logo
Kristen Stewart was always ready to direct

Kristen Stewart was always ready to direct

Yahoo17-05-2025

CANNES, France (AP) — Kristen Stewart has been talking about directing as long as she's been acting. Not many people encouraged it.
'I spoke to other actors when I was really little because I was always like: 'I want to direct movies!'' Stewart recalls. 'I was fully set down by several people who were like, 'Why?' and 'No.' It's such a fallacy that you need to have an unbelievable tool kit or some kind of credential. It really is if you have something to say, then a movie can fall out of you very elegantly.'
You wouldn't necessarily say that Stewart's feature directing debut, 'The Chronology of Water,' elegantly fell out of her at the Cannes Film Festival. She arrived in Cannes after a frantic rush to complete the film, an adaptation of Lidia Yuknavitch's 2011 memoir, starring Imogen Poots. Sitting on a balcony overlooking the Croisette, Stewart says she finished the film '30 seconds before I got on an airplane.'
'It was eight years in the making and then a really accelerated push. It's an obvious comparison but it was childbirth,' says Stewart. 'I was pregnant for a really long time and then I was screaming bloody murder.'
Yet however dramatic was the arrival of 'The Chronology of Water,' it was emphatic. The film, an acutely impressionistic portrait of a brutal coming of age, is the evident work of an impassioned filmmaker. Stewart, the director, turns out to be a lot like Stewart, the actor: intensely sensitive, ferociously felt.
For Stewart, the accomplishment of 'The Chronology of Water,' which is playing in the sidebar Un Certain Regard and is up for sale in Cannes, was also a revelation about the mythology of directing.
'It's a such a male f------ thing,' she says. 'It's really not fair for people to think it's hard to make a movie insofar as you need to know things before going into it. There are technical directors, but, Jesus Christ, you hire a crew. You just have a perspective and trust it.'
'My inexperience made this movie.'
Stewart's first steps as a director came eight years ago with the short 'Come Swim,' which she also premiered in Cannes, in 2017. The festival, she says, generates the kind of questions she likes around movies. It was around then that Stewart began adapting Yuknavitch's memoir.
In it, Yuknavitch recounts her life, starting with sexual abuse from her father (an architect played by Michael Epp in the film). Competitive swimming is one of her only escapes, and it helps get her away from home and into college. Blissful freedom, self-lacerating addiction and trauma color her years from there, as does an inspirational writing experience with Ken Kesey (Jim Belushi in the film). Stewart calls the book 'a lifesaver — like, actually, a flotation device.'
'The book was this call to arms invitation to listen to your own voice, which, if you're walking around in a girl body, is really hard to do,' says Stewart. 'It fragments in a way that feels truer to my internal experience than anything I've ever read.'
'I really wanted to make something that wasn't about what happened to this person, it's about what she did with what happens to her, and what writing can do for you,' adds Stewart. 'It's like the most meta, crazy experience to have also cracked myself open at the same time.'
That goes for Poots, too, the 35-year-old British actor who, in 'The Chronology of Water,' gives one of her finest, most wide-ranging performances.
'It's Lydia's life story and the cards that were dealt her, but in terms of the reactive nature, that's the female experience,' says Poots. 'How you're surveilled, how you're supposed to respond, conform, how that's repulsive, and how you sabotage something good — all of these things are just very, very female.'
Together, Stewart and Poots have been clearly bonded by the experience. Stewart calls Poots 'a sibling now.' In Stewart's best experiences with directors, she says, it becomes such a back-and-forth exchange that the separate jobs disintegrate, and, she says, 'You're kind of sharing a body.'
'But I'm positive I said nothing useful to her ever, and I talked way too much,' says Stewart. Poots immediately disagrees: 'That's not true, Kristen!'
'Kristen is incredibly present but at the same has this ability, like a plant or something, to pick up on a slight shift in the atmosphere where it's like: 'Wait a minute,'' Poots says, causing Stewart to laugh. 'There is this insane brain at play and it's a skill set that comes in the form of an intense curiosity.'
That curiosity, now, includes directing more movies. 'The Chronology of Water' may signal not just a new chapter for one of American movies' most intrepid actors, but an ongoing artistic evolution.
'Our production was a shipwreck, so basically we had to put the boat back together,' Stewart says of the editing process. That reassembling, Stewart believes helped make 'The Chronology of Water' something less predetermined, where 'the emotional, neurological tissue that occurred between images was real.'
'There was no way to make this movie under more normal circumstances,' says Stewart, 'because then it would have been more normal.'
___
Jake Coyle has covered the Cannes Film Festival since 2012. He's seeing approximately 40 films at this year's festival and reporting on what stands out.
___
For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visit https://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AARON RODGERS, JARED GOFF, AND JORDAN LOVE HEADLINE EPISODE 5 OF CHRIS SIMMS' QUARTERBACK COUNTDOWN, NOW ON 'CHRIS SIMMS UNBUTTONED' AND 'PRO FOOTBALL TALK'
AARON RODGERS, JARED GOFF, AND JORDAN LOVE HEADLINE EPISODE 5 OF CHRIS SIMMS' QUARTERBACK COUNTDOWN, NOW ON 'CHRIS SIMMS UNBUTTONED' AND 'PRO FOOTBALL TALK'

