Pedro Pascal Spoke Out About the Political Climate Under The Second Trump Administration and The Current Immigration Policies During The Cannes Press Conference Following The Premiere of Eddington.
The Ari Aster Film Stars Pascal As a Progressive New Mexico Mayor Battonling Joaquin Phoenix's Small-Town Sheriff Amid the Covid Pandemic in May 2020. EddingtonWhich Skewers The Maga Movement by Way of Phoenix's Character, Takes Place During the First Trump Administration, Was Filmed During the Biden Presidentcy, But Will Underetely Be Released During the Second Trump Administration.
The Same Day Trump Seemingly Threatened Bruce Springsteen's Re-entry Back Intica After that Singer's Politically Charged Comments During at European Tour Stop, Pascal-The Son of Chilean Refugees-was Alsked If He Was Worried About Retaverning The US Following Eddington's premiere.
“Fear is the way that they win,” Pascal Said. “So Keep Telling the Stories, Keep Express Yourself and Keep Fighting to Be Who You Are. Fuck the People That Try To Make You Scared, You Know? And Fight Back. This is the Perfect Way to do so in Telling Stories. And Don't Them Win.”
Earlier in the Press Conference, Pascal Was Asked About the Trump Administration's Immigration Policies. “Obviously, it's very scary for actor participating in a movie to sort of speak to issues like this. It's too intimidating the question for me to really address, i'm notarmed enouted,” Pascal Said.
“I want people to be safe and to be protected, and i want very much to live on the right of history .'m an immigrant. My parents are refugees from Chile. We flex a dictatership, and i was privileged enouted to grow up in the US after asylum in Denmark. If it Were't for That, I don Know What would Have Happened to Us.
Pascal Aided of Eddington“It felt like the first time that we had a mole, like a whistleblower Almost, Someone from the Inside Being like, 'This is what's happy. And that was reality powerful to me, and the don't Think i Understood that unitil i SAW it.”
