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British director Ken Loach wins Palme d’Or at Cannes

British director Ken Loach launched a withering attack on austerity economics and neo-liberal ideas which he said had led the world to "near catastrophe", after winning the Palme d'Or at the Cannes film festival Sunday.

British director Ken Loach wins Palme d'Or at Cannes
British director Ken Loach. Photo: AFP
“I, Daniel Blake”, the veteran left-wing filmmaker's damning indictment of the poverty and humiliation inflicted on the most vulnerable by welfare cuts in Britain, had many critics in tears.
   
“The world we live in is at a dangerous point just now,” said Loach as he picked up the award. “We are in the grip of a project of austerity driven by ideas that we call neo-liberalism that brought us to near catastrophe.
   
“It has led to billions of people in serious hardship and many millions struggling from Greece in the east to Spain in the west… while this has brought a tiny few immense wealth.”
   
Loach, who turns 80 next month, came out of retirement to make the film on carpenter Daniel Blake's complex journey to get benefits in Britain after suffering a heart attack and being told by doctors he can no longer work.
   
Blake befriends a young single mother of two who is sanctioned for being late at a benefits centre, leaving her with no money for food.
   
Actress Hayley Squires was praised by the Cannes jury for one of the most hard-hitting performances of the festival as the mother who, weakened by hunger, cannot stop herself from ripping open a tin of baked beans in a food bank and scooping it into her mouth.
   
“We remember the people who inspired this… those people who without (food banks) would otherwise be hungry in the fifth richest country on the planet,” Loach said.
 
Poor blamed 
 
While carrying out research for the movie, the filmmakers interviewed people working for welfare centres, who said they were given a quota of how many sanctions to hand out.
   
One of the actresses in the film was a former employee of Britain's Department for Work and Pensions who “couldn't stand it anymore”, Squires told a press conference this week.
   
One of the main themes tackled in the film is how the poor are viewed by others.
   
Because the main character Blake is denied illness benefits he is forced to apply for unemployment assistance.
   
That in turn forces him to spend hours hunting for jobs which he has to turn down because he is too sick to work, and is accused of being a scrounger.
   
“The most vulnerable people are told their poverty is their own fault,” Loach told reporters this week. “If you have no work it is your fault that you haven't got a job.
   
The world of work — or the lack of it — has long been a favourite theme of the director, who grew up the son of an electrician and a dressmaker.
   
“Cinema can represent the interests of the people against those who are more powerful and mighty,” he said as he accepted his award.

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FILM

Cannes Film Festival postponed to July due to Covid

The Cannes Film Festival has been rescheduled for July 6th to 17th - postponed by around two months due to the ongoing virus crisis, organisers said on Wednesday.

Cannes Film Festival postponed to July due to Covid
The 2018 Palme d'Or winner Japanese director Hirokazu Kore-Eda posing for the cameras at the Cannes Film Festival, is an annual highlight for movie lovers in France. Photo: AFP

“As announced last autumn, the Festival de Cannes reserved the right to change its dates depending on how the global health situation developed,” they said in a statement.

“Initially scheduled from 11th to 22nd May 2021, the Festival will therefore now take place from Tuesday 6th to Saturday 17th July 2021.”

The festival was cancelled last year, while rival European events in Berlin and Venice went ahead under strict health restrictions.

The Berlin Film Festival, which usually kicks off in February, said last month it would run this year's edition in two stages, an online offering for industry professionals in March and a public event in June.

France has closed all cinemas, theatres and show rooms alongside cafés, bars and restaurants as part of its Covid-19 health measures and the government has pushed back their reopening date until further notice due to rising levels of viral spread across the country.

The Cannes festival normally attracts some 45,000 people with official accreditations, of whom around 4,500 are journalists.

It had only been cancelled once before, due to the outbreak of war in 1939.

Its Film Market, held alongside the main competition, is the industry's biggest marketplace for producers, distributors, buyers and programmers.

Last year, the festival still made an official selection of 56 films – including the latest offerings from Wes Anderson, Francois Ozon and Steve McQueen – allowing them to use the “Cannes official selection” label.

 

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