Santa Fe New Mexican

Cannes Film Festival primed for drama amid France #MeToo upheaval

- By Jake Coyle

The Cannes Film Festival rarely passes without cacophony but this year’s edition may be more raucous and uneasy than any edition in recent memory.

When the red carpet is rolled out from the Palais des Festivals on Tuesday, the 77th Cannes will unfurl against a backdrop of war, protest, potential strikes and quickening #MeToo upheaval in France, which for years largely resisted the movement.

Festival workers are threatenin­g to strike. The Israel-Hamas war, acutely felt in France, home to Europe’s largest Jewish and Arab communitie­s, is sure to spark protests. Russia’s war in Ukraine remains on the minds of many. Add in the kinds of anxieties that can be expected to percolate at Cannes — the ever-uncertain future of cinema, the rise of artificial intelligen­ce — and this year’s festival shouldn’t lack for drama.

Being prepared for anything has long been a useful attitude in Cannes. Befitting such tumultuous times, the film lineup is full of intrigue, curiosity and question marks.

The Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof, just days before his latest film, The Seed of the Sacred Fig, is to debut in competitio­n in Cannes, was sentenced to eight years in prison by the Islamic Revolution­ary Court. The film remains on Cannes’ schedule.

Arguably the most feverishly awaited entry is Francis Ford Coppola’s self-financed opus Megalopoli­s. Coppola, is himself no stranger to high-drama at Cannes. An unfinished cut of Apocalypse Now won him (in a tie) his second Palme d’Or more than four decades ago.

Even the upcoming U.S. presidenti­al election won’t be far off. Premiering in competitio­n is Ali Abbasi’s The Apprentice, starring Sebastian Stan as a young Donald Trump. There will also be new films from Kevin Costner, Paolo Sorrentino, Sean Baker, Yorgos Lanthimos and Andrea Arnold. And for a potentiall­y powder keg Cannes there’s also the firebomb of Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga.

The film, a rolling apocalypti­c dystopia, returns director George Miller to the festival he first became hooked on as a juror.

“I got addicted it to simply because it’s like film camp,” says Miller, who became enraptured to the global gathering of cinema at Cannes and the pristine film presentati­ons. “It’s kind of optimal cinema, really. The moment that they said, ‘OK, we’re happy to show this film here,’ I jumped at it.”

Cannes’ official opener Tuesday is The Second Act, a French comedy by Quentin Dupieux, starring Léa Seydoux, Louis Garrel and Vincent Lindon. During the opening ceremony, Meryl Streep will be awarded an honorary Palme d’Or.

But the spotlight at the start may fall on Judith Godrèche. The French director and actor earlier this year said the filmmakers Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon sexually assaulted her when she was a teenager. Jacquot and Doillon have denied the allegation­s.

Though much of the French film industry has previously been reluctant to embrace the #MeToo movement, Godrèche has stoked a wider response. She’s spoken passionate­ly about the need for changes at the Cesars, France’s equivalent of the Oscars, and before a French Senate commission.

In that same period, Godrèche also made the short film Moi Aussi during a Paris gathering of hundreds who wrote her with their own stories of sexual abuse. On Wednesday, it opens Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section.

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