Isabelle Huppert is part of the cast for *Parallel Tales*, a new film by Iranian director Asghar Farhadi, which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival 2026. The drama features an ensemble French cast, including Vincent Cassel, Virginie Efira, Pierre Niney, and a cameo by Catherine Deneuve. Farhadi’s latest work explores themes of betrayal and the relationship between voyeurism and creativity, questioning whether writers observe the characters they create. The film is described as a "diverting, middleweight meta-drama" set in France .
Huppert’s involvement in *Parallel Tales* was highlighted during Cannes’ red-carpet events, where she appeared alongside co-stars Cassel and Efira as Farhadi unveiled the film . The project marks Farhadi’s return to French-language cinema, following his earlier European productions *The Past* and *Everybody Knows*.

Backtalker by Kimberlé Crenshaw review – the audacity of hope The inspiring life of the Black American activist and legal scholar who changed the way the world things about race Kimberlé Crenshaws memoir describes a life shadowed by Jim Crow segregation and racism, but lit up by hope. That the social conditions of her early life did not destroy her family, as they had so many others, must be credited to their extraordinary grit and determination. The journey that led Crenshaw to create the influential legal theory of intersectionality begins with the well of thoughtless devaluation faced by little Black girls. And for all who think those days have long gone, Backtalker is a must read.Backtalking is how Crenshaw responds to anything that does not make sense. Whether as a five-year-old kindergarten student who was allowed to portray a witch but not a princess in a school play, or decades later, lobbying Harvards dean of law to hire Black faculty and being asked whether she wouldnt prefer an excellent white professor over a mediocre Black one, Crenshaw talked back. For her, backtalking is about resilience in the midst of struggle, which sometimes painfully includes talking back to the ones we love. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Cast Away by Francesca de Tores review – gripping portrait of the real-life Robinson Crusoe This fascinating novel about 18th-century privateer Alexander Selkirk, abandoned on a tiny island in the South Pacific, becomes a revelatory meditation on humanityIts hard to think of many superficial affinities between Frank OHara, the queer poet and art critic whose urbane voice is synonymous with 60s Manhattan, and Alexander Selkirk, the 18th-century Scottish privateer whose marooning on a tiny island in the South Pacific would eventually inspire Daniel Defoes Robinson Crusoe. Yet, curiously, it is a line from OHaras poem Mayakovsky that Francesca de Tores refits for Selkirks mouth at the opening of her new novel, Cast Away.Selkirk insists that he is cast upon the island only by the catastrophe of my personality – which is a sobering thing, even for a man used to being sober. And while the OHara of Mayakovsky is famously content to wait for the catastrophe of my personality / to seem beautiful again, / and interesting, and modern, Selkirk – newly and utterly alone on a stony blemish in the ocean, 400 miles off the coast of Chile – spends his first three days and nights on the island blind drunk on the cask of flip left behind with him as a courtesy from his erstwhile crewmates, raging at his fate. This act of unexpected transhistorical ventriloquism is a suitably strange beginning to a surprisingly uncanny novel. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

