Dubai Telegraph - Lights, camera, resistance. Trump looms over anxious film industry

EUR -
AED 4.237925
AFN 72.121544
ALL 94.935089
AMD 425.165269
ANG 2.066121
AOA 1059.336154
ARS 1653.936124
AUD 1.649552
AWG 2.080015
AZN 1.961994
BAM 1.954455
BBD 2.32514
BDT 141.702499
BGN 1.927022
BHD 0.435402
BIF 3450.540733
BMD 1.153961
BND 1.486477
BOB 7.977545
BRL 5.992565
BSD 1.154426
BTN 109.981801
BWP 15.677281
BYN 3.177714
BYR 22617.635458
BZD 2.321802
CAD 1.609037
CDF 2626.415545
CHF 0.922672
CLF 0.026848
CLP 1056.658891
CNY 7.81549
CNH 7.825102
COP 4108.585798
CRC 529.435711
CUC 1.153961
CUP 30.579966
CVE 110.19109
CZK 24.187195
DJF 205.08239
DKK 7.474563
DOP 67.353656
DZD 154.23035
EGP 59.794105
ERN 17.309415
ETB 186.117245
FJD 2.566697
FKP 0.861905
GBP 0.86333
GEL 3.058303
GGP 0.861905
GHS 13.448805
GIP 0.861905
GMD 84.238702
GNF 10113.216666
GTQ 8.799945
GYD 241.52486
HKD 9.041919
HNL 30.863299
HRK 7.537093
HTG 150.996104
HUF 356.809345
IDR 20677.019257
ILS 3.425487
IMP 0.861905
INR 110.370426
IQD 1512.359389
IRR 1586898.30836
ISK 143.402686
JEP 0.861905
JMD 182.294568
JOD 0.818129
JPY 185.211313
KES 149.334265
KGS 100.912851
KHR 4645.823473
KMF 492.741659
KPW 1038.397856
KRW 1758.884682
KWD 0.357001
KYD 0.962042
KZT 563.154949
LAK 25420.618951
LBP 103378.616089
LKR 384.432146
LRD 210.106342
LSL 19.126771
LTL 3.407346
LVL 0.69802
LYD 7.369833
MAD 10.690244
MDL 20.092262
MGA 4842.6679
MKD 61.67086
MMK 2422.068493
MNT 4126.891471
MOP 9.318129
MRU 46.160039
MUR 55.240349
MVR 17.839712
MWK 2001.831271
MXN 20.095365
MYR 4.700111
MZN 73.734387
NAD 19.126771
NGN 1570.356588
NIO 42.48077
NOK 10.920855
NPR 175.970682
NZD 1.990808
OMR 0.443686
PAB 1.154411
PEN 3.925099
PGK 5.131469
PHP 70.860703
PKR 321.251324
PLN 4.252635
PYG 7130.155734
QAR 4.209149
RON 5.235292
RSD 117.392842
RUB 83.370827
RWF 1693.542061
SAR 4.332469
SBD 9.284277
SCR 15.279886
SDG 692.954513
SEK 10.980637
SGD 1.48625
SHP 0.861548
SLE 28.444832
SLL 24197.987467
SOS 659.748904
SRD 43.113136
STD 23884.662712
STN 24.483578
SVC 10.101225
SYP 127.549729
SZL 19.121926
THB 38.074955
TJS 10.799476
TMT 4.050403
TND 3.388427
TOP 2.778461
TRY 53.262572
TTD 7.835609
TWD 36.54006
TZS 3023.381254
UAH 52.019607
UGX 4346.084909
USD 1.153961
UYU 46.76782
UZS 13916.665543
VES 654.264951
VND 30372.25333
VUV 137.889437
WST 3.167617
XAF 655.508804
XAG 0.018528
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.118637
XCG 2.080568
XDR 0.815649
XOF 655.497451
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.392172
ZAR 19.135563
ZMK 10387.03422
ZMW 20.000325
ZWL 371.574969
  • RBGPF

