Cannes Film Fest leaders sign pledge to improve gender equality - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:39 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Cannes Film Fest leaders sign pledge to improve gender equality

The leaders of the Cannes Film Festival have signed a gender equality pledge promising to make their selection process more transparent and to push their executive boards toward gender parity.

'We must question our history and our habits,' says Cannes director Thierry Frmaux

Cannes Film Festival Director Thierry Frmaux signs the 50/50 2020 Gender Equality Pledge in Cannes on Monday. (Joel C Ryan/Invision/Associated Press)

The leaders of the Cannes Film Festival have signed a gender equality pledge promising to make their selection process more transparent and to push their executive boards toward gender parity.

Cannes director Thierry Frmaux signed the pledge Monday in a packed tent on the Cannes beach, along with Edouard Waintrop, artistic director of Cannes' Director's Fortnight section and Charles Tesson, artistic director of Critics' Week. Watching from the front row was this year's nine-member jury, including President Cate Blanchett, Kristen Stewart, Ava DuVernay and La Seydoux.

"We hope that Cannes will welcome these new initiatives," said Frmaux.

"We hope that it will reinforce the realization that the world is not the same anymore. The world has changed."

Women are not a minority in the world, and yet our industry says the opposite.- CateBlanchett

"We must question our history and our habits," added Frmaux.

The pledge was drawn up by the French gender-parity group 50/50 by 2020, which brought in other groups including Time's Up. The same international coalition was behind Saturday's rally on the red carpet steps of Cannes' Palais des Festivales, where 82 women protested gender inequality in the film industry.

"Women are not a minority in the world, and yet our industry says the opposite," Blanchett said from the top of the Palais steps, alongside French filmmaker Agns Varda.

Their number 82 reflected the number of female directors who have been selected to show their films at Cannes' prestigious main slate. In contrast, 1,866 male directors have been selected in the festival's 71-year history.

On Saturday, 82 female film industry professionals gathered on the steps of the Palais des Festivals to protest pervasive gender inequality in the film industry. Since the Cannes Festival was created, 82 films directed by women have been included in official competition, whilst 1,645 films directed by men were selected. (Joel C Ryan/Invision/AP)

Criticism over poor record for equity

Cannes has come under repeated criticism in recent years over its poor record of selecting female filmmakers. Only one female director, Jane Campion, has won the festival's top award, the Palme d'Or.

Of the 21 films in competition this year, three are directed by women. Saturday's protest came ahead of the premiere of Eva Husson's Girls of the Sun,which is about a Kurdish battalion of women soldiers.

Monday's pledge also calls for the festival to compile statistics breaking down the gender of filmmakers and major crew members for all films submitted to Cannes. Frmauxsaid that 1,900 movies were submitted this year.

Jury members Ava DuVernay, from left, Robert Guediguian, Chang Chen, Cate Blanchett, Khadja Nin stand with Cannes director Thierry Frmaux after he signed the 50/50 2020 Gender Equality Pledge on Monday. (Joel C Ryan/Invision/Associated Press)

In the past, Frmauxhas pointed out that the Cannes festival screens films directed by women at a much higher percentage than are made in the movie industry itself. Studies have shown that women directed 11 per cent of the 250 most popular movies at the U.S. and Canada box office in 2017 a figure only slightly above the same metric 20 years ago.

"Even if there is a higher proportion of women showing films at Cannes, we're aware that it's not enough," said Frmaux.

Cannes became the first film festival to sign the pledge but it is expected to be followed by others.

Other film festivals have more aggressively pursued gender parity, including the Tribeca Film Festival, which touted its percentage of female filmmakers 46 per cent last month.

After the signing, filmmaker Rebecca Zlotowski noted it was Blanchett's birthday, and attendees serenaded the actress with a rendition of Happy Birthday.