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But Strauss-Kahn’s lawyer said the film was defamatory in that its subject matter was similar to the accusations levelled against Strauss-Kahn, who quit the Washington-based International Monetary Fund in 2011 after a New York hotel maid accused him of sexual assault.
Strauss-Kahn settled a civil case taken by the maid after criminal charges were dropped.
“This happened three years ago and he was cleared,” lawyer Jean Veil told Europe 1 radio on Monday.
“He is frightened, sickened (by the film). He has instructed his lawyers, myself, to make a complaint for defamation based on accusations of rape, on the insinuations made throughout this film.”
Interviewed by Reuters TV in Cannes, fimlmaker Ferrara said the film was fiction and that he had the right to choose his subjects.
“I’m not on trial,” Ferrara said. “I’m an artist, I have freedom of speech. I’m from America I’m from the country of the free, land of the free and home of the brave.
The film begins with an extended sex-party scene before the encounter between the main character, George Devereau, and a maid. Throughout the over 20-minute scene, Depardieu appears naked and flits from one bacchanalian encounter to another.
Reporters the screening were handed a gift bag containing condoms and Viagra.
Trade publication Variety called the film in a review “a sure-fire scandal-starter in France” and said the “audacious performance (from Depardieu) is undeniably the pic’s chief selling point,” a view shared by most critics.
Films that are not competing in the official 12-day film festival at Cannes often hold screenings nonetheless in order to gain publicity. Following the “Welcome to New York” screening, the film was made available throughout France on pay-per-view.