Updated
Updated · Variety · May 13
Camp Miasma Draws 6-Minute Cannes Ovation as Mubi Bets on Polarizing Queer Slasher
Updated
Updated · Variety · May 13

Camp Miasma Draws 6-Minute Cannes Ovation as Mubi Bets on Polarizing Queer Slasher

8 articles · Updated · Variety · May 13
  • Six minutes of applause greeted Jane Schoenbrun’s “Camp Miasma” at its Cannes Un Certain Regard premiere, with Hannah Einbinder and Gillian Anderson joining the director onstage after the screening.
  • Big laughs ran through the film’s Hollywood-reboot satire and blood-soaked slasher set pieces, but the response was split—some viewers stayed to cheer while many headed for the exits as the credits began.
  • Mubi’s synopsis casts the story as a revival of a fading slasher franchise that pulls a young director and a reclusive original star into a world of desire, fear and delirium; the distributor opens it in U.S. theaters on Aug. 7.
  • The premiere extends Schoenbrun’s run of festival-launched horror films after “We’re All Going to the World’s Fair” and “I Saw the TV Glow,” reinforcing the director’s niche in queer horror and trans-identity themes.
In her Cannes debut, how does Gillian Anderson’s performance as a 'final girl' redefine the iconic horror role for a new generation?
How does Schoenbrun’s film use classic slasher tropes not just for scares, but to explore the modern experience of trans identity?
Can a queer horror film rejected by most studios but celebrated at Cannes finally reshape Hollywood's approach to funding trans stories?