Almodovar says artists have duty to speak out against 'monsters' like Trump

Published 21 May, 2026 11:26am 2 min read

Oscar-winning Spanish director Pedro Almodovar urged artists to speak out about the crises facing society on Wednesday, describing ​it as their moral duty against “monsters” like US President Donald ‌Trump.

“The creator, from their small platform, each from their own, must speak without mincing words,” said Almodovar at the Cannes Film Festival after the premiere of ​his tragicomedy “Bitter Christmas.”

“Silence and fear - because it is clearly an ​expression of fear - are a very bad sign; they ⁠are a sign of the erosion of democracy,” said the director ​considered a defining figure of contemporary European cinema.

“We are obliged to ​become a kind of shield against these monsters like Trump, Netanyahu or the Russian,” he said, referring to Israel’s prime minister and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“Trump ​must know that there is a limit to all his ​delusions and madness, and that Europe will never bow down to Trump’s policies,” he ‌added.

The ⁠latest film from the director known for dark humour and melodrama stars Leonardo Sbaraglia as Raul, a filmmaker who starts borrowing details from the people in his life to write his new screenplay.

The ​story draws deeply ​from Almodovar’s ⁠own creative journey as a director, he told journalists.

Almodovar, who is competing for the festival’s Palme d’Or ​top prize for the sixth time, said that he ​would ⁠miss coming to Cannes once the day comes when he stops making films.

“But for now, I think I’m going to make one more ⁠film; I ​hope that I’ll continue to find ​the inspiration for more,” he said, adding that there will be more humour in ​the next one.

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