Norway-set drama about political polarization āFjordā wins Palme dāOr at Cannes
Norway-set drama about political polarization āFjordā wins Palme dāOr at Cannes
JAKE COYLE Sat, May 23, 2026 at 9:40 PM UTC
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1 / 0France Cannes 2026 Awards CeremonyTilda Swinton, left, poses with Renate Reinsve, Cristian Mungiu, winner of the Palme d'Or for 'Fjord' and Sebastian Stan during the awards ceremony at the 79th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Saturday, May 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Andreea Alexandru) (AP Photo/Andreea Alexandru)
Cristian Mungiuās Norway-set drama about political polarization, āFjord,ā has won the Palme dāOr, handing the Cannes Film Festival ās top honor for the second time to Mungiu, the Romanian director of ā4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days.ā
At a 79th Cannes Film Festival that saw few films cause a stir, āFjordā found wide admiration for its engrossing tale of what Mungiu called āleft-wing fundamentalism.ā It stars Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve as Romanian Evangelicals who move to Norway, but soon after have their children taken from them by child services for spanking them.
āToday the society is split. Itās divided. Itās radicalized,ā said Mungiu. āThis film is a pledge against any type of fundamentalism. It's a pledge for these things we quote very often, like trauma and inclusion and empathy. These are lovely words but we need to apply them more often.ā
Mungiu becomes just the 10th filmmaker to win the Palme dāOr twice. His ā4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,ā a Romanian abortion drama, won the award in 2007.
The win for āFjordā extends one of the moviesā most extraordinary streaks. Neon, the specialty label, has now taken seven Palme dāOr winners in a row. āFjordā adds to its unparalleled run, including last yearās champion, Jafar Panahiās āIt Was Just an Accident,ā and the 2024 winner, āAnora.ā The latter went on to win best picture at the Oscars.
āMinotaurā wins Grand Prix
The Grand Prix, or second prize, went to āMinotaur,ā Andrey Zvyagintsevās domestic thriller set against Russiaās war with Ukraine. Loosely based on Claude Chabrolās 1969 film āThe Unfaithful Wife,ā āMinotaurā is about a Russian businessman suspicious of his wifeās indiscretions. At the same time, heās tasked with conscripting 150 of his workers for Vladimir Putinās war machine.
āThe only person who can stop this butchery is you, Mr. President of the Russian Federation,ā Zvyagintsev said, accepting his award. "Put an end to this slaughter. The whole world is waiting for this.ā
By wide consensus, it wasnāt a banner festival. Hollywood largely sat out this yearās edition. Many of the selections struggled to bowl over critics. The global buzz that Cannes typically generates was fitful at best.
But the awards handed out Saturday as the 79th Cannes drew to a close will significantly raise the international profiles of the winners. Last year's Cannes produced a long string of Oscar nominees, including āSentimental Valueā and āThe Secret Agent.ā
The nine-member jury that decided the awards was headed by Korean filmmaker Park Chan-wook. Demi Moore, ChloĆ© Zhao and Stellan SkarsgĆ„rd were also jurors. Chan-wook, a Cannes regular including last year with his satirical thriller āNo Other Choice,ā joked that he preferred not to give away the Palme.
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āTo be honest, I didnāt want to award the Palme dāOr to any of the films, because itās an award I myself have never gotten,ā Chan-wook told reporters after the ceremony. āBut I had no other choice.ā
Awards are split and shared
Two films won for best director: the Polish filmmaker Pawel Pawlikowski, for his postwar drama āFatherland,ā and the Spanish creative duo Javier Ambrossi and Javier Calvo for āThe Black Ball,ā a generation-spanning queer epic āThe Black Ball.ā
It was Pawlikowski's second time winning the same Cannes prize in as many films, following his āCold Warā in 2018. But the award marked a breakthrough for Ambrossi and Calvo in their first Cannes entry.
"No one knew us. Thierry didnāt know us," Ambrossi told reporters, referring to Thierry Fremaux, Cannes artistic director. āIt was just that the movie spoke.ā
Virginie Efira and Tao Okamoto, the two stars of Ryusuke Hamaguchiās āAll of a Suddenā shared the best actress award. In the elegantly empathetic drama, the two play women brought together in friendship out of their mutual sense of care for others.
The jury also split the best actor prize. They chose Emmanuel Macchia and Valentin Campagne, the two stars of "Coward,ā Lukas Dhontās drama about young Belgian men sent to the front lines of World War II.
The prize for best screenplay was awarded to Emmanuel Marre for āA Man of His Time,ā a French drama about a Nazi collaborator in Vichy France. Marre based it on the experiences of his own great-grandfather.
The jury prize, or third place, went to German filmmaker Valeska Grisebachās āThe Dreamed Adventure,ā a crime drama set in a Bulgarian border town.
Saturdayās ceremony was missing its tribute honoree. Barbra Streisand was to receive an honorary Palme dāOr, but a knee injury prevented her from attending. Isabelle Huppert nevertheless celebrated Streisand during the ceremony, and Streisand appeared in a taped video message.
The Camera dāOr, Cannesā award for best first film, went to Marie ClĆ©mentine Dusabejamboās post-genocide drama āBenāImana,ā the first Rwandan film to be officially selected for the festival.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā