logo
Cannes Critics Slam Trump's Tariff Plan for Hollywood

Cannes Critics Slam Trump's Tariff Plan for Hollywood

The Sun16-05-2025

CANNES: There are not many fans of Donald Trump's dream to save Hollywood with tariffs among the dealmakers at the Cannes film festival -- even among those who voted for him.
Unlike Robert De Niro -- a vocal critic who called Trump 'America's philistine president' at the festival's opening ceremony -- they told AFP they have no political or personal axes to grind with him.
But they see his idea of 100-percent tariffs on movies produced 'in foreign lands' as a 'massive potential disaster' for an industry already shaken by streaming platforms.
'I don't see any benefit to what he is trying to do. If anything it could really hurt us,' Scott Jones, the head of Artist View Entertainment, told AFP.
'A lot of people are out of work right now, and this is not going to make it better. There needs to be method to the madness,' said the producer, in Cannes with a Tennessee-shot Civil War epic 'The Legend of Van Dorn'.
Trump's own 'special ambassadors' to the industry, actors Jon Voight and Sylvester Stallone, both signed a letter Tuesday thanking him for drawing attention to 'runaway' US productions being shot overseas, but asking for tax breaks to keep them in the United States rather than tariffs.
A wide coalition of Hollywood producers, writers and directors groups also put their names to the call.
'More than 80 countries offer production tax incentives and as a result, numerous productions that could have been shot in America have instead located elsewhere,' they said.
The biggest American film at Cannes is Tom Cruise's 'Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning' -- which was mostly shot in Britain and South Africa.
'Catastrophic'
'Hollywood movies are made all over the world,' said Louise Lantagne, head of Quebecreatif, which supports the Canadian industry.
And producers have been going north to make movies in Canada for decades 'because we are cheaper and we have tax credits, great facilities and really top technical talent', she added.
'Of course it is going to be hell if (tariffs) happen,' she told AFP, but 'for the moment it is just a tweet -- even if everyone is really stressed by these declarations'.
Many, like American sales agent Monique White of California Pictures, think tariffs are 'unfeasible' and Trump will quietly drop the idea.
'Tariffs are legally and technically impossible without changing the law in Congress, which doesn't look likely,' she told AFP.
But others worry that the damage has already been done.
One veteran producer who voted twice for Trump, and asked not be named, said the threat of them alone has already been 'catastrophic for confidence'.
'Investors, particularly foreign ones, don't want to get burned down the line. He's killing us,' he told AFP.
'Too expensive'
Even if Trump manages to push tariffs through, Lantagne argued it would be a 'bureaucratic nightmare to rule on what is a US film', as financing and talent is now so international.
Sylvain Bellemare, who won the Oscar for sound editing in 2017 for 'Arrival', gave two clear examples from his own recent work.
He is in Cannes for the red carpet premiere of the US film 'Splitsville' starring Dakota Johnson.
'It was completely shot in Quebec,' he told AFP, but with American money.
And last year he worked on the Paramount film 'Novocaine', which was set in San Diego but shot in South Africa with its post-production in Quebec.
American producers 'do not have the money anymore to shoot in the US like they used to in California, it is so expensive', he told AFP.
California's governor Gavin Newsom has been struggling to push through plans to double tax breaks to $750 million (670 million euros) a year to stem the flight -- a sum White said 'is still way too small'.
Meanwhile, Cannes' bustling industry market is crammed with countries offering generous fiscal incentives to tempt US movie and TV makers their way.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump announces new US-China trade talks in London amid tariff tensions
Trump announces new US-China trade talks in London amid tariff tensions

Malay Mail

timean hour ago

  • Malay Mail

Trump announces new US-China trade talks in London amid tariff tensions

WASHINGTON, June 7 — US President Donald Trump announced yesterday a new round of trade talks with China in London next week, a day after calling Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in a bid to end a bitter battle over tariffs. The talks in the British capital on Monday will mark the second round of such negotiations between the world's two biggest economies since Trump launched his trade war this year. "The meeting should go very well," said Trump in a post on his Truth Social platform. The president added that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would meet the Chinese team. The first talks between Washington and Beijing since Trump slapped levies on allies and adversaries alike took place in Geneva last month. While Trump had imposed a sweeping 10 percent duty on imports from most trading partners, rates on Chinese goods rocketed as both countries engaged in an escalating tariffs battle. In April, additional US tariffs on many Chinese products hit 145 percent while China hit back with countermeasures of 125 percent. Following the talks last month, both sides agreed to temporarily bring down the levels, with US tariffs cooling to 30 percent and China's levies at 10 percent. But this temporary halt is expected to expire in early August and Trump last week accused China of violating the pact, underscoring deeper differences on both sides. US officials have accused China of slow-walking export approvals of critical minerals and rare earth magnets, a key issue behind Trump's recent remarks. While Trump's long-awaited phone call with Xi this week likely paved the way for further high-level trade talks, a swift resolution to the tariffs impasse remains uncertain. — AFP

When the empire goes off script — Abbi Kanthasamy
When the empire goes off script — Abbi Kanthasamy

