USA TODAY US Edition

Including female directors is still the talk of the town

Controvers­y lingers as just 3 of 20 films are headed by women

- Bryan Alexander @BryAlexand USA TODAY

Last year’s edition of Cannes Film Festival prompted an outcry when only two female directors were chosen out of 19 spots in the main competitio­n.

One year later, with the 2016 festival underway, this number has inched in a positive direction — emphasis on “inched.” Three films (out of 20) helmed by women are competing for the festival’s top prize, the Palme d’Or. That’s 15%. With Andrea Arnold’s American Honey and Nicole Garcia’s From the

Land of the Moon having premiered Sunday, and Maren Ade’s well-received dramedy Toni Erdmann Saturday, all of the female directors have shown their competitio­n films this year — with the festival not even halfway complete.

But the conversati­on of how to improve the situation, not only in Cannes but industrywi­de, will rage on well beyond the festival close on May 22.

“These are all really big artistic questions,” says Money Monster director Jodie Foster, the only female director with a film in an out-of-competitio­n showcase. “But they are not going to be served by a dialogue that’s oversimpli­fied.”

Foster says the festival “is doing well in programmin­g ” and opposes the idea of pressuring for increased numbers or quotas. Instead, she takes aim at a riskadvers­e Hollywood system that doesn’t allow women to direct films.

“With large investment­s in these major franchise films, (the studio heads) are scared to hire anyone they see as a risk. And for some reason, women count as

risks,” Foster says.

“That’s the part we have to figure out: Why are women viewed as risks?”

Money Monster star George Clooney also believes representa­tion needs to be addressed on the macro level. Right now, Clooney says, there’s a short list of predominat­ely male directors who can get a project green-lighted.

“We need to expand that list considerab­ly,” he says. “We need to stop playing in a 30-year-old swimming pool. We need to open this pool up.”

Kristen Stewart, who stars in two films at 2016’s festival, seeks to work in that pool. Stewart has been funded and green-lighted to direct her first short film with the aim of eventually taking on a feature film.

She bristles at the discussion of director representa­tion at the festival but knows the discourse is vital to improve the situation.

“We alienate ourselves (as women) completely by talking about it,” Stewart says. “But there’s no way to actually affect change without talking about it.”

Stewart, 26, is heartened that the dialogue has a different tenor altogether when she talks to even younger aspiring filmmakers. With the next generation, she says, the gender of the person behind the camera doesn’t matter.

“With these kids, the acceptance (of the director) and fluidity, that is so second nature. I’m like, ‘Dude, that was not like that when I was in high school,’ ” she says. “I think things are going to change really quickly based on desire.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Actress Marion Cotillard and director Nicole Garcia of From the Land of the Moon, adapted from the novel by Milena Agus.
GETTY IMAGES Actress Marion Cotillard and director Nicole Garcia of From the Land of the Moon, adapted from the novel by Milena Agus.
 ?? ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA ?? George Clooney and Jodie Foster on the set of Money Monster. Foster is the only woman with an out-of-competitio­n film.
ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA George Clooney and Jodie Foster on the set of Money Monster. Foster is the only woman with an out-of-competitio­n film.
 ?? JULIEN WARNAND, EPA ?? British director Andrea Arnold took her film
American Honey to Cannes.
JULIEN WARNAND, EPA British director Andrea Arnold took her film American Honey to Cannes.

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