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    Home » Scarlett Johansson, Kristen Stewart and Harris Dickinson Discuss Their Directorial Debuts

    Scarlett Johansson, Kristen Stewart and Harris Dickinson Discuss Their Directorial Debuts

    By SHOOTFriday, May 23, 2025No Comments621 Views
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    • Image 0

      Director Scarlett Johansson, from left, June Squibb and Erin Kellyman pose for photographers at the photo call for the film 'Eleanor the Great' at the 78th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Wednesday, May 21, 2025. (Photo by Scott A Garfitt/Invision/AP)

    • Image 1

      Director Harris Dickinson poses for a portrait photograph for the film 'Urchin' at the 78th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Sunday, May 18, 2025. (Photo by Joel C Ryan/Invision/AP)

    Kristen Stewart poses for photographers upon arrival at the premiere of the film 'Bono: Stories of Surrender' at the 78th international film festival, Cannes, southern France, Friday, May 16, 2025. (Photo by Lewis Joly/Invision/AP)
    CANNES, France (AP) --

    The Cannes Film Festival has played host to the directorial debuts of three stars: Scarlett Johansson, Kristen Stewart and relative newcomer Harris Dickinson.

    Their films are very different but the fulfillment of longtime dreams of being behind the camera. All three movies are part of Cannes’ Un Certain Regard section, which has helped launch the careers of directors like Yorgos Lanthimos, Lynne Ramsay and Molly Manning Walker.

    At 28, Dickinson is an up-and-coming actor, known for “Babygirl,” “Where the Crawdads Sing” and the Palme d’Or-winning “Triangle of Sadness,” who worked for years to develop his film, “Urchin.”

    Johansson, a two-time Oscar acting nominee who’s been a star since her teens and played Black Widow in multiple Marvel films, brought “Eleanor the Great,” a film about a nonagenarian who coopts her late friend’s Holocaust story, to Cannes this week.

    Stewart, also an acting Oscar nominee, debuted “The Chronology of Water,” an adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch’s 2011 memoir, last week.

    Awards for the Un Certain Regard section will be announced Friday, a day before the Cannes Film Festival closes.

    Here’s what the actors-turned-directors had to say about their first forays into creating a film from behind the camera.

    Harris Dickinson on “Urchin”
    “I wanted to direct from a very young age. I wanted to make films,” says Dickinson, who got his start as many young creators do now: on YouTube. He even had a web sketch series. “That was my first love, just making things.”

    Dickinson’s profile as an actor has exploded in recent years, but his desire to direct was so strong, he started saying no to roles.

    “‘Urchin’ was all I could think about. It was pouring out of me. It was all that was on my mind,” he said. “It’s easy to say no when you’ve got something to take you away from that, you know? Nothing that came in would make me question my own film, which is a sign that I had to make it at this time.”

    The film stars Frank Dillane as a homeless Londoner suffering from drug addiction.

    Scarlett Johansson on “Eleanor the Great”
    Johansson is now one of the world’s most recognizable stars. She’s also one of its most respected, earning two Oscar nominations in 2020, for “Marriage Story” and “Jojo Rabbit.”

    Her success as an actor helped her take on new roles on films, including producing, and, now, directing.

    “At some point, I worked enough that I stopped worrying about not working, or not being relevant — which is very liberating,” Johansson says. “I think it’s something all actors feel for a long time until they don’t. I would not have had the confidence to direct this film 10 years ago.”

    She says that throughout her career, imagining how to make movies has been part of her process: “Whether it was reading something and thinking, ‘I can envision this in my mind,’ or even being on a production and thinking, ‘I am directing some elements of this out of necessity.'”

    The New York-set “Eleanor the Great” stars June Squibb as a 94-year-old who, out of grief and loneliness, takes over her friend’s story of Holocaust survival as her own.

    Kristen Stewart on “The Chronology of Water”
    “It was eight years in the making and then a really accelerated push. It’s an obvious comparison but it was childbirth,” says Stewart of the film. “I was pregnant for a really long time and then I was screaming bloody murder.”

    Stewart in interviews has talked about challenging the myth that men are better suited to directing.

    “It’s really not fair for people to think it’s hard to make a movie insofar as you need to know things before going into it. There are technical directors, but, Jesus Christ, you hire a crew. You just have a perspective and trust it,” she said. “My inexperience made this movie.”

    Yuknavitch’s memoir recounts her surviving sexual abuse by her father and how she sought refuge in competitive swimming and, later, writing.

    While Stewart expressed doubts that she offered much to her film’s star, Imogen Poots, in terms of useful direction, the actor disagrees.

    “Kristen is incredibly present but at the same has this ability, like a plant or something, to pick up on a slight shift in the atmosphere where it’s like: ‘Wait a minute,'” Poots said, causing Stewart to laugh. “There is this insane brain at play and it’s a skill set that comes in the form of an intense curiosity.”

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    Category:News
    Tags:Cannes Film FestivalHarris DickonsonKristen StewartScarlett Johansson



    Judge Awards Blake Lively Legal Fees But No More Damages In “It Ends With Us” Dispute

    Friday, June 12, 2026

    Blake Lively can recover some legal costs from fellow actor and director Justin Baldoni but not punitive damages and other relief she sought after settling her legal claims over their 2024 film "It Ends With Us," a judge ruled Friday.

    Judge Lewis J. Liman said in a written decision that Lively can recover legal fees and costs related to her defense against a countersuit Baldoni brought against her after she sued him in December 2024.

    In his written ruling Friday, Liman cited a California law designed to protect survivors of sexual harassment and discrimination from retaliatory lawsuits meant to intimidate and silence victims.

    The judge said the law requires that the plaintiff must pay the defendant's legal fees and costs if a defamation claim made in response to a lawsuit is dismissed, even if the facts of the case have not been developed through the gathering of evidence.

    Liman said an exception would be if Baldoni and his production company, Wayfarer Studios LLC, could prove malice fueled Lively's claims, but that Baldoni and Wayfarer had produced no evidence to show that.

    The judge rejected her claims to triple any damages and pursue punitive damages as well under the California law, saying that they did not fall within "carefully crafted federal procedural rules designed to protect the rights of the parties."

    Lively and Baldoni settled the bulk of their dispute last month just as a trial was about to start on Lively's retaliation claims. She received no money from the deal but was permitted to pursue legal fees.

    In their statements, both sides cast Liman's ruling as a victory.

    Lively lawyers Michael Gottlieb and Esra Hudson said the award of legal fees "makes it clear that Ms. Lively brought her claims in... Read More

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