logo
Why Kristen Stewart Calls Womanhood "Really Violent"

Why Kristen Stewart Calls Womanhood "Really Violent"

Buzz Feed23-05-2025

Kristen Stewart is making her feature film directorial debut with The Chronology of Water, and now she's sharing the reason why she pursued this deeply personal project.
The movie is a biographical drama based on the memoir of the same name by Lidia Yuknavitch. It follows an aspiring Olympic swimmer who flees her abusive home life thanks to a Texas scholarship, but later loses the scholarship due to an addiction. She eventually finds solace through writing and her journey of self-discovery, ultimately learning how to transform trauma into art. Kristen co-wrote the screenplay with Lidia's husband, film producer Andy Mingo.
While promoting The Chronology of Water at the 78th annual Cannes Film Festival in France, Kristen sat down with Brut India to discuss this harrowing story about physical and sexual violence against women.
"Because being a woman is a really violent experience," Kristen began saying, when asked why she wanted to tell this story. "Even if you don't have the sort of extreme experience that we depict in the film, or that Lydia endured and came out of beautifully."
"To be able to take really ugly things, metabolize them, process them, and put out something that you can live with...something that actually has joy — pain and pleasure, there's a hairline fracture there. They're so tied."
"Women are — not to be dramatic, it's just these are facts — we are secrets. We are walking secrets." She then reflected on how she feels women are viewed in the world — "We wanna see you, we don't wanna hear you. Don't tell us how you feel; it makes us uncomfortable." "The thing is," Kristen continued, "we're harboring a lot of violence all of the time, and it's even in the imagery we consume."
Kristen believes women, or as she described it, "anyone who is open and bleeding, which is 50 percent of the population," will really resonate with the themes in the film because of a lot of the shared experiences women have dealt with as a collective.
"The stories we tell ourselves are very, very important, and finding your fellows, and being able to allow that story to evolve constantly, and that you can change every day, and that there's not a fixed state...that's what keeps us thriving, moving forward, everything."
"I'm not alone in that. That's how we stay alive."
I love how passionately she speaks of this project and everyone involved in it. You can watch Kristen's full Brut India interview below:

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mexican band Grupo Firme cancels festival appearance because of US visa issue
Mexican band Grupo Firme cancels festival appearance because of US visa issue

USA Today

time4 hours ago

  • USA Today

Mexican band Grupo Firme cancels festival appearance because of US visa issue

Mexican band Grupo Firme cancels festival appearance because of US visa issue The Tijuana-based regional music group is among a growing number of Mexican musicians who have had abrupt visa issues. Show Caption Hide Caption Spotted: Pedro Pascal in economy class on his way to Cannes Actor Pedro Pascal went viral for his comments on U.S. immigration at Cannes Film Festival. The Mexican band Grupo Firme canceled their headlining June 1 performance at a California music festival because the group said their visas were currently in an 'administrative process' to enter the country. The Tijuana-based regional Mexican music group is among a growing number of Mexican musicians who have had abrupt visa issues, sometimes for alleged ties to drug cartels, during the second Trump administration. It wasn't immediately clear what caused visa issues for Grupo Firme to enter the country for their June 1 performance at La Onda Fest, in Napa Valley. The band offered no further details aside from a May 30 post on Instagram Stories. The post said the United States Embassy currently had visas in an 'administrative process' for bandmates and their record label, Music VIP. This made it 'impossible' for them to attend the Mexican music festival. 'We are sorry for the inconvenience that this may cause,' the post said in Spanish. 'We appreciate your understanding and, above all, the love of our fans in the United States.' In an emailed response, the Department of State said visa records are confidential by law, so they couldn't comment on the case. Officials didn't respond to questions about the basis for the visa issue, or about the 'administrative process' the band described. The group said they would share news of their return to the United States when they can make new plans. Mexican singer Julión Álvarez said he had his visa revoked ahead of a sold-out May 24 show at AT&T Stadium, the home of the Dallas Cowboys. In 2017, Álvarez had his visa revoked after being accused of ties to a drug trafficker, though he denied this. He was taken off a list in 2022, and he was in the country as recently as April to perform three sold-out shows at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles. Earlier this year, the State Department revoked the visas for Los Alegres del Barranco, after the band displayed an image of Mexican drug lord Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, known as "El Mencho,' at a concert in Mexico in late March. The group had an American tour planned. On X, Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau confirmed the department canceled Los Alegres' work and tourist visas for "glorifying" Oseguera Cervantes, who is head of the Jalisco New Generation Cartel. In 2021, Grupo Firme won a Latin Grammy for best banda album. The group is known for songs such as "Ya Supérame" and "Cada Quién." But in February, the group canceled a festival performance in Mazatlán, in the Mexican state of Sinaloa, after being threatened by a suspected drug cartel. The threat reportedly came in the form of a narcomanta – a banner used by drug cartels to communicate messages – displayed on a bridge, as well as a severed human head found nearby, addressed to Grupo Firme. Grupo Firme has sought to distance itself from music known as narcocorridos, or drug ballads, that have gained an international following, coinciding with a global rise in the popularity of regional Mexican music. States in Mexico have sought to ban the subgenre of corridos, or Mexican ballads. In April, Grupo Firme's lead singer, Eduin Caz, said the group doesn't perform narcocorridos. Their music, focused on love and heartbreak, 'has fed us very well,' he said at a press conference. La Onda Fest was set to take place May 31 to June 1, with Grupo Firme slated as the last act on the second day. The festival said Tito Double P, a corridos singer from Sinaloa, would replace Grupo Firme.

