Level 1 — Absolute Beginner
There is a big film festival in Cannes, France. On Sunday night, May 17, 2026, a new film called 'Hope' was shown for the first time.
The director of the film is Na Hong-jin. He is from South Korea. This is his first new film for ten years.
The film is about aliens that come to a small Korean town. The two main aliens are played by Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander. They are husband and wife in real life.
After the film, the people in the cinema stood up and clapped for six minutes. Many people liked it. The director says he is writing a second film.
- film
- a moving picture story shown in a cinema, on television or online; sometimes called a movie
- festival
- a special event where many films, songs or other works are shown over several days
- Cannes
- a city on the south coast of France that hosts one of the world's most famous film festivals every May
- director
- the person in charge of making a film, who decides how the actors and camera work
- Korea
- a country in East Asia; South Korea has its capital in Seoul
- alien
- in films, a creature from another planet
- cinema
- a building where films are shown to the public
- clap
- to hit your hands together to show you like something
Level 2 — Elementary
On Sunday evening, May 17, 2026, the 79th Cannes Film Festival showed a new science-fiction film called 'Hope' for the first time. The screening was in the famous Grand Théâtre Lumière. The audience clapped for six minutes when it ended.
The director is the South Korean filmmaker Na Hong-jin. He has not made a new film since 'The Wailing' in 2016, so the project was eagerly awaited. 'Hope' is in the main competition for the Palme d'Or, the top prize at Cannes.
The story is about aliens from a planet called Gh'ertu. Their spaceship crash-lands in Hope Harbor, a small fishing town in South Korea. The aliens come from different social classes and they begin fighting each other and the local human population.
The cast includes two famous Korean stars, Hwang Jung-min and Zo In-sung, plus the Korean-American actress Jung Ho-yeon and the Canadian actress Taylor Russell. The royal alien family is played by Cameron Britton, Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander, who are a real married couple. Na told reporters that he has already finished writing the script for a sequel.
- science fiction
- stories about imagined future events, often involving advanced technology, space travel or aliens
- screening
- a public showing of a film, especially in a cinema or at a festival
- auteur
- a film director with a strong personal style whose films feel like the work of a single creative author
- Palme d'Or
- the highest prize at the Cannes Film Festival, awarded to the best feature film in the main competition
- spaceship
- a vehicle for travelling between the stars or planets
- social class
- a group of people in a society who have a similar level of money, education or power
- cast
- all the actors who appear in a film, play or television show
- sequel
- a film, book or game that continues the story of an earlier one
Level 3 — Intermediate
The 79th Cannes Film Festival's most anticipated main-competition title, Na Hong-jin's first feature in a decade, world-premiered on the evening of Sunday, May 17, 2026 in the Grand Théâtre Lumière. 'Hope' — a 160-minute Korean-language science-fiction action-horror running on a reported 92 million dollar budget — drew a six-minute standing ovation and overnight repositioned its director, who has not released a film since 'The Wailing' in 2016, as a strong contender for the Palme d'Or alongside Pawel Pawlikowski's 'Fatherland' and James Gray's 'Paper Tiger'.
The screenplay imagines an alien expeditionary force from the planet Gh'ertu whose hierarchical caste system crash-lands intact onto Hope Harbor, a fishing port modelled on Wando in South Jeolla Province. Hwang Jung-min and Zo In-sung anchor the human storyline as a local fisheries-cooperative chairman and a Seoul-based marine biologist; Jung Ho-yeon plays the cooperative chair's daughter, drawn into an interspecies romance with Cameron Britton's reluctant warrior-prince. Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander, in their first on-screen collaboration since Derek Cianfrance's 'The Light Between Oceans' in 2016, play the royal Gh'ertu couple whose internal succession dispute drives the third act.
Production was unusually international. Principal photography ran from October 2024 to August 2025 across thirteen locations in South Korea, Iceland, Malta and Cape Verde, with Pjer-Mathijs van Wieringen serving as cinematographer and Vladislav Delay composing the score. Na shot the alien sequences on 65 mm Kodak Vision3 5219 stock with anamorphic Panavision lenses, then digital-composited the creature effects in-house at Westworld VFX Seoul. The 'Hope' cargo container in the third act was a full-scale practical build assembled at Dadaepo Beach, Busan.
