Luxbox secured French distribution rights to Katharina Rivilis' *I'll Be Gone in June* and released the first trailer exclusively through Variety, nine weeks ahead of the film's world premiere in Cannes Un Certain Regard 2026. The deal closed while most distributors still wait for festival screenings to commit capital, a reversal of the risk-averse positioning that dominated spring 2025 acquisitions.
Rivilis directed the feature, her second, with the film slated for the Un Certain Regard sidebar rather than Competition. Luxbox did not disclose acquisition price or minimum guarantee structure. The company previously handled French releases for mid-tier festival selections, though never for a title debuting in Un Certain Regard's 20-film lineup. Variety received exclusive trailer access as part of the announcement, a marketing tactic that doubles as buyer validation for sales agents still negotiating other territories.
The early close matters because it moves risk forward. Distributors signing deals pre-festival commit to marketing spend and P&A budgets without critic reaction or buyer consensus. Luxbox's move suggests either strong pre-sales data from other regions or confidence in Rivilis' name recognition within French arthouse circuits. The Un Certain Regard sidebar historically delivers 3-4 breakout titles per year that achieve theatrical runs beyond festival windows, but the majority disappear after their Croisette debut. Luxbox is betting this film lands in the former category, despite zero confirmed talent attachments or production budget disclosure in the announcement.
The timing also isolates Luxbox from the bidding wars that erupt on the Croisette. French distributors typically spend €200,000-€800,000 on Un Certain Regard acquisitions closed during the festival, with prices spiking 40-60% above pre-festival offers when multiple buyers compete. By locking the deal in March, Luxbox either secured a discount or avoided auction dynamics entirely. The trade-off: no ability to walk away if early festival reviews skew negative, and no leverage to renegotiate terms based on market temperature.
Operators should watch whether Luxbox announces a release date within 30 days of the Cannes premiere. Distributors confident in their acquisitions typically confirm theatrical windows before festival buzz fades, targeting fall 2026 slots that capitalize on Cannes credentials without competing against year-end awards contenders. If Luxbox delays that announcement past mid-June, it signals hedging. Also worth tracking: whether other French buyers close pre-festival deals for the remaining 19 Un Certain Regard titles. If they do, it suggests sales agents are offering meaningful discounts to de-risk their own Cannes exposure.
The Variety trailer exclusive runs 90 seconds and will serve as the primary acquisition tool for territories still open. Sales agents now have a marketing asset that didn't exist three weeks ago, which accelerates remaining deals or exposes weakness if buyers still decline after footage review.