Malay Mail

timean hour ago

  • Malay Mail

When the empire goes off script — Abbi Kanthasamy

JUNE 7 — There was a time when America felt like a machine. Cold. Calculated. Efficient. It dropped bombs with spreadsheets, toppled regimes with boardroom precision. Even its madness felt managed — orchestrated behind the curtains of Langley and the Pentagon. We grew up thinking Kennedy was taken out by the CIA. Ask a hundred Malaysians, and ninety-nine will nod solemnly. Of course lah. That's how the empire works. But now? Now the madness is out in the open. Undeniable. Almost beautiful in its rawness. It's like watching a Lamborghini spin out at 200km/h — all carbon fibre and chaos. Because for the first time in modern history, America feels human. It feels real. Flawed. Fallible. Vulnerable. And terrifying. People walk with umbrellas past a United States flag as it rains in Times Square in New York November 17, 2014. — Reuters pic At the centre of the circus stands Donald Trump — real estate huckster turned political wrecking ball. The man tried to reorganise the US federal government like he was redoing the plumbing at Mar-a-Lago. You don't just gut and retrofit the largest bureaucracy in the world in one term. It takes ten years to fix a Fortune 500 company — and that's with consultants, quarterly reports, and CEOs who aren't under criminal indictment. Trump? He barged in with gold drapes, vendettas, and Twitter. And now, he's back. Almost certain to be the Republican nominee. Facing 88 felony charges and somehow still holding court like a cult leader with Wi-Fi. Then there's Elon Musk. Once hailed as a technocratic messiah. A man who could've been Trump's golden child. Today? He's trash-tweeting the former president like a scorned ex. Musk vs. Trump is no longer a subplot — it's a main event. SpaceX vs. Spray Tan. Mars vs. Mar-a-Lago. Billionaire bloodsport. This isn't the America we were taught to admire or fear. This is America unfiltered. The circus has come to town — and the elephants are armed. So what does this mean for the rest of us? For South-east Asia, the implications are seismic. We've built decades of growth on the assumption of US stability. Trade deals. Security umbrellas. Tech partnerships. Hell, half our supply chains are threaded through Long Beach and LAX. We've trusted that while our own governments may wobble, America stood tall — the North Star of liberal democracy and global order. That illusion is dead. Trump's failed tariff wars already rattled Malaysian electronics and Vietnamese footwear exports. Now he's threatening to bring them back. The US Trade Court may have rejected them once, but the man is relentless. He doesn't listen to judges. He doesn't even read. If he finds a workaround, we're looking at a second wave of economic body blows. And the scary part? The chaos is metastasising. Courts are backlogged with lawsuits. Civil discourse is shot. Institutions are bleeding credibility. And the lines between reality TV and reality are gone. Trump doesn't just dominate the Republican Party — he's puppeteering the entire American psyche. Every indictment, every insult, every incoherent Truth Social post — it all feeds the machine. Even the Democrats, supposed defenders of sanity, seem paralyzed. Like they're trying to fight a flamethrower with a cucumber sandwich. Biden, noble as he is, feels like the last man holding a clipboard while the Titanic orchestra plays on. Why should we care? Because chaos in Washington doesn't stay in Washington. It spills. It hits us in shipping lanes. In currency markets. In semiconductor blacklists and TikTok bans. It hits our students trying to get visas. Our exporters trying to find freight slots. Our governments trying to balance between Uncle Sam and Big Brother Xi. In a region where China is getting more aggressive and Asean is still trying to find a spine, we used to rely on American clarity. But when the sheriff is drunk, and the deputy is posting memes, you start locking your own doors. And maybe that's the point. Maybe the era of Pax Americana is ending not with a bang, but with a retweet. So what do we do? We grow up. We stop outsourcing our geopolitical compass. We start building redundancy — in trade, in security, in ideology. We stop waiting for the Empire to save us and start preparing for the Empire to implode. Because what we're witnessing isn't just an election season. It's not even just Trump. It's the US soul on trial — and the whole world's watching the verdict. Somewhere deep in Putrajaya or Phnom Penh, a finance minister is refreshing the news, wondering if the US dollar can still be trusted. Somewhere in Johor, a factory manager is wondering if the next tariff list will include her product line. And somewhere in the mind of every South-east Asian strategist, a thought is growing louder: What if the Americans aren't coming? What if they're never coming back? * This is the personal opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of Malay Mail.

Bacteria halts World Expo water shows
Bacteria halts World Expo water shows

The Star

timean hour ago

  • The Star

Bacteria halts World Expo water shows

Spectacular sight: Visitors watching a water and light display during a media preview day for the 2025 Osaka Expo in Osaka, four days before the event opened to the public, in this file photo. — AFP The discovery of high levels of bacteria has led the World Expo in Osaka to suspend daily water shows and use of a shallow play pool, organisers said. It comes after visitors also complained that swarms of tiny flying insects had invaded the vast waterfront site where Expo 2025 runs until mid-October. Nearly six million people have visited exhibits from more than 160 countries, regions and organi­sations since it opened in April. Although polls showed that public enthusiasm for the Expo was lukewarm before its opening, organisers say crowds have been growing, especially in recent weeks. But concerns were raised over environmental conditions at the reclaimed island site in Osaka Bay, which was once a landfill. Organisers said on Thursday that high levels of legionella bacteria had forced them to close an area with shallow water where visitors, including children, could cool off. That followed a statement on Wednesday saying daily fountain shows with music and lights at an artificial pond had been suspended for the same reason. They said they were cleaning the affected areas, adding that a decision was due yesterday on whether the shows could resume. Days before the Expo opened, a level of methane gas high enough to potentially ignite a fire was detected at the site. More recently, organisers sprayed insecticide to deter swarms of non-biting midges bothering guests. Also known as a World's Fair, the Expo phenomenon, which brought the Eiffel Tower to Paris, began with London's 1851 Crystal Palace exhibition. It is now held every five years in different global locations. — AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store