The Cannes Film Festival unveiled today the lineup for the official competition for its 69th edition, which includes the world premiere of Aquarius by Brazilian director Kleber Mendonça Filho (pictured left) as the only Latin American film contender.
This is Mendonça Filho's first time participating at Cannes' main competition, and the first time a Brazilian filmmaker participates in the festival's main slate since Walter Salles in 2012 with his adaptation of On the Road.
Mendonça Filho’s follow up to his acclaimed debut feature Neighboring Sounds / O som ao redor stars Sonia Braga (Kiss of the Spider Woman) as Clara, a65-year-old retired, widowed music writer, and alone in the apartment building Aquarius after her three grown children have moved away. Oh, and she’s mastered the gift of time travel.
Cannes also unveiled the lineup for its Un Certain Regard Section with also one Latin American contender, the Argentinean film La larga noche de Francisco Sanctis / Francisco Sanctis’s Long Night, the debut feature by Francisco Márquez and Andrea Testa.
Set in 1977 during the Argentinean military dictatorship, the film tells the story of Francisco Sanctis who works as an administrative employee. One afternoon, his old schoolmate Elena contacts him to give hime two names and addresses. The army will find these people and will kidnap them. Francisco begins his long night wondering whether trying to save the lives of two unknown people at the risk of his own life.
The 69th edition of the Cannes Film Festival will take place May 11-22 in France.

Cannes announced their 2016 Short Films Competition yesterday. After receiving over five thousand entries they narrowed down the competition to ten. Two of the selected films are from the Latin American region.
The 4th edition of the Colombian Film Festival New York announced its winners over the weekend at Village East Cinema in Manhattan. For six days, the festival screened more than 19 world and national premieres in the categories of fiction and documentary.
There were special mentions for actress Juana Acosta for her role in Anna, a young Colombian mother living in Paris and struggling with their fragile emotions and filmmaker Esteban Arango for Blast Beat about two brothers who are undocumented immigrants living in the U.S..
Screen Media Films has announced the U.S. theatrical release of the collaborative film Rio, I Love You, an anthology created by 10 visionary directors from across the globe that features multiple Oscar nominees and winners among the cast and crew, and the third in the ‘Cities of Love’ trilogy of films after Paris Je t’Aime and New York, I Love You.
Featuring 10 short stories and their respective transitions of love in the city of Rio de Janeiro, the film is directed by Andrucha Waddington, Paolo Sorrentino, Fernando Meirelles, Stephan Elliott, John Turturro, Guillermo Arriaga, Sang-soo Im, Carlos Saldanha, Jose Padilha, Nadine Labaki, and Vicente Amorim.