Directors Ken Loach and Mike Leigh have resigned as patrons of one of London’s oldest cinemas over a film festival with links to the Israeli government. British directors Ken Loach and Mike Leigh have pulled out as patrons of London’s Phoenix Cinema in protest of the venue hosting the Israeli international Seret film festival, reported on Thursday. “My resignation as a patron of the Phoenix shows what I think of their decision.
It is simply unacceptable,” Loach told The Guardian after resigning. As part of the festival, the north London cinema hosted a special screening of “Supernova: The Music Festival Massacre” about the Hamas-led terrorist attack at the Nova on 7 October. Pro-Palestine solidarity groups, as well as a number of staff at the Phoenix Cinema, called for the screening to be cancelled over Seret’s links to the Israeli culture ministry and the Israeli embassy in the UK.
Cinema chains Picturehouse and Curzon had already cancelled all Seret screenings over safety concerns. Pro-Israel and pro-Palestine protesters clashed outside the historic north London cinema ahead of the screening, just hours after the cinema’s front doors were spray painted in red with the message: “Say no to art washing”. Among the groups calling for the screening to be cancelled was Artists for Palestine UK, who said: “Seret is part of a broader artwashing strategy by the Israel apartheid state that uses culture to whitewash and cover up its crimes against the Palestinian.