BREAKING Explained in 30 seconds

Breaking AI & Tech News Analyzed

The latest stories simplified for humans.

Entertainment May 20, 2026

Nicolas Winding Refn Reveals Near‑Death Experience at Cannes, Inspiring New Creative Outlook

At Cannes, director Nicolas Winding Refn disclosed that he “died for 25 minutes” in 2023 due to a l…
Nicolas Winding Refn broke down during the Cannes Film Festival, recounting a near‑death experience in 2023 when a leaking heart caused him to “die for 25 minutes.” The revelation came as he promoted his first film in a decade, Her Private Hell, and highlighted how the ordeal reshaped his artistic outlook.Refn’s Emotional Disclosure of a 25‑Minute Death at CannesSpeaking to journalists on May 20, 2026, the Danish director described how his lungs filled with blood and doctors warned he might not survive. He joked that “the surgeon was Tom Cruise,” emphasizing the surreal nature of his recovery.Personal Health Timeline and Surgical Intervention2023: Sudden cardiac leak discovered by accident.Immediate symptoms: blood‑filled lungs, 25‑minute clinical death.Two weeks later: Emergency heart surgery performed.Implications for Refn’s Career and Cannes NarrativeThe director said the experience gave him “a second chance” and prompted a shift from feeling “at the end of my career” to a renewed drive to make films. His comments echo a recent Screen International interview where he likened his revival to “Frankenstein.”What This Means for Future Projects and Festival DynamicsRefn’s candidness may influence how Cannes showcases personal comeback stories, joining the return of director Andréï Zvyagintsev, who also screened a new film after severe health challenges. Audiences and programmers might anticipate more narratives centered on resilience and artistic rebirth.
#Nicolas Winding Refn #Her Private Hell #Cannes Film Festival
Read More
Film Apr 09, 2026

Cannes 2026 Shifts Toward Global Auteur Cinema While Hollywood Takes a Back Seat

The 2026 Cannes selection signals a decisive move away from Hollywood blockbusters, spotlighting ac…
The latest Cannes lineup reveals a clear pivot from the usual Hollywood glamour toward a roster dominated by celebrated world‑cinema auteurs such as Pedro Almodóvar, Cristian Mungiu and Asghar Farhadi. While last year’s festival was anchored by a Mission: Impossible spectacle starring Tom Cruise, this edition offers a more eclectic mix, including debut features from Andy Garcia (who also stars in his crime drama Diamond) and John Travolta, who directs the aviation‑themed Propeller One‑Way Night Coach based on his own novel.Under the stewardship of director Thierry Frémaux, Cannes continues to bar films that are exclusive to streaming platforms, a stance that has been vindicated by recent Oscar successes for festival selections. The festival also entered the AI debate: Steven Soderbergh’s documentary John Lennon: The Last Interview employs artificial intelligence to reconstruct visual elements of the legendary interview, sparking both fascination and unease among attendees.Gender representation remains skewed, with a noticeable predominance of male directors in the competition slate, although the final list is still pending. Notably absent are any British filmmakers, despite the inclusion of Polish auteur Paweł Pawlikowski, whose biopic of Thomas Mann, Fatherland, could be loosely claimed as a UK entry given his long residence there.Geopolitical undercurrents are hard to ignore. Russian director Andrey Zvyagintsev returns with Minotaur, a film about a beleaguered Russian businessman. Zvyagintsev, once favored by Vladimir Putin, now lives in exile in France, adding a layer of political intrigue to his work amid the ongoing war in Ukraine.The competition also features a strong historical thread: László Nemes’s Moulin revisits occupied France, Emmanuel Marre’s Notre Salut explores Vichy‑era France, and Lukas Dhont’s Coward follows a Belgian soldier’s harrowing experience in World‑I trenches.Among the more provocative entries, Nicolas Winding Refn’s Her Private Hell promises shock value in the out‑of‑competition slot, while the Un Certain Regard section showcases Jane Schoenbrun’s queer slasher Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma, likely to become a festival highlight.
#cannes #his #director
Read More