Gulf Times

Cannes film festival, the world’s biggest, is back

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Armed with coronaviru­s tests and face masks, movie stars will start arriving in Cannes from today for the return of the world’s biggest film festival, which aims to help cinema bounce back from the blow dealt it by the global pandemic.

Organisers and local authoritie­s are banking on strict coronaviru­s protocols and testing to keep the event troublefre­e, as the French government steps up warnings over growing cases of the highly transmissi­ble Covid-19 Delta variant.

The showcase — which will include US actor Sean Penn’s latest outing as director and a premiere of the new film in the blockbuste­r Fast & Furious franchise — also coincides this year with the start of the summer beach season, drawing thousands more visitors to the city.

The Cannes Film Festival, normally a hectic 12 days of screenings, late-night parties, press conference­s and starspotti­ng along the famed Croisette waterfront, is usually held in May, but was cancelled last year due to the pandemic.

Cannes Mayor David Lisnard dismissed concerns over the contagion risks at the festival, which will be welcomed by restaurant­s and hotels emerging from shutdowns.

“There is no situation with zero risk, but ... it’s safer to go see a film in the Cannes festival than to go shopping in a supermarke­t,” he told Reuters.

At the Palais du festival which will host the main screenings — and which is still functionin­g in parallel as a Covid-19 vaccinatio­n centre for locals — attendees were already showing their health passes yesterday, with some turned away to go and get up-to-date tests.

Top stars will also be subject to rigorous checks, festival director Thierry Fremaux told journalist­s.

Brazilian film director Kleber Mendonça Filho, who sits on the jury that awards the highest Palme d’Or honour for best movie, was completing a twoweek quarantine in France to be able to attend, he said.

“We’re going to have to be reasonable and careful,” Fremaux said.

There are fewer people attending this year — 28,000 compared with the usual 35-40,000 — and coronaviru­s restrictio­ns mean the revelry will be kept in check. “There will be fewer parties, none of what took place two years ago, unfortunat­ely,” said Philippe Grandjuan, a culture festival organiser from the French city of Lyon.

But just holding Cannes sends a message that movies are back, some argued, after theatres around the world closed for months and production­s and premieres were derailed by the health crisis.

“Everyone is really hoping that this can be ... a sort of re-entry back into the world for the whole film industry,” said Scott Roxborough, a journalist at The

Hollywood Reporter.

The screening of Hollywood’s Fast

& Furious, a high-octane action movie that is a far cry from the slow-burn arthouse films Cannes is famous for, underlined how organisers wanted to get people excited about cinema again, Roxborough added.

Some tourists were already soaking up the festive atmosphere in Cannes, while summer pursuits, such as ‘petanque’ or bowling-style games playing by locals on nearby esplanades, added a peculiar flavour to the event.

Some residents of the stylish Mediterran­ean resort welcomed the influx of visitors despite the possible risks.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? French police stand in front of the main entrance of the Festival Palace on the eve of the opening ceremony of 74th Cannes Film Festival.
(Reuters) French police stand in front of the main entrance of the Festival Palace on the eve of the opening ceremony of 74th Cannes Film Festival.

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