For Oscar winner Juliette Binoche, the head of last year's jury at the Cannes Film Festival, it's not hard to understand why the films that succeeded on the Croisette go on to win accolades in Hollywood.
And it isn't because of recent reforms to make the voting members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences more diverse.
"The strength of these films leads to their success," Binoche told AFP in an interview in Los Angeles.
It certainly seems like the Cannes jury made some prophetic choices: the crop of films that premiered at the festival earned a total of 19 Oscar nominations.
Norwegian family drama Sentimental Value, which won the second prize, the Grand Prix, and the Brazilian thriller The Secret Agent are both in the running for Best Picture at the Oscars on Sunday, 15 March.
Watch: The trailer for Sentimental Value
Cannes' top Palme d'Or winner, It Was Just an Accident, and the rave-themed road trip movie Sirat, which took a special jury prize, will compete with those two titles for Best International Film at the Academy Awards.
"It's because these films are so beautiful, so unique, and so strong that they sometimes go against the grain," said Binoche.
"It's not hard to recognise films with their own strength," said the 61-year-old actress who, besides her Academy Award for The English Patient, has won prizes at the Venice, Berlin, and Cannes festivals.
'Reconciliation'
The Academy Awards and the Cannes Film Festival have not always honoured the same films, with the prestigious event in France often leaning towards works by auteur directors, some of them extremely political.
But about a decade ago, when more international voters were invited to join the Academy in the wake of the #OscarsSoWhite scandal, the prizewinners from the two galas have often converged, and Cannes has embraced its role as an Oscars bellwether.
Over the last five years, two films have won both the Palme d'Or and the Best Picture Oscar: the South Korean class satire Parasite and last year's Anora from writer-director Sean Baker, a darling of US indie cinema.
That has only happened four times in 80 years, and it cannot happen this year, with Jafar Panahi's It Was Just an Accident not in Best Picture contention.
Watch: The trailer for It Was Just an Accident
So was Panahi's work, which spotlights the dilemmas of a group of ordinary Iranians as they confront a man they believe to have tortured them in jail, not given its due?
For Binoche, "there is no such thing as fair value, because a film just belongs to itself".
"One could criticise the film by saying that it's not totally well acted, but it's just not actors we are used to seeing on screen because he used non-professionals," she explained.
But she added that Panahi, "who wrote this script in prison in Iran, who went on hunger strike", has highlighted "space... for reconciliation with his executioner".
'Changes lives'
The French film legend says that the most important thing for her about a film "is that it changes lives, changes people's consciences".
Binoche is currently promoting her first directorial effort, which tells the story of an experience that profoundly affected her.
In-I in Motion offers a candid look at her preparations for the dance performance she created with the British choreographer Akram Khan, which premiered in London in 2008.
The actress says those 120 shows taught her to face her fears.
"Each time, I thought I was going to die," she recalled.
The film features footage of rehearsals, which she edited, and invites the viewer to get a bird's eye view of the unusual creative collaboration between the actress and the dancer.
Binoche says making the documentary has taught her that directing is not so different from acting.
In both cases, "you have to be in sync with your own intuition... you have to believe in what you feel," she said.
After performing in dozens of films, Binoche is eager to get behind the camera again.
But when asked what her next subject might be, she said with a smile: "I can't say any more about it."
Source: AFP