CANNES: These are the nine celebrity jurors who will decide Sunday who gets the Palme d’Or, the top prize at Cannes, the world’s most important film festival: George Miller The 71-year-old Australian president of the jury trained as a doctor before creating the Outback post-apocalyptic world of “Mad Max”, partly inspired by his days working in a hospital emergency room. Arnaud Desplechin The 55-year-old French maker of the 2008 heart-warmer “A Christmas Tale” had another hit last year with “My Golden Days” and is a connoisseur of family dramas. Kirsten Dunst Still only 34, the former child actor has had built a glittering career matching arthouse hits like “Interview with the Vampire” and “The Virgin Suicides” with blockbusters such as the “Spider-Man” films. Valeria Golino The Italian actor-director, 50, is best known for her part in “Rain Man” alongside Dustin Hoffman and Tom Cruise. Her first feature, “Honey”, was shown at Cannes in 2013. Mads Mikkelsen Denmark’s best known export after bacon and beer made his name as a sensitive cop in the “Pusher” film trilogy before playing a memorable line of baddies including Le Chiffre in the Bond film “Casino Royale” and Dr Hannibal Lecter in the television version of the cultured cannibal story. Mikkelson, 50, also stars in the new Star Wars film, “Rogue One”. His inclusion on the jury was somewhat controversial, as he is a close friend of fellow Dane Nicolas Winding Refn, who is in the running for the Palme d’Or. Laszlo Nemes The Hungarian director’s debut feature, “Son of Saul”, picked up the best foreign language picture award at both the Oscars and the Golden Globes this year as well as the Grand Prix at Cannes in 2015. It was described by Claude Lanzmann as one of the best films he had seen on the Holocaust, no mean praise from the French maker of epic documentary “Shoah”. Vanessa Paradis The French singer and actress, 43, began as a model before becoming a huge film and singing star in France and having two children with Hollywood star Johnny Depp. Katayoon Shahabi The Iranian producer, who was born in 1968, is a major player in her homeland. She has made a series of documentaries, including one about the impact the Oscar won by fellow Iranian Asghar Farhadi in 2012 for the acclaimed “A Separation” had on the Islamic Republic. Farhadi is again in the running for the Palme d’Or this year with “The Salesman”. Donald Sutherland The veteran Canadian actor – now the head of a thespian dynasty that includes his son Kiefer Sutherland and granddaughter Sarah – made his name with the war films “The Dirty Dozen” and “M*A*S*H” before starring in the Oscar-winning thriller “Klute” alongside Jane Fonda. With a career spanning five decades, the 80-year-old made a big screen comeback in “The Hunger Games” franchise.