Bardem
and Cruz walk the red carpet to open Cannes Film
Festival
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[May 09, 2018]
By Robin Pomeroy
CANNES, France (Reuters) -
Spanish film royalty, Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem,
walked the red carpet to open the Cannes Film Festival
on Tuesday with their film "Everybody Knows", written
and directed by Iranian double-Oscar winner Asghar
Farhadi.
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Farhadi strode up the red carpet arm in arm with Bardem and
Cruz, who wore a black ball gown and long ruby earrings, and
Bardem, along with Argentine co-star Ricardo Darin, who is also
a screenwriter and director in his own right.
The film is one of 21 vying for the Palme d'Or at the first
Cannes festival since sexual abuse and harassment allegations
rocked the global movie industry and gave birth to the MeToo
campaign to get greater female participation in films.
Cannes has set up a hotline for victims to report any abuse
during the festival and will host a series of discussions on the
issue. And the jury that will award the Palme d'Or is this year
headed by a woman, Australian actress Cate Blanchett, and is
majority-female.
But Blanchett said the increased awareness of women's issues
would have "no direct impact" on who wins.
When asked whether she was concerned that of the 21 films in the
main competition, there were only three directed by women,
Blanchett told a news conference:
"A few years ago there were only two!"
"Is (MeToo) going to have a direct impact upon the films in
competition this year, six, nine months on? Not specifically.
There are several women in competition but they are not there
because of their gender, they are there for the quality of their
work."
She added: "Would I like to see more women in competition?
Absolutely. Do I expect and hope that’s going to happen in the
future? I hope so."
But, as if to show how women must not be overlooked in cinema,
she had a barbed response to a reporter who asked the
"filmmakers" - meaning the directors, rather than actors - on
the jury to answer "why are movies still important?"
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"Actresses: don’t answer that because you have no idea how to answer
that question!" Blanchett said with a raised eyebrow to fellow jury
members Lea Seydoux and Kristen Stewart (an actress who has recently
moved into directing).
The news conference was the last time the five-women, four-men jury
will speak to the media until the end of the fortnight.
After Farhadi, another Iranian director, Jafar Panahi, will screen a
movie in competition, but will be unable to attend the festival as
he is officially banned from film-making by his government. Russian
director Kirill Serebrennikov will also be absent as he is under
house arrest in Russia on charges that his supporters say are
politically motivated.
Blanchett, who called their plight "a terrible situation" was asked
it that would alter the way their films are judged.
"It's not a political film festival," she replied, insisting that
all films will be judged solely on their artistic merits.
"This is not the Nobel Peace Prize, it's the Palme d'Or."
The festival runs from May 8 to May 19.
(Reporting by Robin Pomeroy; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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