CANNES, France (AP) — While Donald Trump’s hush money trial entered its sixth week in New York, an origin story for the Republican presidential candidate premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on Monday, unveiling a scathing portrait of the former president in the 1980s.
“The Apprentice,” directed by the Iranian Danish filmmaker Ali Abbasi, stars Sebastian Stan as Trump. The central relationship of the movie is between Trump and Roy Cohn (Jeremy Strong), the defense attorney who was chief counsel to Joseph McCarthy’s 1950s Senate investigations.
Cohn is depicted as a longtime mentor to Trump, coaching him in the ruthlessness of New York City politics and business. Early on, Cohn aided the Trump Organization when it was being sued by the federal government for racial discrimination in housing.
“The Apprentice,” which is labeled as inspired by true events, portrays Trump’s dealings with Cohn as a Faustian bargain that guided his rise as a businessman and, later, as a politician. Stan’s Trump is initially a more naive real-estate striver, soon transformed by Cohn’s education.
Strictly star Giovanni Pernice's former partner Rose Ayling
Chinese pickle spices up export hopes with Mexico
Flood relief work strengthened in China's Guangdong
More Chinese people hit road for Dragon Boat Festival
California congressman urges closer consultation with tribes on offshore wind
Dortmund, Sancho find themselves in a quandary
Liang seals narrow win as WTT Champions Incheon kick off
'Ice city' sees booming tourism
Trump accepts a VP debate but wants it on Fox News. Harris has already said yes to CBS