height of the Cold War and revolves on the relationship between German writer Thomas Mann and his daughter Erika, an actress, journalist and rally driver, as they embark on a road trip in a black Buick cruiser across a Germany in ruins — from U.S. dominated Frankfurt to Soviet controlled Weimar. It’s produced by Mubi and Lorenzo Mieli and Mario Gianani’s Our Films. Exploring once again themes of identity and family bonds in post-WW2 Europe, “1949” could open at Cannes where Pawlikowski won best director with “Cold War” in 2018 and earned three Oscar nominations the following year.
‘Paper Tiger,’ James Gray
James Gray’s “Paper Tiger,” a gritty crime story starring Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson and Miles Teller, doesn’t yet have a release date but is expected during the first half of 2026 which means that it could world premiere at Cannes. It would be a homecoming of sorts for Gray, who is beloved in France and considered a Croisette regular having already presented five films there, including “Armageddon Time,” “The Immigrant,” “Two Lovers,” “We Own the Night” and “The Yards.” He also sat on Cannes’ jury in 2009, the year it was presided over by Isabelle Huppert. Yet, the mix reception of “Armageddon Time” at Cannes in 2022 could temper expectations. “Paper Tiger” was independently produced and doesn’t have U.S. distribution yet.
‘Parallel Tales,’ Asghar Farhadi
Iranian auteur Asghar Farhadi looks like a natural fit for Cannes 2026 with his latest film,” Parallel Tales.” Slated for a spring release, the film shot in Paris with a dazzling French ensemble led by two of the country’s most iconic actresses, Isabelle Huppert and Catherine Deneuve, alongside Virginie Efira and Vincent Cassel. Cannes has consistently championed Farhadi’s dramas over the years. His previous French-language film, “The Past,” marked his first film in competition at Cannes in 2013 and won best actress for Berenice Bejo. He has presented three other movies in competition: “The Salesman” which won best screenplay and best actor for Shahab Hosseini in 2016, the Spanish-language film “Everybody Knows” which opened the festival in 2018, and “A Hero,” which won the Grand Prize in 2021. He served on the jury (presided over by Vincent Lindon) the following year.





