Los Angeles: The Venice Film Festival has come under fire from the European Womens Audiovisual Network (EWA) and several other advocacy groups for virtually shutting out female directors from its competition section.
In an open letter, the EWA has also demanded that Venice join the Cannes and Locarno festivals in signing a gender-parity pledge, reports variety.com.
"We have seen this film before," the letter said, referring to the fact that, for the second year in a row, only one out of the 21 competition titles at Venice is directed by a woman: Jennifer Kent's "The Nightingale."
"Angels Wear White," by Chinese director Vivian Qu was last year's lone competition title directed by a woman.
The EWA joined issue with Venice artistic chief Alberto Barbera, who, while pledging to try to do more to boost female representation, said recently that he would quit 'if we impose quotas or gender-equality needs.'
"When Alberto Barbera threatens to quit, he is perpetuating the notion that selecting films by female film makers involves lowering standards. Sorry, but we don't buy this any more. We know it has been proven that instead of preventing meritocracy, targets and quotas help to promote it by widening the pool of candidates," the letter said.
There was no immediate response from Venice to the open letter.