Big movies, strange mood as Cannes Film Festival prepares for opening 
		night
		
		 
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		 [May 14, 2024] 
		By Hanna Rantala 
		 
		CANNES (Reuters) - The excitement that usually builds to a crescendo 
		ahead of the Cannes Film Festival's opening night has been reined in 
		this year by rumors of potentially explosive #MeToo allegations, and a 
		possible festival workers' strike that could shut down the event. 
		 
		There is much to be thrilled about, with Francis Ford Coppola's 
		"Megalopolis," and Emma Stone - fresh off "Poor Things" success - 
		teaming up again with Yorgos Lanthimos in "Kinds of Kindness" - among 
		the big-name films premiering.  
		 
		"The combination of being excited about the films and being concerned 
		about disruption and maybe criminal allegations, that's combining into a 
		very weird mood this year," Scott Roxborough, European bureau chief for 
		The Hollywood Reporter, told Reuters on Monday. 
		 
		Organizers have brought in a crisis management team, French daily Le 
		Figaro reported last week, to deal with any fallout from the possible 
		release of the names of 10 industry figures accused of sexual abuse that 
		could coincide with the opening ceremony on Tuesday.  
		 
		"When this expose is finally released, it's probably going to go off 
		like a real bombshell," said Roxborough.  
		
		
		  
		
		Certain films could be dropped from the schedule, Le Figaro said, or 
		some of the accused could be asked not to appear on the red carpet, 
		depending on the seriousness of the accusations.  
		 
		The festival's organizers did not respond to a request for comment.  
		 
		There is also a potential strike by the festival's freelance workers 
		over proposed changes to French labour law. 
		 
		"We could see what we haven't seen since maybe 1968, before my time, 
		that the film festival could actually shut down," said Roxborough about 
		what effect the strike could have on the fest. 
		 
		THE SHOW MUST GO ON?  
		 
		Against this tense backdrop, organizers have gone all out with one of 
		the best line-ups in years, said Roxborough.  
		 
		[to top of second column] 
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            Greta Gerwig, Jury President of the 77th Cannes Film Festival 
			interacts with fans while arriving at the Hotel Martinez on the eve 
			of the opening of the 77th Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, France, 
			May 13, 2024. REUTERS/Yara Nardi 
            
			  "You basically have a who's who of 
			the best art house directors working today. The old folk and the 
			newcomers, which is kind of what you expect at Cannes," he said.  
			 
			For Roxborough, the sci-fi epic "Megalopolis" starring Adam Driver, 
			which Coppola has been working on for decades and financed with his 
			wine fortune, is the must-see film this year.  
			 
			"It could be a massive flop or a tremendous hit, but everybody, of 
			course, is desperate to see that movie."  
			 
			Cannes has particularly given love to old Hollywood names in recent 
			years, Coppola included, as evidenced by a rise in honorary awards 
			handed out to well-known names like George Lucas, Meryl Streep, Tom 
			Cruise and Harrison Ford. 
			 
			Part of that is due to Cannes' desire to bring the spotlight back to 
			those actors, who have been somewhat forgotten in the modern era of 
			Marvel blockbuster movies, Roxborough said. 
			 
			Still, "despite a lot of the greybeards that will be walking the red 
			carpet, the majority of really top-end stars will all be quite 
			young," he said.  
			 
			Some of the under-35 big names include Jacob Elordi of teen drama 
			"Euphoria," who is in Paul Schrader's competition film "Oh, Canada," 
			as well as Anya Taylor-Joy as the titular Furiosa in the new "Furiosa: 
			A Mad Max Saga" and pop star Selena Gomez in the musical crime 
			comedy "Emilia Perez." 
			 
			(Reporting by Hanna Rantala and Miranda Murray; Editing by 
			Bernadette Baum) 
			
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