Berliner Boersenzeitung - Women directors close Cannes, putting gender imbalance in spotlight

EUR -
AED 4.18418
AFN 72.345505
ALL 94.14615
AMD 419.060304
ANG 2.039857
AOA 1044.764284
ARS 1665.100202
AUD 1.642689
AWG 2.050791
AZN 1.941648
BAM 1.954682
BBD 2.294887
BDT 139.979934
BGN 1.926468
BHD 0.429754
BIF 3403.453278
BMD 1.139328
BND 1.476056
BOB 7.890487
BRL 5.896304
BSD 1.139448
BTN 107.880294
BWP 15.494138
BYN 3.20017
BYR 22330.835112
BZD 2.291569
CAD 1.616491
CDF 2580.578112
CHF 0.922517
CLF 0.026329
CLP 1036.378473
CNY 7.718721
CNH 7.735219
COP 3924.530338
CRC 516.904339
CUC 1.139328
CUP 30.192201
CVE 110.201966
CZK 24.20606
DJF 202.903942
DKK 7.474911
DOP 66.691853
DZD 152.212235
EGP 56.643191
ERN 17.089925
ETB 183.698927
FJD 2.555342
FKP 0.860054
GBP 0.861976
GEL 3.013567
GGP 0.860054
GHS 12.789685
GIP 0.860054
GMD 83.170728
GNF 9984.289143
GTQ 8.692913
GYD 238.383648
HKD 8.932322
HNL 30.485162
HRK 7.537682
HTG 148.974789
HUF 354.579516
IDR 20418.073759
ILS 3.414794
IMP 0.860054
INR 107.95096
IQD 1492.64623
IRR 1566576.442968
ISK 143.87478
JEP 0.860054
JMD 179.35741
JOD 0.807752
JPY 184.064757
KES 147.485994
KGS 99.63461
KHR 4573.384096
KMF 491.050622
KPW 1025.395889
KRW 1750.412809
KWD 0.352075
KYD 0.949557
KZT 554.252976
LAK 25232.346027
LBP 102035.337387
LKR 381.221947
LRD 207.371387
LSL 18.789205
LTL 3.36414
LVL 0.689168
LYD 7.311818
MAD 10.6644
MDL 20.059526
MGA 4760.235439
MKD 61.67035
MMK 2391.891494
MNT 4077.656082
MOP 9.201637
MRU 45.257518
MUR 54.642279
MVR 17.613896
MWK 1975.769891
MXN 19.922466
MYR 4.717392
MZN 72.805701
NAD 18.789205
NGN 1559.063043
NIO 41.926019
NOK 11.144911
NPR 172.608271
NZD 2.006944
OMR 0.438074
PAB 1.139448
PEN 3.856994
PGK 4.997142
PHP 69.77645
PKR 316.902137
PLN 4.282564
PYG 6945.935586
QAR 4.153588
RON 5.248198
RSD 117.394087
RUB 84.936921
RWF 1670.944246
SAR 4.27737
SBD 9.188729
SCR 16.014934
SDG 684.167236
SEK 11.061015
SGD 1.476393
SHP 0.850624
SLE 28.198016
SLL 23891.149424
SOS 651.227508
SRD 42.645626
STD 23581.795972
STN 24.485994
SVC 9.970297
SYP 125.932349
SZL 18.783256
THB 37.82285
TJS 10.568155
TMT 3.999042
TND 3.372771
TOP 2.74323
TRY 52.955177
TTD 7.736575
TWD 36.070561
TZS 2991.0012
UAH 51.147544
UGX 4170.614474
USD 1.139328
UYU 45.703257
UZS 13689.989303
VES 702.812079
VND 29992.818078
VUV 135.304952
WST 3.140359
XAF 655.582017
XAG 0.018352
XAU 0.000276
XCD 3.079092
XCG 2.053525
XDR 0.813361
XOF 655.582017
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.900837
ZAR 18.785302
ZMK 10255.314604
ZMW 20.440308
ZWL 366.863255
  • RBGPF

