The Cannes film festival has often been likened to world championships among film auteurs from across the planet. In a podcast with good friend and filmmaker Robert Rodriguez, director Quentin Tarantino [who became a worldwide phenomenon when Pulp Fiction (1994) picked up the top prize at Cannes] once described it as similar to the “tournaments where Bobby Fischer would play chess.” Despite its dazzling red carpet, garbled politics compared to the Berlinale or Venice, and some provocative press interactions, the festival has remained arguably prestigious through the decades.