Moore publicicing his documentary a bit more.

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Protestors disrupt Cannes festival

By Ian Youngs
BBC News Online entertainment staff in Cannes



Moore addressed protestors at their march
French protesters briefly brought the fourth day of the Cannes film festival to a halt on Saturday with a loud march in front of the red carpet.

The demonstration by about 500 entertainment industry workers over government cuts to their unemployment benefits paralysed the seafront area of the Riviera town for about two hours.

Although the day's main competition film, Shrek 2, went on without a problem, several other screenings were interrupted or cancelled.

In one case, a dozen workers who had pushed their way into a theatre were forcibly removed by police, resulting in three people being slightly injured, according to unions and officers.

Riot police closed off all the streets around the building hosting most of the sprawling festival, causing major traffic jams.

Police said five people were taken into custody.

Earlier, documentary film maker Michael Moore had addressed the protestors.

'Support'

He said: "I'm here to support workers in France, the United States and all around the world."


Later, Moore revealed he had smuggled three camera crews into Iraq to film disillusioned US soldiers for his new documentary, Fahrenheit 9/11.

Moore's film will have its world premiere on Monday.

He was speaking for the first time since his public row with Disney, who had refused to distribute the film in the US because of its anti-Bush message.


Fahrenheit 9/11 looks at life in the US in the wake of the 11 September 2001 attacks and the onset of military action in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Moore sent the crews into Iraq after disaffected soldiers wrote to him, he said.

"I was able to sneak three different freelance crews into Iraq," he said.

The soldiers had "express disillusionment that they had been lied to", said Moore.

'Political reasons'


Harvey Weinstein is co-founder of Miramax films
The film from Iraq was a "very important" part of the documentary, he added.

"It is certainly something the Bush administration does not want people to see," said Moore.

Moore made Farenheit 9/11 for Miramax, which is owned by Disney.

He said Disney had backed out of distributing the film for "only political reasons".

He said that the US and Taiwan were the only two world markets yet to find a distributor.

Other US distributors were "afraid" because pressure had been put on them, he claimed.

He refused to explain further but said he would speak more about Disney once the film had found a US distributor.

Moore also bemoaned the lack of freedom of expression in the US and said the art of documentary film making was under threat.

"The movie press has an obsession with celebrity... and is driving the nail into the coffin," he said.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/film/3717735.stm
 

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More filmy stuff.
Satire is a useful weapon, if you are clever with it.

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Iran 'anti-cleric' film withdrawn

People across Iran queued to see Marmoulak
The makers of an Iranian box-office hit seen as satirising the religious establishment have decided to withdraw the film.
The producers of Marmoulak (The Lizard) say the award-winning film will be withdrawn by next Friday, following pressure from the authorities.

The film had been playing to packed cinemas since 21 April - but attracted criticism from the conservative clergy.

It is about a convicted criminal who disguises himself as a mullah.

"This film is going to be taken off screens gradually by the end of this week," the film's financier Manouchehr Mohammadi said on Saturday.

He said the film - which had a contract to run until July - had grossed almost $1m in the capital Tehran alone.

Those who oppose Marmoulak do not want cinema to exist as a modern medium

Manouchehr Mohammadi
But hardliners have found it offensive.

Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, head of the powerful Guardian Council, said the film was a "bad influence".

"The judiciary and the culture ministry have not banned the film, except in a few towns, but they have advised us to stop screening it," Mr Mohammadi told the Iranian student news agency ISNA.

He said he and producer Kamal Tabrizi had taken the decision reluctantly but had "seen no obvious alternative".

Cuts

Mr Mohammadi also lashed out at his critics.

"Those who oppose Marmoulak do not want cinema to exist as a modern medium," he said.

Marmoulak's release was delayed by a month as the religious authorities debated whether or not to ban it.

It was finally released with minor cuts from the version that won the best film award at Tehran's international film festival in February. It was an immediate hit.

The audience lapped up the comedy, as the film's lead character - Reza the Lizard - revels in the privileges and power his clerical robes bring him.

Eventually he captivates his congregation's imagination by his simplicity and brings worshippers flocking back to the mosques.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3718275.stm
 

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