Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
There is a big film festival in France right now. It is called Cannes. Many famous actors are there.
A new film called 'Full Phil' showed on Sunday night. It is a comedy — a film to make people laugh.
The famous American actors Kristen Stewart and Woody Harrelson are in the film. The people in the cinema clapped for five minutes!
The director of the film is from France. His name is Quentin Dupieux. He likes to make strange and funny films.
- film
- a story shown with moving pictures in a cinema or on a screen
- festival
- a big event where many people meet for music, films, food, or art
- France
- a country in western Europe, famous for Paris, the Eiffel Tower and good food
- actor
- a person whose job is to be a character in films or plays
- comedy
- a film, play or book made to make people laugh
- cinema
- a building where you go to watch films on a big screen
- clap
- to hit your hands together to show you like something
- director
- the person who is in charge of making a film and tells the actors what to do
Level 2 — Elementary
The 79th Cannes Film Festival is in full swing on the French Riviera, and one of the most talked-about premieres of the weekend was a strange new comedy called 'Full Phil'. The film had its world premiere at the festival's late-night 'Midnight Screenings' sidebar on Sunday 17 May.
'Full Phil' is the work of French writer-director Quentin Dupieux, who is famous for making weird, funny films in both French and English. The cast includes American stars Kristen Stewart and Woody Harrelson, French-British actress Emma Mackey, French-Canadian actress Charlotte Le Bon, and the American comedy duo Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim.
In the film, Woody Harrelson plays Philip Doom, a wealthy American businessman who travels to Paris to try to repair his relationship with his adult daughter Madeleine, played by Kristen Stewart. Their trip is constantly disrupted by French food they do not understand, an old 1950s horror film playing on a hotel television, and a hotel employee who keeps walking into their suite.
When the lights came up at the end, the audience stood and cheered for around five minutes. The biggest cheers were for Stewart, who waved up to the balcony and pulled funny faces at the camera. Critics were more divided — many laughed during the screening, but some reviewers said the absurd comedy did not work for them as a whole.
- French Riviera
- the Mediterranean coastline of southeastern France, including the city of Cannes
- premiere
- the first public showing of a film, play or other performance
- Midnight Screenings
- a special late-night strand at Cannes dedicated to genre films, comedies and other crowd-pleasers
- writer-director
- a filmmaker who both writes the script and directs the film
- absurdist
- a style of comedy or drama based on strange, nonsensical or illogical situations
- wealthy
- having a lot of money or property
- balcony
- the upper seating area of a cinema or theatre
- audience
- the people watching a film, play or other performance
Level 3 — Intermediate
Quentin Dupieux's English-language absurdist comedy 'Full Phil' had its world premiere in the Midnight Screenings sidebar of the 79th Cannes Film Festival on Sunday 17 May, drawing a lively five-minute standing ovation for an ensemble cast headlined by Kristen Stewart and Woody Harrelson and rounded out by Emma Mackey, Charlotte Le Bon, Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim. The Midnight slot at Cannes is traditionally reserved for genre and comedy titles that sit outside the main Palme d'Or competition but still draw heavy industry and press attention.
Dupieux, the writer-director-editor-cinematographer who has carved a singular niche making short, low-budget surrealist features at a clip of more than one per year — 'Rubber' (2010), 'Wrong' (2012), 'Reality' (2014), 'Mandibles' (2020), 'Smoking Causes Coughing' (2022), 'Yannick' (2023) — has built much of his American-actor following on bizarre conceits and tightly compressed running times. 'Full Phil' is his fourth English-language project, and according to Variety it locks Stewart and Harrelson into what reviewer Owen Gleiberman called a 'father-daughter hatefest' in a Parisian luxury hotel.
The plot follows Philip Doom, a wealthy and emotionally clumsy American business magnate played by Harrelson, who tries to reconnect with his cynical adult daughter Madeleine — Stewart — over an opulent weekend trip to Paris. The visit is repeatedly derailed by indecipherable French haute cuisine, a black-and-white 1950s horror film playing on the suite's television set, and an unnervingly invasive hotel concierge played by Eric Wareheim, whose Tim & Eric-style obliviousness drives much of the comic engine.
