
Arnaud Desplechin
Jane Owen Public Relations
EXCLUSIVE: Cannes habitué Arnaud Desplechin is not at the festival this year but his upcoming English-language production The Thing That Hurts is making a big splash at the market with Gravel Lake Entertainment.
Featuring Alfre Woodard, J.K. Simmons, Jason Schwartzman, André Holland, Noémie Merlant, Golshifteh Farahani, Teddie Allen, and Felicity Jones in the cast, the picture is Desplechin’s starriest yet.
It revolves around the clients of a renowned American psychoanalyst who descend on Paris on the news of her death, causing unexpected connections and long-buried truths to come to the surface as their stories intertwine.
The film marks a departure for the the director on a number of fronts, with Daya Fernandez, Amaury Nolasco and Alois Rubenbauer at Puerto Rico-based 3SIX9 Studios producing his work for the first time, alongside French producer Charles Gillibert at CG Cinema, who produced his penultimate feature Filmlovers!, Atilla Yücer at Turkey’s Alaz Film and Belgium’s Wrong Men.
Written by Kamen Velkovsky and Desplechin, the film is executive produced by Wes Anderson and financed by Silver Screen Global.
Deadline caught up with Desplechin the film launches in the market in Cannes.

Arnaud Desplechin
Jane Owen Public Relations
DEADLINE: How did you get involved in this film?
ARNAUD DESPLECHIN: I was born to make this film. For over 30 years I’ve been reading about psychoanalysts, visiting shrinks, and talking about it with friends. It was a pitch that was proposed to me by Kamen Velkovsky, with whom I wrote Two Pianos, but this time we were writing in English. He writes beautifully. To that point, J.K. Simmons said, “How can I say no to such a well-written script?” That was Kamen.
People have often asked me, when I made, My Sex Life… Or How I Got Into An Argument, or A Christmas Tale, for example, “When are you going to make a real comedy?” Well, here it is. It’s a comedy, a bittersweet comedy.
The beauty of it is that it’s an ensemble piece, like A Christmas Tale, and each character has their individual adventure. It’s extremely funny, extremely melancholic, but it’s more funny than melancholic. A bit in the vein of Wes Anderson’s The Royal Tenenbaums which tells stories about things like incest, death, suicide, divorce, and so on, but you’re rolling with laughter throughout the film.
DEADLINE: Who plays the psychoanalyst at the heart of the story?
DESPLECHIN: It’s Alfre Woodard who is magnificent. It was bold of her to accept the role because she didn’t know Kamen or me, while my memories of her date back to Grand Canyon and Spike Lee’s Crooklyn. I also saw her more recently in a film called Clemency, which isn’t so well-known in the U.S. It’s an arthouse film in which she has real gravitas, an authority, which is truly wonderful.
DEADLINE: Did she know your work?
DESPLECHIN: I think her agent gave her some of my films but we didn’t really talk about it. As I said, I was born to make this film. It’s as if this is a first film. Nothing else counts. At the moment there is no before and after.
DEADLINE: The cast also features Felicity Jones…
DESPLECHIN: She is incredible, incredible. We’ve recently seen her in The Brutalist, in a very, very tragic role. Here she’s in a comic role. I don’t want to spoil things, but one of her last lines in the film is “To Life”, “L’Chaim”. That’s the spirit of her character. She has another line I love, “When I sparkle, I will sparkle”
It’s a side of her we don’t know much about, her comedic side, or rather we knew about it from her earlier films, but we’re all marked by The Brutalist.
DEADLINE: It’s not the first time you’ve directed an English-speaking film. You also made Esther Khan and Jimmy P: Psychotherapy of a Plains Indian.
DESPLECHIN: I learned a lot on those films, particularly on Jimmy P. We made it under difficult conditions, but it still made it to Cannes. It’s a film that has its weaknesses but still touches me, particularly the performance of Benicio del Toro. I could see the weaknesses, and it was part of my process of learning how to make films.
DEADLINE: How did you prepare for this shoot?
DESPLECHIN: We did a lot of readings which led to changes and improvements in the script. We improvised things, challenged things and said, “No, this line isn’t funny enough, we have to find something better, we have to do better”. The final script was born in collaboration with the actors. It meant when I got to set, we were totally prepared.
DEADLINE: The story unfolds in Paris but given many of characters hail from the U.S., wouldn’t it have been easier to make the film somewhere like New York?
DESPLECHIN: No, because there’s one very contemporary aspect of the film, which resonates with me: they’re all expatriates, people living in a foreign country, and that’s why they talk to each other. Alfre’s character of the psychoanalyst is the most in exile of the entire film. She’s an African American and a New Yorker, who has chosen to settle in France and practice psychoanalysis in a very French way. You have Golshifteh’s character of this incredibly rebellious woman who comes from Iran. Noémie Merlant plays the only French person in the group, but we learn that she’s spent time in Japan. They’re all characters who are out of place.
DEADLINE: How do these characters interact on screen?
