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Cannes Man
Cannes Man
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Cannes Man
Directed byRichard Martini Susan Hillary Shapiro
Written byRichard Martini
Deric Haddad
Irwin M. Rappaport
Susan Hito Shapiro
Produced byTom Coleman
Johan Schotte
Holly MacConkey
StarringFrancesco Quinn
Seymour Cassel
Johnny Depp
Edited byRichard Currie
Music byRichard Martini
Release date
  • 1996 (1996)
Running time
88 minutes
CountriesUnited States
France
LanguagesEnglish
French
Norwegian

Cannes Man is a 1996 independent comedy film directed by Richard Martini, and Susan Hillary Shapiro (scenes in Cannes). The film stars Seymour Cassel and Francesco Quinn. The film also features more than 15 famous Hollywood actors (mostly cameo) including Johnny Depp, Jon Cryer, Benicio del Toro, John Malkovich, Dennis Hopper, Kevin Pollak, Jim Jarmusch and Chris Penn. The film was released as Direct-to-DVD in many countries.

Plot

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Frank 'Rhino' Rhinoslavsky (Quinn) is a dumb part-time cab driver in New York City who wants to break into film business. He doesn't have anything to offer, and just thinks that he can start at the top, as a writer. Opportunity knocks on Frank's door when he goes to the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France to deliver some props to Troma, Inc.

So, he meets Sy Lerner (Seymor Cassel), perhaps a bigger loser in movie business and as each person interviewed in this mockumentary attests, he has made a fool out of a lot of industry executives and cost them plenty of money. Lerner makes a bet with his friend that he can take any shmoe off the street and turn them into the biggest success around. And Frank is his shmoe. 'Rhino' is going to create the same success by letting others do all the work.

Sy Lerner takes on Frank as his pet project. He shows Frank how to dress and behave, tells him how to respond when being interviewed such as never saying too much, and always being ambiguous. Then Sy Lerner comes up with the vehicle for Frank's reputation, by naming him the writer of a new movie. Only the movie doesn't exist and Frank isn't a writer. And, even knowing Lerner's reputation, people buy into the garbage. And now, everyone wants a piece of that action. Lerner and Frank (now given a fitting industry name of "Frank Rhino") have everyone knocking down their door, popular directors, big name producers, and famous actors (including Johnny Depp and Jim Jarmusch). Interviews, press opportunities, everything: Frank is the "Cannes Man," and he didn't have to do much to get it. So, they are at the Cannes Film Festival. "It's where deals get made, producers get laid, and stars get paid. It's where all the movie industry meets to buy and sell all the movies on the planet. And it's where the art of the deal can be filled with more laughs than the deal itself."[1]

Location

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The film was shot in Cannes, Alpes-Maritimes, France, and in Beverly Hills.

Critical reception

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Cannes Man was generally given mixed reviews by critics. Film review aggregate website Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a "rotten" score of 50% based on 6 reviews. Clint Morris from Moviehole said, "Richard Martini really knows Hollywood - if you're a fan of The Player, you'll love this. You'll see more stars in this than you will outside the window of a space ship!"[2] Peter Nichols of the New York Times deemed it "One of this year's small treasures" when released to video in 1997.[3]

Main cast

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Celebrity cameos

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Home media

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The film was released on DVD (PAL, cat. 23904) in Australia by Flashback Entertainment.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Cannes Man is a American independent that premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May 1996. Directed by Richard Martini and co-directed by Susan Hillary Shapiro, the film satirizes the film industry, Hollywood hype, and during the prestigious event. It stars as Sy Lerner, a seasoned who accepts a wager from a rival executive that he can elevate an unknown individual to stardom at the festival within days. Lerner selects New York City cab driver Frank "Rhino" Rhinoslavsky, portrayed by , as his subject, employing manipulation, fabricated backstories, and aggressive promotion of a nonexistent project titled Cannes Man (pronounced "Con Man") to generate buzz. The , written by Deric Haddad, Richard Martini, Irwin Rappaport, and Susan Hillary Shapiro, unfolds in a semi-improvised style, with a runtime of 88 minutes. Produced by Scotty Gelt Productions, Cannes Man features over a dozen cameo appearances by notable actors, including as himself, , , , , , and , who portray industry insiders drawn into Lerner's scheme. Upon release, the film garnered mixed critical reception, earning a 50% Tomatometer score on based on eight reviews, with critics noting its sharp insider humor but uneven execution. It holds an average rating of 5.1 out of 10 on from 867 user votes (as of November 2024), reflecting its appeal among film enthusiasts despite limited commercial success.

