Tuesday, September 9, 2025 - More than 1,800 actors, directors, and other film industry professionals have signed a new pledge vowing not to work with Israeli film institutions they say are “implicated in genocide and apartheid against the Palestinian people”.
“We pledge not to screen films, appear at, or otherwise work
with Israeli film institutions — including festivals, cinemas, broadcasters,
and production companies — that are implicated in genocide and apartheid
against the Palestinian people,” read the letter published in The Guardian
newspaper.
The signatories included British stars Olivia Colman, Riz
Ahmed, Aimee Lou Wood, Josh O’Connor, Tilda Swinton and Joe Alwyn (the latter
of whom had a supporting role in the recent post-Holocaust drama “The
Brutalist”); American actors Mark Ruffalo, Emma Stone, Ayo Edebiri and Cynthia
Nixon; Spanish actor Javier Bardem; Mexican filmmaker Gael García Bernal; and
filmmakers Ken Loach, Yorgos Lanthimos, Adam McKay and Ava DuVernay (the
latter’s film “Origin” compared Nazi rule to slavery and global caste systems.)
They join several progressive Jews who have long been vocal
pro-Palestinian activists, including Ilana Glazer, Hannah Einbinder, Emma
Seligman and Wallace Shawn.
The letter, organized by the group Film Workers for
Palestine, said it was inspired by filmmakers who had refused to screen their
work in apartheid South Africa.
The pledge is distinct from other previous arts and culture
Israel boycotts in naming specific Israeli cultural institutions that the
letter’s signatories are boycotting. Those include major Israeli film festivals
like the Jerusalem Film Festival, Haifa International Film Festival, Docaviv
and TLVfest.
“In this urgent moment of crisis, where many of our
governments are enabling the carnage in Gaza, we must do everything we can to
address complicity in that unrelenting horror,” the letter read.
“We answer the call of Palestinian filmmakers, who have
urged the international film industry to refuse silence, racism, and
dehumanization, as well as to ‘do everything humanly possible’ to end
complicity in their oppression,” the film workers said in their petition.
The institutions to be boycotted would include any involved
in “whitewashing or justifying genocide and apartheid,” or those that partnered
with the Israeli government.
The group behind the letter cited the Jerusalem Film
Festival and the Docaviv documentary film festival, which “continue to partner
with the Israeli government.”
“The vast majority of Israeli film production and
distribution companies, sales agents, cinemas and other film institutions have
never endorsed the full, internationally recognized rights of the Palestinian
people,” according to a FAQ document accompanying the letter.
The pledge does not specifically target Israeli individuals.
Instead, the document says the “refusal takes aim at institutional complicity,
not identity,” and that “a few Israeli film entities are not complicit.”
Several open letters signed by prominent figures from the
worlds of cinema, music and literature have been published as pressure mounts
on the Israeli government to end the devastating, nearly two-year war in Gaza,
and urgently address the humanitarian crisis there.
Last month, some 200 British and Irish
writers called for an “immediate and complete” boycott of Israel,
“until the people of Gaza are adequately provided with drinking water, food,
and medical supplies, and until all other forms of relief and necessity are
restored to the people of Gaza under the aegis of the United Nations.”
The writers also said: “We demand the return of all hostages
and those imprisoned without charge or trial on all sides. We demand an end to
settler violence against Palestinians on the West Bank. We demand the immediate
and permanent ceasefire and cessation of violence by Hamas and Israel.”
“We stand in solidarity with the resistance of Palestinian,
Jewish, and Israeli people to the genocidal policies of the current Israeli
government. We note that prominent and respected Israeli and Jewish groups in
Israel and other countries, including many of our fellow writers, have recently
called for serious and impactful sanctions on Israeli institutions, to which we
add, on, and only on, objectively culpable individuals. A boycott is the only
sanction an individual can apply,” the letter said.

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