NBC Sports

time2 hours ago

  • NBC Sports

AARON RODGERS, JARED GOFF, AND JORDAN LOVE HEADLINE EPISODE 5 OF CHRIS SIMMS' QUARTERBACK COUNTDOWN, NOW ON 'CHRIS SIMMS UNBUTTONED' AND 'PRO FOOTBALL TALK'

Simms' QB – Top 10 Countdown Begins Next Week, with QBs #10-6 Monday, June 9, and Culminates with the Top Five QBs on Tuesday, June 10; In-Depth Breakdowns for Each Ranking Weekly on Chris Simms Unbuttoned Podcast 'At the end of the year when [the Jets] were dangerous and fun to watch, [he] wasn't all that conservative. [He] was throwing lasers.'– Simms on Free Agent Aaron Rodgers 'Along with being the toughest pocket passer, also one of the most aggressive, fearless decision-makers there is in the NFL.' – Simms on Lions' Jared Goff 'He still puts fear into defensive coordinators because he's so aggressive, and he has such an easy way of throwing the ball down the field and making explosive plays that it's scary playing against him.' – Simms on Packers' Jordan Love STAMFORD, Conn. – June 4, 2025 – NBC Sports' Chris Simms continues his list of the top quarterbacks in the NFL on the Chris Simms Unbuttoned podcast and on 'PFT Live' today, headlined by four-time NFL MVP Aaron Rodgers, four-time Pro Bowler Jared Goff of the Lions, and 2020 first round pick Jordan Love of the Packers. This year's countdown features a new format, with Simms focusing on tiers and groups of quarterbacks as opposed to specific numeric rankings until the Top 10 next week. Continuing the countdown, Simms unveiled his quarterbacks ranked in the next tiers today. Simms' Top 10 QBs will be revealed next week, with QBs #10–6 Monday, June 9, and culminating with his top five on Tuesday, June 10, Simms will unveil a group of quarterbacks on each Chris Simms Unbuttoned episode and discuss his rankings on 'PFT Live' with Mike Florio. Simms, a third-round pick of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the 2003 NFL Draft who played eight NFL seasons, will also offer in-depth player breakdowns and rankings explanations throughout each week on Chris Simms Unbuttoned. Simms has had success in projecting college quarterbacks – including naming Jayden Daniels, who was named AP's 2024 Offensive Rookie of the Year following a season that saw him lead the Washington Commanders to the NFC Championship Game, as his No. 2 QB prospect in 2024. Additionally, Simms named C.J. Stroud, who was named AP's 2023 Offensive Rookie of the Year, as his top QB prospect in 2023, Patrick Mahomes as his most exciting prospect in 2017, Lamar Jackson and Josh Allen as his top-two QBs in 2018, and Justin Herbert as his No. 2 QB in 2020. The rankings will continue Monday, June 9, on the next episode of Chris Simms Unbuttoned. The following are highlights from this week's edition of Chris Simms Unbuttoned: Brock Purdy, San Francisco 49ers 'Brock Purdy still does a lot of those things really well, but just not as good as he did the two years before. I think there was a lot of things at play here. One, the positives are he tinkered with his motion. His arms and everything weren't nearly as floppy. The delivery was a little quicker. I like that aspect of him. I saw maybe more power throws than two years before when we know they went to the Super Bowl and NFC Championship Game. Throws down the middle, in-cuts where you say, 'Man, that's a nice throw right there.' But the area where it did take a step back is running the [49ers head coach Kyle] Shanahan scheme perfectly.' Aaron Rodgers, Free Agent 'Aaron Rodgers' decision-making is still pretty good. It's a hair conservative. That's the only problem. But at the end of the year when [the Jets] were dangerous and fun to watch, it wasn't all that conservative. Rodgers was throwing lasers around the field. He's not just checking it down and throwing two-yard routes. He's throwing howitzers and bombs and that was what's cool. That is where I was really encouraged with watching Rodgers. I don't think he is going to ruin the locker room.' Jared Goff, Detroit Lions 'Arguably the toughest pocket passer in the NFL. That would be my number one thing. Along with being the toughest pocket passer, also one of the most aggressive, fearless decision-makers there is in the NFL too. That's why I love watching Jared Goff. I don't sit there and wax poetically and go, 'Oh, look at his release. Oh, look at that rifle spiral.' He doesn't throw spirals all the time, that's not what it is, it is not always sexy that way. But you can't deny the results. But, the aggressive nature came back to bite him in the butt a little bit in the playoff [loss to Washington in the NFC Divisional Round].' Kyler Murray, Arizona Cardinals 'Still one of the most dynamic, physically gifted quarterbacks in the game. He is still one of the quarterbacks that is able to pull off any play. It's not just about the run game either, it's about throwing the football too. Things are on the up. There are certainly parts of his game he can still get better at and there are parts of his game that I saw him get better at. Murray can do it all and he can play the position true to form. He has become a better decision-maker. He has become better going through reads in the pocket, but the biggest issue there is his in-the-pocket play. He leaves the pocket too early and looks at the rush too soon.' Jordan Love, Green Bay Packers 'It wasn't as good last year, but there's still big-time, game-changing talent here with Jordan Love. He still puts fear into defensive coordinators because he's so aggressive, and he has such an easy way of throwing the ball down the field and making explosive plays that it's scary playing against him. He's also a guy - I've even heard defensive coaches say this—he's scary because he looks for the big play a lot. He might have a chance to take a five-yard gain, but he'll sit there and go, 'No, I'm about to see the 25- or 30-yarder coming open, so I'm going to wait for it. This is the coverage that's there.' He's great at that, and that scares people.' To listen to the full player breakdowns on Chris Simms Unbuttoned, click here. -NBC SPORTS-

