Spanish Cinema in Cannes: A Turbulent History

En Film & Series Sunday, 10/05/2026

Pol Costa

Pol Costa

PERFIL

The 79th edition of the Festival de Cannes is historic for Spanish cinema: for the first time, three Spanish films will compete for the Palme d’Or in the Official Competition. A milestone that comes after years of turbulence between Spain and the world’s greatest film festival, whose relationship —from the scandal surrounding Viridiana during the Franco dictatorship to the recent controversy involving Víctor Erice— has not always been a smooth one.

“There is movement in Spanish cinema,” said Cannes General Delegate Thierry Frémaux when announcing the 2026 Competition selections of Bitter Christmas by Pedro Almodóvar, The Beloved by Rodrigo Sorogoyen, and La bola negra by Javier Calvo and Javier Ambrossi. “There are people resisting, distributors keeping cinema alive. And it is a country that continues to produce extraordinary artists,” he stated.

Spanish cinema arrives in Cannes following the historic 2025 edition, which featured Romería by Carla Simón and Sirat by Oliver Laxe.

The strong Spanish harvest in Cannes comes after a 2025 edition that was already historic, with Romería by Carla Simón and Sirat by Oliver Laxe (which won the Jury Prize) in the Official Competition. Two films whose long subsequent trajectory (with Sirat nominated for the Oscars) demonstrates the vital importance of being present on the Croisette.

But things were not always so easy.

1953: A Flag in the Ditch

In 1953, Luis García Berlanga presented Bienvenido, Mister Marshall in Cannes, a satire about a poor and picturesque Spain eagerly awaiting the arrival of American economic aid to the rhythm of a folk tune that became a classic (“Americans, they come to Spain handsome and healthy,” etc.). In the final scenes, a small pennant bearing the colours of the United States flag briefly appears being dragged along by the water of a dich. It is the symbol of the disappointment of Villar del Río, which, when the Americans finally pass by without stopping, “returns to being what it has always been, just another small village,” as the voice-over states.

Bienvenido, Mister Marshall. Festival de cannes

Bienvenido, Mister Marshall (Luis García Berlanga,1953)

But Edward G. Robinson, a member of the jury that year, disliked both the affront to the flag and Berlanga’s irony in a film he described as “anti-American.” History has never fully clarified whether the reaction of the actor who created cinema’s gangster archetype stemmed from genuine patriotism or was simply a way of protecting himself amid his troubles with McCarthyism. In any case, the scandal was inevitable, and Spanish censorship ultimately removed an image that, more than seventy years later, retains all of its power — perhaps more than ever.

1961: A Palme d’Or for a Blasphemous Last Supper

The year 1961 marked a turning point for Spanish cinema in Cannes with Viridiana, a Spanish-Mexican production directed by Luis Buñuel, which became the first —and still the only— Spanish Palme d’Or winner, ex aequo with Une aussi longue absence by Henri Colpi.

Viridiana Festival de Cannes

Viridiana (Luis Buñuel, 1961).

El escándalo fue mayúsculo y forzó la dimisión del entonces director general de Cinematografía franquista, José María Muñoz Fontán. Pasaron los años y Viridiana no se pudo estrenar en España hasta 1977, dos años después de la muerte de Franco y 16 después de su premio en Cannes.

2023: Cannes cierra los ojos a Erice

En 2023, Víctor Erice (cuyo Sol del membrillo había obtenido el premio del jurado en 1992) volvió a Cannes con Cerrar los ojos, su primer largometraje en más de 30 años. Poco antes del festival, al descubrir que su película se proyectaría fuera de concurso, dejándola sin posibilidad de Palma de Oro, publicó una carta abierta en la prensa denunciando la «falta de diálogo» con Cannes y decidió no acudir.

The scandal was enormous and forced the resignation of the Franco regime’s Director General of Cinematography, José María Muñoz Fontán. Years passed, and Viridiana could not be released in Spain until 1977, two years after Franco’s death and sixteen years after winning the Palme d’Or in Cannes.

2023: Cannes Turns a Blind Eye to Erice

In 2023, Víctor Erice — whose El sol del membrillo had won the Jury Prize in 1992 — returned to Cannes with Close Your Eyes, his first feature film in more than thirty years. Shortly before the festival, upon discovering that his film would screen out of competition, leaving it ineligible for the Palme d’Or, he published an open letter in the press denouncing the “lack of dialogue” with Cannes and decided not to attend.

Cerrar los ojos

Close Your Eyes (Víctor Erice, 2023).

Despite the “surprise” expressed by the festival’s organizers and the absence of the legendary director of El espíritu de la colmena from the theatre, the screening of this meditation on the passage of time and the labyrinths of memory in the vast and overcrowded Louis Lumière auditorium was met with sustained applause. Yet another misunderstanding —some would say slight— between Spanish cinema and the world’s most prestigious film festival, which in 2026 finally has a unique opportunity to recognize it as it deserves.

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79º Festival de CannesAmarga NavidadBienvenido Mister MarshallCerrar los ojosEl espíritu de la colmenaJavier AmbrosiJavier CalvoOliver LaxePedro AlmodóvarromeríaVíctor Erice

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