The Daily Telegraph

Thelma and Louise

Film would not be made now, say stars

- By Hannah Furness in Cannes

IT WAS the original feminist roadtrip movie, nominated for six Oscars and tipped as heralding a new era for women in film.

But Thelma and Louise might not even get made today, according to its stars, as Susan Sarandon said it would have to be turned into “an animation”.

Sarandon, who played Louise in the 1991 film, said corporate studios were now increasing­ly staffed by men who were taught to commission films by formula and lacked the imaginatio­n to see women in leading roles.

Speaking at the Cannes Film Festival to celebrate 25 years since the release of Thelma and Louise, Sarandon and co-star Geena Davis lamented the lack of progress in Hollywood since their landmark film.

When asked if she thought it would ever get commission­ed today, Sarandon said: “Maybe as an animation? I mean, everybody thought that there were going to be so many more buddy films [afterwards]. Well I don’t think the studios have fallen off their horse and had some kind of epiphany about women in film.

“After Thelma and Louise, they predicted there would be so many films starring women. But it didn’t happen.”

Speaking at a Kering Women in Motion event, part of a festival-long series, Davis added: “And that’s one of the really uncomforta­ble things, because when they said that, I believed it. It didn’t happen.

“The thing about film is, it can change overnight. It isn’t like real life, where it takes so long to get women to be half of Congress or boards or CEOs. The next movie somebody makes can be gender balanced. We don’t have to sneak up on it, just do it.”

When asked about what was holding Hollywood back, Sarandon said: “There are still many more male executives making these decisions. Hollywood has become more and more corporate.

“Whereas women can see a woman or a man in a leading role, I don’t think it’s as easy for a guy to see a woman in a leading role and say, ‘I’ll get behind that.’ I think it’s a cultural thing, and that’s part of what slows it down: a lack of imaginatio­n on the part of men.”

She joked that she, too, would not survive as a modern celebrity starting out today, with scrutiny over the every move of actresses.

On the issue of equal pay, Sarandon argued that Hollywood actors were “all paid prepostero­usly considerin­g what we do. But why should we not be paid as prepostero­usly as men?”

Speaking of the reaction to the original release of Thelma and Louise, which sees the leading characters on the run after getting into trouble with the law, Sarandon said: “I don’t know if you remember, but there were a lot of people who were very offended by the movie.

“Because women having those kind of options got people upset, suddenly we were accused of condoning suicide, which was ridiculous.”

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 ??  ?? Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis pictured at the Cannes Film Festival a quarter of a century after their film Thelma and Louise
Susan Sarandon and Geena Davis pictured at the Cannes Film Festival a quarter of a century after their film Thelma and Louise

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