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Cannes Buzz: Neon & Netflix Snag Festival's Hottest Films
7 May
Summary
- Neon acquired "It Was Just an Accident," a Palme D'Or winner.
- Netflix purchased "Nouvelle Vague" and "Left-Handed Girl."
- James Gray's crime thriller "Paper Tiger" stars Driver and Johansson.

Last year's Cannes Film Festival generated considerable excitement with major acquisitions, including Neon's eventual Palme D'Or winner "It Was Just an Accident." Neon also drew attention for "The Secret Agent" and "Sirât." Netflix secured distribution rights for "Nouvelle Vague" and "Left-Handed Girl," indicating a robust market for festival films.
This year's slate features notable entries like James Gray's "Paper Tiger," a crime thriller with Adam Driver, Scarlett Johansson, and Miles Teller, focusing on brothers entangled with the Russian Mafia. Clockwork, Warner Bros.' new indie label, is releasing a restored, uncut version of Ken Russell's controversial film "The Devils" in October, marking its first repertory release.
Other highlighted films include Kiyoshi Kurosawa's samurai drama set in 16th century Japan and Nicolas Winding Refn's "Her Private Hell," a futuristic tale starring Charles Melton and Sophie Thatcher, slated for a July 24 theatrical release. Despite critical buzz, some films like MUBI's "Die, My Love" did not achieve the same commercial success upon their U.S. release.