Over a six-decade profession in Hollywood, Jon Voight has performed an aspiring gigolo (Midnight Cowboy), gained an Oscar for Greatest Actor (Coming House) and, on the age of 76, been awarded a Golden Globe.
Now, the 86-year-old Voight has taken on one other position that has generated loads of drama: “Particular Ambassador to Hollywood” for the Trump administration.
If the position was meant to be ceremonial, Voight, a longtime conservative, didn’t get the memo. Final weekend, he visited US President Donald Trump at his Mar-a-Lago compound to pitch a plan to “make Hollywood nice once more” — a dialog that sparked per week of hysteria within the world movie trade.
Simply hours after their assembly, Trump took to his telephone, posting that he would intervene to save lots of Hollywood from “a really quick demise” by instituting a 100 per cent tariff on movies coming to the US that have been produced in “Overseas Lands”.
Shares in Netflix, Disney, Warner Bros Discovery and Paramount plummeted the subsequent morning, shedding $20bn in market worth.

Hollywood executives are puzzled by the obvious sympathy from a US president who beforehand expressed disdain for them as “elites”. Trump has slammed actors comparable to Meryl Streep as “liberal film individuals” and lashed out on the Academy Awards as “boring, woke crap!”
“That is simply loopy,” mentioned one senior Hollywood government, noting that the American movie trade has a commerce surplus, in contrast to different industries Trump desires to bolster together with his tariff plans. “What’s it you’re making an attempt to attain?”
Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel mocked the announcement, telling viewers: “What an awesome thought. Subsequent 12 months, [HBO’s] The White Lotus is gonna be set at a Hampton Inn.”
But the Teamsters, a union representing drivers and different employees within the movement image trade, thanked Trump, calling his transfer a “robust step in the direction of lastly reining within the studios’ un-American dependancy to outsourcing our members’ work”.
Questions abound about how Trump’s movie tariffs would work in observe — and whether or not they are going to occur in any respect. A White Home spokesperson on Monday mentioned “no closing choice” had been made and the administration was “exploring all choices”.

If the plan goes forward, it could mark the primary occasion of a tariff being levied on a service as an alternative of a bodily good, mentioned Marney Cheek, a associate on the Covington legislation agency.
“Most movies are transmitted digitally and never in bodily kind, so there’s a basic query about the best way to implement the tariff,” she mentioned. “The US authorities has been against digital service taxes up to now, so that they must provide you with a scheme to gather the cash.”
Executives at Netflix and different main teams are getting ready to fulfill with Trump to attempt to affect the plans, mentioned individuals aware of the matter. Their message for Trump: movie tariffs would injury US companies.
Throughout earnings calls this week three of the most important studios prevented addressing the subject completely.
Disney and Netflix didn’t reply to requests for remark. Warner Bros Discovery and Paramount declined to remark.
Like different elements of US media and cultural circles, Trump has feuded with Hollywood but in addition proven a want to be included in it. As a former actuality tv character and producer of NBC’s The Apprentice, he was awarded a star on Hollywood’s Stroll of Fame in 2007. He has appeared in movies such because the Nineteen Nineties hit House Alone, enjoying himself as a New York businessman. His latest takeover of Washington’s Kennedy Middle implies a continued curiosity in influencing American tradition.

“Trump cares about film stars, he cares about Tom Cruise. He loves being King Trump and needs the attractive individuals . . . My query is, the place is the upside for him?” mentioned media analyst Alice Enders.
Enders believed it’s “impossible” for Trump’s administration to provide important federal tax incentives to Hollywood, as each Voight and California Governor Gavin Newsom proposed this week. “It gained’t play properly together with his base. The Christian base, they’re not in Hollywood. They’re going to say: why are we giving them more cash?
“Doge has been slicing issues proper, left and centre,” she mentioned, referring to the so-called Division of Authorities Effectivity. “And also you’re going to provide an enormous amount of cash to Hollywood?”
As he introduced a commerce cope with the UK on Thursday, Trump nodded to his Hollywood ties, mentioning he had been mates with actor Sean Connery, who performed the unique James Bond. “Nice man,” Trump mentioned. However he reiterated intentions to implement movie tariffs, which weren’t a part of the commerce settlement.
Days earlier than his inauguration, Trump introduced that Voight — together with fellow conservative actors Sylvester Stallone and Mel Gibson — would change into “particular ambassadors” whose jobs can be to assist a “very troubled place, Hollywood, California” that was dropping out to “international international locations”.
No matter their different {qualifications}, Stallone and Gibson have expertise in trying exterior the US to make their films. Stallone shot Rambo: Final Blood in Bulgaria, whereas Gibson is capturing his sequel to The Ardour of the Christ in Italy.

Regardless of the mutual hostility between Trump and most of Hollywood, the president’s declare that it’s a “troubled place” sums up the best way many within the metropolis’s leisure trade really feel in the intervening time.
Manufacturing has been shifting out of Hollywood for years, because of beneficiant incentives provided by Vancouver, Atlanta, New York and London. The development to shoot exterior LA accelerated after the 2023 labour strike, which introduced manufacturing to a standstill for six months. An anticipated rebound has not materialised, leaving some to worry that Los Angeles is destined for a similar destiny as Detroit and the auto trade.
Senior executives say there’s nonetheless a powerful want to shoot in Hollywood, however they bemoan the expense — significantly after the strikes — and onerous allowing necessities to movie in LA.
Newsom has launched a $750mn annual tax-incentive plan, doubling the present credit score, and there’s additionally dialogue of slicing pink tape.
Trump appeared to stroll again his plan on Monday, saying he was “not seeking to harm the [movie] trade, I wish to assist the trade”. However he has not offered any extra particulars, leaving Hollywood in limbo — and afraid of upsetting Trump by talking out.
Executives this week puzzled whether or not this was all a scheme to inflict injury on Canada, or a political tactic to achieve favour with unions and weaken help for Newsom, a Democrat with doable presidential ambitions.
“With solely a single social media put up to go on, [it is] nearly inconceivable to measurement the influence to the trade,” Morgan Stanley analyst Benjamin Swinburne wrote this week. He warned that the tariffs “would result in fewer movies, dearer movies, and decrease earnings for all within the enterprise”.
“At this level, we now have extra questions than solutions,” Swinburne concluded.