It’s All About the Auteur
To understand Cannes, you have to understand one crucial French concept: the ‘auteur theory.’ Popularized by French critics (many of whom became legendary filmmakers themselves) in the 1950s, the theory posits that a director is the true ‘author’ of a film. While Hollywood often sees a movie as a product of a studio, a producer, or a bankable star, the French tradition insists that a film is the singular vision of its director. Every choice—from the script to the camera angle to the editing—is an expression of their personal artistry. Cannes was built on this philosophy. It’s not a marketplace to sell blockbusters (though deals are certainly made); it's a cathedral built to celebrate cinematic art, and the director is its high priest. When a film is chosen
for the main competition, it is officially an invitation to the director, not the studio or the stars.
Rituals of Reverence
This director-centric worldview is baked into the festival’s every ritual. The iconic walk up the 24 steps of the Palais des Festivals is the great equalizer, but the reception inside is what tells the story. The now-legendary standing ovations—which can stretch from a polite five minutes to a joint-aching eighteen minutes (as Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ received)—are directed primarily at the filmmaker. They are a visceral, public affirmation of their artistic achievement. Press conferences are not just junkets for actors to repeat charming anecdotes. They are intense, intellectual forums where journalists from around the world grill directors on their thematic intentions and aesthetic choices. Winning the top prize, the Palme d’Or, doesn’t just mean you had a good run; it anoints you into the pantheon of cinematic masters alongside Fellini, Kurosawa, Coppola, and Campion. It’s a career-defining validation of personal vision.
The Croisette vs. Hollywood
This reverence stands in stark contrast to the Hollywood system. In the U.S. film industry, the director is often just one piece of a massive commercial puzzle. The studio has final cut, the producer manages the budget, and the star’s name is what sells the tickets. Directors can be, and often are, replaced mid-production if they don't align with the studio’s commercial goals. You’d never see a Marvel movie marketed with ‘From the Visionary Director Who Brought You…’ placed above Chris Evans’s face on the poster. At Cannes, that’s exactly the point. The festival champions films that would be considered difficult or uncommercial in the American market precisely because they bear the unmistakable stamp of a single creator. It’s a temporary, two-week bubble where the power dynamic of the global film industry is completely inverted. Here, commerce serves art, not the other way around.
Anointing the Next Generation
This tradition isn't just about celebrating established legends like Martin Scorsese or Francis Ford Coppola, who are treated like visiting royalty. A huge part of Cannes's function is to use its platform to discover and consecrate the next generation of auteurs. When a young filmmaker has their first movie play at Cannes, their career trajectory changes overnight. Suddenly, they are no longer just a promising indie director; they are an internationally recognized artist. Directors like Julia Ducournau (‘Titane’), the Safdie Brothers (‘Good Time’), or Yorgos Lanthimos (‘The Lobster’) were all given a global stage at Cannes that transformed them from niche talents into cinematic rock stars. The festival bestows a stamp of approval that gives these filmmakers the clout to get their next, often more ambitious, projects made—ensuring the cycle of auteur-driven cinema continues.











