Right-wing
mogul ignites culture war in French cinema
But
French filmmakers are not ready to cut ties with controversial Vincent Bolloré.
By
GIORGIO LEALI
in PARIS
https://www.politico.eu/article/right-wing-mogul-culture-war-french-cinema-vincent-bollore/
May 29,
2026 4:00 am CET
By
Giorgio Leali
There’s a
tradition at the Cannes film festival: when the lights go down, the audience
claps and cheers when the logos of their favorite producers and distributors
appear.
This
year, there was a twist. Almost every time the logo of Canal+, the company
owned by right-wing tycoon Vincent Bolloré, appeared on screen, the audience
booed.
It was a
sign that France’s bitter culture war over the hard right’s politics had
reached the heart of the country’s TV and movie business.
Canal+
prides itself on being the largest private funder of French cinema and has long
been seen as a haven within Bolloré’s media empire, insulated from the owner’s
politics. But that all changed this month, when its top manager, Maxime Saada,
threatened to blacklist 600 artists.
They had
strayed into Saada’s crosshairs for signing a petition warning against French
cinema’s overdependence on Bolloré, whom they label “far-right,” and to oppose
his takeover of UGC, which manages hundreds of movie theaters in France and
Belgium.
For some
in the sector, Canal+’s blacklisting was an ominous sign of what could happen
more broadly in the cultural sphere if the far-right National Rally wins next
year’s presidential election.
Those
targeted included Oscar-winning actress Juliette Binoche and artists competing
at Cannes this year, such as actor Swann Arlaud, who is starring in a film
about the collaborationist Vichy regime in World War II, and director Arthur
Harari.
After the
blacklist threat, 2,000 more film industry insiders added their names to the
anti-Bolloré petition.
The furor
in Cannes immediately sparked political reactions, with left-wing parties
accusing Canal+ of censorship and right-wing politicians defending the
company’s reaction.
“After
literature, the censor Bolloré now wants to control filmmaking. It is
unacceptable to allow a billionaire to threaten artists in this way,” said
hard-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon, threatening to dismantle Bolloré’s empire.
Socialist leader Olivier Faure slammed the move by Canal+ as a sign that “the
far right has never liked freedom, creativity, or public service.”
More
diplomatically, Culture Minister Catherine Pégard regretted Canal+’s
“disproportionate, to say the least” reaction to “the very real concerns that
were raised.”
The
conservative mayor of Cannes, David Lisnard, slammed the artists as masochists
for “biting the hand that feeds them.”
Canal+
declined POLITICO’s request for comment, but Bolloré’s son, Cyrille, president
of the Bolloré group, brushed off fears on Wednesday that Canal+ would choose
projects based on political orientation.
“No,
there is no political project,” he said.
France’s
Citizen Kane
The
uproar has illustrated how deeply connected French cinema is to Canal+, which
financed seven of the nine movies that won awards at Cannes this year,
including the prestigious Palme d’Or.
“It is
good to show some resistance to Bolloré’s takeover of the film industry. But we
are sawing off the branch we are sitting on,” said one French producer, who was
granted anonymity to speak freely, like others quoted in this story.
The
ever-expanding empire of the conservative Breton tycoon, which already covers
TV channels, legacy newspapers and publishing houses and is set to further
expand in the cinema sphere by taking over UGC.
Bolloré,
a devout Catholic who flies to Lourdes by private jet for an annual pilgrimage,
has made his mark on the media companies he owns.
His TV
channel CNEWS regularly airs conservative pundits warning against migrants and
a pro-Russia propagandist, while legacy newspapers “Le Journal du Dimanche” and
“Paris Match” have also turned right-wing since Bolloré acquired them.
More
recently, the tycoon even fired the president of prestigious publisher Grasset,
prompting an exodus of all its most famous writers, such as Virginie Despentes
and Frédéric Beigbeder.
Big shoes
to fill
While
cinema industry heavyweights almost unanimously criticized Saada’s threat, they
also realized they needed to take a pragmatic approach, especially as they risk
a major drop in public funding should the far-right National Rally win next
year’s election.
Seeing
Canal+ as indispensable for the survival of French film, they have stressed it
is better to talk to Bolloré rather than start a war against him.
With
€155.6 million of investment in French movies in 2025, Canal+ is by far the
biggest private funder of French cinema.
Under a
three-year deal with the cinema industry, Canal+ committed to invest at least
€480 million over the 2025-2027 period in a wide range of movies. In return, it
has the exclusive right to broadcast movies six months after their release,
while other platforms like Netflix, Disney+, and free TV channels have to wait
much longer.
As the
deal will expire at the end of next year, many in the industry fear that no one
could step in for Canal+ should it decide to invest away from the French cinema
or to only finance right-wing movies.
A second
French producer said he didn’t see any imminent risk of Bolloré imposing his
right-wing views on Canal+’s editorial decisions but argued that U.S. platforms
such as Netflix and Disney+ are unlikely to replace Canal’s investment, at
least not in the short term.
“There is
currently no concrete alternative to Canal’s investment. There is an
interdependence between French cinema and Canal+: French cinema needs Canal+,
but Canal+ also needs French cinema,” he said.
And the
rise of U.S. platforms would raise another kind of concern.
“The
weakening of a domestic player is never really good news, because those who
replace them may create value here but not reinvest it back into our economy,”
said Céline Calvez, a parliamentarian from the party of French President
Emmanuel Macron, while acknowledging that Canal+ is, however, more reactionary
than it used to be in the 1990s, before Bolloré’s takeover. For the centrist
lawmaker, the whole spat shows the importance of having strong public cinema
funding, rather than leaving it to private actors.
Industry
insiders agree that, from a business perspective, Bolloré would shoot himself
in the foot should he decide to only invest in right-wing movies.
“In the
case of Canal+, censorship or ideological bias would be particularly
counterproductive,” said Laurent Creton, a professor in the economics of cinema
at the Sorbonne University.
While
airing right-wing TV programs makes sense economically, given that France is
swinging to the right, cinema audiences want a diversity of movies and might
drop their Canal+ subscriptions and turn to other platforms, he noted.
But some
are not that optimistic about Bolloré’s plans.
A third
producer said Canal+’s threats are just an appetizer for what could happen next
year if the far-right comes to power and joins forces with Bolloré.
“It is
clear that, once Bolloré also has more political power, possibly in one year,
he will absolutely do what he wants, and it will be catastrophic for French
cinema.”


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