The most memorable Cannes Film Festival controversies
Some people make the rookie mistake of going to Cannes to report on the films. But oftentimes, it’s the off-screen mayhem that makes the headlines…
Ah, the Cannes Film Festival. The festival that on paper attracts people from around the world who love and cherish the art of film. Then, for good measure, they respond by either booing films, or applauding them for so long that everyone has to pretend toilet matters do not need attending to.
Cannes is always good value for its controversies and flare ups though.
Read more: The biggest films at Cannes 2022
Here are five of the most memorable from over the years…
Down with this sort of thing
We may as well get the jeering out of the way, not least because it seems to bear precious little relation to the quality of what’s on screen. The booing of movies. Not enough rubbish, either: stone cold classics.
Take Martin Scorsese’s Taxi Driver. The 1976 feature — beaten by Rocky at the Oscars no less — is widely regarded as a flat-out masterpiece today. But when it took home the top prize at Cannes, the Palme d’Or, the film was roundly booed by festival attendees.
Quentin Tarantino faced a similar response from some quarters when his 1994 feature Pulp Fiction won, and was duly booed as well. The difference was QT turned back to the crowd and just stuck his finger up at them.
Had Scorsese been in town to collect the Palm D’Or nearly two decades before, maybe he’d have been tempted…
Down with comfortable shoes
A furore sprung up in 2012, when the list of films in contention for Cannes’ Palm d’Or was released. Unlike the Oscars — whose Best Picture shortlist runs to ten films maximum — this particular longlist had 22 films on. Not one of them was directed by a woman.
This was reported as if it was the first time but, of course, that was far from the case. It’s not as if the good films weren’t out there, they just weren’t getting recognition.
In 2012 though, several filmmakers banded together to sign a letter penned to the French newspaper Le Monde, declaring “men love their women to have depth, but only when it comes to their cleavage”.
Cannes of course took this to heart. In 2015, it thus turned away some women from the premiere of the film Carol because their stilettos weren’t tall enough for the red carpet. No high heels, no way in.
A swift response came from the festival declaring this was no official rule, but the damage was done.
It did, though, give us the moment a few years later when Kristen Stewart walked the red carpet, stopped half way down, took her heels off, and carried on walking…
Angry (dead) birds
You’ve got to make your mark at Cannes if you’re trying to get your movie noticed. And sometimes, you need a good stunt.
Thus, the team promoting 24 Hour Party People, Michael Winterbottom’s terrific account of the Manchester music scene in the 1980s and 90s, came up with a brainwave: pigeons!
Actor Danny Cunningham, playing Shaun Ryder in the film, led a bunch of the film’s performers as they duly headed to a Cannes beach and attacked each other with, er, dead pigeons. They’d brought them across especially from the UK for the stunt.
They were invited to leave by security, but not before Cunningham had been wounded by deceased animals.
Ebert vs Gallo: Dawn Of Justice
Stories of filmmakers and critics not seeing eye to eye are too frequent to really make headline news. A story of an independent filmmaker going toe-to-toe with America’s most respected critic of the time – the late Roger Ebert? Well, that travelled the world.
Ebert was one of the (many) sharp critics of actor/director’s Vincent Gallo film The Brown Bunny, a movie infamous for including a scene of, er, explicit ‘mouth interaction’ that wasn’t actually acted.
Ebert called the movie 'the worst film in the history of the festival' — there’s some competition there — with Gallo blasting that Ebert was a 'fat pig' with 'the physique of a slave trader'.
Ebert’s riposte gave the story even more legs. “It is true that I am fat” he declared, “but one day I will be thin, and he will still be the director of The Brown Bunny”.
Lars von Trier
We end with the man who gets a whole section to himself.
The Danish filmmaker first fully attracted the ire of Cannes off the back of his 2009 film Antichrist. So unimpressed was the festival’s ecumenical jury, it invented a special ‘anti-prize’ to try and get across how much the collective voters hated the film.
In a PR gift to von Trier, it labelled the movie "the most misogynist movie from the self-proclaimed biggest director in the world”.
Von Trier was not deterred. He returned in 2011 with the film Melancholia, which was earning positive reviews. At the press conference for it however, he sat next to its stars — Kirsten Dunst and Charlotte Gainsbourg — and started declaring that “I understand Hitler” and joking “how do I get out of this? Okay I’m a Nazi”.
It takes a lot for Cannes to ban a high-profile filmmaker from its festival. Von Trier managed to find the line and finally cross it. The festival banned the director declaring him 'persona non grata', and he eventually apologised saying "I am not anti-Semitic or racially prejudiced in any way, nor am I a Nazi".
Even then it didn’t last: he was allowed back in seven years later with The House That Jack Built, to predictable results. After 100 people reportedly walked out of it's Cannes debut, Von Trier said: “I’m not sure if they hated it enough, though. If it gets too popular, I’ll have a problem. But the reception seemed just about right, I think.”
At the rate he’s going, expect him back in town to burn some more bridges in the next year or two…
Watch a trailer for The House That Jack Built