Cannes, which is scheduled for May, is the most global of film festivals and its international village of flag-waving pavilions annually hosts more than 80 countries from around the world.
In a statement, festival organizers said the ban on any official Russian delegation or individuals linked to the Kremlin would remain âunless the war of assault ends in conditions that will satisfy the Ukrainian people.â
The festival didnât rule out accepting films from Russia. In recent years, Cannes has showcased films from filmmakers like Kirill Serebrennikov, even though the director hasnât been unable to attend. Serebrennikov is under a three-year travel ban after being accused of embezzlement by the Russian government in a case that was protested by the Russian artistic community and in Europe.
Hollywood continued pulling its films out of Russian theaters. After the Walt Disney Co., Warner Bros. and Sony announced they would halt distributing films in Russia, including Warnerâs highly anticipated âThe Batman,â Paramount Pictures announced likewise on Tuesday. That includes upcoming releases like âSonic the Hedgehog 2â and âThe Lost City.â
The Venice Film Festival, meanwhile, said it was organizing free screenings of the film âReflection,â about the conflict in Ukraineâs eastern Donbas region, as a sign of solidarity with the people of Ukraine.
The screenings are scheduled for next week in Rome, Milan and Venice.
The film, which was presented in competition at Venice last year, tells the story of a Ukrainian surgeon who is taken prisoner by Russia during the Donbas conflict in eastern Ukraine. In 2014, Russia threw its weight behind an insurgency in the mostly Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine region known as Donbas, where Russia-backed rebels seized government buildings and proclaimed the creation of âpeopleâs republics.â
âReflectionâ shows the horrors of war as well as the surgeonâs efforts to rebuild the surgeonâs relationships after he was freed.
It was directed by Ukrainian director Valentyn Vasyanovych, whose âAtlantisâ film in 2019 was also set in eastern Ukraine and dealt with similar issues of war and trauma. âAtlantisâ won the Best Film award in the experimental Orizzonti section of the Venice Film Festival 2019 ad was Ukrainâs candidate for the Oscars.
Earlier this week, the art exhibition of the Venice Biennale, of which the annual film festival is a part, announced the curator and artists of Russiaâs pavillion had quit their positions to protest the war in Ukraine.
Last week, the European Broadcasting Union announced Russia would not be allowed to enter an act for this year's Eurovision Song Contest, to be held in Turin in May.
The 2016 winner of the contest was Ukrainian singer Jamala, who won with a song about the 1944 deportations of Crimean Tatars by Josef Stalin. On Tuesday, it emerged that she had fled Ukraine for Turkey with her two children.
A Crimean Tatar, Jamala told reporters in Istanbul that she never imagined that she would end up sharing the same fate as her grandmother, who she said âhad just 15 minutes to packâ during the forced deportations of 1944.
The singer said she left Kyiv for Ternopil, in western Ukraine, where she thought her family would be safe, but decided to cross into Romania when she woke up to the sound of explosions there too. Her husband remained in Ukraine.
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Coyle reported from New York; Suzan Fraser in Istanbul contributed.