Every Cannes Palme d'Or Winner Since 1990, Ranked
Updated May 27, 2023 with the 2023 Palme d'Or winner, Anatomy of a Fall.
A best picture Oscar may be film's peak honor, but a Cannes Palme d'Or win isn't far behind. Though it didn't adopt its current name (which translates to "Golden Palm" in English) on a permanent basis until 1975, the top award at the globe's most prestigious film festival has been handed out in nearly every year since 1946, with occasional interruptions (most recently in 2020, when the festival was canceled during the COVID pandemic).
Is the latest Palme d'Or winner a favorite with critics as well? Not every Palme d'Or recipient is, as Cannes juries (typically composed of actors and directors, and different every year) don't always have the same tastes as reviewers. In the gallery on this page, we rank all of the Cannes winners since 1990. They are arranged from worst to best by Metascore, which reflects the consensus of professional critics for each film.
2016 winner
Director Ken Loach collected the Palme d'Or for the second time—becoming just the eighth repeat winner in Cannes history—with this 2016 drama that marked his 13th Cannes competition entry (and has since been followed by a 14th). The film, which follows a carpenter who finds himself ineligible for both work and welfare after a heart attack, bested numerous better-reviewed Cannes submissions like Toni Erdmann, Elle, Paterson, The Handmaiden, Graduation, and Aquarius.
“A couple of scenes are perhaps too on the nose, but the naturalistic performances are faultless, the righteous anger controlled, and the bleakness dotted with moments of humour and small acts of kindness. I, Daniel Blake is, first and foremost, a deeply humanistic film.” —Jamie Graham, Total Film