Cannes 2025 Cracks Down: New Red Carpet Dress Code Bans Nudity and Voluminous Gowns

Stephane Cardinale - Corbis - Getty Images

The legendary film festival updates its sartorial standards, outlawing sheer statements and sprawling trains — but can couture really be contained?

The Cannes Film Festival, one of the world’s most iconic cultural showcases, has unveiled a dramatic revision to its red carpet policy ahead of its 77th edition. Known for blending cinematic prestige with high fashion spectacle, Cannes is now formally banning full nudity and overly voluminous outfits from all official events. While rules governing dress codes at the Grand Théâtre Lumière have always existed in some form, this marks the first time such guidelines have been so explicitly codified and communicated to the public.


Effective immediately, festival guidance states that “for decency reasons, nudity is prohibited on the red carpet, as well as in any other area of the festival.” Furthermore, “voluminous outfits, in particular those with a large train, that hinder the proper flow of traffic of guests and complicate seating in the theater are not permitted.” The festival’s red carpet teams have been instructed to enforce these guidelines strictly, including the authority to deny entry to non-compliant guests.



From Couture to Cultural Flashpoints

Cannes has always occupied a liminal space between fashion fantasia and industry credibility. Its red carpet moments are watched just as closely as its Palme d’Or contenders, with designers vying to make the steps of the Palais des Festivals their runway. But the allure of pushing sartorial boundaries has often led to spectacle overtaking cinema. Bella Hadid’s 2021 Schiaparelli gown—featuring a golden breastplate in place of fabric—was celebrated and criticized in equal measure. Julia Fox’s penchant for latex and transparency raised similar eyebrows in 2023, as did models like Irina Shayk, whose 2022 ensemble was barely more than a thong with jewelry.





These fashion flashpoints seem to have catalyzed a broader institutional shift. The updated charter, a Cannes representative told The Cinema Group, aims to “recenter the red carpet on the festival’s cultural mission” by limiting what they term “performative provocation.” The statement also alludes to issues of safety and flow management, particularly when ensembles block staircases, emergency exits, or seating arrangements.





The Train Has Left the Station?

If the sheer ban targets provocation, the voluminous outfit clause takes direct aim at fashion grandeur. Think Cardi B’s sculptural Gaurav Gupta gown at the Grammys or Tems’ viral cloud-like headpiece at the 2023 Oscars that blocked fellow guests’ view. Cannes has long tolerated and even celebrated such show-stopping silhouettes, but with tight screening schedules, logistical strain, and VIP congestion, these couture flourishes are now seen as hazards.




Designers may bristle at what some already call “anti-haute couture” policing. With brands like Valentino, Dior, and Alexander McQueen relying on the international platform Cannes offers, it remains to be seen how flexible enforcement will be for sponsored guests. Will brands recalibrate to emphasize elegance over excess? Or will Cannes face backlash for constraining artistic freedom?




History of Control, Disguised as Decorum

Kristen Stewart takes of her heels at the 2018 Cannes Film Festival on May 14, 2018. Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images


This isn’t the first time Cannes has drawn global attention for policing fashion. In 2015, the festival faced intense backlash for allegedly turning away women not wearing high heels. Emily Blunt called the practice “very disappointing,” and it prompted numerous stars, including Kristen Stewart, to ditch their shoes altogether as a form of protest. Thierry Frémaux, Cannes’ artistic director, downplayed the scandal but later implemented changes to avoid similar controversies.



That same year, Cannes banned selfies on the red carpet, with Frémaux calling them “grotesque” and “ridiculous.” Critics noted that while the festival claims to uphold cinematic dignity, it often defaults to gatekeeping and optics control.




When Pop Culture Meets Protocol

As celebrity culture increasingly blurs the line between promotion and provocation, Cannes finds itself caught in the crosshairs. Kanye West’s now-infamous Grammy red carpet moment with Bianca Censori, who wore a sheer sheath dress that left nothing to the imagination, has renewed global debates about red carpet nudity and decorum. Such moments, while not Cannes-specific, clearly influence global festival policy. And with stars like Doja Cat, Megan Fox, and Rihanna regularly using nudity as aesthetic strategy, it’s hard to imagine the new rules will go uncontested.



Will this new code apply equally to a Valentino ambassador versus a first-time director? What about avant-garde fashion designers whose entire brand centers on subversion and spectacle? These questions remain unanswered—and history suggests Cannes may apply its rules unevenly.




From Censorship to Symbolism

The Amendment Prohibiting Nudity raises more questions than it solves, particularly regarding the definition of nudity. In 2022, Florence Pugh caused controversy at the Valentino Haute Couture Show in Rome when she wore a dress that showed her chest.

Jacopo Raule/Getty Images

Fashion, especially at Cannes, has always operated as a language—a symbol of status, ideology, protest, or transformation. When celebrities challenge norms, whether through Kristen Stewart’s bare feet or Lady Gaga’s infamous meat dress (albeit not at Cannes), they contribute to a conversation that transcends fabric. The updated dress code suggests that Cannes now wants to limit that conversation. In doing so, it risks muting one of its most potent cultural outputs.


Fashion isn’t frivolous at Cannes; it’s fundamental. But the new policy reimagines that narrative as a tightly managed procession of elegance, stripped of shock, stripped of message—stripped, quite literally, of transparency.



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