Production

Development

The development of Cannes Man originated in the early as an independent project conceived by filmmakers immersed in the Hollywood scene, aiming to capture the chaotic hype and deal-making of the international through a satirical lens. The concept emerged from real-life observations of festival dynamics, particularly at , where producers and agents often manufacture buzz around unproven talent to secure deals, inspiring a that mocked these practices in a low-budget, on-the-ground format. This idea was shaped into an improvised style, allowing for spontaneous interactions with industry figures during production to heighten the film's authenticity and critique of self-indulgent deal-making. The screenplay was collaboratively written by Richard Martini, Deric Haddad, Irwin M. Rappaport, and Susan Hillary Shapiro, each contributing personal anecdotes from their experiences within the film world to craft a biting on Hollywood's excesses and the illusion of stardom. Their script emphasized the absurdities of festival networking and hype-driven financing, drawing directly from insider stories to portray the industry's manipulative underbelly without relying on polished studio tropes. Richard Martini was selected as the primary director, leveraging his background in independent filmmaking, which included assisting Oscar-winning screenwriter after graduating from USC Film School and earning awards for his 1979 short Special Olympian. His prior work as a freelance journalist for outlets like Variety and Premiere informed the project's guerrilla approach, while Susan Hillary Shapiro co-directed specific scenes, particularly those shot on location, to incorporate her expertise in festival environments. Martini's independent ethos directly influenced the format, prioritizing over scripted rigidity to mirror the unpredictable nature of film market schmoozing. Production was overseen by producers Tom Coleman, Holly MacConkey, and Johan Schotte, who emphasized a lean, low-budget execution to enable filming amid the high-stakes setting of the without major studio backing. Their focus on cost-effective strategies allowed the team to embed the production directly into the 1995 event, turning logistical constraints into creative assets for the satirical tone. Pre-production spanned the early 1990s, with script refinement and planning culminating in during the 1995 in May, where the improvised elements were captured live among real activities. This timeline enabled the film to authentically document the era's industry fervor while keeping development agile and festival-tied.

Filming

The principal photography for Cannes Man was conducted primarily on location at the 1995 in , , , to authentically capture the event's bustling atmosphere, with supplementary scenes filmed in . Filming took place over a compressed period in May 1995, coinciding directly with the festival's schedule from May 17 to 28, which enabled the low-budget production to exploit the real-time chaos for dynamic, unscripted moments. The movie adopted an improvised style to simulate documentary realism, with much of the action woven into the live environment; director Richard Martini, alongside co-director Susan Hillary Shapiro for the portions, relied on spontaneity to secure cameos by approaching celebrities on-site during the event. This approach presented logistical hurdles, including obtaining permissions and synchronizing fictional elements with actual attendees and proceedings, all within the constraints of the independent production's limited resources and tight timeline.

Plot

At the , jaded film producer Sy Lerner () makes a wager with a fellow executive that he can transform any unknown person into a celebrity within one week. He chooses Frank "Rhino" Rhinoslavsky (), a cab driver and aspiring screenwriter who is in to deliver props for . Sy and his assistant Nikki (Zanna Wyatt) give Rhino a makeover, invent a glamorous backstory, and promote him as the writer and star of a nonexistent film titled The Song of the Rhino. Using hype, fabricated press releases, and schmoozing with industry insiders, they generate buzz around Rhino. To Sy's surprise, the ploy works: Rhino, rebranded as "Frank Rhino," attracts attention from celebrities and media, securing interviews and meetings with figures like and . As Rhino embraces his newfound fame, the lines between deception and reality blur, testing the limits of Hollywood manipulation.

Cast

Main cast

Seymour Cassel leads the cast as Sy Lerner, the quintessential Hollywood renowned for his scheming charisma and mastery of hype to navigate the film industry. His portrayal emphasizes Lerner's role as the manipulative force driving the narrative's core bet, drawing on Cassel's experience in improvisational cinema. embodies Frank "Rhino" Rhinoslavsky, a reluctant part-time New York cab driver harboring ambitions in the movie business, depicted with a mix of and underlying . Quinn's captures Rhino's transformation from an everyday outsider to a fabricated figure under intense pressure. Rebecca Broussard plays Rebecca Lerner, Sy's close associate who facilitates key dealings and interactions within the festival environment. Among supporting mains, Luana Anders portrays an agent managing crucial phone negotiations, adding layers to the behind-the-scenes machinations. Ann Cusack appears as Kitty Monaco, a rival presence in the competitive festival circuit. Jim Stark rounds out key non-celebrity roles as a betting producer involved in the central wager. The main cast was selected for their improvisational abilities, enhancing the film's format captured spontaneously at the . Central dynamics revolve around Sy's mentorship of Rhino, where their collaborative interplay fuels the story's momentum through persuasive tactics and escalating encounters.