    -0.2700

    60.34

    -0.45%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.12

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    3.4850

    179.915

    +1.94%

  • NGG

    0.4000

    81.37

    +0.49%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    18.63

    +1.23%

  • BTI

    1.9550

    60.855

    +3.21%

  • RIO

    -3.2700

    96.09

    -3.4%

  • GSK

    0.9650

    51.705

    +1.87%

  • VOD

    -0.0600

    14.06

    -0.43%

  • BCC

    0.0200

    72.56

    +0.03%

  • JRI

    -0.0290

    12.621

    -0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.1000

    21.98

    -0.45%

  • BP

    -0.2750

    39.505

    -0.7%

  • RELX

    0.3900

    31.22

    +1.25%

  • BCE

    0.3250

    22.975

    +1.41%

Women directors close Cannes, putting gender imbalance in spotlight
Women directors close Cannes, putting gender imbalance in spotlight / Photo: Antonin THUILLIER - AFP

Women directors close Cannes, putting gender imbalance in spotlight

Films by two women directors wrapped up the main competition at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday, with men once again dominating the line up in a refelction of an industry where progress towards gender parity has stalled.

Text size:

Only five out of 22 of the films in the main competition this year were directed by women, with premieres for "The Dreamed Adventure" by Germany's Valeska Grisebach and "The Birthday Party" by French filmmaker Lea Mysius taking place on the last day.

"I can't really explain it because I'm not the committee. I'm not the one who decides," Grisebach told AFP on Friday when asked about the imbalance. "I'm surrounded by many great female filmmakers."

Only three women have won the Palme d'Or for best film in the 79-year history of the world's most prestigious film festival.

In 1993, Jane Campion became the first woman to receive a Palme d'Or for "The Piano".

In 2021, French director Julia Ducournau won one for "Titane", followed by Justine Triet two years later for "Anatomy of a Fall".

French director Geraldine Nakache, who unveiled her latest film "Si Tu Penses Bien" ("If You Think So") in a parallel section of the festival, said she felt a "a bit powerless".

"I'm here with my film and I tell myself, 'I’m lucky to be here,' that things are moving forward and then someone shows me the statistics," she told AFP.

- 'Slow' -

Cannes Festival organisers drew criticism from some activists this year for using the movie "Thelma and Louise" on its official poster.

Feminist collective 50/50 accused organisers of "feminism washing" by using actors Geena Davis and Susan Sarandon for publicity purposes.

"Programming is a political act," Fanny De Casimacker from the collective told AFP. "If only 23 percent of directors (in competition) are women, we're going to miss out on some stories."

Festival supremo Thierry Fremaux stressed that all the juries and the Cannes governing body were gender equal, while the festival alone cannot correct the structural imbalances of the industry.

"If we are hesitating between two films... and that hesitation is between a film by a male director and a film by a female director, we will choose the film by the female director," he said at the start of the festival.

Although they only make up only 23 percent of the main competition, women directors account for 34 percent of all feature films picked for the official Cannes programme, which includes several parallel sections, according to festival figures.

"Today we're seeing more and more women directors in upcoming cinema, so they are gradually making their way into the competition," explained Fremaux, who has been running Cannes for two decades. "The figures show that things are moving forward, that it's slow, that it's not enough."

- 'Endemic' -

The picture is similar, or worse, in Hollywood.

A study earlier this year by the University of Southern California Annenberg Inclusion Initiative found that only nine of the 100 biggest US movies last year were directed by women.

Speaking last weekend in Cannes, "The Hours" star Julianne Moore bemoaned a drop in leading roles for women, with the number of women and girl in top-grossing movies down to 37 percent -- a 10 percent drop in one year.

"It's not endemic just to the film industry, it's global," Moore said after getting a Women In Motion award from the luxury group Kering.

"There's not representation in the media, there's not representation in higher education. There are lots of places where we don't have the representation we deserve," the actor added.

Also speaking in Cannes, two-time Oscar winner Cate Blanchett stressed how gender imbalances run throughout the industry and that progress since the #MeToo scandals about sexual abuse in 2017 has stalled.

"I'm still on film sets and I do the headcount every day, and it is still, you know… there’s 10 women and there’s 75 men every morning," she said.

(F.Schuster--BBZ)