France | A hundred artists support the #metoo movement

(Paris) “It is revolting that theater and cinema serve as a cover for abuses that have nothing to do with art”: around a hundred French people from the world of culture, including director Jacques Audiard, support the #metoo movement.


The column, published Tuesday on the website ofShewas initiated by the mathematician Michel Broué, companion of Anouk Grinberg, according to the magazine.

“Over the past few years that the #metoo revolution has been taking place, we have understood how male behaviors sometimes considered harmless were experienced by women for what they were: abuse,” they write in the text.

This is signed in particular by the actors Reda Kateb, Swann Arlaud, Mathieu Amalric, the directors Jacques Audiard (whose film Emilia Perez will be in competition at Cannes) and Emmanuel Mouret, the directors Alain Françon, Thomas Jolly (also artistic director of the ceremonies for the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Paris), the historian Benjamin Stora, the journalist Edwy Plenel…

“Contrary to what we sometimes read, we do not think that ‘we are attacking men’,” they express. “The practice of equality is desirable, it takes away neither freedom nor pleasure, but increases them; it beautifies relationships,” they write again.

“We refuse to recognize ourselves in this hegemonic masculinity. For example, having to reserve gentleness and care for the feminine gender is absurd: a man cries, a man loves, a man can be upset.”

For the signatories, “it is revolting that theater and cinema serve as a cover for abuses that have nothing to do with art.” Likewise, “it is revolting to use one’s prestige, whatever it may be, to abuse the admiration it arouses.”

At stake according to them: “Sparing more than half of humanity from serious attacks”.

The French cinema sector has been shaken for several months by accusations of sexual violence which allegedly took place for years. Actress Judith Godrèche became a spearhead of this movement, after filing a complaint in early February against directors Benoît Jacquot and Jacques Doillon, for sexual and physical violence dating back to her adolescence, which the latter deny.


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