“The call is for film workers to refuse to work with Israeli institutions that are complicit in Israel’s human rights abuses against the Palestinian people,” the letter said. “This refusal takes aim at institutional complicity, not identity.”
The Israeli Government has strongly denied accusations that it is guilty of genocide in Gaza. Israel says its war effort is in self-defense and targets Hamas, not Palestinian civilians. Israel accuses the militant group of using civilians as human shields and says therefore Hamas is responsible for the civilian casualties in Gaza.
Inspired by 1980s filmmakers
The letter was modeled after a campaign in the 1980s signed by Hollywood filmmakers including Jonathan Demme, Spike Lee, Steven Spielberg, Susan Seidelman and Martin Scorsese, who refused to screen their films in apartheid South Africa.
The group sent a letterto President Ronald Reagan in 1987, urging him to support the boycott, The Los Angeles Times reported. Along with the letter was a joint statement from Demme and Scorsese, saying in part: “It has become clear that boycott and divestment . . . are the last possible peaceful methods available to achieve the ultimate goal of social change in South Africa, short of the looming and inevitable violent civil war that presently threatens that country.”
The Israeli film industry has been growing steadily over the past few years, according to a May 2025 report. The industry is expected to reach about $80 million in revenue by the end of the year. That is still considerably less than Hollywood, which will generate about $9.6 billion in revenue this year. Within Israel, people in the film industry worry that without other countries buying their film and TV productions, the industry will falter.