George Clooney is making his disdain for Donald Trump known not just here in the United States but also overseas.

The actor was interviewed by members of the international press at the Cannes Film Festival on Thursday afternoon, and took some time to share with them his opinion of Trump.

'There's not going to be a President Donald Trump,' said Clooney, who held a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton last month in Los Angeles where tickets reportedly went for $353,400 per couple.

'That's not going to happen. Fear is not going to be something that drives our country. We're not going to be scared of Muslims or immigrants or women. We're not actually afraid of anything.'

Scroll down for video

Speaking out: George Clooney (above on Thursday) spoke about Donald Trump during a press conference in Cannes

Strong words: 'There's not going to be a President Donald Trump,' said Clooney, who held a fundraiser for Hillary Clinton at his LA home last month (Trump above last week)

Clooney, who was on the Croisette to promote his film Money Monster, went on to say; 'Trump is actually a result in many ways of the fact that much of the news programs didn't follow up and ask tough questions.

'Twenty-four-hour news doesn't mean you get more news, it means you get the same news more. More and more and more you hear these guys, their ratings go up because they can show an empty podium saying "Donald Trump is about to speak," as opposed to taking those 30 seconds and saying, "Well, let's talk about refugees,' which is the biggest crisis going on in the world right now."'

Clooney then tied things back to the film he is promoting by saying; 'This movie is talking about one of the things that I think is a great disaster in the way we inform ourselves right now.

'We've lost the ability to get to and tell the truth and get to the facts.'

Clooney previously spoke out against Trump at the Toronto Film Festival last September, and his comments about Mexicans, saying; 'Anyone who says intolerant words should be laughed at, and I think that's what history will do.'

Cast: Clooney was on the Croisette to promote his new film Money Monster (l to r: Julia Roberts, Clooney, Caitriona Balfe and Dominic West)

Money Monster, which is getting mixed reviews, opens this Friday.

The film, which was directed by Jodie Foster and also stars Julia Roberts, Catriona Balfe, Dominic West and Jack O'Connell, was made for $27million and is projected to make a little over $10million in its opening weekend according toThe Hollywood Reporter.

Reporter critic Todd McCarthy wrote in his review that the movie 'emerges as a pretty ordinary film about an extraordinary predicament, one in which the writers contrived to bring all the principals together down on Wall Street.

'The wrap-up, and the way it too easily employs both comeuppance and tragedy, is rather too neat for real life, and there's a feel-good aspect to it as well in the way the sneaky, morals-free culprit is forced to be held to account in the most public and embarrassing way possible.