DESPLECHIN: What’s very beautiful in Alfre’s character is that she is very different with each of her patients. Each adventure reveals a different facet of her character. I called them my Seven Samurai on set… it reminds me a bit of Catherine Deneuve in A Christmas Tale in which she has very different relationships with each of her children. We filmed each adventure separately… but the final scenes when we had them altogether they was very technically demanding and they were so generous, it was wonderful.
DEADLINE: How did Wes Anderson come on board as an executive producer?
DESPLECHIN: I’ve known Wes for a quite a long time. We met for the first time at a screening in France of Darjeeling Limited, a film I absolutely adore… Deep down I’ve always wanted to be a critic… I presented the film and explained why I loved it… and a strong friendship was born… but it was Atilla Yücer [Alaz Film] who knew him from Asteroid City who asked him if he would like to come on board as executive producer, I would never have dared, and it came together from there.
DEADLINE: How did you connect with the producers?
DESPLECHIN. I’ve worked with Charles Gillibert before, on my film Filmlovers!, while Atilla worked on the Jim Jarmusch film that Charles co-produced [Father Mother Sister Brother]. In France, everyone read the screenplay, but it was Charles who really got behind it and said he thought it was the best screenplay I’d ever written and had to be made. He was extremely tenacious in getting it off the ground. Because its English, the French system didn’t really work. It was when we found American funding, thanks to 3SIX9, that the film suddenly became possible. Atilla and Kamen met with Daya, Amaury and Al and got them to read the script and it turned out that the Americans like the project more than the Europeans. Daya is on set with us every day. I’ve never seen anything like it. I’m from a European background, so the producer is never there.
DEADLINE: We’re seeing more and more Hollywood producers and talent coming to work in Europe. What do you think is going on?
DESPLECHIN: None of my films carry a political message, but I still have thoughts if not an opinion. I think with the political developments we’re seeing in the United States, the country is changing in a way that is irreversible. The country will never be the same again. After Trump’s second election, the country is already different.
We see the war in Iran right now, the controversies surrounding Greenland and ICE. It creates a climate of anxiety, which I see in my American friends. They see their country as the world’s largest democracy and that is changing, evolving, and in flux.
It’s one of the themes explored in the film: all these characters are refugees in a way in France. And at the end of the film, it’s very beautiful, J.K. Simmons says, “Well, the psychoanalyst I loved died, so I’m going back to the United States.” And then all his friends say, “Are you crazy?!’ And he’s like, “F**k it, I’m going.” It’s my home.
>
Japan’s Cloud11 Studios, France’s Les films du Sillon and Hong Kong’s Saidam Baryl Ltd. have joined forces on Almost There, a new feature project from Sakha filmmaker Stepan Burnashev. The collaboration was unveiled on the sidelines of the Cannes Film Festival‘s Marché du Film.
The partnership brings together producers from Japan, France and Sakha, a republic of Russia that is also known as Yakutia, around what is being described as “an intimate, character-driven road movie” that is currently in development and positioned as an international arthouse feature with cross-cultural reach. A completed script and production are targeted for 2027.
Burnashev has become a key voice of Sakha’s film scene with his previous features Aita, Our Winter, Black Snow and The Penthouse.
Set in Japan, Almost There follows “an unexpected encounter between a Japanese man and a man from the Sakha Republic who, despite their vastly different backgrounds, find themselves in a similar emotional state,” according to a description of the project. “Both are unable to let go of their past and set out on a journey toward a place where they hope to finally confront it. Their chance meeting gradually evolves into a shared journey, as emotional distance gives way to an increasingly profound human connection. As they move closer to their destination, the journey itself begins to change them – and the very reasons that brought them there start to shift.”
The project, designed to combine “cultural specificity with universal resonance,” explores such themes as memory and isolation. Burnashev also said that the film would dive into “male vulnerability, inner conflict and what often remains unspoken.”

Hiroyuki Yoshihara, Stepan Burnashev and Emmanuelle Faucilhon, courtesy of Saidam Baryl.
To provide lightness and humor, the movie is set to also feature cultural misunderstandings and comedic moments, while the Japanese landscapes are set to add an “almost meditative quality,” according to the producers. “Rather than pushing toward heaviness, the film approaches its characters with openness and compassion, allowing intimacy and human connection to emerge gradually.”
The producers are Hiroyuki Yoshihara for Cloud11 Studios, Emmanuelle Faucilhon for Les films du Sillon and Burnashev’s Saidam Baryl. They are currently focused on further development and financing on Almost There.
“Almost There is a restrained yet emotionally intense male drama,” Burnashev said. “It’s a story about two men who seem very different on the surface, but are both carrying something they have never really learned how to express. They come from entirely different worlds, yet share a sense of isolation and unspoken inner conflict that allows them to recognize each other beyond language or culture. As their journey unfolds, they begin to understand one another on a deeply human level – a connection that transcends borders and gives the film a universal resonance. One hides himself behind movement, confidence and the habit of always going forward, while the other lives with silence, hesitation and the weight of unresolved things.”
Yoshihara said about the project: “What drew us in was its confidence. The film does not try to overstate itself. It trusts rhythm, character and silence, and that gives it a strong cinematic identity. We believe that kind of precision can travel internationally.”
