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‘Pan’s Labyrinth’ returns to Cannes 20 years after record 22‑minute ovation

By Thomson Reuters May 13, 2026 | 10:23 AM

By Rollo Ross

CANNES, France, May 13 (Reuters) – Mexican director Guillermo del Toro received the longest-ever standing ovation at the Cannes Film Festival two decades ago for his ​historical fantasy “Pan’s Labyrinth”, which returns this year to the ‌Cannes Classics section.

Speaking to Reuters, del Toro said the 22-minute ovation given to his Spanish-language film 20 years ago produced a “rush of human emotion.”

“Alfonso Cuaron was there with me because we produced the movie together and ‌he ​said, ‘let it in, man,'” recalled del ⁠Toro on Tuesday. “I’m not very ⁠good with praise and he said, ‘let it in, let love go in’ and I experienced it like that.”

“Pan’s Labyrinth” did not win the top-prize Palme D’Or that year, but ​del Toro went on to win the best picture Oscar for his fish monster love story “The Shape of Water” in ⁠2018.

The film, which has been digitally ⁠remastered, is set in Spain under the Franco ​dictatorship and follows a young girl who is enticed by ​a magical faun to complete three dangerous tasks while also ‌dealing with her ailing pregnant mother and cruel military stepfather.

The concept for “Pan’s Labyrinth” came when del Toro was at a low point in his creativity following the September 11 attacks on ⁠the Twin Towers in New York.

“I felt really defenceless,” he said, and started to question what the role of a storyteller is ⁠in this situation.

“I ‌thought it would be really interesting to have ⁠a man of rigidity, a captain, having ​to face ‌magic – something that seems imaginary, but his ​own notions ⁠of what is right and what is wrong, the captain’s notions, are also imaginary,” he added.

The cult classic, which will also be shown in 3D, is set to be re-released in theatres later this year.

(Reporting by Rollo Ross, Writing by Miranda Murray: Editing ​by Sharon Singleton)