Fan-favourite Toronto hockey star Emma Maltais on her love of fashion and life in the PWHL spotlight
Fan-favourite Toronto hockey star Emma Maltais on her love of fashion and life in the PWHL spotlight

Hamilton Spectator

time6 hours ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Fan-favourite Toronto hockey star Emma Maltais on her love of fashion and life in the PWHL spotlight

When hockey player Emma Maltais — Toronto Sceptres team member, Olympic gold medal winner, three-time world champion — pauses to reflect on this moment in her life, 'a little overwhelmed' is the phrase she uses. 'It's day-to-day survival,' says Maltais. When we speak with her, she's at home in Toronto, freshly returned from a Sceptres away game in Minnesota and already packing to join Team Canada in the Czech Republic at the Women's World Championship. (They'd claim silver in a nail-biting 4-3 final against the U.S.) Her packed schedule is a direct result of the enthusiasm that has greeted the PWHL [Professional Women's Hockey League] since it launched in 2023, its packed arenas and cheering crowds reflecting the global groundswell for women's professional sports . 'It's a lot, and it's something that all of us aren't used to,' says Maltais. 'When you add the attention that the PWHL has gotten and the attention I've been lucky enough to have, sometimes there can be pressure with that, and responsibility.' Here's how she's navigating it. Maltais is a forward known for her scrappy style and cheeky comebacks, and she's emerged as one of the league's fan favourites. 'I would die for this woman,' wrote one Reddit commenter underneath a video of Maltais' off-the-cuff comments while mic'd up during a game. 'I love Emma's energy,' says another. On TikTok, Maltais documents her life as a professional athlete — locker room pranks, bus rides to games, days off in the cities the teams travel to. One of her viral videos, which has 1.2 million views, features her Sceptres teammates pulling disgusted faces in reaction to a comment about how women playing professional hockey can't be taken seriously. Maltais happens to be five foot two, a beacon to short people who've felt their height was an obstacle to athletic success. 'I don't want to say that it's adversity, but it's something that a lot of women deal with,' she says with a laugh. 'It's important to see that it's still possible if you're short — and it's possible to be one of the stronger, tougher players.' A post shared by Emma Maltais (@emmamaltais17) The growing opportunities for athlete fashion collabs — like a recent Barbie x PWHL fashion collection — are pure joy for Maltais, who loves a 'really high heel,' the butter yellow trend and a hair bow; her most recent purchase is a pink Coach Tabby bag. 'When I was growing up and playing hockey with the boys, I was put into a shirt and tie and I would have to wear the same boys' peacoat,' she says. 'I remember a couple years later, running into one of the boys' parents and they were like, 'Oh Emma, you look girlie,' and I was like, 'Yeah, because I am a girl.'' To her, the PWHL letting players express 'their own unique style' feels like progress. 'I love the feeling when someone looks at me and says, 'Oh I like your outfit, it's different,'' she says. 'I also love feeling powerful in a great outfit.' Emma Maltais in a recent Bravado bra campaign. 'A bra is just another piece of clothing,' says Maltais, who recently starred in a campaign for Bravado Designs, now the PWHL official bra partner. 'It's a miss that we don't talk about it.' The sooner we can dissolve the stigma around bra-wearing, and other women's issues, the better, she adds. So what is a pro athlete looking for in a sports bra? 'Support, so I don't feel like I'm all over the place,' she says. 'I also look for comfort, softness, and a bra that's not digging in. Also, is it pretty? That's important.' Her own bra wardrobe has benefited from this partnership. 'I've had sports bras in my closet that are as old as when I started wearing bras,' she says. '[Working with Bravado] was the first time in 15 years that I actually got my breasts sized and felt good in a bra that wasn't a janky old sports bra where the seams were coming out.' Maltais recognizes that she's part of this trail-blazing vanguard because her own career is blooming at the exact right time. 'There are so many women before me who wish they had gotten the opportunity to play in the PWHL,' says Maltais. Many of her high school friends who played sports have told her they wish they'd known women's pro sports would grow this much, because they wouldn't have dropped out. 'When I zoom out and think about the position I'm in, I'm eternally grateful,' she says. But being around powerhouses like her teammate Sarah Nurse has taught her to keep expanding her ambition. 'As women, we tend to be very grateful for our opportunities, but it doesn't mean we should put limits on things.' She measures success on two levels: The scoreboard on game day, and her impact on the community, like when a young girl asks her for a photo and tells her that she's playing hockey now. 'Those are times where you really realize the impact you can have.'

Denzel Washington Receives Surprise Honorary Palme D'Or Award at Cannes
Denzel Washington Receives Surprise Honorary Palme D'Or Award at Cannes

Epoch Times

time10 hours ago

  • Epoch Times

Denzel Washington Receives Surprise Honorary Palme D'Or Award at Cannes

CANNES, France—Actor Denzel Washington received a surprise honorary Palme d'Or award at the Cannes Film Festival on Monday evening in recognition of his outstanding career, according to organizers. Washington, 70, was in southern France for the premiere of director Spike Lee's latest film 'Highest 2 Lowest,' an adaptation of legendary Japanese filmmaker Akira Kurosawa's 'High and Low,' which also celebrated its premiere on Monday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store