June 26, 2026
Sydney Film Festival 2026 Reveals Full Program With 19 Cannes Films


The Sydney Film Festival has unveiled its complete program for the 73rd edition, spanning 248 films from 81 countries, with 19 titles arriving directly from the Cannes Film Festival as part of an event running June 3-14 at the State Theatre, Sydney Opera House and cinemas across the city.

The festival will open June 3 with the Australian premiere of โ€œSilenced,โ€ Selina Milesโ€™ documentary following international human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson as she contests the weaponization of defamation law by alleged perpetrators seeking to muzzle survivors and journalists. The Sundance title, which traces the cases of Brittany Higgins, Catalina Ruiz-Navarro and Amber Heard, will be presented by Miles and Robinson in person.

The official competition marks 18 years of the Sydney Film Prize โ€“ a AUD$60,000 ($43,100) award for an โ€œaudacious, cutting-edge and courageousโ€ film โ€“ and draws substantially from this yearโ€™s Cannes competition. Titles in contention include Andrey Zvyagintsevโ€™s โ€œMinotaur,โ€ a thriller set in 2022 Russia marking the directorโ€™s long-awaited return; Asghar Farhadiโ€˜s โ€œParallel Tales,โ€ featuring an all-star French cast including Isabelle Huppert and Catherine Deneuve; Kore-eda Hirokazuโ€™s โ€œSheep in the Box,โ€ a near-future drama in which bereaved parents use AI technology to reconstruct their shattered family; and Paweล‚ Pawlikowskiโ€™s โ€œFatherland,โ€ a portrait set amid the ruins of postwar Germany, following novelist Thomas Mann and his daughter Erika, starring Sandra Hรผller and Hanns Zischler.

Also from the Cannes competition are Marie Kreutzerโ€™s โ€œGentle Monsterโ€ with Lรฉa Seydoux, Valeska Grisebachโ€™s โ€œThe Dreamed Adventureโ€ and Cristian Mungiuโ€™s English-language debut โ€œFjord,โ€ a family drama starring Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve. From Un Certain Regard, Marie-Clรฉmentine Dusabejamboโ€™s โ€œBenโ€™Imanaโ€ offers an account of post-genocide reconciliation in Rwanda. International prize winners round out the slate, among them Visar Morinaโ€™s โ€œShame and Moneyโ€ โ€“ World Cinema Grand Jury Prize winner at Sundance โ€“ Alain Gomisโ€™ โ€œDaoโ€ from the Berlinale competition, and Olivia Wildeโ€™s Sundance hit โ€œThe Invite.โ€ Australian horror entry โ€œLeviticus,โ€ Adrian Chiarellaโ€™s breakout Sundance title about two teenage boys confronting a shape-shifting evil force, represents local cinema in the competition.

Brazilian filmmaker Kleber Mendonรงa Filho will preside over the jury, alongside Hungarian filmmaker Ildikรณ Enyedi, Singaporean filmmaker Boo Junfeng, Australian cinematographer Ari Wegner and Australian First Nations producer and director Sally Riley. The Sydney Film Prize winner will be announced at the closing night gala on June 14.

โ€œWe want to invite you to join us at SFF this year, where each moment offers an opportunity for discovery and empathy,โ€ festival director Nashen Moodley said. โ€œArt and cinema help us make sense of the world, take us into the lives of people far away from us, and remind us to remain vigilant about our own rights and freedoms. And we canโ€™t forget, theyโ€™re also an enormous source of joy.โ€

Special presentations at the State Theatre draw from several major festivals. Cannes selections include Ira Sachsโ€™ โ€œThe Man I Love,โ€ a 1980s New York romance starring Rami Malek, Tom Sturridge and Rebecca Hall; Jane Schoenbrunโ€™s psychosexual horror โ€œTeenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma,โ€ with Hannah Einbinder and Gillian Anderson; and Kurosawa Kiyoshiโ€™s samurai epic โ€œThe Samurai and the Prisoner.โ€ Ildikรณ Enyediโ€™s โ€œSilent Friend,โ€ winner of the Venice Fipresci Prize and starring Tony Leung Chiu-wai and Lรฉa Seydoux in a narrative measured across a hundred years through a single ginkgo tree, also screens in this strand. Michael Sarnoskiโ€™s โ€œThe Death of Robin Hood,โ€ starring Hugh Jackman, Jodie Comer and Bill Skarsgรฅrd, and Yeon Sang-hoโ€™s zombie action film โ€œColonyโ€ from Cannes Midnight further anchor the program. The Australian premieres of the Berlinale Golden Bear winner โ€œYellow Lettersโ€ and Sandra Hรผllerโ€™s Silver Bear-earning โ€œRoseโ€ are also included.

Australian features lead with Natalie Erika Jamesโ€™ body horror โ€œSaccharine,โ€ Dario Russoโ€™s absurdist folktale โ€œThe Foxโ€ โ€“ featuring Olivia Colman as a talking fox and Sam Neill as a magpie โ€“ and Anthony Marasโ€™ D-Day drama โ€œPressure,โ€ starring Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser. Ten local documentaries vie for the AUD$20,000 ($14,400) Documentary Australia Award, with world premieres including โ€œRodeo Dreams,โ€ โ€œYumburraโ€ and โ€œThe Piano Tuner.โ€

The broader features program includes notable Asian titles. Anthony Chenโ€™s โ€œWe Are All Strangersโ€ โ€“ the first-ever Singaporean film selected for the Berlinale Competition โ€“ screens alongside Thai director Pen-ek Ratanaruangโ€™s Bangkok revenge thriller โ€œMorte Cucina,โ€ shot by cinematographer Christopher Doyle, and Clara Lawโ€™s โ€œRipples in the Mist,โ€ tracing a pair of Hong Kong women displaced into exile between Taiwan and Australia. Joko Anwarโ€™s prison-set horror-comedy โ€œGhost in the Cellโ€ appears in the Freak Me Out genre sidebar.

The First Nations Award โ€“ carrying a AUD$35,000 ($25,200) prize presented as the worldโ€™s largest dedicated to Indigenous filmmaking, supported by Truant Pictures โ€“ returns with highlights including Zacharias Kunukโ€™s supernatural epic โ€œWrong Husband,โ€ winner of best Canadian film at Toronto, and Banchi Hanuseโ€™s watercolor animation hybrid documentary โ€œCeremony,โ€ winner of the Audience Award at SXSW. The Sustainable Future Award, worth AUD$40,000 ($28,700) and supported by philanthropist Amanda Maple-Brown, recognizes environmental cinema, with 2026 nominees including โ€œNuisance Bear,โ€ โ€œJust Look Upโ€ and โ€œTime and Water.โ€

A retrospective curated by jury president Mendonรงa Filho โ€“ titled The Tropical Trail โ€“ spans six decades of Brazilian cinema, anchored by Eduardo Coutinhoโ€™s 1984 documentary โ€œMan Marked for Death, Twenty Years Later.โ€ The Classics Restored strand brings new 4K restorations including Tsai Ming-liangโ€™s โ€œVive Lโ€™Amour,โ€ winner of the Venice Golden Lion, Tโ€™ang Shushuenโ€™s 1968 Hong Kong independent landmark โ€œThe Archโ€ and Richard Lowensteinโ€™s Australian cult film โ€œHe Died with a Felafel in His Hand,โ€ with Lowenstein attending as a festival guest.

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