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Standing her ground

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ACTORS must learn to just say “no” to roles that objectify women, Oscar-winning French actor Juliette Binoche said at the San Sebastian film festival where she was honoured with an award for her acting career.

“You have to know how to say no to things so that you don’t end up in a kind of situation where you are seen in a certain way,” added Binoche, who is one of France’s most recognised actors.

When she was offered roles where she was “somebody’s woman, or objectifie­d as a woman”, she turned them down.

“I just said ‘no’ because I wasn’t interested,” the 58-yearold told reporters, admitting that she felt “very lucky” to have played so many interestin­g parts throughout her career.

“I know there are women who are victims of this ... but you have to know how to reject this kind of codified cinema,” said Binoche whose role in

The English Patient

(1996) won her an

Oscar in the best

French actress binoche receives the donostia lifetime achievemen­t award in recognitio­n of her prestigiou­s film career during the 70th san sebastian Film Festival. —aFp supporting actress category “It’s not always easy but you have to know how to take a leap into the unknown where these chauvinist­ic codes no longer apply.”

Binoche, who has taken on some 75 different parts since her silver screen debut in 1983, says she tries to “never judge a role, but to embrace it with all its contradict­ions, all its darkness, and for what ultimately makes it human”. “And when a storyline leads to an evolution or a transforma­tion, that’s what interests me most.” – AFP

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