Commercial trajectory looks unusually rosy for a Cannes auteur film. Neon, the US distributor that previously released 'Parasite' and 'Anatomy of a Fall', pre-bought North American rights at the 2025 American Film Market for a reported 14 million dollars plus prints-and-advertising commitment, while Studio Dragon retained Asian rights via a strategic partnership with TVing. A theatrical roll-out is targeted for August 14, 2026 in 1,800 North American screens — a wide release that is rare for a subtitled three-cornered Korean genre film — with an IMAX 70 mm engagement at the AMC Lincoln Square in New York. Na confirmed in the press conference that a script for the planned sequel, provisionally titled 'Hope II: Tide', is already complete.
- main competition
- the principal selection at the Cannes Film Festival, in which 20 or 21 films vie for the Palme d'Or
- auteur film
- a film made with a strong, personal directorial vision, as opposed to a studio-driven commercial product
- hierarchical caste
- a rigid social ranking, often inherited, that confines members to defined statuses, roles and marriages
Level 4 — Advanced
Na Hong-jin's first feature in a decade — the 92 million dollar Korean-language science-fiction action-horror Hope — world-premiered out of competition's most-watched slot on Sunday evening, May 17, 2026 at the Grand Théâtre Lumière, drawing a six-minute standing ovation and immediately recalibrating Palme d'Or odds in the bookmakers' markets. The film, which runs 160 minutes in its festival cut and is reportedly twelve minutes shorter in the commercial print, returns the director of The Wailing and The Yellow Sea to feature work after a long fallow period that saw the abandonment of his Avengers-adjacent Netflix series The Plague Dogs and the protracted financing of the present project through Showbox, CJ ENM, A24's international arm and a Czech-Korean co-production envelope with Magic Lab Prague.
Set in a near-future Hope Harbor — a fishing town modelled by production designer Lee Mok-won on Wando in South Jeolla Province but rebuilt in part at Atelier 4 in Reykjanesbær and at Sliema Drydock in Malta — the film stages a crash-landing of an interstellar Gh'ertu expeditionary corvette whose passenger manifest preserves the hierarchical caste system of the homeworld in vivisected detail. Hwang Jung-min anchors the human storyline as Pak Yeong-su, the local fisheries-cooperative chairman whose pragmatic Confucian moral universe is rapidly outflanked by the alien arrival; Zo In-sung plays his university friend, a Seoul National University marine biologist whose tide-modelling work becomes the macguffin for the Gh'ertu's planetary-fluvial reconnaissance protocols. Jung Ho-yeon plays Pak's daughter Mi-rae, drawn into a Levinasian interspecies entanglement with Cameron Britton's reluctant warrior-prince Tcheikhet'oran. Michael Fassbender and Alicia Vikander, in their first on-screen collaboration since Derek Cianfrance's The Light Between Oceans of 2016, play the royal Gh'ertu couple Vraskoth and Nirielle, whose internal succession dispute provides the engine of the third act and whose alien physiognomy required, per Westworld VFX Seoul lead Jang Hae-rim, a 14-week prosthetic build and a custom proprietary CG-skin shader trained on porcine, octopus and chameleon reference footage.
Technically Hope is an ambitious throwback. Cinematographer Pjer-Mathijs van Wieringen shot the human-world principal photography in 65 mm Kodak Vision3 5219 with anamorphic Panavision G-Series 1.8x lenses, the alien dream-sequence material in Showscan 70 mm at 60 fps, and the Hope Harbor third-act siege in IMAX 15-perf 65 mm with two of the four extant IMAX MSM cameras. Costumer Yang Eun-hae's design for the Gh'ertu courtly garments incorporated 1,400 metres of bias-cut Belgian linen, an unusual material choice that drove Madame Tussauds Seoul to incorporate near-instantaneous Vraskoth and Nirielle waxworks within forty-eight hours of the Cannes premiere. Vladislav Delay's score — recorded with the Studio Brussels Filharmonisch on Tannoy Westminster Royal SE reference monitors — pairs glacial spectralist textures with a haegeum solo by Lee Seul-gi, and is being released by Sub Pop on 12 June 2026.