Dial M
for Marine: The far right's crusade against French cinema
French
filmmakers fear a National Rally victory in next year’s presidential election
will bring seismic changes to their industry.
By
GIORGIO LEALI
in PARIS
This
article is also available in: French
https://www.politico.eu/article/dial-m-for-marine-the-far-rights-crusade-against-french-cinema/
May 11,
2026 4:00 am CET
Not even
the scariest slasher films frighten French filmmakers as much as the prospect
of a President Marine Le Pen or President Jordan Bardella.
As the
Cannes film festival begins Tuesday, French entertainment industry heavyweights
are facing up to the potential reality that a future far-right president will
tear up the generous system of state funding and tax breaks that helped turn
France, the birthplace of cinema, into a promised land for producers of film
and television.
Le Pen
and Bardella’s party, the National Rally, already floated dismantling the
Centre National du Cinéma last year during tense budget negotiations, arguing
that the heavily indebted French state wastes taxpayer money by financing
left-wing and woke movies that flop at the box office.
Should it
win the Elysée in next year’s election, as polls currently predict, the
National Rally would likely either make good on that proposal or redirect some
of its funding toward other priorities.
“People
from the cinema world live in another reality, they are not aware of the
financial problems of the French,” said Philippe Ballard, one of the National
Rally lawmakers who led the effort to reduce state funding for the
entertainment sector.
Ballard
said his constituents “roll their eyes” at talk of state-backed cinema at a
time when they’re forced to choose between filling up their gas tanks or their
refrigerators.
Directors,
producers and actors who spoke to POLITICO respond that such a move would
torpedo a job-creating industry that, according to one estimate, generated
€12.6 billion of value added in 2022, and employs more than 260,000 people.
They contend the current system attracts foreign investment, projects French
soft power across the globe and challenges American cultural hegemony in the
political tradition of Charles de Gaulle.
Famed
director Olivier Assayas, whose large productions typically don’t rely on
public funding, called attacks against the French film funding “stupid, lame
and perfectly counterproductive, even from a nationalist perspective, in terms
of global influence and recognition of French cinema.”
“French
cinema holds a privileged place in global cinema. Giving it up would obviously
be an unspeakable absurdity, no matter how you look at it,” Assayas, who has
helmed films featuring major Hollywood stars like Jude Law and Kristen Stewart,
told POLITICO.
“You have
to find a way to protect yourself from the juggernaut of American cinema — and
this is coming from someone who loves American cinema.”
The
French Connection
France by
many metrics boasts mainland Europe’s most successful cinema industry.
According to the European Audiovisual Observatory, France had Europe’s highest
cinema attendance in 2024, the most recent year for which confirmed figures are
available. A quarter of all admissions to European films from 2015 to 2024 were
sold in France, per the observatory. No other country in the European Union
exported more movies abroad than France during that time period.
At the
heart of France’s unique system of funding cinema is the CNC. Created after
World War II, the center supports the production of hundreds of films shot in
France and abroad each year. Of the 84 films submitted to the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences considered for this year’s Oscar for Best
International Film, 20 of them were supported by the CNC. All five nominees
were French coproductions, and four of them received assistance from the CNC.
“We have
one of the best models in the world. It’s not just me saying this — it’s the
whole world. The French and European models are envied and imitated,” CNC
President Gaëtan Bruel told POLITICO.
The CNC
is financed through taxes on movie theater tickets; television services paid
for by broadcasters and distributors; the sale of DVDs and Blu-rays; and on
streaming platforms like YouTube and Netflix.
Those
levies brought in €810 million in 2024, the most recent year for which
consolidated figures are available, helping giant productions like “The Count
of Monte Cristo” pay for visual effects or grants to small-budget films like
“Souleymane’s Story,” which tells the poignant tale of an immigrant in Paris
struggling to obtain asylum.
“None of
my movies would have existed without the CNC,” said Franco-Italian actress and
director Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi.
Calling
POLITICO during a break from shooting her latest film, Bruni-Tedeschi said the
CNC plays an essential role in funding “films that embody the poetry and
complexity of existence.”
Such
projects, however, appear of little interest to the National Rally unless they
have wide commercial appeal. Prominent National Rally lawmaker Sébastien Chenu,
who would likely be in the running for culture minister should his party win
the Elysée Palace next year, once said that it’s the free market’s job to judge
which movies are good and bad.
Chenu and
other National Rally heavyweights claim the CNC funds left-wing movies,
promoting diversity, LGBTQ+ rights and what they describe as woke culture.
“The main
ideological battle waged by the populist right is to claim that culture is
elitist, created by city-center elites using state funds to show it off to
themselves while no one else is interested in it,” said Charles Gillibert, a
film producer who manages the production company founded by New Wave director
Eric Rohmer.
The
favorite example regularly mentioned by National Rally representatives is a
recent feminist version of Alexandre Dumas’ “The Three Musketeers.” The film,
which cost around €10 million to make, was a commercial dud. It averaged of
just two entries per screening on opening day and did little better in the
weeks that followed.
Bruel
acknowledged not all films backed by the CNC succeed commercially but said it
was unfair to judge the entire model on a handful of projects.
“Those
who criticize and undermine this model by caricaturing it and failing to see
all that it brings … are weakening it at a time when we need it the most,” said
Bruel.
Once Upon
a Time in Hollywood
The
cinema industry also fears any attempt could undermine France’s attractiveness
for foreign productions, including those fleeing Hollywood in search of tax
breaks or other incentives that bring down the cost of production.
French
President Emmanuel Macron pledged last year to boost efforts to bring in
foreign productions as part of his “Choose France” program. In September, he
will host on the French Riviera the first edition of an international cinema
and animation summit co-chaired with South Korea.
“We see a
number of American filmmakers trying to make their films by securing funding
from Europe, or even by producing them in Europe. France is at the heart of
this system,” said Gillibert, who co-produced indie icon Jim Jarmusch’s latest
film, which won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival.
If France
gives up on offering financial incentives to shoot in the country, foreign
productions will inevitably turn to other countries that are engaging in the
subsidy race, Gillibert warned. That concern was shared by all the movie
industry insiders interviewed for this story.
The film
industry on the whole already faces seismic changes, whether it’s streaming
cutting into the bottom line of movie theaters, the consolidation of major film
studios or the prospect of artificial intelligence rendering movie production
entirely obsolete.
Were
France to cede its role as a leader in cinema now, it may never have the chance
to get it back.
“This
crisis is global, we are resisting better than elsewhere, but each year we are
on the verge of making it irremediable,” said Bruel.
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