The Prague Post - 'Being a woman is a violent experience,' says Kristen Stewart

EUR -
AED 4.159231
AFN 78.828432
ALL 98.314578
AMD 433.372294
ANG 2.026609
AOA 1038.399083
ARS 1294.312448
AUD 1.756536
AWG 2.041127
AZN 1.926224
BAM 1.960521
BBD 2.27583
BDT 137.170316
BGN 1.960467
BHD 0.42695
BIF 3353.88754
BMD 1.132387
BND 1.46118
BOB 7.788756
BRL 6.418709
BSD 1.127089
BTN 96.419571
BWP 15.211294
BYN 3.688601
BYR 22194.782574
BZD 2.264102
CAD 1.57348
CDF 3221.640165
CHF 0.932187
CLF 0.027823
CLP 1067.704883
CNY 8.175722
CNH 8.16122
COP 4726.243063
CRC 570.360877
CUC 1.132387
CUP 30.008252
CVE 110.534591
CZK 24.901383
DJF 200.70889
DKK 7.459327
DOP 66.35833
DZD 150.185489
EGP 56.502591
ERN 16.985803
ETB 152.977704
FJD 2.56203
FKP 0.847929
GBP 0.843351
GEL 3.103037
GGP 0.847929
GHS 13.751114
GIP 0.847929
GMD 82.107753
GNF 9763.338357
GTQ 8.653411
GYD 235.817866
HKD 8.865021
HNL 29.335995
HRK 7.535018
HTG 147.541381
HUF 402.132109
IDR 18570.691648
ILS 3.996079
IMP 0.847929
INR 96.947886
IQD 1476.536042
IRR 47687.638544
ISK 144.900004
JEP 0.847929
JMD 179.227636
JOD 0.802858
JPY 162.934627
KES 145.863117
KGS 99.027155
KHR 4511.745066
KMF 495.419573
KPW 1019.101417
KRW 1569.646892
KWD 0.347428
KYD 0.939249
KZT 577.061961
LAK 24376.161327
LBP 101382.989972
LKR 339.149207
LRD 225.447826
LSL 20.288909
LTL 3.343644
LVL 0.68497
LYD 6.178742
MAD 10.43593
MDL 19.611794
MGA 5087.13787
MKD 61.532437
MMK 2377.283514
MNT 4049.866235
MOP 9.087062
MRU 44.645524
MUR 52.055852
MVR 17.506859
MWK 1954.463334
MXN 21.81934
MYR 4.839822
MZN 72.365778
NAD 20.289089
NGN 1806.840519
NIO 41.478785
NOK 11.567366
NPR 154.258058
NZD 1.905909
OMR 0.435941
PAB 1.127114
PEN 4.160263
PGK 4.687204
PHP 62.937492
PKR 318.751438
PLN 4.242657
PYG 9002.479845
QAR 4.120195
RON 5.064377
RSD 117.308227
RUB 91.296654
RWF 1593.000887
SAR 4.246963
SBD 9.44086
SCR 16.081678
SDG 680.009805
SEK 10.865988
SGD 1.462642
SHP 0.889878
SLE 25.676068
SLL 23745.586629
SOS 644.136906
SRD 41.501798
STD 23438.121847
SVC 9.862619
SYP 14723.253721
SZL 20.282394
THB 37.106074
TJS 11.576644
TMT 3.969016
TND 3.383071
TOP 2.652163
TRY 43.976473
TTD 7.652258
TWD 34.136371
TZS 3054.614797
UAH 46.719773
UGX 4117.916228
USD 1.132387
UYU 47.226853
UZS 14492.707468
VES 107.218833
VND 29400.726396
VUV 137.48081
WST 3.057879
XAF 657.525851
XAG 0.034289
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.060332
XDR 0.817751
XOF 657.525851
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.185326
ZAR 20.271253
ZMK 10192.840325
ZMW 30.553901
ZWL 364.628109
  • SCS

