Cannes 2025: Dardenne Brothers’ Bid for Third Palme d’Or Wraps up Wide-Open Race
- The Dardenne siblings from Belgium debuted their film "Young Mothers" at the Cannes Film Festival in May 2025, where it received the award for best screenplay.
- The brothers made the film to depict young women freeing themselves from imposed destinies amid poverty and social struggles.
- They filmed mostly with real babies, working differently to portray authentic stories of disadvantaged individuals without pity or pathos.
- Jean-Pierre explained that the location was a key factor in their decision to create this film, while Luc emphasized that the story focuses on individual life paths.
- The film’s recognition reinforces the brothers’ ongoing commitment to giving a "voice to the voiceless" and exploring social hardship realistically.
64 Articles
64 Articles

'Outstanding' Dardenne brothers teenage mothers movie has Cannes in tears
Belgian brothers Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne, whose inspiring new film "Young Mothers" won the best screenplay prize at Cannes on Saturday, said they wanted to show young women defying the fate that was forced on them.
‘Young Mothers’ Review: The Dardenne Brothers Bring Clear-Sighted Observation and Empathy to a Tender Snapshot of Women at a Crossroads
The two-time Palme d’Or winners’ latest is an ensemble drama developed out of time spent with teenagers and their babies in a maternal support shelter near Liège.
Cannes 2025: Dardenne brothers’ bid for third Palme d’Or wraps up wide-open race
The race for the Palme d’Or wound up with a return for two-time winners the Dardenne brothers, adding a slice of Belgian social realism to a politically charged 78th Cannes Film Festival that delivered strong contenders for the top prize but no outright favourite ahead of Saturday’s closing ceremony.
Newborn (Young Mothers): the Tenderness of the Dardenne Before the Inconvenience of Being Born (****)
"We don't run to death, we run away from the birth catastrophe." Even though it is recurrent and even punishable (more than even quoting Oscar Wilde) it's practically...
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