Key Points

Jeremy Strong described his Cannes jury experience as profoundly inspiring, likening the intense deliberations to a papal conclave. The panel, led by Juliette Binoche, awarded the Palme d'Or to Jafar Panahi's politically charged Iranian drama. Binoche emphasized the film's urgent message of resistance and survival under oppression. Strong echoed festival themes by celebrating cinema's power to transcend political barriers.

Key Points: Jeremy Strong Compares Cannes Jury Duty to Conclave Film Experience

  • Strong served on Cannes jury with Juliette Binoche and Halle Berry
  • Compared deliberations to Oscar-nominated film 'Conclave'
  • Panel awarded Palme d'Or to Jafar Panahi's political drama
  • Binoche praised winning film's human resilience amid Iran's oppression
2 min read

This has been a really wonderful experience: Jeremy Strong on serving as Cannes jury

Succession star Jeremy Strong reflects on his transformative Cannes jury role alongside Juliette Binoche, comparing deliberations to papal conclaves.

"This has been a really wonderful experience, a really connected experience with these people—it's like 'Conclave' with champagne. - Jeremy Strong"

Cannes, May 25

Actor Jeremy Strong reflected on his past 11 days as a member of the Cannes Film Festival competition jury, comparing it to the process of choosing a new pope as depicted in the Oscar-nominated film 'Conclave'.

"I feel immeasurably inspired by what I've seen here," Strong said during a press conference after the jury awarded Jafar Panahi's "It Was Just an Accident" with the Palme d'Or. "It's been so invigorating, and this sort of cumulative tally of the work I'll carry with me," reported Variety.

Strong continued, "This has been a really wonderful experience, a really connected experience with these people -- it's like 'Conclave' with champagne. It's really great."

Strong served under president Juliette Binoche along with Halle Berry, Payal Kapadia, Hong Sansoo, Alba Rohrwacher, Leila Slimani, Dieudo Hamadi and Carlos Reygadas. During the presser, the group explained their decision to give the top prize to "It Was Just an Accident," which follows a group of former prisoners in Iran who must decide whether or not to enact revenge on a man they think was their torturous guard. The film marked Panahi's first project since being imprisoned for several months in 2023 for criticizing the Iranian government, according to Variety.

"It's very human and political at the same time because he comes from a complicated country, politically speaking," Binoche said, adding, "When we watched the film, it really stood out. The film springs from a feeling of resistance, survival, which is absolutely necessary today. So we thought it was important to give this film the paramount award."

She continued, "Art will always win. What is human will always win. Our creative urge can transform the world."

Strong said that the jury "wanted to recognise films that we felt were transcendent intrinsically as pieces of work," aligning with how Robert De Niro kicked off the festival during its opening ceremony by saying that "fascists should fear art," reported Variety.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

Here are 5 diverse Indian perspective comments for the Cannes Film Festival article:
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Arjun P.
So proud to see Payal Kapadia representing India on the Cannes jury alongside such legends! 🇮🇳 Our film industry is truly coming of age on the global stage. Hope this inspires more Indian filmmakers to tell authentic stories that can compete internationally.
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Priya M.
Interesting choice awarding Panahi - his courage to make films despite government oppression is admirable. But I wish Indian films got more recognition at Cannes beyond just the jury representation. Our parallel cinema deserves this platform too! ✨
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Rahul K.
Jeremy Strong comparing jury deliberations to papal conclave with champagne is such a classy metaphor 😂 But seriously, Cannes remains the gold standard - wish we had something similar in India beyond just Bollywood award shows.
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Sunita V.
Binoche's words "Art will always win" gave me goosebumps! This is why we need to support independent cinema everywhere - whether in Iran or India. Films have power to change perspectives where diplomacy fails.
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Vikram J.
While I appreciate the political statement, I wonder if the jury leaned too much into activism over pure cinematic merit? Some of us just want to see great storytelling without heavy messaging. Still, congrats to all winners! 🎥

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