Marion Cotillard stood at the center of one of Cannes 2026’s most emotionally charged premieres Friday when “Karma,” Guillaume Canet’s religious cult thriller written specifically for her, drew a six-minute standing ovation in the Special Screenings section of the official selection.
Cotillard was visibly moved as the Palais des Festivals audience held its applause, and Canet — struggling to hold back tears — took the microphone to praise her. “I wrote this role for you and you did it justice,” he told her in front of the crowd. Turning to co-stars Denis Ménochet and Luis Zahera, he added: “I give you all three the greatest acting award in the world.” The moment carried added weight given that Canet and Cotillard, who recently divorced, attended the gala together with their son Marcel.
In the film, Cotillard plays Jeanne, a French woman living in northern Spain who becomes the prime suspect when her six-year-old godson mysteriously vanishes. Fleeing the police, she seeks shelter inside the French religious commune where she was raised — a cloistered sect controlled by the menacing Marc, played by Ménochet, who the film depicts as an abusive false prophet. Leonardo Sbaraglia and Luis Zahera round out the principal cast.
Canet co-wrote the screenplay with Simon Jacquet, and cinematographer Benoît Debie shot the film. Critical reaction divided along familiar lines for ambitious genre work: some reviewers praised the film as a gripping, commercially minded thriller that runs a tight two-and-a-half hours without feeling its length, while others argued its religious cult subject matter — well-trodden territory in streaming documentaries — gives away its central mysteries too early.
The film’s arrival marks a significant moment in Cotillard’s career trajectory. She has largely worked in French-language independent films since 2016’s “Assassin’s Creed,” a deliberate retreat from Hollywood that she has attributed to her commitment to raising her children. “When I do a movie, I have this tendency to choose very deep and intense roles. There’s a part of me that goes away. That doesn’t really fit the life of a child,” she said at Cannes. She added that her children now understand her desire to make films again. Canet wrote the protagonist role specifically for Cotillard as she stepped back into more active filmmaking after that period focused on her family.
“Karma” is Cotillard’s 14th and 15th Cannes premiere appearance this year, across two separate projects — she also appears in Bertrand Mandico’s dramedy “Roma Elastica.” Pathé handles international sales and will release the film in French theaters on October 21.





















































