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Jury Prize (Cannes Film Festival)

Film award

Jury Prize (Cannes Film Festival)

Summary

Film award

FieldValue
nameJury Prize
subheaderfr
image
image_upright0.8
caption2025 recipients: Oliver Laxe and Mascha Schilinski
countryFrance
presenterCannes Film Festival
holderOliver Laxe for Sirāt and Mascha Schilinski for Sound of Falling (2025)
year1946
website

History

Prize official logo

The award was first presented in 1946. The prize was not awarded on 10 occasions (1947, 1949, 1953, 1967, 1974–79, 1981–82, 1984, and 2001). The festival was not held at all in 1948, 1950, and 2020. In 1968, no awards were given as the festival was called off mid-way due to the May 1968 events in France. Also, the jury vote was tied and the prize was shared by two films on 21 occasions (1957, 1960, 1962–63, 1970–71, 1973, 1987, 1991–93, 1998, 2000, 2004, 2007, 2009, 2014, 2019, 2021–22, and 2025). Ken Loach and Andrea Arnold have won the most awards in this category, each winning three. Irma P. Hall is the only actress to win in this category, for her role in The Ladykillers (2004). Four directing teams have shared the award: Enrico Gras, Giorgio Moser and Leonardo Bonzi for Lost Continent (1955), Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud for Persepolis (2007), Kleber Mendonça Filho and Juliano Dornelles for Bacurau (2019), and Felix van Groeningen and Charlotte Vandermeersch for The Eight Mountains (2022). Samira Makhmalbaf was the first woman to have won the award, for 2000's Blackboards.

Since 1967, the official name of the award has been simply the Prix du Jury, but it has had two other names since its creation in 1946: the International Jury Prize, which was awarded for that year only, and the Prix spécial du Jury (1951–1967) that was given among other secondary prizes. In 1954, after facing much criticism about the whimsical nature of these awards, the Festival authorities decided to turn to a more traditional prize-giving arrangement. Since then, the Prix spécial du Jury reappeared only twice: Christopher Hampton won that award for Carrington along with the regular Prix du Jury given to Xavier Beauvois for Don't Forget You're Going to Die in 1995; and David Cronenberg won for Crash in 1996, which was the only prize allotted by the International Jury for that year.

British film academic Andrew M. Butler regards jury prizes such as Cannes' as a way of helping a film gain a distribution deal.

Winners

[[Joseph L. Mankiewicz]] won for ''[[All About Eve]]'' (1951)
[[Andrzej Wajda]] won for ''[[Kanał]]'' (1957)
[[Jacques Tati]] won for ''[[Mon Oncle]]'' (1958)
[[Michelangelo Antonioni]] won twice for ''[[L'Avventura]]'' (1960) and ''[[L'Eclisse]]'' (1962)
Kwaidan]]'' (1965)
Souleymane Cissé]] won for ''[[Yeelen]]'' (1987)
Hidden Agenda]]'' (1990), ''[[Raining Stones]]'' (1993) and ''[[The Angels' Share]] (2012)''
The Puppetmaster]]'' (1993)
The Letter]]'' (1999)
[[Samira Makhmalbaf]] won twice for ''[[Blackboards]]'' (2000) and ''[[At Five in the Afternoon]]'' (2003)
Memoria]]'' (2021)
American Honey]]'' (2016)
[[Jean-Luc Godard]] won for ''[[Goodbye to Language]]'' (2014)
Loveless]]'' (2017)
EO]]'' (2022)
Fallen Leaves]]'' (2023)

1940s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country1946
France

1950s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country19511952195419551956195719581959
United States
France
René Clément
, &Italy
France
Poland
Sweden
France
East Germany

1960s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country19601961196219631964196519661969
Italy
Japan
Poland
Italy
France
Czechoslovakia
Japan
United Kingdom
Costa-GavrasFrance

1970s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country19701971197219731974
Hungary
United States
Sweden, United States
Hungary
United States
Poland
Switzerland
Spain

1980s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country1980198319851986198719881989
Poland
India
Hungary, West Germany
France
Japan
Mali
Poland
Canada

1990s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country1990199119921993199419951996199719981999
United Kingdom
Denmark
France
Spain
France, Russia
{{sortnameHouHsiao-hsienHou, Hsiao-hsien}}Taiwan
United Kingdom
France
United Kingdom
Canada, United Kingdom
France
Denmark
France
Portugal, France, Spain

2000s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country200020022003200420052006200720082009
Iran, Italy
Sweden, France
Palestine, Morocco, France, Germany
Iran, France
*Irma P. HallUnited States
Tropical Maladyสัตว์ประหลาดFrance, Thailand
{{sortnameWangXiaoshuaiWang, Xiaoshuai}}China
United Kingdom
&France
Mexico, France, Netherlands
Italy, France
United Kingdom
{{sortnameParkChan-wookPark, Chan-wook}}South Korea

2010s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country2010201120122013201420152016201720182019
Chad, France, Belgium
MaïwennFrance
United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Italy
Japan
France
Canada
Ireland, United Kingdom, France, Greece, Netherlands
United Kingdom, United States
Russia, France, Belgium, Germany
Lebanon
{{sortnameKleberMendonça FilhoMendonça, Kleber Filho}} &Brazil, France
France

2020s

YearEnglish TitleOriginal TitleRecipient(s)Production Country20212022202320242025
France, Germany, Israel
Colombia, Thailand, United Kingdom, Mexico, France
&Italy, Belgium, France
IOPoland, Italy
Finland
Emilia PérezJacques AudiardFrance
SirātOliver LaxeSpain, France
Sound of FallingIn die Sonne schauenMascha SchilinskiGermany

; Notes : ‡ Awarded as "Special Jury Prize", a unique award not given annually but only at the request of the official jury. : * The Jury Prize was specially awarded to Irma P. Hall for acting in The Ladykillers.

Multiple winners

The following individuals received two or more Jury Prize awards:

Number of WinsDirectorsNationalityFilms32
Ken LoachUnited KingdomHidden Agenda (1990),
Raining Stones (1993),
The Angels' Share (2012)
Andrea ArnoldRed Road (2006),
Fish Tank (2009),
American Honey (2016)
René ClémentFranceThe Battle of the Rails (1946),
Knave of Hearts (1954)
Michelangelo AntonioniItalyL'Avventura (1960),
L'Eclisse (1962)
Masaki KobayashiJapanHarakiri (1963),
Kwaidan (1965)
Samira MakhmalbafIranBlackboards (2000),
At Five in the Afternoon (2003)
Apichatpong WeerasethakulThailandTropical Malady (2004),
Memoria (2021)

References

References

  1. Kehr, Dave. (1992). "45 Years: Cannes Festival International du Film". [[Museum of Modern Art]].
  2. "Awards 1946 : All Awards (archived)". festival-cannes.fr.
  3. "The History of the Festival / The 50s". festival-cannes.com.
  4. "Awards 1995 : All Awards (archived)". festival-cannes.fr.
  5. "Awards 1996 : All Awards (archived)". festival-cannes.fr.
  6. Butler, Andrew M.. (2002). "Film Studies". Oldacastle Books.
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