Demi Moore Decries "Self-Censorship," Park Chan-wook Welcomes Politics "Without Prejudice" as Cannes Gets Underway
Cannes jury members (left to right) Laura Wandel, Chloé Zhao, jury president Park Chan-wook, Demi Moore and Ruth Negga pose during the photocall at the 79th annual Cannes Film Festival at Palais des Festivals on May 12 in Cannes.
Courtesy of Amy Sussman/Getty Images
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Hollywood star Demi Moore and Korean auteur Park Chan-wook kicked off the 79th edition of the Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday with a series of careful but unequivocal statements defending the role of politics in cinema.
Asked whether she had concerns about political statements during the festival potentially distracting from the films themselves, Moore said she strongly hoped not. “I think part of art is about expression, so if we start censoring ourselves, then we shut down the very core of our creativity, which is, I think, where we can discover truth and answers,” she said.
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Park, who is chairing this year’s Cannes jury, then offered an extended defense of political filmmaking in response to a similar question, which quickly became the dominant theme of Cannes’ first press conference.
“I don’t think politics and art should be divided,” the South Korean auteur said. “I think it’s a strange concept to think they’re in conflict with each other. Just because a work of art has a political statement, it should not be considered an enemy of art. At the same time, just because a film is not making a political statement, that film should not be ignored.”
But Park also noted that the most “brilliant political statement” can easily devolve into “propaganda” if it’s “not expressed artfully enough.”
Park later added: “I am prepared to watch films with the pure eyes of an audience member, without any prejudice or stereotype, just excitement to watch films that will surprise me.”
The remarks came three months after this year’s politically embattled 76th Berlin International Film Festival, where jury president Wim Wenders told reporters during the opening press conference that filmmakers “have to stay out of politics because if we make movies that are dedicatedly political, we enter the field of politics.” The comments drew immediate online backlash and helped set off one of the most acrimonious editions in the German festival’s recent history. The fallout included an open letter signed by more than 80 industry figures — among them Javier Bardem and Tilda Swinton — criticizing the Berlinale for what they called its “silence” over the war in Gaza and Germany’s culture ministry convening a meeting on the festival’s future direction.
This year’s nine-member Cannes jury is characteristically stacked with filmworld talent. Park is joined by Moore; Oscar winner Chloé Zhao (Nomadland, Hamnet); Swedish veteran Stellan Skarsgård (Sentimental Value); French actor Isaach De Bankolé (Ghost Dog: The Way of the Samurai); Irish-Ethiopian actress Ruth Negga (Loving); Belgian filmmaker Laura Wandel (Adam’s Sake); Chilean director Diego Céspedes (The Mysterious Gaze of the Flamingo); and Scottish screenwriter Paul Laverty, the longtime collaborator of Ken Loach.
Later in the press conference, Moore was asked about the rise of artificial intelligence in filmmaking and took a more measured stance. “AI is here, and so to fight it is to, in a sense, fight something that is a battle that we will lose. So to find ways in which we can work with it, I think, is a more valuable path,” she said. “Are we doing enough to protect ourselves? I don’t know. My inclination would be to say probably not.” Even so, Moore said the technology has its limits. “There are beautiful aspects of being able to utilize it, but the truth is, there really isn’t anything to fear, because what it can never replace is what true art comes from, which is not the physical. It comes from the soul. It comes from the spirit of each and every one of us sitting here.”
Laverty was by far the most outspoken among the Cannes jurors on the festival’s opening day, offering a sharper critique of the industry’s embrace of AI. The Scottish screenwriter argued that the industry and society at large should be deeply skeptical of the companies and tech billionaires who own and control the world’s most popular AI services, “because t