These are the 19 movies competing in the main competition at this week's Cannes film festival. (AFP)
The Beguiled - Sofia Coppola's starry and much-touted American Civil War thriller, a remake of the 1971 movie with Clint Eastwood, features Colin Farrell as a wounded soldier who seduces the women around him, including Nicole Kidman and Kirsten Dunst. (YouTube)120 Beats Per Minute - Drama by Franco-Moroccan director Robin Campillo set among a group of people working with an AIDS charity in Paris in the 1990s. (Facebook)Amant Double (The Double Lover) - No one does erotic thrillers like French director Francois 'Swimming Pool' Ozon. His latest follows a young woman who falls in love with her therapist before realising he's not who she thought he was. (Facebook)Good Time - Billed as a grindhouse movie with a brain, New York indie brothers Benny and Josh Safdie have cast 'Twilight' heartthrob Robert Pattinson as a bank robber struggling to evade the police. (Cannes.com)Redoubtable - The buzz is also good on this cheeky 'comedy' about the legendary New Wave movie director Jean-Luc Godard from Michel Hazanavicius, the man behind the whimiscal multi-Oscar winner 'The Artist'. (Facebook)Happy End - No one has ever won the Palme d'Or three times. But with Isabelle Huppert again by his side fresh from her accolades for 'Elle', Austrian-born Michael Haneke could write his place in history with this family drama set in northern France against the backdrop of the migrant crisis. (Facebook)In The Fade - Hamburg's Fatih Akin of 'Head-On' fame returns to home ground in a promising story of vengeance set among Germany's Turkish community. (Sydney Film Festival website)Wonderstruck - Todd Haynes in back in period mode after his huge hit 'Carol' with the first of two Amazon-backed movies to have made the cut. Julianne Moore and Michelle Williams star in the story of two deaf children living parallel lives in the 1920s and 1970s. (Facebook)Jupiter's Moon - Hungarian director Kornel Mundruczo -- who won the newcomers prize with 'White God' in 2014 -- has turned his lens on the European migrant crisis, with this story of a young refugee who discovers amazing powers when he is shot. (Facebook)Loveless - Russian director Andrey Zvyagintsev wowed Cannes in 2014 with 'Leviathan', a darkly funny meditation on family bonds and religion. Family is again the focus of his new film about a clan with an aversion to affection. (Playwire)The Meyerowitz Stories - The streaming giant has also snapped up Noah 'While We're Young' Baumbach's story about a neurotic New York boho family trying to deal with their difficult artist father. Ben Stiller, Emma Thompson, Candice Bergen and Dustin Hoffman complete a top-notch cast. (Twitter)Radiance - Japan's Naomi Kawase returns to the competition three years after her 'Still the Water' with a film following a photographer whose eyesight is failing. (Twitter)Rodin - Vincent Lindon picks up the chisel to portray France's greatest sculptor in a biopic that marks the centenary of his death. (YouTube)Okja - Netflix are pushing the boat out for their big-budget 'E.T.'-like 'creature feature' 'Okja', starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Tilda Swinton, which tells the tale of a girl who risks everything to protect a shy giant animal. (Facebook)The Square - The Swedish director Ruben Ostlund best known for 'Snow Therapy' was a late entry with his dystopian tale of a place without rules where people can do what they want. (Facebook)The Square - The Swedish director Ruben Ostlund best known for 'Snow Therapy' was a late entry with his dystopian tale of a place without rules where people can do what they want. (IMDB)The Killing of a Sacred Deer - Nicole Kidman and Colin Farrell team up for the second time in the competition, this time in the story of a boy trying to bring a surgeon into his dysfunctional family, with disastrous consequences. With Greek maestro Yorgos Lanthimos at the helm, expect the weird. (YouTube)You Were Never Really Here - Scotland's Lynne Ramsay made her Cannes debut with the unforgettable 'Ratcatcher'. This year she will close the festival with this drama of a war veteran (Joaquin Phoenix) who tries to save a victim of sex-trafficking. (British Council website)The Day After - South Korean director Hong Sang-Soo is bringing two films to Cannes. His new feature 'The Day After' is in the main competition with a special screening for 'Claire's Camera', which features Isabelle Huppert, and was partly shot during last year's festival. (Facebook)