Female directors were on the up at this year's Cannes Film Festival, and Sofia Coppola was honoured with Best Director – but the film industry still has a long way to go with how women are being represented on both sides of the camera, according to one Cannes jury member.

Jessica Chastain has spoken candidly about how she found "the representation of female characters on screen" to be "disturbing", while reflecting on the festival as it came to a close.

"This is the first time I've watched 20 films in 10 days, and I love movies, and the one thing I really took away from this experience is how the world views women," Chastain told reporters after Coppola picked up the Best Director award for The Beguiled.

"It was quite disturbing to me, to be honest. There are some exceptions, I will say. For the most part, I was surprised by the representation of female characters on screen in these films."

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Award-winning filmmaker Ava DuVernay was also present at the conference, and nodded her head in agreement at Chastain's emotive comments.

"I do hope that when we include more female storytellers, we will have more of the women that I recognise in my day-to-day life," she added. "Ones that are proactive, that have their own agencies.

"They just don't react to the men around them. They have their own point of view."

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Chastain – who is an advocate for gender equality in Hollywood – recently told Variety: "I'm not taking jobs anymore where I'm getting paid a quarter of what the male co-star is being paid. I'm not allowing that in my life."

This year, the festival included 12 women directors in the official selection, up from nine last year. Coppola became the second female director to win the director award in the festival's 70-year history.

From: ELLE UK
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Naomi Gordon

Naomi Gordon is news writer mainly covering entertainment news with a focus on celebrity interviews and television.