Review | Cannes 2024: Megalopolis movie review – Francis Ford Coppola’s wildly ambitious project comes to fruition
- A blend of satire and science fiction with shades of Citizen Kane and Damien Chazelle’s Babylon, Coppola’s film is stylish, sometimes inspired and quite bonkers
- Adam Driver plays an architect building a 21st century metropolis, with support from a who’s who of actors including Giancarlo Esposito and Nathalie Emmanuel.

4/5 stars
Francis Ford Coppola returns with a bang, with his long-cherished and divisive project Megalopolis. Unveiled in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, it is the director’s first film since 2011’s Twixt, and one he has dreamed of making since 1977.
An intriguing blend of science fiction and political satire, it begins with a voice-over: “Our American Republic is not all that different from old Rome.” It is a conceit that Coppola pursues, with his lead character named Cesar Catalina (Adam Driver) and the setting a 21st century metropolis called New Rome.
Surely a figure to be compared to Coppola, Catalina is an architect who schemes of creating a city of the future for the people, named Megalopolis. It is a unique vision, built with a substance called megalon, which some believe is unsafe.
Catalina’s reputation is being called into question wherever he goes. Dubbed an “obsessive-compulsive wacko” and a “reckless dreamer”, he is gathering enemies like some collect stamps.
Among the most powerful is Mayor Franklyn Cicero (Breaking Bad’s Giancarlo Esposito), whose daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) soon becomes the object of the architect’s desire.