‘Shame on Hollywood’: Cannes-winning writer rails at stance on Gaza

Published May 13, 2026 Updated May 13, 2026 05:43am
(L to R) Iris Knobloch, chief organiser of the festival, New Zealand director Peter Jackson and organiser Thierry Fremaux arrive for the screening of La Venus electrique.—AFP
(L to R) Iris Knobloch, chief organiser of the festival, New Zealand director Peter Jackson and organiser Thierry Fremaux arrive for the screening of La Venus electrique.—AFP

CANNES: Hollywood should be ashamed of the way it has treated stars like Susan Sarandon, Javier Bardem and Mark Ruffalo for opposing Israel’s war in Gaza, a member of the Cannes Film Festival jury said on Tuesday, with big studios conspicuously absent this year.

Paul Laverty, who wrote two films that won Cannes’ top prize, was cheered as he lambasted the studios and praised the French festival for using an image of Sarandon in “Thelma and Louise” for its poster this year.

“Isn’t it fascinating to see Susan Sarandon, Javier Bardem and Mark Ruffalo blacklisted because of their views in opposing the murder of women and children in Gaza? Shame on Hollywood, people who do that,” the Scottish-born writer, who was arrested last year at a pro-Palestine protest, added.

“They’re the best of us,” said Laverty, who won best screenplay at Cannes for Ken Loach’s “I, Daniel Blake” and “The Wind that Shakes the Barley”. “I just hope we don’t get bombed now,” he joked.

Sarandon was dropped by her US agents and accused of antisemitism in 2023 after she told a pro-Palestinian rally in New York that people “afraid of being Jewish at this time are getting a taste of what it feels like to be a Muslim in this country, so often subjected to violence”.

She said earlier this year that her outspoken stance on Gaza made it “impossible for me to even be on television”, never mind work in Hollywood. But left-winger Laverty made an impassioned plea for filmmakers not to shy away from politics “when madmen lead the blind”, quoting Shakespeare’s “King Lear”.

Laverty did not mention US leader Donald Trump, but his presidency and the war in Gaza have hung heavy over film festivals over the last few years.

Published in Dawn, May 13th, 2026

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