The 79th Festival de Cannes officially kicked off on May 12, 2026, and opening night landed exactly where it always does: at the intersection of cinema, luxury, and the ancient art of being photographed like you were born under spotlights.
This year’s extra tension comes from the rules. The festival’s red carpet dress code—tightened last year—still draws a clean line around nudity and “voluminous” silhouettes that clog the stairs or the seating inside the Grand Théâtre Lumière. In other words: be glamorous, but don’t be a logistical event.
And yet, the looks still hit.
The Cannes Equation: Control + Sparkle
If the Met Gala is fantasy, Cannes is precision. Opening night delivered a kind of controlled glamour that feels newly relevant in 2026—less “shock the internet,” more “own the frame.”
Demi Moore’s opening-night moment did that math perfectly: a shimmering, fitted Jacquemus choice that reads like a statement without needing a stunt. It’s the Cannes power move—nothing excessive, everything intentional, the kind of silhouette that photographers can’t lose in a crowd.
Elsewhere on the carpet, the strongest styling leaned into shape, shine, and old-fashioned “expensive” signals: clean lines, high-impact fabrics, and jewelry that does the talking when the dress stays disciplined.
What the Dress Code Is Actually Doing
The internet loves the idea of Cannes “banning” something because it implies rebellion is imminent. The more interesting story is subtler: restrictions are shaping design choices.
You can feel it in the return to high-glam structure—more sculpted bodices, fewer attention-grabbing transparency games, and trains that look dramatic but don’t behave like furniture. The mood isn’t prudish. It’s edited. Cannes is asking celebrities to be strategic again, not just viral.
That edit also makes room for something we’ve missed on red carpets: proportion that flatters from a distance. When the stairs are the backdrop, a look has to read in a single glance. Opening night’s best outfits understood that.
The Gossip Stone Read
Cannes week is not won by one outfit. It’s won by consistency: a red carpet look, a photocall look, an “arriving at the hotel” look, all telling the same story in different volumes.
Opening night set the tone: glamour, yes—but the kind that holds up under rules. Expect the next few days to reward designers who can do drama without chaos and celebrities who know that restraint, at Cannes, is not a limitation. It’s a flex.


