The main films that competed for the Palme d'Or at Cannes used DaVinci Resolve in their finishing
The festival included the world premiere of 'Mad Max: Fury Road', which includes scenes shot with the Blackmagic Cinema Camera.
A large number of feature films nominated for the 2015 edition of the Cannes Film Festival were shot with cameras manufactured by the company and finished with DaVinci Resolve from Blackmagic.
Some of the most anticipated films competing for the Palme d'Or were graded with DaVinci Resolve. Among these stand out Macbeth, starring Michael Fassbender and Marion Cotillard, and The Lobster, the English-language debut of Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos.
The festival included the world premiere of Mad Max: Fury Road, which includes scenes shot with the Blackmagic Cinema Camera, and A story of love and darkness, Natalie Portman's first feature film as a director where cinematographer Slawomir Idziak used the Pocket Cinema Camera model to capture various elements.
During Cannes Classics, an event that is part of the festival and pays tribute to cinema masterpieces, restored digital prints were screened and graded with DaVinci Resolve, such as More, by director Barbet Schroeder, and Marius, a 1931 feature film shot by Alexander Korda.
The 68th edition of the festival was held from May 13 to 24 with the aim of highlighting cinematographic diversity through an official selection of titles that compete in two categories: the main one and the so-called Un Certain Regard. Being part of this selection is one of the most prestigious honors in the world of cinema, and the products developed by Blackmagic Design continue to be used by a large number of filmmakers and post-production professionals to create extraordinary feature films.
Films in Cannes graded with DaVinci Resolve
Main category
• Amnesia (Patrick Lindenmaier, Andromeda Film AG)
• Chronic (Richard Deusy, M141 Films)
• Dheepan (Charles Freville, Digimage)
• The tale of tales (Andrea Baracca, Grande Mela Film)
• Marguerite et Julien (Richard Deusy, M141 Films)
• Macbeth (Adam Glasman, Goldcrest Post London)
• The Lobster (Tony Ford)
• Valley of Love (Richard Deusy, M141 FilmsUn Certain Regard
• Treasure, (Christophe Bousquet, M141 Films)
• Hruter (Norman Nisbet)
• Maryland (Serge Antony, Digimage)
• One Floor Below (Fatah Shams, Shoot & Post)
• Kishibe no Tabi (Toriumi Shigeyuki, IMAGICA)Special screenings
• Amy (Paul Ensby, Company 3 London)
Short films
• Love is Blind (Arthur Graham-Maw)
• The boys (Fateh Shams, Shoot & Post)
• The Guests (Anna Howard, ACS)Cannes Classics
• Marius (Jerome Bigeur, Digimage)
• More (Pauline Bassenne, Digimage)Critics' Week
• Neither heaven nor earth (Mikael Commereuc, M141 Films)
• Krisha (Daniel Stuyck)
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