Trump, Cannes and Robert De Niro
Digest more
Hollywood films increasingly rely on people and places overseas. Trump’s plan to slap tariffs on imported movies, which are often the product of international partnerships, will be both hard to implement and ineffective,
Donald Trump wants to put a tariff on movies made overseas, but he says that will not extend to the James Bond franchise.
President Donald Trump has announced plans to implement a 100% tariff on movies made outside of the United States, describing them as 'propaganda' and a threat to national security. However, his plan
Donald Trump said that the administration is beginning the process to impose a 100% tariff on imports of movies that are produced in "foreign lands."
9don MSN
President Donald Trump took to social media on Sunday to express his dissatisfaction with the film industry and announced his plans to impose a movie-related tariff.
3d
Irish Star on MSNDonald Trump's new $100,000,000 biopic that will show President in a 'kinder light'A highly-anticipated new movie based on the President's life is in the works. Unlike the last film made about him, The Apprentice, the new one shows Trump in a positive light
Bloodsport is one of Donald Trump’s favorite movies. He told The New Yorker in 1997 that he often returns to the late-’80s action flick, which follows a United States Army captain (played by Jean-Claude Van Damme) who travels overseas to defeat his foreign opponents in an underground martial-arts tournament.
9don MSN
Donald Trump is now vowing to impose a 100% tariff on all movies made outside the United States, and Hollywood has questions.
Hollywood Reporter on MSN8d
What Donald Trump Is Really After With Movie TariffsThat is, until Sunday night, when Donald Trump sought to turn back the clock and undo some 75 years of history. Using the blunt instrument of a tariff, he sought to bring us back to that pre-Wylerian times of a default shooting on a Southern California backlot, or at least whatever U.S. state is currently offering the most generous tax incentives.
Whoopi Goldberg is telling Donald Trump to “please stop” when it comes to Hollywood and movie tariffs. Trump caused shock and confusion in the film and TV industries this week by writing on social media that he had authorized the U.
1don MSN
The following day, White House spokesperson Kush Desai told Fox News Digital, “Although no final decisions on foreign film tariffs have been made, the administration is exploring all options to deliver on President Trump’s directive to safeguard our country’s national and economic security while Making Hollywood Great Again.”