Bruce Dern brings 'Dernsie' philosophy to Cannes in career-spanning documentary

Bruce ​Dern, one of Hollywood's most enduring character ​actors, returned to the Cannes Film Festival ‌on ​Wednesday, over a decade after winning best actor, for the premiere of a documentary dedicated to the 89-year-old's unconventional career path.


Reuters | Updated: 21-05-2026 03:47 IST | Created: 21-05-2026 03:47 IST
Bruce Dern brings 'Dernsie' philosophy to Cannes in career-spanning documentary

Bruce ​Dern, one of Hollywood's most enduring character ​actors, returned to the Cannes Film Festival ‌on ​Wednesday, over a decade after winning best actor, for the premiere of a documentary dedicated to the 89-year-old's unconventional career path. "Dernsie: The Amazing Life ‌of Bruce Dern" is a chronological biographical documentary by filmmaker Mike Mendez about Dern's nearly 70-year career in acting, starting with small bit parts and moving on to create his distinctive acting style, the Dernsie. A Dernsie is ‌Dern's ability to do or say something not in a screenplay that made his performance unique, born ‌out of advice he received from influential Greek American director Elia Kazan early in his career.

"I never thought I was altogether that interesting, you know what I mean? I mean, I had played the fifth cowboy from the right for 20 years," ⁠Dern ​told Reuters ahead of ⁠the premiere. "He (Kazan) said, 'Since you're going to be slotted in that area, make sure you're the most unique fifth cowboy from the right ⁠anybody ever saw and out of that came Dernsie, because you don't write the Dernsies,'" he said.

The film ​chronicles his relationships and family, featuring interviews with a long list of famous names he has ⁠worked with, including Quentin Tarantino, Billy Bob Thornton, Walton Goggins and his daughter, "Jurassic Park" and "Wild at Heart" actor Laura Dern. "The whole journey of ⁠being ​here knocked me out because what I've always looked for in this business - excuse the expression - is people that give a shit, and Cannes gave a shit about our documentary," Dern said.

"That ⁠was the big thrill for me, because that means that somebody understood that I've been in it ⁠68 years or whatever ⁠it is," he said. Dern has been nominated for two Oscars, for 1978's Vietnam war drama "Coming Home" and road trip movie "Nebraska," which also won him the best actor ‌award at Cannes ‌in 2013.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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