Journalist, filmmaker, and philosopher, public intellectual and political provocateur, Bernard-Henri Lévy—whose name in France is distilled into the initials B.H.L.—spent the pandemic traveling between war zones and humanitarian crises. “There were no curfews for the forgotten wars,” says the narrator in Lévy’s latest film, The Will to See. Sent by a group of newspapers—Paris Match, La Repubblica, The Wall Street Journal, and Stern—to Nigeria, Syria Kurdistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, and other embattled areas, Lévy documented acts and events he believed the world needed to see, footage that makes up this new film. His reporting from Ukraine, which includes an interview with President Zelensky, powerfully illustrates his point about paying attention. Immediately following the film’s premiere, Lévy will discuss the issues with Alessandra Stanley, AIR MAIL’s co-editor and a veteran New York Times journalist. —Clara Molot
The Arts Intel Report
Bernard-Henri Lévy and Alessandra Stanley Discuss "The Will to See"
Bernard-Henri Lévy with soldiers in Ukraine.
When
April 29, 2022
Where
Etc
Photo courtesy of Hampstead Rose LLC