Depardieu lashes out at Oscar hopeful DiCaprio, Clooney

French actor Gerard Depardieu at a press conference for the film "Saint Amour" presented during the 66th Berlinale Film Festival in Berlin on February 19, 2016

Maverick French actor Gerard Depardieu Friday took aim at the Oscars, "The Revenant" and George Clooney, criticising Hollywood for its "comfort" bubble. He rejected the pomp surrounding US cinema, saying he preferred to get into the gritty side of movies. "When I think about the Oscars, with 'The Revenant', the caravans, the warmth and all of that. We tell them: go roll in shit. I am sure that shit is fragrant," he said at a press conference during the Berlin film festival, referring to the movie staring Leonardo DiCaprio. "That's the fabulous comfort of cinema. I like things that are not comfortable, even if I scream all the time. I'm shouting all the time over a film. I start by saying 'no, nein'. And then I make it. That's how it is, that's life." Depardieu, 67, also took a dig at Clooney over his meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel when the Hollywood star offered to lend a hand solving Europe's refugee crisis. "We see these Syrian refugees, and George Clooney went to see Madame Merkel. I think that didn't go well. Today, we want to be an actor, a politician, an ecologist," he mocked. Depardieu is no stranger to controversy, and has even sparked an outcry in his native France for taking Russian nationality after befriending President Vladimir Putin. The actor, who was presenting his new film "Saint-Amour" in Berlin, reiterated that he has "a lot of admiration for Vladimir Putin, for what he has done, and for the Russian people". He acknowledged that his pro-Russian stance displeases his "some French intellectuals, including my friends". But he said: "I believe what I see." The Berlin film festival ends on Sunday.