RITA DI SANTO listens out for the undertow of political film-making at this year’s festival


From Morning Star via This RSS Feed.

  • obvs@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    12 hours ago

    In the U.S. if a white person says they’re moderate, I suspect they will reveal themself to be an extreme right-winger.

    If someone who’s not white says they’re moderate, I think there’s a reasonable chance that they might be an immigrant or a child of immigrants from another culture and might actually be moderate.

    If someone says they’re non-political, my first question is whether they’re an immigrant unfamiliar with the politics of the area, and if so, I think that’s actually defensible.

    If someone says they’re non-political and is not an immigrant, those are the first people I suspect of being MAGA.

    • theolodis@feddit.org
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      6 hours ago

      To sum it up: white & moderate or apolitical = far right/MAGA (probably ashamed to admit it)

      Otherwise probably just uninformed.

      But US Politics are just different anyways, as somebody that is a liberal democrat might identify as left, but is objectively center-right or right (and might even agree with a lot of the MAGA stuff to some degree, specially fiscally and immigration wise)

  • supersquirrel@sopuli.xyz
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    18 hours ago

    Also, Laverty expressed his disdain for Hollywood figures who have “blacklisted” actors supporting the people of Gaza. He praised Susan Sarandon, who features on this year’s festival poster, alongside Javier Bardem. “My respect and total solidarity to them,” Laverty said. “They’re the best of us, and good luck to them.”

    He also pointed out the roots of the word politics, meaning “of the city,” emphasising the importance of how human beings interact with one another. “In every story, there is the question of power and how it operates, and the values within the story are implicit. Many times, the people who say they are non-political are the most political and don’t realise it,” he explained.

    Chilean film-maker Diego Cespedes, the youngest member of the jury at 31 years old, added, “I am very political, and I think we need to take a political position. I hope that cinema gets diverse, that not just rich people ‘do’ cinema. I think I represent that, and I hope we can push that more in the future.” This conversation underscores the festival’s commitment to exploring the intersection of art and activism.