Faucilhon shared: “We were struck by the film’s emotional precision and its quiet strength. As the war [by Russia in Ukraine] rages on, Sakha culture is increasingly reaching beyond its borders and building new connections with the East. One can only applaud the director’s determination to keep creating whilst forces of destruction are at work.”
>
Japanese newcomer Rimu Kuwaki makes his debut as a savvy robot child surrogate.
Japanese auteur Hirokazu Koreeda is a regular at the Cannes Film Festival, largely returning to present films that deal with issues of life, death and parenting, both good and bad. This year his Competition entry Sheep in the Box, offers a sci-fi twist on those familiar themes, marking the acting debut of Kuwaki, who will turn 10 years old during the festival. Haruka Ayase and Daigo Yamamoto play his parents. And Kuwaki? “I play a humanoid who looks exactly like their child, who died in an accident,” he explains, “and continues living in their place.”
Kuwaki was chosen from more than 200 contenders, despite having next to no acting experience. “I’ve never really had any acting lessons — almost none, to be honest — but I have appeared in one drama series. The lines were basically just me being myself, so I’m not sure if you could really call it acting.”
Nevertheless, Kuwaki took to the challenge, and praises Koreeda for helping him ease into the role. “Director Koreeda Hirokazu is very kind,” he says. “He would encourage me by saying, ‘Let’s do our best,’ so any feelings of fear or embarrassment just disappear. Every time after shooting a take, he would also say to me, ‘That was really great,’ which made me so happy and motivated me to do my best again the next day. The atmosphere on set was fun and relaxed.”

Read the digital edition of Deadline’s Disruptors/Cannes magazine here.
Not every take was perfect, however. “Sometimes I got a bit too excited and started running around,” he recalls, “and I was told, ‘Robots aren’t supposed to sweat.’ And when I had a little bit food around my mouth, the crew said, ‘Robots don’t eat sweets, right?’ So I realized I had to be more careful.”
Kuwaki also learned a lot from his screen parents. “They’re kind, beautiful, and cool — I love them very much,” he says. Did he hang out with them to prepare for the role? “Yes, I did. We spent time together having meals, looking at photos of me as a baby, and even giving each other shoulder massages! It was a really fun time. As for what I learned, I was really moved by their facial expressions and movements during the acting, and it made my heart ache at times. It made me realize how amazing acting can be.”
Any plans to act again? “I like both watching movies and acting in them, and I hope to continue acting in the future. I’ve already told my family about my decision, and I’m going to do my best to appear in three more films.” And in the meantime, what else keeps him busy? “I like baseball, soccer, video games, golf, dancing and fishing. I’m currently practicing golf and dancing so I can get better at them.”
>
Russian writer-director Andrey Zvyagintsev (Leviathan, Elena, Loveless) is back in the Cannes Film Festival competition this year. Loveless won the jury prize at the 2017 edition of the festival after Leviathan received the 2014 best screenplay award, and Elena was honored with the Un Certain Regard special jury prize in 2011.
So, of course, the latest movie from the two-time Oscar nominee, his first feature in close to a decade, is highly anticipated.
Minotaur, co-written with Semen Liashenko, has been shrouded in mystery, though. What is known about the film is that the now-exiled Zvyagintsev reunited for its creation with longtime collaborators, such as cinematographer Mikhail Krichman and production designer Andrey Ponkratov. The film is a co-production between France, Latvia and Germany. The producers are MK2 Films’ MK Productions, CG Cinéma and Zvyagintsev, in association with Leaf Entertainment. The co-producers are Razor Film in Germany and Forma Pro films in Latvia.
MK2 Films (Sentimental Value) is handling international sales. Mubi has acquired Minotaur for North America, the U.K., Ireland, Germany, Austria and Latin America.
The crime thriller is understood to also be a political and moral fable, as the title, which is a nod to Greek mythology, hints at. The minotaur was a monster, half man and half bull, that was imprisoned in a dark underground labyrinth.
The Cannes website only reveals the following about Minotaur: “Russia, 2022. When Gleb, a successful company director, finds himself under siege from mounting corporate pressures and an increasingly unstable world, the collapse of his carefully ordered life accelerates toward violence.”
Dmitriy Mazurov stars as Gleb opposite Iris Lebedeva as Galina. An exclusive clip from Minotaur that THR can now premiere takes us to their breakfast table. Does the sneak peek give you the sense that there is a certain awkwardness in the air? Could there be trouble brewing because of secrets that we, and Gleb, may not be privy to? Maybe it’s just us, but it feels like there is stuff that is left unsaid – even if not left untexted?
But make up your own mind! Watch the exclusive clip from Andrey Zvyagintsev‘s Minotaur below.
>
These ’90s fashion trends are making a comeback in 2017
According to Dior Couture, this taboo fashion accessory is back
Your comprehensive guide to this fall’s biggest trends
Model Jocelyn Chew’s Instagram is the best vacation you’ve ever had
A photo diary of the nightlife scene from LA To Ibiza
Emily Ratajkowski channels back-to-school style
9 Celebrities who have spoken out about being photoshopped
The tremendous importance of owning a perfect piece of clothing