WORST: The Paperboy (2012) — The 15-Minute Cringe
Let’s start with a masterclass in awkwardness. Lee Daniels’ steamy, swampy, and critically savaged thriller *The Paperboy* reportedly received a 15-minute standing ovation. Why is this one of the worst? Because it perfectly exposes the absurdity of the tradition. The film, which features a now-infamous scene involving Nicole Kidman and a jellyfish sting, was widely panned as a hot mess. For an audience to stand and clap for a quarter of an hour for *this* movie felt less like genuine appreciation and more like a hostage situation disguised as politeness. It's the quintessential example of a 'Cannes ovation' — a performative act completely divorced from the quality of the art, making everyone involved look a little silly.
BEST: Pan's Labyrinth (2006) — The 22-Minute Emotional Breakthrough
This is the ovation all
others are measured against. After the screening of Guillermo del Toro's dark fantasy masterpiece, the applause didn't just last; it swelled into a 22-minute tidal wave of emotion. This wasn't polite clapping. It was a raw, visceral reaction to a film that had clearly shattered the audience. The most enduring image is of del Toro himself, a large man known for his love of monsters, weeping openly. In a festival often defined by posturing, this was a moment of pure, unadulterated cinematic magic. The ovation wasn’t just long; it was earned. It cemented the film’s legacy and offered a beautiful portrait of an artist receiving his flowers in real time.
WORST: The Brown Bunny (2003) — Applause Drowned in Boos
While not a lengthy ovation in the traditional sense, the reception for Vincent Gallo's *The Brown Bunny* is a legendary Cannes disaster. The film was met with a chorus of boos and walkouts, primarily for its glacial pacing and an unsimulated oral sex scene that became an instant scandal. Any applause that occurred was fighting a losing battle against a tidal wave of derision. Critic Roger Ebert famously called it the worst film in the history of the festival. A 'worst' ovation isn't just about awkward length; it's about a moment so divisive and toxic that the very act of clapping becomes a bizarre act of defiance in a sea of hate. It represents the festival at its most pretentious and confrontational.
BEST: Fahrenheit 9/11 (2004) — The 20-Minute Political Rally
Sometimes, an ovation is about more than just the movie. When Michael Moore's scathing documentary about the Bush administration, *Fahrenheit 9/11*, premiered at Cannes, the subsequent 20-minute ovation felt like a political event. The global audience wasn't just applauding a film; they were applauding its message. It was a powerful, cathartic release of anti-war sentiment on an international stage. Moore's film would go on to win the festival's top prize, the Palme d'Or, a rare feat for a documentary. This ovation is one of the 'best' because it demonstrated the festival's power not just as a cinematic marketplace, but as a global cultural and political barometer.
THE GRAY AREA: Elvis (2022) — The 12-Minute Spectacle
Where does a film like Baz Luhrmann's *Elvis* fit? Its 12-minute ovation was long, loud, and perfectly in sync with the director’s more-is-more philosophy. The film is a hyper-caffeinated spectacle, and its reception was, too. It’s hard to call it one of the 'best' because it feels so… expected. Of course a Baz Luhrmann film got a huge, flashy ovation. It’s also hard to call it one of the 'worst' because the film was a bona fide hit and Austin Butler’s performance was electric. Instead, the *Elvis* ovation sits in a strange middle ground: a perfect marriage of style and substance, where the performative nature of the applause perfectly mirrored the dazzling, beautifully constructed artifice on screen. It wasn't cringe, nor was it a tearjerker. It was simply good show business.











