The 2026 Cannes line-up brings a rich Asian and European presence, including the return of Renate Reinsve and Nicolas Winding Refn and the fresh debut by Eivind Landsvik.
Thursday noon April 9 at the Pathé Palace in Paris, the world saw Cannes Film Festival heads Iris Knobloch, President, and Thierry Frémaux, General Delegate, announcing the Official Selection of the 79th edition, covering the Competition, Out of Competition, Un Certain Regard, Cannes Premiere and Special Screenings sections. “We’ve received 2541 submissions from 141 countries – they have all been seen,” exclaimed Frémaux upon commencing the presentation of the 47 entries unveiled at this time, with “bonus” titles promised in the forthcoming weeks.
Europe and Asia are richly represented in the 2026 competition line-up, Japan being an especially prominent presence, with prizewinning favourites like Ryusuke Hamaguchi, Hirokazu Kore-eda, and Koji Fukada, all presenting new work. Spain has three entries, one of them from Pedro Almodóvar, who together with Belgium’s Lukas Dhont, Russia’s Andrey Zvyagintsev, UK-Poland’s Paweł Pawlikowski, Iran’s Asghar Farhadi, Hungary’s László Nemes, and Romania’s Cristian Mungiu provides auteur excellence in splendid abundance. Less US studio productions are in town this year, noted Frémaux rather stoically, but American artists will still be celebrated, with participation from both John Travolta and Barbra Streisand, to name two.
As for defending any Nordic colours, the aforementioned Mungiu, a fixed star of Cannes ever since his second feature 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days (4 luni, 3 săptămâni și 2 zile) won the Golden Palm in 2007, is in the main contender spot with his sixth film Fjord, the director’s first project to play out outside of his home region. The film stars yet another steadily fortified festival luminary, Renate Reinsve, in this highly Nordic co-production, with involvement of Eye Eye Pictures, Norway; Snowglobe, Denmark; Aamu Filmcompany, Finland; Filmgate Films and Garagefilm, Sweden; Why Not Productions, France and Mobra Films, Romania, Mungiu’s home base company. The film has received support from the Romanian, but also from the Norwegian, Finnish and Danish film institutes and from Nordisk Film & TV Fond.
Reinsve plays Lisbet, the Norwegian wife of Romanian Mihai (Sebastian Stan, seen as Donald Trump in Ali Abbasi’s 2024 Cannes entry The Apprentice). The couple move from Romania to Norway with their five children, as per the plot outline provided by Eye Eye Pictures, “seeking closeness to Lisbet's family, who share their faith. Settling in an isolated coastal village, they form a bond with their neighbours, the Halbergs. When their daughter Elia appears at school with bruises, suspicions arise about the family's strict religious upbringing. Fjord explores clashing worldviews, conformity, tolerance, and the boundaries of freedom and intimacy.” Shot around and taking place on the Norwegian west coast, in the town of Ålesund, Fjord co-stars, among others, Lisa Carlehed and Ellen Dorrit Petersen in major parts.
Also playing in this year’s competition is the family drama Gentle Monster, directed by Austria’s Marie Kreutzer, starring Léa Seydoux and co-starring Catherine Deneuve. Among the co-producers is Sweden’s Kjellson & Wik.
Another Cannes “life member”, a designation it would be his pleasure to submit to, is Denmark’s own NWR, Nicolas Winding Refn, providing cult-prone fare for the festival on a regular basis since 2011 and his Best Director award for Drive. Winding Refn’s 2026 outing, Her Private Hell (sub-captioned “Revenge Wears Leather”), a co-production between the director’s own company byNWR and US producer-distributor Neon, is a colourful thriller with an international cast, headlined by Sophie Thatcher, and takes place in Tokyo. Her Private Hell is screened out of competition.
Norway is also involved with a pair of highly international productions in the Un Certain Regard section: Elephants in the Fog (Tinihāru), directed by Nepalese Abinash Bikram Shah with co-production by Storm Films, and Ben'Imana by Rwandian Clémentine Dusabejambo, co-produced with DUOfilm.
Major Norwegian presence is to be found In the Directors’ Fortnight parallel section, where Eivind Landsvik will premiere his fresh first feature Low Expectations (Lave forventninger) to the world. The film stars music artist Marie Ulven Ringheim, internationally acclaimed as Girl in Red, here playing an acclaimed music artist going through a collapse and moving back to her childhood home in order to distance herself from her chaotic past. Production is by Norway’s Maipo Film with co-production by Denmark’s Snowglobe, the cast includes Anders Danielsen Lie and Tone Mostraum, and the film has support from Nordisk Film & TV Fond. Contrary to the title, the expectations should be sizeable.
The End of It is a UK-Spanish-Norwegian sci fi drama from first feature director Maria Martínez Bayona, playing in the Cannes Premiere section. Apart from Norwegian co-production by Eye Eye Pictures, the cast holds names such as Kristine Kujath Thorp, Pål Sverre Hagen and Noomi Rapace.
Substantial is also the participation of Snowglobe Films – the Danish production company is involved in three entries at the 2026 Cannes edition, including the Critic’s Week-playing Six Months in a Pink and Blue Building (Seis meses en el edificio rosa con azul) by Mexican director Bruno Santamaría Razo. The same section also presents The Station (Al Mahattah) by Yemeni-Scottish Sara Ishaq, a multi-international co-production involving Yemen, Jordan, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Qatar and Norway, through Barentsfilm.
Nordic co-production is also found in 9 Temples To Heaven (9 Wat Su Sawan) by Thai director Sompot Chidgasornpongse, through Norway’s Needle in the Haystack.
To the official site: CLICK HERE.