Cannes Film Festival: Film for Injured Yellow Vest Protesters

The film takes place in a hospital where the exhausted medical staff fights to cope with the increased attendance of injured protesters.

The title of this French film is “La Fracture” and presents a snapshot of social tensions in France, something extremely relevant after the coronavirus pandemic, as its director, Catherine Corsini, stated today at the Cinematographic Cannes Film Festival.

The film focuses on characters from various social and professional backgrounds – including a truck driver and a Parisian cartoonist – who clash inside the hospital amid anti-government protests with the “Yellow Vests”.

The demonstrations, which in 2018 led to the creation of a movement against the high cost of living and in some cases had violent endings and clashes with the police, tarnished the second year of the term of French President Emanuel Macron.

Asked what she would say to Macron if the film’s creator had the opportunity, who spent time in hospitals and spoke to members of the “Yellow Vests” about the needs of her film, she replied that she would mainly campaign on behalf of hospitals.

During a press conference, the director said: “I would tell him to double the salary of all medical workers.”

The idea for the film preceded the pandemic, although the shooting took place in the middle of a lockdown, thus increasing the difficulties for the actors and the crew who had to wear a mask, the producers said.

The shooting sites are completely up-to-date today, Corsini added, as hospitals have come under a lot of pressure.

Along with the professional actors, Corsini also used a real nurse, who plays a hospital worker who is called to deal with the lack of medicines, damaged equipment and extreme or stressed patients.

The film uses humor to convey its message and its characters collide or come closer as chaos scenes unfold around them.

The world’s largest film festival, which returned to the French Riviera after an absence in 2020 due to the pandemic, often includes films with political content, and this year there are several entries about modern France.

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