Cannes Film Festival observes minute's silence for Manchester

Breaking Headlines
2017-05-23 | 10:36
High views
Share
LBCI
Share
LBCI
Whatsapp
facebook
Twitter
Messenger
telegram
telegram
print
Cannes Film Festival observes minute's silence for Manchester
Whatsapp
facebook
Twitter
Messenger
telegram
telegram
print
3min
Cannes Film Festival observes minute's silence for Manchester

Filmmakers and fans at Cannes held a minute's silence on Tuesday for the victims of the bombing of a pop concert in Manchester, condemned by the film festival's organizers as an "attack on culture, youth and joyfulness".

 

French actress Isabelle Huppert joined Cannes Film Festival Director Thierry Fremaux and his staff on the red-carpeted steps that usually host smiling movie stars heading to premieres.

 

"The people who were there last night at that music concert were doing exactly what we are doing here at Cannes ... being together, rejoicing in the freedom to love and sharing their passion," Fremaux said before the minute's silence.

 

Cannes was already under massive surveillance due to a deadly truck attack on revelers in Nice, just up the French Riviera coast, last July, and gun and bomb attacks on a music concert and football match in Paris in 2015.

 

Festival organizers expressed "horror, anger and immense sadness" at the suicide bombing that killed at least 22 people, including children, at a concert by US singer Ariana Grande in Manchester, northern England, on Monday night.

 

Local police chief Yves Daros told Reuters about Cannes: "We are going to follow the procedures to the letter, without any deviation, to ensure this is going to be a safe festival."

 

But the bombing was already having an impact at the festival, one of the biggest global entertainment events.

 

An appearance by racing driver Lewis Hamilton to promote the Disney franchise "Cars" on Tuesday was cancelled "out of respect for the casualties and all of those impacted", according to the publicist.

 

Colin Farrell, in two of the biggest films in competition at Cannes, told Reuters the assault on a concert attended primarily by children and teenagers was "an attack against humanity and it's an attack against society and it's an attack against the hearts and lives and minds of innocent people".

 

 
REUTERS

Breaking Headlines

Cannes

Festival

Manchester

LBCI Next
Grand Mufti Derian travels to Saudi Arabia for Hajj
Download now the LBCI mobile app
To see the latest news, the latest daily programs in Lebanon and the world
Google Play
App Store
We use
cookies
We use cookies to make
your experience on this
website better.
Accept
Learn More