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Cannes film festival shuffles dates in bid to survive epidemic |
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In this file photo taken on May 18, 2018 the General Delegate of the Cannes Film Festival Thierry Fremaux (L) and the President of the Cannes Film Festival Pierre Lescure look at guests arriving for the screening of the film "The Wild Pear Tree (Ahlat Agaci)" at the 71st edition of the Cannes Film Festival in Cannes, southern France. The Cannes film festival will not take place as planned in May, it was announced on March 19, 2020 amid concerns over the spread of COVID-19 (new Coronavirus). Valery HACHE / AFP.
by Fiachra Gibbons
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PARIS (AFP).- The Cannes film festival will not take place as planned in May because of the coronavirus, its board said Thursday, with its directors looking at postponing it until late June.
While a slew of other major entertainment events including the Eurovision Song Contest have fallen victim to COVID-19, the world's biggest film festival has been bullish about its chances of survival.
Director Thierry Fremaux said last week that you "cannot look at May through the lens of March".
But the Cannes board conceded Thursday that in the light of the severity of the pandemic they were now looking at rescheduling the 12-day festival, which was due to start on May 12, until "the end of June-beginning of July".
Several other smaller film festivals, including Tribeca, SXSW and Edinburgh have already been cancelled or put back.
Doubts still remain though about whether Cannes will be able to go ahead, with film shoots halted or called off across the world.
The board said postponement was the main one of "several options" it was looking at.
Hoping on Hollywood
The festival's president Pierre Lescure said last week that despite its proximity to the fierce Italian coronavirus outbreak, he was hopeful that Hollywood big hitters would still come.
"We remain reasonably optimistic hoping that the peak of the epidemic will be at the end of March and that we can breath more freely in April," he told the French daily Le Figaro.
Variety had earlier revealed that the festival had turned down a chance to take out insurance against epidemics.
But Lescure said the coverage being offering was "peanuts" compared to the 32 million-euro ($36-million) cost of the festival, which draws more than 40,000 people movers and shakers to the Mediterranean town.
"We have (financial) reserves," he added. "The funds we have put in place allow up to face up a year without revenue."
Cannes is still due to announce its line-up next month and the board said that it would make its decision about whether to go ahead or not "in accordance with our ongoing consultation with the French government, Cannes city hall" and the film industry.
Director Spike Lee is to head the jury, the first person of black African heritage to do so.
The South Korean film, "Parasite", won Cannes' top Palme d'Or award last year and went on to triumph at the Oscars, becoming the first non-English feature to win best film.
Applications for accreditation for the festival were up 10 per cent on last year before the coronavirus crisis, officials said.
© Agence France-Presse
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