The 2026 Cannes Film Festival lineup was announced this morning, and among the headline filmmakers set to debut new works are veteran American indie director Ira Sachs and Iranian director Asghar Farhadi. Scroll down for the full list of titles. 

Ira Sachs will screen The Man I Love, a feature set in 1980s New York. The film has been described as a “musical fantasia of a city under duress.” This morning, Cannes chief Thierry Frémaux said the film deals with the AIDS crisis. Sachs wrote the screenplay with Mauricio Zacharias. Starring in the film are Tom Sturridge, Luther Ford, Rebecca Hall, and Ebon Moss-Bachrach.

Farhadi will debut Parallel Stories, a feature he shot in Paris last year. The film is yet to receive an official synopsis, but the cast features Isabelle Huppert, Virginie Efira, Vincent Cassel, Pierre Niney, and Adam Bessa. Parallel Tales is the Oscar-winning Iranian director’s first feature since A Hero, which won the Grand Prix at Cannes in 2021. The film also marks Farhadi’s second French-language outing after The Past with Tahar Rahim and Berenice Bejo, who won the Best Actress award for her performance at Cannes in 2013.

Elsewhere, the buzzy American filmmaker Jane Schoenbrun returns with a new feature titled Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma. Schoenbrun’s latest is one of the most-talked-about titles of the year, following the success of the filmmaker’s 2024 film I Saw the TV Glow. Plan B has produced Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma, which will screen in UCR. The film stars Hannah Einbinder and Gillian Anderson.

There are also some heavy hitters outside of the festival’s competition strands. Nicolas Winding Refn returns with Her Private Hell, Steven Soderbergh will screen John Lennon: The Last Interview, and Ron Howard will debut Avedon.

Pierre Salvadori’s The Electric Kiss (La Vénus électrique) is the festival’s opening title. Set against the backdrop of the early 20th-century Paris art world, the period drama stars Pio Marmaï, Anaïs Demoustier, Gilles Lellouche, and Vimala Pons.

John Travolta‘s directorial debut, Propeller One-Way, will also screen at the festival before its May 29 launch on Apple TV. 

The under-the-radar Apple Original Films project is inspired by the 1997 kids’ book of the same name that Travolta wrote for his son. The mid-length film, whose cast includes his daughter Ella Bleu Travolta, charts a nostalgic journey set in the golden age of aviation: “Young airplane enthusiast Jeff (played by newcomer Clark Shotwell) and his mother (Kelly Eviston-Quinnett) set off on a one-way cross-country odyssey to Hollywood, which transforms a simple flight into the trip of a lifetime. Between airline meals, charming flight attendants (played by Ella Bleu Travolta and Olga Hoffmann), unexpected stopovers, larger-than-life passengers, and a thrilling glimpse at first class, the journey unfolds in moments both magical and unexpected, charting the course for the boy’s future.”

Propeller One-Way will play in the festival’s Premiere Selection in the Debussy Theater at the Palais des Festivals, with Travolta in attendance. 

Cannes runs from May 12 to 23. 

COMPETITION
Minotaur, Andrey Zvyagintsev

The Beloved, Rodrigo Sorogoyen

The Man I Love, Ira Sachs

Fatherland, Pawel Pawlikowski

Moulin, Lazlo Nemes

Histoires de la Nuit, Lea Mysius

Fjiord, Cristian Mungiu

Notre Salut, Emmanuel Marre

Gentle Monster, Marie Kreutzer

Hope, Na Hong-Jin 

Nagi Notes, Kôji Fukada

Sheep in the Box, Hirokazu Kore-eda

Garance, Jeanne Herry

The Unknown, Arthur Harari

Sudden, Ryûsuke Hamaguchi

The Dreamed Adventure, Valeska Grisebach

Coward, Lukas Dhont

La Bola Negra, Javier Calvo and Javier Ambrossi

Parallel Stories, Asghar Farhadi

Bitter Christmas, Pedro Almodóvar

A Woman’s Life, Charline Bourgeois-Taquet

UN CERTAIN REGARD
La más dulce, Laïla Marrakchi

Club Kid, Jordan Firstman

Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma, Jane Schoenbrun

Yesterday the Eye Didn’t Sleep, Rakan Mayasi

Everytime, Sandra Wollner

Meltdown, Manuela Martelli

OUT OF COMPETITION
Her Private Hell, Nicolas Winding Refn 

Diamond, Andy Garcia

The Electric Kiss, Pierre Salvadori

De Gaulle: L’Age de Fer, Antonin Baudry

CANNES PREMIERE
Propeller One-Way, John Travolta

Kokurojo: The Samurai and the Prisoner, Kiyoshi Kurosawa

SPECIAL SCREENINGS
John Lennon: The Last Interview, Steven Soderbergh

Avedon, Ron Howard

Les Survivants du Che, Christophe Réveille

Les Matins  Merveilleux – Avril Besson

MIDNIGHT SCREENINGS
Roma elastica, Bertrand Mandico

Jim Queen, Nicolas Athane and Marco Nguyen

Full Phil, Quentin Dupieux 

Colony, Yeon Sang-ho

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