Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky made a surprise video address at the opening ceremony of the Cannes Film Festival on Tuesday.
“Hundreds
of people are dying every day. They won’t get up again after the
clapping at the end,” he told the audience, which had reacted with
surprise when the pre-recorded message was introduced.
“Will
cinema keep quiet, or will it speak up? If there is a dictator, if
there is a war for freedom, once again, everything depends on our
unity. Can cinema stay outside of this unity?” Zelensky
added.
Zelensky
referred to the power of cinema during World War II, including the
1940 Charlie Chaplin film “The Great Dictator” which mocked Nazi
leader Adolf Hitler.
“Chaplin’s
dictator did not destroy the real dictator, but thanks to cinema,
thanks to this film, cinema did not stay quiet,” Zelensky said.
“We
need a new Chaplin to prove today that cinema is not mute. Will
cinema keep quiet, or will it speak up? Can cinema stay outside of
this?”
His
speech received a standing ovation from the crowd in the southern
French resort town’s Palais des Festivals.
The
war is a dominant theme for the 75th edition of the Cannes Film
Festival, with a special day dedicated to Ukraine’s filmmakers at
the industry marketplace.
“Mariupolis
2,” a documentary about the conflict by Lithuanian director Mantas
Kvedaravicius, who was reportedly killed by Russian forces in Ukraine
last month, will get a special screening.
Zelensky similarly addressed the Grammy awards ceremony in Las Vegas last month, telling the crowd: “Our musicians wear body armor instead of tuxedos. They sing to the wounded in hospitals.”
The
opening ceremony in Cannes had introduced the jury and handed an
honorary Palme d’Or to actor and peace activist Forest
Whitaker.
“The
torments of the world, which is bleeding, suffering, burning... they
rack my conscience,” French actor and jury president Vincent Lindon
said in his speech.