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This Movie Is the New Frontrunner for the 2026 Palme d’Or at Cannes Film Festival

In a dramatic shift, a new film has emerged as the frontrunner to win the prestigious Palme d’Or in 2026, the top prize at the 79th Cannes Film Festival. The event began several weeks ago on May 12, and the nine-member jury for the main competition, which features 22 films from around the world, will reveal its decision on who will win the award on May 23. When the Cannes Film Festival began, the predicted winner was the Korean sci-fi thriller Hope directed by Na Hong-jin, but another competitor has steadily climbed the ladder to become the new leader, though its lead is thin and precarious.

Fatherland is the predicted winner of the 2026 Palme d’Or

As of May 20, Fatherland (originally titled 1949) is predicted to take home the Palme d’Or at the 2026 based on a pair of prediction markets from Kalshi and Polymarket.

Per usual, the odds for these bets are volatile and have changed wildly since April, so it’s important to take them with a grain of salt. The full results below (from Polymarket) reveal that Fatherland has two major challengers that both have a strong shot to win.

  • Fatherland (Pawel Pawlikowski) – 26%
  • Minotaur (Andrey Zvyagintsev) – 22%
  • All of a Sudden (Hamaguchi Ryusuke) – 20%
  • Fjord (Cristian Mungiu) – 7%
  • Paper Tiger (James Gray) – 6%
  • Hope (Na Hong-jin) – 5%
  • Notre Salut (Emmanuel Marre) – 3%
  • La Bola Negra (Javier Calvo & Javier Ambrossi) – 3%
  • The Man I Love (Ira Sachs) – 3%
  • Parallel Tales (Asghar Farhadi) – 2%
  • El Ser Querido (Rodrigo Sorogoyen) – 2%
  • Moulin (László Nemes) – 1%
  • Coward (Lukas Dhont) – 1%
  • Nagi Notes (Fukada Koji) – Less than 1%
  • The Unknown (Arthur Harari) – Less than 1%
  • Amarga Navidad (Pedro Almodóvar) – Less than 1%
  • A Woman’s Life (Charline Bourgeois-Tacquiet) – Less than 1%
  • Gentle Monster (Marie Kreutzer) – Less than 1%
  • Das Geträumte Abenteuer (Valeska Grisebach) – Less than 1%
  • The Birthday Party (Léa Mysius) – Less than 1%
  • Another Day (Jeanne Herry) – Less than 1%
  • Sheep in the Box (Kore-eda Hirokazu) – Less than 1%

A similar Kalshi bet shows comparable results — Fatherland is in the lead at 28%, but Minotaur and All of a Sudden are close behind at 22% and 19% respectively. The former leader, Hope, has now dropped to 3%.

That said, looking at the history of both bets, the top spot has changed hands numerous times between Fatherland, Minotaur, All of a Sudden, Hope, and Fjord, especially over the last two weeks as the festival has progressed.

Fatherland follows exiled German novelist Thomas Mann (Hanns Zischler), who won the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature, and his wife Erika Mann (Sandra Hüller) as they drive from Frankfurt in West Germany to Weimar in East Germany in 1949 during the Cold War. The German-language film, which is already making its presence felt in the early Oscars race, is on the short side with a runtime of a 1 hour and 22 minutes and will release in Poland on June 19. The black-and-white movie has a modest production budget of €10 million (about $11.6 million USD), and its screenplay was co-written by Pawlikowski after he was loosely inspired by the 2021 novel “The Magician” by Colm Tóibín that provides a fictional account of Mann’s life.

The movie has received widespread acclaim from critics so far, earning a high 94% rating on Rotten Tomatoes (as of May 20). Justin Chang from The New Yorker says that Fatherland’s “sombreness has seldom looked more suave or felt more disciplined,” and Philip De Semlyen from Time Out gave it a perfect score of 5 stars, praising Pawlikowski for packing “more into this short-yet-stately monochrome historical drama than others manage in twice the time.”

The jury for the festival’s main competition includes actress Demi Moore, after Jacob Elordi had to drop out after injuring his foot, and Oscar-winning director Chloé Zhao. Legendary filmmaker Peter Jackson won an honorary Palme d’Or near the start of the event.


Source: Comingsoon.net