For those ones not invited to see a movie at the iconic Grand Theatre Lumiére during the Cannes Film Festival, every evening at 9:30pm, the biggest film festival of the world is screening well-known films. The Macé Beach on the Croisette, across from the Hotel Majestic, once again has been turned into a free outdoor cinema at nightfall. Besides a selection of films from a variety of genres, from romance to comedy, the public evening screening will also have an exclusive avant-première and even concerts to welcome film fanatics and holiday makers spending some time at the French Riviera during the 74th Cannes Film Festival.
Wong Kar-wai’s ‘Mood for Love’ and Scarecrow, by Jerry Schatzberg, started the week mixing new and old features. On Thursday, July 8th, Tom Medina by Tony Gatlif, a film competing for the Palme d’or as part of the Cannes 2021 official selection, will be on from 9:30pm.
See the full programme of the Cinéma de la Plage 2021:
Thursday, July 8, 9:30 P.M.
Tom Medina by Tony Gatlif (2021, 1h40, France/Switzerland)
World premiere – Official Selection Cannes 2021
Ciné-Concert !
A “Camargue Western”, the new film from the great Tony Gatlif, winner of the Best Director Award at Cannes in 2004, will also bring us, prior to the screening, his trademark kind of surprise: the “Tom Medina Concert”, rock, flamenco, gypsy music performed by thirteen musicians, including Karoline Rose Sun, Nicolas Reyes, Manero, Norig, Cécile Évrot and flamenco dancer Karine Gonzales.
Friday, July 9, 9:30 P.M.
Black Cat, White Cat by Emir Kusturica (1998, 2h10, Germany/France)
A family adventure, funny and fantastical, with eccentric – one could say “kusturician” – characters, for a plunge into the depths of the colourful, musical and poetic world of Emir Kusturica, a two-time Palme d’or winner at Cannes.
Saturday, July 10, 9:30 P.M.
The Summit of the Gods (Le Sommet des Dieux) by Patrick Imbert (2021, 1h34, France/Luxembourg). World premiere – Official Selection Cannes 2021
Adapted from the famous manga by Jirô Taniguchi, himself inspired by the novel by Baku Yumemakura, The Summit of the Gods is an extraordinary animation film, a great adventure and an investigation into the thrilling realm of conquering the world’s most challenging peaks.
Sunday, July 11, 9:30 P.M.
JFK (Director’s Cut) by Oliver Stone (1991, 3h25, USA/France)
The most famous film about the event that traumatized America in 1963. The investigation carried out on a drum roll on the assassination of President Kennedy: suspense, politics and history. Oliver Stone presents his personal thesis, with conviction and often convincing, that there were several killers and that it was a plot against America. Screened in its full version, as Oliver Stone wished, it will also raise the curtain on the next day’s screening in Official Selection of the world avant-premiere of another fascinating documentary: JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass.
Monday, July 12, 9:30 P.M.
Fast and Furious 9 by Justin Lin (2021, 2h23, USA)
European avant-première
For the return of the Festival in Cannes and of film in our hearts, Universal Studios is offering the Cannes audience a magnificent gift and one of the highlights of the summer: opus 9 of the motorized saga, screened in avant-première in France prior to its release on July 14. Vin Diesel and his band, the family, harrowing stunts and crazy car chases. The blockbuster of the summer.
Thursday, July 15 9:30 P.M.
Lovers Rock by Steve McQueen (2020, 1h08, UK)
Official Selection Cannes 2020
In the 2020 Official Selection, and at long last on the big screen in France, the Small Axe anthology is like a long trance, a slow combustion of desire on a backdrop of reggae in London of the 1960s, that represents almost everything you weren’t allowed to do under physical distancing.
Friday July 16, 9:30 P.M.
Amélie by Jean-Pierre Jeunet (2001, 2h01, France/Germany)
Thrust into the limelight two decades ago, Amélie depicted Paris and Parisians, Montmartre and garden gnomes, extraordinary actors (Audrey Tautou, Mathieu Kassovitz, Jamel Debbouze) and a splendid tribute to French cinema of the 1940s. Jeunet at his best.
Saturday, July 17, 9:30 P.M.
David Byrne’s American Utopia by Spike Lee (2020, 1h45, USA)
Spike Lee’s latest film, never released in French theatres. A percussive concert of extraordinary beauty by New York singer David Byrne, directed by the 2021 President of the Jury.