Celebrity cameos

_Cannes Man features over 15 cameos, many of which were filmed on location during the 1995 , lending an authentic, improvisational quality to the 's satirical depiction of industry hype. These brief appearances, often unscripted, showcase stars playing heightened versions of themselves or festival archetypes, emphasizing the absurdity of deal-making and self-promotion without driving the central narrative. Notable cameos include as himself in an extended, unscripted sequence alongside , where Depp portrays a quirky, evasive director dodging promotional pitches. appears as himself, enthusiastically pitching outlandish film ideas to the protagonist in a scene that mocks overzealous networking. delivers a meta jab at Hollywood pretensions in his self-referential role, highlighting the festival's superficial glamour. Other prominent appearances feature and as themselves promoting , Jon Cryer hawking his film Heads, Chris Penn attempting to evade a persistent producer, and as a bombastic studio executive. Additional cameos by , , , , , and (as the Troma chief) further populate the festival milieu with insider humor. These guest spots, secured spontaneously amid the 1995 event's chaos, amplify the film's humorous authenticity by capturing real-time celebrity interactions and the event's frenetic energy. Their satirical brevity underscores the mockumentary's theme of manufactured stardom, providing comic relief and cultural commentary through star power alone.

Release

Premiere and distribution

Cannes Man had its world premiere in May 1996 at the in , aligning with the film's satirical depiction of the event. The film, an independent production by Scotty Gelt Productions, bypassed a wide theatrical rollout and opted for a release in the United States on June 3, 1997. This approach was deemed suitable given the film's modest budget and production values, which limited its appeal for cinema exhibition. Internationally, distribution remained constrained, with video and later DVD releases in markets such as in 2006, reflecting the challenges faced by independent films in securing broad theatrical access. The movie was produced through a U.S.-based effort but incorporated French elements from its filming locations, resulting in versions available in English, French, and Norwegian. Marketing emphasized the film's insider satire on the festival circuit, leveraging on-site recruitment of celebrity cameos during the event to build buzz among industry attendees. Due to its indie status and video-first strategy, Cannes Man generated limited revenue, with no major theatrical earnings documented.

Home media

The film was initially released on VHS in the late 1990s in format for the North American market, distributed through independent labels and available via retailers like Amazon. A Region 1 DVD was released in the United States in 2002 by an independent distributor. An early PAL edition (catalog number 23904) was issued in by Flashback Entertainment around 1997, emphasizing distribution in that region. In the United States and other territories, a DVD was handled by Cinema Libre Studios in 2011 as a Region 1 edition without widespread theatrical tie-ins. European markets saw Region 2 imports, highlighting regional encoding variations that limited playback compatibility outside PAL/ zones. A Blu-ray edition was released on March 1, 2011, by Cinema Libre Studios in Region A (with B and C untested), marking the film's first high-definition home media format at resolution. As of November 2025, digital access has expanded to streaming platforms including and (free with library access), alongside free options on Plex, , and Fawesome; rentals and purchases are available via At Home, with possible availability on .

Reception

Critical response

Cannes Man received mixed reviews from critics upon its release. On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds a 50% approval rating based on 8 reviews, with critics highlighting its satirical take on the film industry despite uneven execution. User ratings on IMDb average 5.1 out of 10 as of November 2025, based on 8,677 votes, reflecting a similarly divided audience response. Positive critiques focused on the film's witty satire of Hollywood deal-making and the Cannes Film Festival atmosphere. Clint Morris of Moviehole praised its authentic insider perspective, stating, "Richard Martini really knows Hollywood—if you're a fan of The Player, you'll love this. You'll see more stars in this than you will outside the window of a space ship!" Mike McGranaghan of The Aisle Seat commended the energetic cameos from celebrities like Johnny Depp and Jim Jarmusch, noting, "There's some fun to be had," while appreciating how it captures the "self-promotional spirit" of the festival. Mark R. Leeper highlighted the humorous bits that poke fun at industry excesses, rating it a +1 on his -4 to +4 scale and suggesting it resonates strongly with film insiders. Critics also pointed out several weaknesses, including pacing issues and uneven improvisation. McGranaghan observed that the film "lacks clarity and character development" compared to Robert Altman's The Player, with the ending "running out of steam" into an obvious conclusion. Leeper described the tone as "a little uneven," attributing this to its blend of scripted and improvised elements. One review dismissed it as "utterly grating," criticizing its derivative feel and failure to sustain momentum. Thematically, the mockumentary format effectively skewers the hype and manipulation at film festivals, drawing comparisons to satirical works like This Is Spinal Tap for its exaggerated portrayal of industry absurdities. However, its limited mainstream appeal has confined discussion largely to niche film circles, with scant critical reevaluation since 1997.

References

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