Daily Dispatch

French film festival embraces #MeToo

Colcoa hits Hollywood, celebratin­g women talent

- The Party is Over, Custody, Persepolis, The Dark Knight Rises, Skyfall, Captain Phillips Fast and Furious 6. (Inglouriou­s Basterds), The Adopted, Dawn, Proud, Diving. of the Orchid) (Return of the Hero). Promise at The Prayer, (Dog), (Get Out Your Handk

THE world’s largest festival of French film hits Hollywood this month embracing the #MeToo moment, with a line-up dedicated to the country’s best women filmmaking talent.

The 22nd Colcoa is offering a record 86 films, television shows, digital series and virtual reality experience­s – many never seen before in the United States, as well as a handful of internatio­nal and US premieres.

It is the first edition of the annual event since the Harvey Weinstein sex abuse scandal that sparked the #MeToo and Time’s Up campaigns, and the programme reflects the push to celebrate the work of women.

“Through its different competitio­ns, we are proud to dedicate this year’s programmin­g of Colcoa to women, both in their role in the making of the films and series, and their central roles in the majority of the stories selected this year,” executive producer Francois Truffart said.

Originally styled “City of Lights, City of Angels”, Colcoa boasts about 75 entrants for a slew of honours, including the audience award, best documentar­y, best TV movie, critics award and critics special prize.

With the film industry still reeling from the shock of the sexual harassment and assault firestorm that ended the careers of Weinstein and numerous other powerful Hollywood figures, the woman aspect of many Colcoa entrants should resonate on both sides of the Atlantic.

These include Oscar-nominated Xavier Legrand’s feature debut

a social realist thriller about a violent abuser who forces his way back into his ex’s life that won best director and debut at the Venice film festival.

another feature directoria­l debut, this time from Marie Garel-Weiss, is about two women who bond as they battle drug addiction, becoming inseparabl­e.

More than half of the selection of short films are by women, while panels will address the role of women in the French film industry and first films directed by women.

Over at the festival’s virtual reality corner, an experience called Uturn examines the gender gap from both sides, with interwoven stories that allow the viewer to embody either a woman or man character.

The experience was created by Nathalie Mathe, a Nasa scientist turned filmmaker and VR specialist whose credits include

and

“For 50 years women have been told how they should adapt and learn to survive to succeed in male-dominated industries like tech and media,” she said about the project.

Mathe said that while a few women had risen to the top of their field, the vast majority were still under-represente­d and under-valued – an assertion borne out in numerous studies of employment patterns in showbusine­ss.

“Now is the time for changing strategy. Men need to see gender issues as their problem too, an overall outdated cultural framework that needs to be reframed,” Mathes said.

Colcoa also boasts a focus on filmmaker and actress Melanie Laurent

screening her first movie, before a discussion about her career, followed by a US premiere screening of her latest film,

The festival opens on April 23, with the North American premiere of writer-director Eric Barbier’s

a celebratio­n of motherhood starring Pierre Niney and Charlotte Gainsbourg.

It closes a week later with the North American premiere of Cedric Kahn’s study of a religious sanctuary for recovering addicts, which won newcomer Anthony Bajon best actor at Berlin’s film festival.

Colcoa is nothing if not glamorous and other big internatio­nal names sprinkling stardust on the festival include Vanessa Paradis Gerard Depardieu

), Charlotte Rampling

and Jean Dujardin

In the documentar­y section, highlights include which follows the work of Salim Shaheen, a chubby Afghan actor who is his country’s one-man film industry.

A gonzo director who has made 111 movies on a shoestring in a country where just watching one can get you killed, he and his endearingl­y band of actors are the stars of the documentar­y.

The television competitio­n features 12 series and TV movies, including the internatio­nal premiere of

a three-part miniseries dealing with gay rights spanning 30 years in France. —

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