Cannes 2026 review: Jim Queen (Nicolas Athané & Marco Nguyen)

Jim Queen understands that the most urgent political cinema is sometimes the least solemn.”

There is a specific kind of courage required to be truly funny about something that genuinely matters. Not the courage of the provocateur, who deploys outrage as a shield, nor the courage of the moralist, who wields gravity as a cudgel — but the rarer, more difficult courage of the satirist who understands that laughter, when it is precise enough, cuts deeper than any earnest argument. Jim Queen, the debut animated feature from Nicolas Athané and Marco Nguyen, possesses this courage in abundance. It is the most engagé film in the Cannes Midnight section this year. It is also, at intervals, the funniest. That these two things are not in contradiction is the film’s central and most quietly radical achievement.

The premise is a masterclass in satirical economy: a sexually transmitted virus called Heterosis is turning gay men straight — dissolving musculature, installing a sudden comprehension of sporting regulations, generating an irresistible gravitational pull toward suburban domesticity and opposite-sex desire. The dispositif is absurdist. The argument it carries is not. Athané and Nguyen understand, with an instinct that separates artists from polemicists, that the most effective way to make oppression visible is to invert it — to construct a world in which the mechanisms of conversion, of enforced normalisation, of the institutional insistence on a single permissible form of desire, are redirected at those who have never had to think about them before, and observe what happens when the apparatus turns. What happens, in this film, is comedy. What underlies it is fury. The tension between them is where Jim Queen lives, and where it refuses, with admirable discipline, to choose.

The film announces its entire tonal and formal strategy in its opening minutes: a gymnasium sequence of ferocious comic delirium in which rows of identically sculpted men hymn the body beautiful to a thundering EDM beat, protein regimens and injectable supplements administered with the choreographic rigour of a military exercise. The animation style — flat colour fields in a palette of almost aggressively cheerful pastels, bodies rendered in a graphic idiom of gleeful exaggeration — constitutes a cadrage that holds its subjects at the precise distance required for satire: close enough to feel, far enough to laugh. It is a regard at once affectionate and pitiless. Jim himself — voiced by Alex Ramirès with a swagger so total it has consumed all available interior space — is introduced as a monument to narcissism so complete it has become, in its own way, a form of integrity. He is impossible. He is irresistible. And when Heterosis begins its slow demolition of everything he has built himself from, he becomes the film’s most devastating comic instrument — the spectacle of a sujet losing, increment by increment, the only identity he has ever inhabited.

Against Jim stands Lucien — Jérémy Gillet, perfectly calibrated — a closeted young man whose inner life is rendered in one of the film’s most fully realised passages of dramaturgie: a private space that doubles as a sanctuaire of longing, its concealed recesses a catalogue of desire so elaborately sustained it generates its own musical number — a parody of animated yearning so precisely constructed it lands simultaneously as joke and as genuine emotional declaration. Lucien cannot come out to his mother Christine — the country’s ferociously right-wing health minister, played by Elisabeth Wiener with magnificent, humourless conviction — a frosted figure d’autorité whose political genealogy will be recognisable to anyone who has followed the long, ignoble history of French conservative homophobia. The rapport de forces that develops between Jim and Lucien — the fading icon and the terrified devotee — is the film’s emotional architecture, its denouement earning its feeling precisely because the comedy never pauses long enough to announce the sentiment accumulating beneath it.

The satire’s most sophisticated quality is its refusal of a single target. Jim Queen is as unsparing toward the internal hierarchies of its own community — the cult of physical perfection, the cold économie du désir that determines who is considered sufficiently queer, the institutional cruelty of those who would police belonging from within — as it is toward the external forces of homophobia and political reaction. The Gaystapo, a militant organisation deploying violent reverse-conversion tactics, is the film’s sharpest invention: a reminder, delivered with characteristic lightness of touch, that the mechanism of exclusion is not the ideological property of any single camp. Meanwhile, Jim’s dawning attraction to his long-standing platonic friend Nina — who has always, it emerges, loved him — opens a passage of unexpected emotional complexity into the comedy, a meditation on the way desire, once it shifts, can simultaneously illuminate and destroy, the film’s most fully human movement and its most quietly surprising act of mise en scène.

The screenplay, co-written by Athané, Nguyen, Simon Balteaux and Brice Chevillard, sustains its comic architecture across ninety concentrated minutes with impressive maîtrise — the montage crisp and propulsive, the internal rhythm never loosening long enough for the film’s absurdist logic to lose its structural coherence. Musical sequences punctuate the récit with genuine formal ambition: from the EDM opening to Lucien’s numéro of impossible longing, to a climactic number that advocates, with full comic conviction, for a biological cure-all of considerable specificity. The animation quality throughout — clean, expressive, formally intelligent — punches well above the production’s financial constraints, a debut that announces two filmmakers in full command of their forme.

This is, finally, a film about the cost of expulsion — from the category of the desirable, from the grammar of acceptable selfhood, from the community that was supposed to be the one place safety was guaranteed. Athané and Nguyen have found in animation’s capacity for gleeful unreality the perfect dispositif for this argument: a regard capacious enough to hold the farcical and the devastating in the same frame without either cancelling the other, a forme that can accommodate both the logic of farce and the weight of genuine heartbreak without buckling under the contradiction. Jim Queen understands that the most urgent political cinema is sometimes the least solemn. It arrives in the Cannes dark like a shot of something necessary — sharp, warm, unapologetically itself. The queer festival circuit awaits. It will not be disappointed. And neither, it turns out, will anyone else.