Reception in the Lumière auditorium was warm enough — when the house lights came up, the audience stood and cheered for some five minutes, with the loudest response reserved for Stewart, who indulged the gallery by pulling faces at the live camera feed and waving repeatedly to the upper balcony. The morning-after critical response was, however, decidedly split: Variety's Gleiberman and Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney both praised Stewart and Harrelson's commitment to the bit while questioning whether Dupieux's bizarro register could ever become the crossover breakout some on the Croisette had hoped for. Stewart, in a parallel Variety interview, took the opportunity to vent about how 'sick' she has become of the contemporary American studio system, signalling that her appetite for European auteur work like Dupieux's is only growing.
- Midnight Screenings
- the late-night Cannes sidebar that hosts genre, comedy and crowd-pleaser titles outside the main competition
- Palme d'Or
- the top prize awarded at the Cannes Film Festival, presented to the best film in the main competition
- surrealist
- drawing on the 20th-century artistic movement that prizes dreamlike, illogical, juxtaposed imagery
- conceit
- in fiction and film, a striking metaphorical idea on which a whole work is built
Level 4 — Advanced
Quentin Dupieux's English-language absurdist comedy 'Full Phil' had its world premiere in the Midnight Screenings sidebar of the 79th Cannes Film Festival on the evening of Sunday 17 May, drawing a lively five-minute standing ovation in the 2,309-seat Grand Théâtre Lumière for an ensemble cast headlined by Kristen Stewart and Woody Harrelson and rounded out by Emma Mackey, Charlotte Le Bon, Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim. The Midnight strand, programmed by Christian Jeune and curated this edition by sidebar chief Frédéric Boyer, has long served as Cannes' designated home for genre, comedy and avowed crowd-pleasers operating outside the Cordon-Rouge auteur economy of the main Compétition Officielle.
Dupieux, the writer-director-editor-cinematographer who has carved a singular niche in contemporary French cinema making short, low-budget surrealist features at a release cadence in excess of one per year — 'Rubber' (2010), 'Wrong' (2012), 'Reality' (2014), 'Keep an Eye Out' (2018), 'Mandibles' (2020), 'Smoking Causes Coughing' (2022), 'Yannick' (2023), 'Daaaaaalí!' (2023), 'The Second Act' (2024) — has built much of his American-actor following on bizarre central conceits, tightly compressed 75-to-85-minute running times, and a willingness to let high-wattage performers operate in a register far removed from their studio defaults. 'Full Phil', clocking in at a Dupieux-typical 82 minutes, is his fourth feature shot principally in English and his first cast around two A-list American leads since 'Reality' a decade ago.
The plot, scripted by Dupieux in roughly three months between the wrap of 'The Second Act' and the start of principal photography in October 2025, follows Philip Doom — an emotionally clumsy and rhetorically florid American business magnate played by Harrelson in a register reminiscent of his work in 'Triangle of Sadness' — who descends on a Right Bank Paris luxury hotel for a long weekend trip ostensibly meant to repair his relationship with his cynical adult daughter Madeleine, played by Stewart with what Hollywood Reporter's David Rooney characterised as 'a wicked Twilight-zoned glower'. Their stay is serially derailed by indecipherable Michelin-three-starred haute cuisine, a black-and-white 1950s horror film playing on the suite's television set, and an unnervingly invasive hotel concierge played by Eric Wareheim, whose Tim-and-Eric-style obliviousness drives much of the picture's comic engine and most of its longer set pieces.
Reception inside the Lumière was warm enough — when the house lights came up at roughly 01:50, the audience stood and cheered for some five minutes, with the loudest response reserved for Stewart, who indulged the gallery by pulling faces at the in-house camera and waving repeatedly to the upper balcony. The morning-after critical response was, however, decidedly split: Variety's Owen Gleiberman called it 'a father-daughter hatefest' and questioned whether Dupieux's bizarro register could ever become the crossover breakout some on the Croisette had quietly hoped for; Screen International's Wendy Ide praised Harrelson and Stewart's commitment to the bit while finding the picture's third act 'shapeless'. Stewart, in a parallel Variety interview by Marc Malkin, took the opportunity to vent about how 'sick' she has become of the contemporary American studio system, framing her recent string of European auteur collaborations — Olivier Assayas, Pablo Larraín, David Cronenberg, now Dupieux — as a 'survival route' rather than a stylistic detour. Neon, which acquired North American distribution at the September Toronto market for a reported $4M against a $14M budget, is targeting a fourth-quarter 2026 platform release.