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Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Panama Papers star Streep says rich playing ‘black joke’ on world

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The world’s richest people are playing a “black-hearted joke on all of us” Hollywood star Meryl Streep said Sunday as a new movie based on the Panama Papers scandal was premiered.

Panama Papers star Streep says rich playing ‘black joke’ on world
 Meryl Streep, with British star Gary Oldman, noted that some journalists had paid with their lives for exposing corruption.

The American actress plays a cheated widow out to right financial chicanery in Laundromat, a deft satire on the maze of shell companies that criminals and the super-rich use to hide their billions.

“This movie is fun and it’s funny, but it’s really important,” Streep told reporters at the Venice film festival.

Director Steven Soderbergh shows how the massive 2016 leak of documents from the Panama law firm Mossack & Fonseca exposed the lengths the rich and powerful go to avoid paying tax—mostly legally.

It sent shock waves across the world when the off-shore dealings of leaders in a string of countries were exposed, leading to the resignation of the Icelandic prime minister Sigmundur Davio Gunnlaugsson.

But rather than casting the firm’s partners as shady baddies, Soderbergh lets the pair—played by British actor Gary Oldman and Spanish star Antonio Banderas—dig their own graves by telling it from their point of view.

“This is a funny way to tell a black-hearted joke, a joke that’s been played on all of us,” Streep told reporters in Venice. 

‘It’s a crime’

“But it’s a crime not without victims, and many of them are journalists. The reason the Panama Papers were exported out to the world was the work of journalists. People died because of this,” Streep said, referring to the Maltese columnist Daphne Anne Caruana Galizia, who was killed in a bomb attack in 2017 after taking part in the Panama Papers investigation.

Soderbergh, the maker of classics such as Sex, Lies and Videotape, Traffic, Erin Brockovich, and the Ocean’s trilogy, said he hoped the Netflix film would increase pressure for real change.

“Along with climate change, this kind of corruption is the defining issue of this moment. In 2000 the top 1 percent controlled a third of the world’s wealth. They now control half.

“That does not seem sustainable and yet here we are. Transparency is the only solution,” he added.

In the film, Soderbergh admits that five companies he has been involved with have been registered in the low-tax US state of Delaware, where more than a quarter of a million shell companies are registered to a single address. 

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