    2.0500

    60.72

    +3.38%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    24.71

    +0.53%

  • VOD

    0.3800

    15.05

    +2.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2300

    16.49

    -1.39%

  • NGG

    -0.7000

    80.38

    -0.87%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    22.3

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.9600

    33.98

    -2.83%

  • RIO

    -2.3600

    99.06

    -2.38%

  • GSK

    -0.0800

    51.17

    -0.16%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.29

    +0.04%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.86

    +1.09%

  • BCC

    -1.7000

    68.31

    -2.49%

  • BTI

    1.1700

    61.12

    +1.91%

  • AZN

    -4.4700

    178.96

    -2.5%

  • BP

    0.2800

    42.95

    +0.65%

Lights, camera, resistance. Trump looms over anxious film industry
Lights, camera, resistance. Trump looms over anxious film industry / Photo: ROBERTO SCHMIDT - AFP

Lights, camera, resistance. Trump looms over anxious film industry

To resist, ignore or yield? Hollywood and the film industry, long a haven for progressive idealists, are braced for difficult choices in the era of US President Donald Trump.

Text size:

At the Berlin film festival this week, the radical changes unfolding in the United States and on the world stage loomed over every discussion and led many films screening there to be viewed through a new political lens.

The latest movie from acclaimed South Korean director Bong Joon Ho took on a different hue in light of current events, with the space-loving billionaire at the heart of the satire appearing a mix of Trump and Elon Musk.

"Dreams", a film by Mexican director Michel Franco starring Jessica Chastain, tackled immigration and the story of an undocumented Mexican ballet dancer who crosses into the United States to be with his wealthy lover.

The story is "incredibly political, (partly) because of what's happening right now... not just the United States, all over the world", Chastain told reporters.

The question for filmmakers, studios and actors is whether they openly push back against Trump's "America First" nationalism, either through their on-screen work or public statements.

"I have no problem naming Donald Trump and Elon Musk and the entire Republican Party and condemning them for what's occurring right now," independent American director Todd Haynes, who is chairing the Berlin jury, told AFP.

"It is an appalling moment that we're in right now that will take every bit of energy to resist and revert back to a system that, flawed as it is, is something that we've taken for granted as Americans," the 64-year-old added.

- 'Escapism' -

Others were more coy.

When asked about the rise of far-right political parties, superstar Timothee Chalamet, in Berlin for the German premiere of his Bob Dylan biopic "A Complete Unknown", did not name Trump, but warned about "saviour" or "cult-like" figures.

A moderator intervened to shift the question onto the film and away from "personal politics".

British actor Robert Pattinson avoided a question about Trump, while Bong denied being inspired by the New York tycoon for his billionaire-politician character, saying he was thinking of dictators from the past.

Asked whether directors should take on more political themes, Oscar-nominated American director Richard Linklater said that "movies particularly have always been escapism".

His latest, "Blue Moon", is set in 1943 and includes an on-screen discussion of how audiences want distraction from the horrors of World War II.

British A-lister Benedict Cumberbatch said that cinema reflected the "collective concerns" of a particular moment in history, but that storytellers needed to be wary of making clunky statements.

"As an artist, I think you're dead in the water if you try to go out and proselytise or be didactic," he told reporters.

- 'Yielding' -

It remains to be seen how much Trump will pressure Hollywood studios to fall into line with his agenda against immigration, trans rights or racial and gender diversity programmes, for instance.

Earlier this month, he replaced the board of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, a Washington cultural institution, and posted online that he would usher in a "GOLDEN AGE of American Arts and Culture".

One of his objectives was to ensure there was no more "ANTI-AMERICAN PROPAGANDA".

Last week, major Hollywood studio Disney -- which Trump has derided as "woke" in the past -- followed the lead of other major US corporations by dropping diversity targets as a "performance factor".

Oscar-nominated "The Apprentice", an unflattering portrayal of Trump in his early years as real estate developer, struggled to find American cinema distribution last year and is still without a US streaming deal.

Other issues for Hollywood include whether to continue to film overseas -- many movies are shot in Mexico for cost reasons -- at a time when Trump is pressuring US companies to base their activities at home.

"We're already seeing unfortunately, like not necessarily in Hollywood, but in many other places that deal with massive corporate power, already a yielding to this new administration that is just shocking," Haynes told AFP.

"When people say 'oh, they're just playing the long game', that's when you find yourself becoming contaminated by the culture that you're in and losing your own ability to stand up," he continued.

H.El-Hassany--DT