The Guardian (USA)

Cannes 2019: jury speaks out against 'rage and anger' of populist politician­s

- Gwilym Mumford

A familiar trio of topics – Netflix, gender disparity and Donald Trump – were on the agenda as the this year’s Cannes film festival got under way.

At the press conference introducin­g this year’s festival jury, its president, Birdman and The Revenant director Alejandro González Iñárritu, took aim at Trump and offered support to theatre chains battling the dominance of the streaming service. Another jury member, Happy as Lazzaro director Alice Rohrwacher, criticised the film industry for failing to promote female film-makers.

Iñárritu, the first Mexican-born president of the Cannes jury, expressed concern at the rise of populist politician­s including Trump and said that his presence at the festival served as a repudiatio­n for the US president’s antiimmigr­ant policies.

“These guys are ruling with rage and anger,” Iñárritu said. “They are writing fiction and making people believe those things are real. The fact that we are here is a statement in itself.

“We know how this story ends if we keep with this rhetoric,” he added, alluding to the outbreak of the second world war.

The director also spoke out against the erosion of the theatrical experience at the hands of streaming services. “Cinema was born to be experience­d communally. I have nothing against watching on a phone, iPad, computer. But it’s not the same as having experience­d [it in a cinema]. One should not cancel the other.”

“France is an exception in that they protect that. This is one of the last spaces where we can experience these films around the world,” he said.

Iñárritu’s words will have been welcomed by Cannes executives, who have had a fractious recent relationsh­ip with Netflix. For the second year in a row no Netflix titles will screen at the festival, with the streaming service maintainin­g a boycott in the wake of a Cannes rulechange excluding films from competitio­n that fail to adhere to the French practice of waiting three years between cinema and streaming releases.

Rohrwacher, who was one of just three female directors in competitio­n last year, took aim at the film industry for failing to elevate young female film-makers. “People keep asking us what it’s like to be a woman director,” she said. “It’s a bit like asking someone who’s survived a shipwreck why they’re still alive. Well, ask the person who built the boat. Ask the people who run film schools. Ask the people behind the scenes. It’s not at the very end that we need to raise these issues – it needs to happen at the very beginning.”

The Italian director’s words echoed those of Cannes artistic director Thierry Frémaux, who in a press conference on Monday defended the festival against claims that it failed to include enough female film-makers. Frémaux noted that the festival’s percentage of films directed by women – 20 % – was significan­tly higher than the 7% of female directors working in film overall, and suggested that the finger of blame should instead be pointed at the “film schools, the universiti­es and the production houses”.

The 72nd Cannes film festival gets underway tonight with a screening of The Dead Don’t Die, a horror-comedy by American director Jim Jarmusch. The film, which stars Tilda Swinton, Bill Murray, Adam Driver and Chloë Sevigny, follows the inhabitant­s of a small town who are faced with an invading zombie horde.

Joining Iñárritu and Rohrwacher on this year’s competitio­n jury are actors Elle Fanning and Maimouna N’Diaye, The Favourite director Yorgos Lanthimos, Polish director Paweł Pawlikowsk­i, French comic-book creator Enki Bilal and US screenwrit­er Kelly Reichardt.

 ??  ?? Cannes jury president Alejandro González Iñárritu, far right, with a fellow jurors (from left) Alice Rohrwacher, Elle Fanning and Enki Bilal. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images
Cannes jury president Alejandro González Iñárritu, far right, with a fellow jurors (from left) Alice Rohrwacher, Elle Fanning and Enki Bilal. Photograph: Stephane Cardinale/Corbis via Getty Images
 ??  ?? Alice Rohrwacher speaks during the jury press conference at Cannes on Tuesday. Photograph: John Phillips/Getty Images
Alice Rohrwacher speaks during the jury press conference at Cannes on Tuesday. Photograph: John Phillips/Getty Images

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