The New Zealand director, producer and screenwriter Jane Campion, winner of the Palme d'or for The Piano, will be the President of the Jury of the 67th Festival de Cannes. Cannes has always sought to adopt a universal and international approach, and in tune with this tradition, Campion will be surrounded by eight luminaries of world cinema, from China, Korea, Denmark, Iran, the United States, France and Mexico.
As in 2009 the Jury will therefore include five women and four men. Their task will be to decide between the 18 films in Competition in order to select the winners - to be announced on stage at the ceremony on Saturday 24th May. The winner of the Palme d'or will be screened during the Festival's closing evening on Sunday 25th of May, in the presence of the Jury and the entire team of the winning film.
THE JURY
Jane CAMPION - President
(Director, Screenwriter, Producer - New Zealand)
Carole BOUQUET (Actress - France)
Sofia COPPOLA (Director, Screenwriter, Producer - United States)
Leila HATAMI (Actress - Iran)
JEON Do-yeon (Actress - South Korea)
Willem DAFOE (Actor - United States)
Gael GARCIA BERNAL (Actor, Director, Producer - Mexico)
JIA Zhangke (Director, Screenwriter, Producer - China)
Nicolas Winding REFN (Director, Screenwriter, Producer - Denmark)
Carole Bouquet, Actress (France)
After her film debut in 1977 with Luis Buñuel in That Obscure Object of Desire, Bouquet alternated between arthouse and blockbuster productions. A Bond Girl in 1981 in For Your Eyes Only, she worked with Bertrand Blier on Buffet Froid (1979) and Too Beautiful For You (1989) for which she won the César for Best Actress. She appeared in Le jour des idiots by Werner Schroeter, Michel Blanc's Dead Tired and Embrassez qui vous voudrez, Lucie Aubrac by Claude Berri, L'Enfer by Danis Tanovic, Nordeste by Juan Diego Solanas (Festival de Cannes 2005) and Unforgivable by André Téchiné.
Sofia Coppola, Director and screenwriter (United States)
Coppola's first feature film, The Virgin Suicides (1999) was selected for the Directors' Fortnight at Cannes, where it met with international critical acclaim. Four years later, after several Oscar nominations for Lost in Translation, including Best Director, she walked off with the Best Screenplay award. Her third film, Marie-Antoinette was selected in Competition at Cannes in 2006. After picking up a Golden Lion in Venice for Somewhere (2010), Sofia Coppola opened Un Certain Regard with her last film The Bling Ring at the Festival de Cannes in 2013.