An Ideal Husband review – Oscar Wildes comedy gets the gleefully camp glow-up it deserves Lyric Hammersmith, London The dissolute aristocrats from 1895 remain sharply funny, and bitingly relevant, in this flamboyant new spinOscar Wildes comedy was billed as a play of modern life when it premiered at the Haymarket theatre in London in 1895. It is just as modern now in its central, chiming theme: the clandestine corruptions of outwardly squeaky-clean members of parliament.Sir Robert Chiltern (Chiké Okonkwo) is the apparently upstanding minister and ideal husband to Lady Chiltern (Tamara Lawrance) but his past bears the illicit selling of a cabinet secret to a baron. This threatens to ruin him if he does not appease the blackmailing Mrs Cheveley (Aurora Perrineau). Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Frailty and terrible rage: Linda Bassett on Call the Midwife, her crap-free CV and selling ice creams at Oliviers Old Vic Best known as Nurse Phyllis in the TV hit, the actor is a peerless interpreter of Caryl Churchill and is starring in Alexander Zeldins Shakespearean play about dementia. She looks back on a career of unconventional choicesEvery part is an education, says Linda Bassett. Thats the glory of being an actor. You learn about human feelings and frailty and rottenness. The writer puts their soul on the page, and you inhabit that. Ive always felt I was a writers actor.Shes not wrong. Never showy, Bassetts understated magic has enhanced plays by Timberlake Wertenbaker, Wallace Shawn, Ayub Khan Din and, notably, Caryl Churchill, of whom she is a peerless interpreter. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Are you sitting uncomfortably? How Backrooms upended the horror movie It was just a creepy picture on the internet. Now its the years freakiest film. Its 20-year-old auteur Kane Parsons and stars Chiwetel Ejiofor and Renate Reinsve take us through the terrifying labyrinthChiwetel Ejiofor has been on a lot of movie sets, but Backrooms was something different: a 30,000 sq ft labyrinth of apparently random corridors and chambers, all carpeted, fluorescent lit and decorated in the same sickly yellow wallpaper. It was so big that people were getting lost in it, says Ejiofor: Especially on those first days. As you try to navigate your way around and youre like: Im sure its this door, Im sure thats the way. Hes laughing at the recollection. And you find yourself just back in the wrong corner of the whole studio and youre like: Get me some help!This is kind of the point of Backrooms – the movie and the online phenomenon that spawned it. Its a concept that takes some unpacking, but as the premise for a buzzy A24 horror freakout, you could summarise it as something like The Blair Witch Project meets Severance or The Shining set in an infinite Travelodgeor maybe the exact opposite of a Wes Anderson movie. Comparisons fall short, partly because the Backrooms concept feels as if its come from another world – a parallel dimension, even. Ejiofor concurs: There was stuff that we were doing by the end of the film that I was just like: This is among the most bizarre things I have ever been involved in. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Parallel Tales review – Isabelle Huppert pens furtive sexual fantasy for Vincent Cassel in Asghar Farhadis latest Cannes film festival: Iranian auteur Asghar Farhadi returns to France with this intriguing middleweight meta-drama featuring a cameo from Catherine DeneuveAsghar Farhadi is the Iranian auteur whose film-making style has always shown the high European influences of Antonioni and Haneke. He has in fact made two films in Europe: The Past in France and Everybody Knows in Spain.Now he returns to France and the French language for this diverting, middleweight meta-drama about betrayal and about a supposed link between voyeurism and creativity: do writers spy on the characters they have brought to life? Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Huppert, Cassel and Sandra Hüller light up Cannes 2026 as Farhadi and Pawlikowski premiere new films The stars are out in force on the Croisette tonight as Asghar Farhadi unveils Parallel Tales, bringing together an extraordinary French cast including Virginie Efira, Pierre Niney, Isabelle Huppert, Vincent Cassel and a special appearance from Catherine Deneuve. Meanwhile, Paweł Pawlikowski returns to competition with Fatherland, starring Sandra Hüller in one of the festivals most anticipated premieres. FRANCE 24s Culture editor Eve Jackson reports live from the Cannes Film Festival red carpet.
france24 · 6 days ago

American poet Sasha Debevec-McKenney wins Dylan Thomas prize for blistering debut poetry collection The £20,000 award for writers aged 39 or under goes to Joy Is My Middle Name, a collection about navigating race, addiction and womanhoodA debut poetry collection with themes including race, addiction and womanhood has won this years Swansea University Dylan Thomas prize.American poet Sasha Debevec-McKenney took home the £20,000 prize – awarded to writers aged 39 or under in honour of the Welsh poet Dylan Thomas, who died at that age – for her debut collection Joy Is My Middle Name. She was announced as the winner at a ceremony in Swansea, Thomass birthplace. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Fatherland: Pawel Pawlikowski inunda Cannes con la memoria herida y profundamente triste de la Europa fracturada (*****) El director polaco presenta la primera y temprana candidata a la Palma de oro, una medida, profunda y emocionantísima reflexión en blanco y negro sobre la identidad, la familia, el amor y la culpa Leer
elmundo · 6 days ago

Fatherland review – Sandra Hüller brings a bayonet of intelligence to Paweł Pawlikowskis taut return Cannes film festival: Hanns Zischler stars as Thomas Mann on his 1949 tour of Germany, contending with political barbs, personal tragedy and his daughter, played by an extraordinary HüllerHere is an impossibly elegant, poised historical vignette whose brevity and control can hardly contain its characters personal and historical pain. It is directed and co-written by the Polish film-maker Paweł Pawlikowski and shot in lustrous monochrome by Lukasz Zal; it is a film about exile and betrayal, the impossibility of going home and of reconciling an artists children to their secondary importance.The setting is 1949 and the celebrated German novelist and Nobel laureate Thomas Mann – who fled the Nazis before the war for California exile and US citizenship – has returned home, first visiting Frankfurt (now in West Germany) to receive an award named after Goethe, whose birthplace this is. It is Goethes enlightened civilised wisdom and apolitical artistry Mann will pointedly evoke in his many elaborate speeches. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Hannah Einbinder: cost of not speaking out on Palestine is greater than losing career The Hacks star spoke at Cannes about fallout from pro-Palestine comments and joining a tradition of Jewish alliesThe actor Hannah Einbinder has said the cost of not speaking up about Palestine is greater than losing her Hollywood career.The Emmy-winning star of Hacks, who leads the new queer slasher drama Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma, told an audience at Cannes film festival she would not be deterred from standing up for causes she cared about. Continue reading...
theguardian · 6 days ago

Six films to watch this week Ian McKellen and Michaela Coel shine in art-forgery comedy The Christophers; 1950s-set Hungarian drama Orphan; Bob Odenkirk shoots em up in Normal; documentary Chasing Utopia warns of AI peril; five-star coming-of-age tale Romería; Japanese kabuki theatre drama Kokuho. Reviews by Danny Leigh & Jonathan Romney
financial times · 6 days ago