Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 18
Cate Blanchett Says #MeToo Was Killed Quickly as 75 Men to 10 Women Still Dominate Sets
Updated
Updated · Fox News · May 18

Cate Blanchett Says #MeToo Was Killed Quickly as 75 Men to 10 Women Still Dominate Sets

9 articles · Updated · Fox News · May 18
  • Cate Blanchett said at Cannes that #MeToo was "killed very quickly," arguing the movement exposed systemic abuse across industries but the conversation was shut down before lasting change took hold.
  • A 75-to-10 male-female headcount she says she still sees on film sets underpins that view, with Blanchett arguing homogeneous workplaces affect both behavior and the quality of the work.
  • Blanchett said in 2025 that #MeToo never truly "took root," and she has linked that failure to efforts to discredit voices that were only beginning to speak publicly.
  • Her comments carry added weight because Blanchett was among the actresses who said Harvey Weinstein behaved inappropriately toward them, part of the 2017 allegations that propelled #MeToo beyond Hollywood.
Cannes claims to pick films on quality, not gender. So why does data show a persistent 'auteur glass ceiling' for women?
With female representation in Hollywood at a seven-year low, was the #MeToo movement just a fleeting moment?
Beyond protests and awards, what can actually fix Hollywood's deep-rooted financial and structural gender imbalance?