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    Home » Women Rally At Toronto Film Festival To Combat Gender Inequality

    Women Rally At Toronto Film Festival To Combat Gender Inequality

    By SHOOTSunday, September 9, 2018Updated:Tuesday, May 14, 2024No Comments3255 Views
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    Actress Geena Davis addresses the crowd at the Share Her Journey Rally for Women in Film during the Toronto Film Festival, on Saturday, Sept. 8, 2018, in Toronto. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

    By Jake Coyle, Film Writer

    TORONTO (AP) --

    Women filmmakers, activists and actors congregated outside the hub of the Toronto International Film Festival on Saturday in a series of impassioned speeches on gender inequality in the movie industry and the power of female voices to overcome it.

    The "Share Her Journey Rally," attended by hundreds on a chilly Toronto morning, followed similar events at earlier film festivals. Ahead of the gathering, Cameron Bailey, co-head of the Toronto Film Festival, signed an inclusivity pledge to achieve gender parity in the festival's executive ranks and on its board of directors by 2020, a pledge that has been signed other festival leaders.

    "Given all the problems that we have in our world, all the sectors of society where there's tremendous gender inequality, the one area that can be fixed overnight is on-screen," said Geena Davis, founder of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media. "The very next project that someone makes— the next TV show, the next movie — can be gender balanced. It can be fixed absolutely instantly."

    She added: "No more missed opportunities."

    Davis is also a producer on the documentary "This Changes Everything," which premiered shortly after the rally on Saturday in Toronto.

    Directed by Tom Donahue ("Casting By"), it features Davis, Jessica Chastain, Shonda Rhimes, Meryl Streep, Rose McGowan and others discussing systematic sexism in Hollywood.

    "Progress will happen when men take a stand," Streep says in the film.

    Saturday's rally included tales of personal trials and triumphs and statistics capturing the long-running disparity between men and women in front of and behind the camera.

    Stacy L. Smith, whose Inclusion Initiative at USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism has been at the forefront of studies focusing on Hollywood's record of inclusivity, noted that from the top box-office films from 2007 to 2017 included only four films directed by black female filmmakers, two Asian female directors and one Latina director.

    "Every day I dream of a world in which the necessity to talk about this is absent, and where my fellow woman artists can speak about their work rather than campaign to do it," said Amma Asante, the director of "Belle," ''A United Kingdom" and the Toronto entry "Where Hands Touch."

    Smith is credited with developing the inclusion rider concept, a contractual provision that sets targets of diversity in casts and crews. She applauded WarnerMedia, the parent company of Warner Bros., for launching a company-wide diversity program last week beginning with Michael B. Jordan's forthcoming legal drama, "Just Mercy."

    "Now, other studios, call us and do the same thing," said Smith.

    Keri Putnam, executive director of Sundance Institute, sought to dispel "the myth that there is a talent shortage" for women behind the camera, noting film schools are typically half women.

    The Indian filmmaker and actor Nandita Das said that while she wants to just be treated as a person, "the identity of being a woman just doesn't leave me."

    "I would like to just be called 'a director,' and I used to get a little bit upset at being called a 'female director,'" said Das. "But now, I don't know why, for the last few years I've started owning it and saying: Yes, I'm a woman director. When we want more women directors, we've got to own it. You've got to say, 'Yes, I'm a woman director and I want more of us out here.'"

    "We have lots of stories to tell," added Das. "Please just hear them."

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    Category:News
    Tags:Cameron BaileyGeena Davisgender equalityToronto International Film Festival



    “Send Help” Remains Atop Box Office, “Melania” Plummets On A Quiet Weekend In Theaters

    Sunday, February 8, 2026

    Hollywood largely ceded attention to football over a slow box-office weekend, with the survival thriller "Send Help" repeating as No. 1 in ticket sales and the Melania Trump documentary "Melania" falling sharply in its second weekend.

    Super Bowl weekend is typically one of the lowest attended moviegoing times of the year. It was the second slowest weekend last year and in 2024 it ranked dead last for moviegoing.

    Studios instead put their focus on advertising movies for the massive television audience. Among the trailers expected to hit the NFL broadcast Sunday were The Walt Disney Co.'s "Mandalorian and Grogu," Lionsgate's Michael Jackson biopic, "Michael" and Universal Pictures' "The Super Mario Galaxy Movie."

    In North American theaters, the Disney.-20th Century Studios release "Send Help," directed by Sam Raimi, lead all films with $10 million in its second weekend, according to studio estimates Sunday. With $53.7 million globally thus far, the R-rated survival thriller has proved a solid midbudget success. Disney meanwhile watched its remarkably long-lasting "Zootopia 2" cross $1.8 billion worldwide in its 11th week of release.

    "Melania," from Amazon MGM, added 300 theaters in its second weekend but dropped steeply to $2.4 million in ticket sales, down 67% from its much-discussed debut. The rapid downturn means the Brett Ratner-directed documentary is likely heading toward flop territory given its high price tag. Amazon MGM paid $40 million for film rights, plus some $35 million to market it.

    The North American total for "Melania" stands at $13.4 million. Amazon MGM has not released international figures, though they're expected to be paltry.

    Kevin Wilson, head of domestic distribution for the studio, said the movie's... Read More

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