Le film hommage aux combattants kurdes de Bernard-Henri Lévy a reçu une magnifique ovation lors de sa projection en séance spéciale, vendredi 20 mai, au Festival de Cannes. En Sélection officielle, le documentaire de l’écrivain et philosophe a été accueilli par de très longs applaudissements et une émotion palpable, partagée avec l’équipe du film et la délégation de peshmergas, héroïne de ces images exceptionnelles rapportées après la remontée des 1000 kilomètres de ligne de front séparant le Kurdistan irakien de l’Etat islamique. Le film de BHL, «Peshmerga», sera en salles, à Paris, à partir du 8 juin prochain.


AFP Cannes (France) 

« A Kurdish cameraman who nearly lost his arm shooting a film by French celebrity philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy about the Kurds’ battle against the Islamic State group was cheered Friday at the Cannes film festival.

Ala Hoshyar Tayyeb was called onto the stage by the flamboyant Gallic intellectual as he and a group of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga generals got a standing ovation after the documentary “Peshmerga” was screened.

“This is great. I am very moved, thank you,” Tayyeb told AFP.

The vehicle in which he was filming a Kurdish advance against IS last year was blown up by a mine, killing three peshmerga fighters inside.

One of the Kurdish generals who figure prominently in the documentary was also killed in a firefight with IS six weeks ago.

The 67-year-old thinker is shown warning General Maghdid Harki — who insisted on taking the same risks as his men — to be careful.

But footage later has the general fighting off an IS attack on his mountaintop position overlooking Mosul, the biggest city held by the jihadists.

The camera cuts seconds before he is shot in the forehead.

Levy travelled 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) along the front line between the Kurds and IS in Iraq filming fighting, “landscapes, and the faces of men and women rarely seen in the wider world”.

He told reporters that the film is a “recognition of the courage of the peshmerga fighters and a recognition of the justice of their cause.”

Levy was markedly less present in front of the camera than in “The Oath of Tobruk”, his film about his role in toppling Libyan dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.

Sheikh Jafar Mustafa, one of the leading Kurdish commanders, said the peshmerga were “a rampart protecting the world from what has unfortunately happened in Paris and Brussels,” referring to IS terror attacks there in November and March.

General Sirwan Barzani, a telecoms millionaire and nephew of the Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdish Autonomous Region, was also at Cannes to see the film, as well as the “Kurdish Madonna”, singer Helly Luv.

Festival director Thierry Fremaux mistakenly welcomed them as “our Turkish guests” before quickly correcting himself. »

Lien : Cameraman blown up shooting film gets cannes ovation

Un commentaire

  1. La prise de risque de cette équipe de tournage est louable. Personne ne peut leur enlever ça.