Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
A film festival is happening in France. The town is called Cannes. Many famous actors go there every year.
On May 18, 2026, a new film called 'Fjord' was shown. The director is Cristian Mungiu. He is from Romania. The two main actors are Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve.
When the film ended, the people in the room stood up and clapped for twelve minutes. That is a very long time. Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve cried because they were happy.
Now some people say the film may win the top prize. The top prize is called the Palme d'Or. The winners will be named on May 23, 2026.
- film
- a moving picture that tells a story; a movie
- festival
- a special event where many people meet to enjoy films, music or art
- director
- the person who decides how a film is made
- actor
- a person whose job is to play a part in a film or play
- clap
- to hit your hands together to show that you like something
- prize
- an award given to a winner
- France
- a country in western Europe
- Romania
- a country in eastern Europe
Level 2 — Elementary
The 79th Cannes Film Festival in southern France gave one of its loudest welcomes of the year to 'Fjord,' a new drama directed by the Romanian filmmaker Cristian Mungiu. The film had its world premiere on Monday night, May 18, 2026, in the festival's main competition.
When the closing credits ended, the audience in the Grand Théâtre Lumière stood up and applauded for a full twelve minutes. That is the longest standing ovation of this year's festival so far. Many critics in the room called it the most powerful new film of the week.
The film stars Sebastian Stan, the American actor known from the Marvel superhero films, and the Norwegian actress Renate Reinsve, who won Best Actress at Cannes in 2021 for 'The Worst Person in the World.' They play a Romanian couple with a strict religious background who move to a small village in Norway and lose custody of their children to local social services. Mungiu shot the film in English with Norwegian and Romanian dialogue.
Both Stan and Reinsve were visibly emotional during the long ovation, with Stan shaking his head in disbelief and Reinsve in tears. Mungiu, who won the Palme d'Or in 2007 for '4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,' is now considered one of the front-runners for this year's top prize as well. The Palme d'Or winner will be announced on Saturday, May 23, 2026.
- premiere
- the very first public showing of a film, play or other work
- competition
- the part of a film festival in which selected films are judged for prizes
- audience
- the people who watch a film, play or show
- applaud
- to clap one's hands to show approval or thanks
- ovation
- a long and enthusiastic round of clapping by an audience
- custody
- the legal right to care for and live with a child
- social services
- government departments that help families and protect vulnerable people
- front-runner
- the person or thing that is most likely to win
Level 3 — Intermediate
Cristian Mungiu's English-language debut 'Fjord' had its world premiere in the main competition of the 79th Cannes Film Festival on the night of Monday, May 18, 2026, drawing a twelve-minute standing ovation in the Grand Théâtre Lumière — the longest at this year's edition so far and a match for Sunday's Adèle Exarchopoulos vehicle 'Garance.' The Romanian filmmaker, who won the Palme d'Or in 2007 for '4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days' and the Best Director prize in 2016 for 'Graduation,' is now considered one of the front-runners for this year's top award.
Working from a screenplay he developed over four years, Mungiu reunites with cinematographer Tudor Vladimir Panduru to follow a devout Pentecostal Romanian family — played by Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve, both of whom dyed their hair for the role — who emigrate to a hamlet on Norway's western fjords and lose custody of their three children after the village's social services agency, Barnevernet, interprets the parents' strict religious discipline as abuse. Mungiu shot the film in English with passages of Romanian and Norwegian, scaling back his usual long-take aesthetic for a more cross-cut, perspective-shifting structure that draws comparison to Asghar Farhadi's 'A Separation.'
The ovation was visibly emotional even by Cannes standards. Stan, in his first leading role at a major festival, oscillated between shaking his head in disbelief and fighting back tears; Reinsve, who won the Cannes Best Actress prize in 2021 for Joachim Trier's 'The Worst Person in the World,' wept openly and embraced her co-star and the director throughout the bow. The Romanian flag and the Norwegian flag were both held up by audience members near the front of the orchestra section as the curtain rose for the fourth and fifth time.
