Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Deadline

Coralie Fargeat Pulls ‘The Substance’ From Camerimage Lineup Over Festival Director’s Controversial Op-Ed About Women Cinematographers

Zac Ntim
3 min read
Generate Key Takeaways

French filmmaker Coralie Fargeat has pulled her latest feature The Substance from Poland’s Camerimage Film Festival following the fallout of a controversial op-ed written by the festival’s founder and head Marek ?ydowicz.

Fargeat posted a short statement on her X account Friday morning announcing the move. The filmmaker also said the film’s director of photography Benjamin Kra?un would not be traveling to the cinematography-focused festival. Kra?un had been scheduled to take part in Q&A sessions at the festival.

More from Deadline

Advertisement
Advertisement

“After discovering the highly misogynistic and offensive words of the director of the Camerimage Film Festival, I have decided to pull ‘The Substance’ from the festival (and [director of photography] Benjamin Kra?un has decided not to attend),” Fargeat wrote.

“‘The Substance’ is about the impact of exactly these types of behaviors on our world. We shouldn’t tolerate them anymore. We send our support to all involved in the festival and hope this decision will help create a much needed change.”

In his much-criticized article titled Time for Solidarity, published last week in the craft magazine Cinematography World, ?ydowicz outlined the path he believes the cinematography-focused festival can take as the wider film industry continues to change at speed. The greatest change, ?ydowicz hypothesized, was the growing prominence of women cinematographers and directors. The thesis of ?ydowicz’s article, however, was quickly denounced by industry professionals and unions who said it was sexist.

The parts that have drawn widespread criticism online are a portion where ?ydowicz writes: “‘Can we sacrifice works and artists with outstanding artistic achievements solely to make room for mediocre productions?”

Advertisement
Advertisement

Another highlighted by filmmakers such as Reed Morano and Fabian Wagner read: “While EnergaCamerimage strives to acknowledge the contributions of women in cinematography, it also aims to maintain artistic integrity. Change? Yes, but let’s remain decent and honest. It’s about rapid evolution, not a fanatical revolution that destroys the cathedrals of art and throws out its sculptures and paintings.”

?ydowicz’s article was promptly denounced by multiple industry organizations such as the British Society of Cinematographers, which said ?ydowicz’s words represented an “outdated notion of male superiority in the field and equate fairer gender representation with a drop in artistic values.” Filmmaker Steve McQueen also stepped back from a scheduled appearance at the fest where set to introduce his last feature Blitz and receive an honorary award.

The BSC’s statement was quickly supported by the American Society of Cinematographers, which reshared the letter on its website. Similar statements have since been shared by almost a dozen industry unions, including the Canadian Society of Cinematographers, the Society of Camera Operators, and the Women Cinematographers Network Of Germany, Austria & Switzerland.

Camerimage is set to kick off this weekend in Torun, Poland with a screening of Blitz. McQueen had also been set to receive an honorary award at the festival. Camerimage is set to close with a screening of Universal’s Wicked remix starring Ariana Grande. Cate Blanchett will head the competition jury.

Best of Deadline

Sign up for Deadline's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

Solve the daily Crossword

The Daily Crossword was played 10,288 times last week. Can you solve it faster than others?
CrosswordCrossword
Crossword
Advertisement
Advertisement