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At Cannes, long ovations grab attention – but do they mean anything?

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 2:34 PM

By Rollo Ross and Miranda Murray

CANNES, France, May 22 (Reuters) – The duration of a Cannes Film Festival standing ovation is often reported as a spot test on how good a film is, but ​film critics and journalists question whether the measure holds any merit.

Entertainment ‌outlet Deadline reported that this year’s Spanish competition entry, “The Black Ball,” received a 20-minute ovation on Thursday night, just two minutes shy of Guillermo del Toro’s 22-minute record with “Pan’s Labyrinth” two decades ago.

Whether that long ovation predicted success at Cannes will be revealed on ‌Saturday ​evening, when the jury hands out the Palme ⁠d’Or top prize to one ⁠of 22 films in the competition.

OVATIONS OF SOME USE?

“It’s got all the ingredients for a long ovation,” Deadline awards editor Damon Wise said about “The Black Ball,” a 135-minute saga about the Spanish Civil War and gay ​representation in history.

“As the applause is drowning, going down, going down, going down, you cut to Penelope Cruz and the applause comes back,” said ⁠Wise.

He added that last year’s second-place Cannes ⁠winner “Sentimental Value,” which went on to win best international feature ​at the Oscars, had a similar kind of ovation.

“I do think they (the ovations) ​do have their use,” he said.

“Pan’s Labyrinth” failed to win anything at ‌Cannes but won three Oscars, for cinematography, art direction and makeup.

However, a lot of them are “performative,” he said, citing how Danish film maker Nicolas Winding Refn actively encouraged the audience to keep going at his dark fable “Her Private ⁠Hell.”

TIMES MAY VARY

Adding to the doubt is that standing ovation times vary from publication to publication, with Variety reporting that “The Black Ball” ovation was only 16 minutes.

“I’m ⁠not sure it really ‌is a measure of a great film,” said Anna ⁠Smith, film critic and host of the “Girls on Film” ​podcast.

Smith ‌said that the standing ovations start as a way ​of being ⁠polite but then can quickly go out of control.

“Often I’ve enthusiastically joined in. But there is a moment where it does start to taper out a bit, and then someone will start up again. Then everyone sort of thinks, ‘Oh, OK, maybe I should join in’,” she said.

(Reporting by Rollo Rosso and Miranda ​MurrayEditing by Nick Zieminski)