Weinstein Prosecutors Invoke His Former Power as N.Y. Retrial Nears End
Weinstein Prosecutors Invoke His Former Power as N.Y. Retrial Nears End

New York Times

time3 hours ago

  • New York Times

Weinstein Prosecutors Invoke His Former Power as N.Y. Retrial Nears End

When a prosecutor rose to make her closing argument at Harvey Weinstein's retrial on sex crimes charges on Tuesday, the Manhattan courtroom's televisions showed a picture of him clad in a smart black suit, on a red carpet, smiling with his hands spread before a throng of clamoring photographers. The image, taken at a star-studded gala at the Cannes Film Festival, captured the former Hollywood producer at the height of his power — power Mr. Weinstein used to sexually assault three women, the prosecutor, Nicole Blumberg, told the jury. He took private flights, had a personal driver and attended events with dignitaries and celebrities regularly. 'I want you to remember it's not the person sitting here today in the wheelchair,' Ms. Blumberg, a prosecutor with the Manhattan district attorney's office, said, pointing to the picture: 'It's that man.' Ms. Blumberg's statements, which continued on Wednesday, will be the last arguments the jury hears before beginning its deliberations over whether to convict him on two counts of a first-degree criminal sexual act and one count of third degree rape. It is the second time in five years that Mr. Weinstein, 73, has faced a Manhattan jury. The state's highest court overturned his a 2020 conviction on sex crimes charges last year. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin Officially Call It Quits After 8 Years Together
Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin Officially Call It Quits After 8 Years Together

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin Officially Call It Quits After 8 Years Together

Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin have officially broken up, according to new report from People. The ex-couple were engaged to be married and had been an item since 2017. Breakup rumors also surfaced last summer, but a rep for Johnson said they were "happily together" at the off-again couple Dakota Johnson and Chris Martin are officially off for good, according to a new report from People. The duo were previously engaged and first started dating eight years ago, in 2017. Of the split, one source said simply, "It feels final this time." The ex-couple were last seen together just two weeks ago in Malibu, California. Before that, they were photographed together in India (Martin's band Coldplay is currently on tour). Rumors of a split initially surfaced last August, but at the time, a rep for the Materialists actress insisted the couple was "happily together." "Sure, they've had issues and taken breaks in the past, but things are great now," a source later told People. "They both love their careers. They are balancing things the best they can." Johnson and Martin had been engaged for "years" when news of their pending nuptials broke last year, however they never actually tied the knot. The duo were in "no rush to get married," according to a source who spoke to People said at the time. Of course, any plans of a wedding have now been permanently postponed. Aside from her relationship with Martin, Johnson made headlines most recently for her appearance at Cannes Film Festival, during which she low-key announced her feature film directorial debut. "The girl that plays my daughter [in Cha Cha Real Smooth], Vanessa Burkhart, she is an autistic actress and musician and brilliant person, and we have been working with her on developing a script," Johnson told reporters, per Deadline. "She's written a script, and it's really special, and it's about a young woman with autism. I feel very protective of her and her story in her mind, she's just an unbelievable woman. I just don't think I could allow anyone else to direct it. So we'll see.' Read the original article on InStyle

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