In Cannes, Demi Moore Toasts Mike Faist, Sophie Wilde, and a New Generation of Stars
Up on the rooftop of the HĂŽtel Martinez on the Cannes Croisette, Mike Faist is fighting back tears. He lost his father in December and his grandfather just three weeks later, and on Thursday, found himself deeply moved at the world premiere of Megalopolis, Francis Ford Coppolaâs self-financed epic. This was Faistâs first day ever at the festival. âIt could be [Coppolaâs] last and my firstâI donât take it lightly, and I do not take my days for granted any more,â Faist tells me. âIâve been having a little bit of a crisis for myself in the past couple of weeks, as Challengers has come out and Iâve been saying to people that, in the next, what, five or 10 years, we will probably be losing some of our greatest giants. And it really hurts. Itâs very sad for me.â He gets choked up, and pauses to collect himself: âI get emotional thinking about it.â
The evening before, there was Faist in a tux, a reel of his greatest screen work so farâfrom the aforementioned Challengers to his striking work in Steven Spielbergâs West Side Storyâplaying to thunderous applause before he accepted the nightâs final Chopard TrophĂ©e, an official Cannes Film Festival 2024 honor bestowed to rising stars. Itâs been a whirlwind of a weekend for the actor whoâs just skyrocketed to a new profile with his red-hot tennis drama, costarring Zendaya and Josh OâConnor. He sees that movieâs theatrical success and Cannesâs promise of cinematic artistry as of precisely the spirit heâd like to carry forward in this industry: âItâs an inhumane thing to just sit in your apartment alone by yourself and just mindlessly click on whateverâs next on the streaming thing,â he says. âWe have to bring people together in those shared spaces.â
Sophie Wilde, Demi Moore, and Mike Faist at the Chopard Trophée dinner.
Olivier Borde
Demi Moore shared a similar sentimen just moments earlierânotable, since sheâs coming into Cannes not as a Chopard TrophĂ©e honoree, but as its esteemed Godmother, a prestigious designation reserved for screen icons. Oh, and also as the host of the amfAR gala, a benefit for HIV/AIDS research she previously hosted 27 years ago (the last time she was in Cannes). Oh, and as the star of The Substanceâa body-horror feast from director Coralie Fargeat thatâs one of the buzziest remaining competition titles. âIt feels like the completing of a circle,â she says. (I also spoke with Moore for a career-spanning conversation on Sunday at the American Pavilion nearby.)
The Chopard dinner is one of the glitziest, starriest events of a very glitzy, starry festival. In attendance at the Carlton Beach Club (yes, we walked on the sand in our tuxes and gowns) alongside Moore, Faist, and fellow honoree Sophie Wilde were Mooreâs fellow Hollywood A-lister Kevin Costner, competition jury members including Greta Gerwig and Omar Sy, and arthouse favorites like Vicky Krieps. The event began with remarks by the festivalâs general delegate Thierry FrĂ©maux and president Iris Knobloch, before Moore took the stage for some remarks on Faist and Wildeâs behalf.
âThis place represents not just the top of cinematic art, but a place where dreams come through frames and stories, and the location isn’t too shabby either,â Moore said. âI argue you need nothing from me and have all the resources within yourselves to handle whatever comes your way. But as your appointed Godmother, remember, Iâm not just here for the fun stuff, and you don’t have to do it alone.â
Iris Knobloch, Kevin Costner, and Caroline Scheufele.
Olivier Borde
Wilde, who broke out in last yearâs horror phenomenon Talk to Me, took the stage after Chopardâs president Caroline Scheufele and seemed to bask in Mooreâs glow, giddy at the mere proximity with her. âThis is just so sick,â she said with a grin. âThereâs something so sort of surreal, yet incredibly special about being recognized by a group of people who you really admire and whose work has been a constant source of inspiration.â
Moore wasnât much older than Wilde and Faist when she first came to Cannes in 1997. Back then, Elizabeth Taylor was supposed to host the amfAR event but had to bow out due to surgery. Moore, who was attending the festival that year in support of then-husband Bruce Willisâs The Fifth Element, reenacts what the late legend said to her as if still in awe of even getting that phone call. âWith that sweet, breathy voice: âItâs Elizabeth TaylorâŠ,ââ Moore recalls. âWe had never met, so of course I had to say yes. You donât say no!â
Faist and Moore.
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
Of course, Moore wasnât in town for her own film then. Now she is, for the first time everâand for a project sheâs deeply proud of. âIt had elements that were risky and Iâd never really seenâitâs really about the male perspective of the idealized woman that we as women have bought into,â she says, before teasing that Substance will be âa little bloody, a little gory,â and very thrilling. âI feel that butterfly nerves of seeing it in such a grand way. For it to be premiering here, I feel fairly humbled. I do.â Spoken like a true Godmother.
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