Neon, the Brooklyn-based independent distributor that has won the past four Palme d'Or releases in North America, pre-bought the United States, United Kingdom and Australia/New Zealand rights in May 2025 and confirmed a late-autumn theatrical release. Bookmakers including Pinnacle and Betfair have moved 'Fjord' to joint second favourite for the Palme d'Or at roughly 7-to-2, behind Pawel Pawlikowski's 'Fatherland.' Jury president Park Chan-wook will hand out the festival's prizes at the Palais des Festivals on Saturday, May 23, 2026.
- world premiere
- the first public screening of a film anywhere in the world
- main competition
- the principal selection of films at a festival that compete for its top prizes
- standing ovation
- applause given by an audience that has risen to its feet, used to signal exceptional appreciation
- cinematographer
- the person in charge of how a film is photographed, including lighting and camera work
- Barnevernet
- Norway's child welfare service, which has the authority to remove children from a home in cases of suspected abuse or neglect
Level 4 — Advanced
Cristian Mungiu's first English-language feature, 'Fjord,' had its world premiere in the main competition of the 79th Cannes Film Festival on the evening of Monday, May 18, 2026, drawing a twelve-minute standing ovation in the Grand Théâtre Lumière that equalled the festival-leading figure set the previous evening by Jeanne Herry's 'Garance' and threw the second week of the competition into the kind of late-edition prognostication that the Cannes press tent thrives on. Mungiu, who became the first Romanian filmmaker to win the Palme d'Or with '4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days' in 2007 and who later collected the Best Director prize in 2016 for 'Graduation,' presented the film alongside cinematographer Tudor Vladimir Panduru, editor Mircea Olteanu, producer Tudor Reu and the Neon North-American distribution team led by Tom Quinn and Christian Parkes.
Working from a 142-page screenplay he developed over four years in collaboration with the Romanian-Norwegian dramaturg Sigrid Frandsen, Mungiu follows a devout Pentecostal Romanian family — Marius and Lavinia Petrescu, played by Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve, both of whom underwent six weeks of dialect coaching with the Norwegian-language coach Tone Bull-Hansen — who emigrate to a fjord-side hamlet in Sogn og Fjordane and lose custody of their three children when the local Barnevernet office interprets the parents' biblical discipline and restrictions on technology as Article 4-12 grounds for emergency removal. Mungiu departs from the long-take aesthetic of his earlier Romanian-language films for a deliberately fragmented, perspective-rotating structure that critics in the post-screening press scrum compared with Asghar Farhadi's 'A Separation' and with Joachim Trier's 'Louder Than Bombs,' the latter a thematic ancestor explicitly cited in Mungiu's director's statement.
The post-credits ovation, which began with the customary one-minute clap and lengthened in two extended waves as Mungiu repeatedly tried to direct attention back to his cast and crew, was visibly emotional even by Cannes standards. Stan — in his first lead role at a tier-one festival after a decade in the Marvel Cinematic Universe — oscillated between shaking his head in disbelief and fighting back tears; Reinsve, who took the Cannes Best Actress prize in 2021 for Joachim Trier's 'The Worst Person in the World,' wept openly and embraced both her co-star and the director throughout the bow. Audience members near the front of the orchestra section unfurled small Romanian and Norwegian flags as the curtain rose for the fourth and fifth time, a gesture later read as a quiet rebuke to the diplomatic chill that has lingered between Bucharest and Oslo over the Barnevernet caseload since the 2015 Bodnariu case.
Neon, the Brooklyn-based independent distributor whose run of Palme d'Or releases in North America now extends through 'Triangle of Sadness,' 'Anatomy of a Fall,' 'Anora' and 'It Was Just an Accident,' pre-bought the United States, United Kingdom and Australia/New Zealand theatrical rights in May 2025 for a reported $14 million plus prints-and-advertising commitment and confirmed a late-autumn theatrical release positioned for an aggressive specialty roll-out. Bookmakers including Pinnacle and Betfair moved 'Fjord' to joint second favourite for the Palme d'Or at roughly 7-to-2 within hours of the premiere, narrowing the gap on Pawel Pawlikowski's 'Fatherland' and overtaking James Gray's 'Paper Tiger' for the second slot. Jury president Park Chan-wook, alongside jurors Demi Moore, Stellan Skarsgård and Ruth Negga, will hand out the festival's prizes at the Palais des Festivals on Saturday, May 23, 2026.