La Semana

Cannes Film Festival Postponed, Late June Dates Being Considered

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The Cannes Film Festival has been postponed. Organizers confirmed Thursday evening that the film festival will no longer take place during the scheduled dates of May 12-23, and several options are now being considered, including postponing the event until the end of June through to the beginning of July.

The festival press conference, originally scheduled for April 16, has also been delayed. Cannes is to announce the new date for the press conference when they reveal the exact timings of the festival.

The decision to postpone, which comes as France remains in lockdown in its battle against the coronaviru­s pandemic, follows weeks of speculatio­n around the fate of this year’s edition.

The festival said in a statement, “At this time of global health crisis, our thoughts go to the victims of the Covid-19 and we express our solidarity with all of those who are fighting the disease.”

“As soon as the developmen­t of the French and internatio­nal health situation will allow us to assess the real possibilit­y, we will make our decision known, in accordance with our ongoing consultati­on with the French Government and Cannes’ City Hall, as well as with the Festival’s board members, film industry profession­als and all the partners of the event.

“In the meantime, the Festival de Cannes lends its vocal support to all of those who firmly call on everyone to respect the general lockdown, and ask to show solidarity in these difficult times for the entire world.”

The Cannes Marché du Film will also be postponed to run alongside the festival, Variety has learned.

On Wednesday, an initiative led by Hollywood talent agency CAA to set up a virtual film market that would replace or run parallel to the Cannes Marché du Film was unveiled. However, the Cannes Marché du Film then confirmed it was developing its own virtual market with its digital service Cinando for industry profession­als who may not be able to attend the market.

The 2020 postponeme­nt marks the first such delay for Cannes since its first edition after WW2 in 1946. It was only canceled once in 1968 during the nationwide student riots that were supported by French New Wave icons François Truffaut and Jean-luc Godard.

However, many had expected that Cannes would be impacted by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has crippled much of Europe in the span of just one month.

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