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The Venice Film Festival Has Only One Film Directed By A Woman

Photo: Courtesy of 22 Hour Films.
Actress Annette Bening, the jury president of the festival, has responded to the criticism about the lack of female directors in this year's lineup, and she's not perturbed.
"I was thrilled to be asked to be here, so I didn’t count the number of films that were accepted that were directed by women," she told the Hollywood Reporter. "I know that most people that I know, whether they’re veterans or newcomers, or they’re men or women, most people struggle to get their movies made. And there is a lot of sexism, of course that exists. There’s no question. But I think things are changing. The more that we, as women, can make films that speak to everyone, we can be regarded as filmmakers."
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Original story follows.
International film festivals boast lineups that include projects imagined by quirky industry newcomers as well as seasoned creators — but not, apparently, if they're directed by women. At least, that seems to be the case with the Venice Film Festival, which has just one female-directed project in its roster of 21 movies. It's called Angels Wear White, directed by Vivian Qu.
"I don't think it's our fault," Alberto Barbera, director of the festival, told The Hollywood Reporter about the gender gap. "I don't like to think in terms of a quota when you make a selection process. I'm sorry that there are very few films from women this year, but we are not producing films."
Qu, the sole female director, also doesn't blame the festival.
"Of course I wish there were more female filmmakers presented in the festival (or in any festival)," she told the outlet. "[But] to go to the root of the problem, if more women were encouraged to work in film and had the opportunity to take on major creative roles, I'm sure we will see more and more films by women."
Back in May, Jessica Chastain, who called out a similar disparity during the Cannes Film Festival, pointed out just how far-reaching the effects of this underrepresentation can spread.
"This is the first time I’ve watched 20 films in 10 days," she said at a panel during the festival (which, for the record, had only the female-directed films in its lineup). "I love movies, and the one thing I really took away from this experience is how the world views women from the female characters that I saw represented. It was quite disturbing, to be honest.”
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When women aren't behind the camera, the women in front of the camera suffer.
"There are some exceptions, I will say. But for the most part, I was surprised with the representation of female characters on screen in these films," she continued. "The women that I recognize in my day-to-day life — ones that are proactive, have their own agencies, don’t just react to the men around them — they have their own point of view."
It's not enough to just encourage women to get involved — the people who hold the keys have to change their attitudes as well.

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