    -0.1000

    10.25

    -0.98%

  • JRI

    0.0300

    12.82

    +0.23%

  • BCC

    -1.2700

    89.92

    -1.41%

  • CMSD

    0.0015

    22.17

    +0.01%

  • CMSC

    0.1000

    22.26

    +0.45%

  • RIO

    -0.1500

    62.24

    -0.24%

  • NGG

    0.9900

    73.42

    +1.35%

  • AZN

    0.2300

    69.92

    +0.33%

  • BTI

    0.8600

    44.44

    +1.94%

  • GSK

    0.4400

    38.4

    +1.15%

  • RBGPF

    67.2000

    67.2

    +100%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    21.66

    +0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    54.99

    -0.07%

  • BP

    -0.2000

    29.2

    -0.68%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    11

    +0.73%

  • VOD

    0.7500

    10.39

    +7.22%

'Being a woman is a violent experience,' says Kristen Stewart
'Being a woman is a violent experience,' says Kristen Stewart / Photo: Sameer AL-DOUMY - AFP

'Being a woman is a violent experience,' says Kristen Stewart

"I can't wait to make 10 more movies," Kristen Stewart told AFP the morning after making what Rolling Stone called "one hell of a directorial debut" at the Cannes film festival.

Text size:

Nor can film critics judging from the rave reviews of "The Chronology of Water", her startling take on the American swimmer Lidia Yuknavitch's visceral memoir of surviving abuse as a child.

All the producers who Stewart said passed on her script, saying its subject matter made it "really unattractive" to audiences, must now be crying into their champagne.

Variety called it "a stirring drama of abuse and salvation, told with poetic passion", while Indiewire critic David Ehrlich said "there isn't a single millisecond of this movie that doesn't bristle with the raw energy of an artist".

The fact that she has got such notices with what is normally a no-no subject in Hollywood -- and with an avant-garde approach to the storytelling -- is remarkable.

"I definitely don't consider myself a part of the entertainment industry," said the "Twilight" saga star, dressed head to toe in Chanel.

And those looking for something light and frothy would do better to avoid her unflinching film.

Stewart has long been obsessed with the story and with Yuknavitch's writing, and fought for years to make the movie her way.

"I had just never read a book like that that is screaming out to be a movie, that needs to be moving, that needs to be a living thing," she told AFP.

That Yuknavitch was "able to take really ugly things, process them, and put out something that you can live with, something that actually has joy" is awe-inspiring, she added.

- 'Book is a total lifeboat' -

"The reason I really wanted to make the movie is because I thought it was hilarious in such a giddy and excited way, like we were telling secrets. I think the book is a total lifeboat," said Stewart, who also wrote the screenplay.

It certainly saved Yuknavitch and made her a cult writer, with her viral TED Talk "The Beauty of Being a Misfit" inspiring a spin-off book, "The Misfit's Manifesto".

"Being a woman is a really violent experience," Stewart told AFP, "even if you don't have the sort of extreme experience that we depict in the film or that Lidia endured and came out of beautifully".

Stewart insisted there were no autobiographical parallels per se that drew her to the original book.

But "I didn't have to do a bunch of research (for the film). I'm a female body that's been walking around for 35 years. Look at the world that we live in.

"I don't have to have been abused by my dad to understand what it is like to be taken from, to have my voice stifled, and to not trust myself. It takes a lot of years (for that) to go.

"I think that this movie resonates with anyone who is open and bleeding, which is 50 percent of the population."

Stewart -- who cast singer Nick Cave's son Earl as the swimmer's first husband and Sonic Youth rock band's Kim Gordon as a dominatrix -- told reporters she was never really tempted to play Yuknavitch herself.

- 'We are walking secrets' -

Instead she cast British actor Imogen Poots, who she called "the best actress of our generation. She is so lush, so beautiful and she's so cracked herself open in this".

"She has this big boob energy in the film -- even though she is quite flat-chested -- these big blue eyes and this long hair."

She described her movie's fever-dream energy as "a pink muscle that is throbbing" and that Poots was able to tap into, channelling Yuknavitch's ferocious but often chaotic battle to rebuild herself and find pleasure and happiness in her life.

"Pain and pleasure, they're so tied, there's a hairline fracture there," Stewart told the Cannes Festival's video channel.

Yuknavitch's book "sort of meditates on what art can do for you after people do things to your body -- the violation and the thievery, the gouging out of desire. Which is a very female experience."

She said "it is only the stories we tell ourselves that keep us alive", and that art and writing helped liberate Yuknavitch and find a skin she could live in.

Stewart said Yuknavitch discovered that the only way to take desire back was to "bespoke it... and repurpose the things that have been given to you in order for you to own them."

"I'm not being dramatic, but as women we are walking secrets," the actor said.

X.Kadlec--TPP