Shoes kick up dust at Cannes
CANNES, FRANCE The Cannes Film Festival faces scrutiny for its strict dress code after women not wearing high heels were turned away from a première.
Many are criticizing the festival after Screen International reported that several middle-aged women were refused entry to Sunday’s première of Todd Haynes’s ’50s lesbian romance, Carol, for wearing flats. On Tuesday, actress Emily Blunt called the report “very disappointing, obviously.”
“Everyone should wear flats, to be honest, at the best of times,” said Blunt, who was there to première the Mexican drug war thriller Sicario. “You kind of think that there’s these new waves of equality.”
Director Denis Villeneuve joked that he and his male stars, Benicio Del Toro and Josh Brolin, would wear heels to the evening première of Sicario in protest.
The red carpet at Cannes is highly regulated by tradition. Men must wear tuxedos with bow ties and black shoes, and women are expected to wear dresses with heels. The dress code isn’t explicitly spelled out by the festival but is enforced by security guards or “hosts.”
Festival spokeswoman Christine Aimé suggested that festival staff had made a mistake.
“There is no specific mention about the height of the women’s heels, as well as for men’s,” Aimé said of the dress code. “Thus, in order to make sure that this rule is respected, the festival’s hosts and hostesses were reminded of it.”
Some were already calling the incident “Shoegate. ”Asif Kapadia, the director of the Amy Winehouse documentary Amy, added on Twitter that his wife was also initially refused entry to his film’s Cannes première on Saturday because she wasn’t wearing heels, but she was eventually allowed in.
The dust-up is particularly awkward for Cannes because this year’s festival has been marked by considerable discussion about gender equality in the movie industry.