Hollywood ghosts the Croisette, queer cinema owns it, and AI crashes the party: five takeaways from Cannes 2026

Anand Kumar
By
Anand Kumar
Anand Kumar
Senior Journalist Editor
Anand Kumar is a Senior Journalist at Global India Broadcast News, covering national affairs, education, and digital media. He focuses on fact-based reporting and in-depth analysis...
- Senior Journalist Editor
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With apparent calm, Cannes 2026 has exposed the fault lines reshaping cinema — from the evolving independent ecosystem and the decline of studio festivals to the industry’s uneasy embrace of artificial intelligence.

(L-R): Competition favorite The Black Ball, Club Kid director Jordan Firstman, Vin Diesel at the screening of The Fast and the Furious, and the humanoid robot at Cannes.

(L-R): Competition favorite “The Black Ball,” “Club Kid” director Jordan Firstman, Vin Diesel at the “The Fast and The Furious” screening, and the humanoid robot at Cannes. Cannes Film Festival, Mustafa Yalcin/Anadolu, Rocco Spaziani/Archivio Spaziani/Mondadori Portfolio, Anna Kurth/AFP

The 79th Cannes Film Festival was, on the surface, a more subdued edition. No studio films, fewer stars and a more impressive lineup.

But this relative calm was deceptive. Underneath, Cannes 2026 was less a showcase of immediate successes than a seismic map of independent filmmaking, revealing the shifting tectonic plates in the independent sector’s transformation, the changing role of studios on the festival circuit, and the accelerating impact of artificial intelligence across production and marketing. What happened on the Croisette was not a noise, but a signal.

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Anand Kumar
Senior Journalist Editor
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Anand Kumar is a Senior Journalist at Global India Broadcast News, covering national affairs, education, and digital media. He focuses on fact-based reporting and in-depth analysis of current events.
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