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All the winners at the 68th Cannes Film Festival

Cannes - After nearly two weeks of stirring, sleek and thought-provoking movies and a couple of duds the Cannes Film Festival closed Sunday with an awards night to declare the winner of its coveted Palme d'Or.

French actor Lambert Wilson hosted the black-tie event in the festival's 2 300-seat main theater.

US directing duo the Coen brothers headed this year's jury of top actors and filmmakers deciding which of the 19 competition entries will walk away with the 20,000-euro ($24 000) gold-and-crystal trophy.

Two runner-up films will also get prizes, along with awards for best director, actor, actress and screenplay.

Critics have hailed this year's crop, which revealed a remarkably strong contingent from Italy, two noted Chinese-language pictures, a couple of American features seemingly destined for Oscar acclaim, a raw Holocaust movie, and a mixed bag of French fare.

After rule changes in past years, the Palme d'Or cannot be shared and must go to just one of the movies. The awards for best actor and best actress cannot go to performers in the Palme winner.
But which way the jury will jump is anyone's guess.

Joel and Ethan Coen, the makers of Oscar-winner No Country for Old Men and the 1991 Palme d'Or winner Barton Fink, could be swayed by movies with menace, or oddball humour, or extraordinary production values.

The opinions of the other members of the panel also have to be taken into account  for instance, Mexican director Guillermo del Toro (known for fantasies such as Pan's Labyrinth), Canadian wunderkind filmmaker Xavier Dolan, and actors Jake Gyllenhaal and Sienna Miller.

An unofficial award, the Queer Palme, decided by a separate panel looking to highlight gay people in movies, went to Carol, an American lesbian drama that was warmly received at the festival.

"It is a historic moment the first time a story of love between two women has been treated with the respect and importance that we accord to all other cinematic romances," said Queer Palm jury president Desiree Akhavan, an American actress and director.

Many critics believe the film is likely to earn Australian actress Cate Blanchett accolades for her memorable performance.

Champagne bucket

According to festival rules, the awards for best actor and best actress cannot go to performers in the Palme winner.

Usually, the nine members of the jury put their choice of winner on a bit of folded paper in a champagne ice bucket to be drawn out.

The Sea of Trees, an American melodrama starring Matthew McConaughey and directed by past Palme winner Gus Van Sant, is seen as unlikely to figure in their deliberations, with critics widely giving it a thumbs-down.

Whichever way the prize ceremony goes, the festival will be remembered for a varied and mostly interesting line-up.

As well as a flawed but ambitious triptych by Chinese director Jia Zhang-ke, Mountains May Depart, and notable performances from French actor Vincent Lindon in The Measure of a Man and British actor Tim Roth in Chronic, some out-of-competition films generated buzz.

Those non-contenders included dystopian sci-fi desert derby Mad Max: Fury Road, which has gone on to bumper box-office success, Inside Out, a new animation movie seen as putting Pixar back onto a winning slate, and Amy, a documentary about the short and tragic life of superstar singer Amy Winehouse.

Here are all the winners from the 2015 Cannes Film Festival:

Palme d'Or: Dheepan

(French director Jacques Audiard)

A thriller spotlighting the plight of Sri Lankan refugees, including a traumatised former insurgent, as they try to build new lives in France.

Grand Prize: Son of Saul

(Hungarian director Laszlo Nemes)

The 38-year-old Nemes's first feature, this movie was widely acclaimed for taking audiences into a Nazi concentration camp and showing the Holocaust in a different way.

Jury Prize: The Lobster

(Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos)

Starring a paunchy, deadpan Colin Farrell, The Lobster is a weird but well-received movie about single people who are transformed into animals if they don't find a mate.

Best actor: Vincent Lindon

(The Measure of a Man)

Talented, gruff French character actor Lindon scooped the prize for his performance as a laid-off factory worker desperately searching for a job.

Best actress: Rooney Mara, Emmanuelle Bercot

(Carol, Mon Roi)

Mara won the award for her part in lesbian love affair Carol in which she co-starred with Cate Blanchett, while France's Emmanuelle Bercot was also awarded for her performance as a woman looking back on a destructive relationship with a deceitful but charming boyfriend.

Best director: Hou Hsiao-hsien

(The Assassin)

A leading figure in Taiwan's New Wave cinema, Hou won for his slow-burning minimalist drama set in ninth-century China featuring Asian megastar Shu Qi as a female assassin who, after failing in one mission, is sent back to her home province to kill its governor, who is also the man she loves.

Best screenplay: Chronic

(Michel Franco)

Mexican writer-director Franco won for his bleak film about an end-of-life nurse played by Tim Roth who grows too close to some of his patients and faces difficult moral choices about assisted suicide.

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