PARIS (AFP) – Top Hollywood woman director Greta Gerwig said she was "disappointed" that she had been snubbed by the Golden Globes, with the producer of her hit film Little Women blaming the "unconscious bias" of male movie critics.

With the awards from the Hollywood Foreign Press Association about to kick off the Oscar season on Sunday (Jan 5), Gerwig told AFP she had been saddened to have been "bumped out" of the best director race.

However, her adaptation of the much-loved novel by Louisa May Alcott won nods for best actress for its lead Saoirse Ronan and best music for French composer Alexandre Desplat.

"Of course, I'm disappointed. I love the film that we made and of course it's lovely to be honoured," said Gerwig, one of only five women ever to be nominated for a best director Oscar for her last film, Lady Bird.

But the fact Little Women was completely ignored by the Screen Actors Guild awards has caused consternation among some in Hollywood.

'ACTIVE HOSTILITY'[hhmc]

With the voters who chose the best films of the year overwhelming men, New York Times critic Janet Maslin tweeted her shock at the "active hostility about Little Women from men I know, love and respect."

Producer Amy Pascal echoed her uneasiness in an interview with Vanity Fair. She said women outnumbered men two to one at the screenings laid on for Academy members in the run up to the Oscar nominations.

"It's a completely unconscious bias. I don't think it's anything like a malicious rejection," she said.

However, "I don't think that (men) came to the screenings in droves, let me put it that way," Pascal added.

Gerwig, 36, said that "there are so many beautiful films made by women this year, and so many worthy films… I want to give them a bunch of statues."

She said there had been progress for women directors, but "it's still dreadful".

"I think in the past couple of years it's got better. I think people have been more willing to take this risk of taking a chance on different voices, and different authors, writers and directors."

HOLLYWOOD'S GOLDEN COUPLE[hhmc]

The fallout from the Harvey Weinstein scandal had been positive, but the system was still skewed in favour of men, she said.

"I think obviously movies are expensive, they take a lot of time, a lot of money, a lot of people saying yes – and most of those people are men," she told AFP.

But she said there had been progress towards "the kind of world that I think Louisa May Alcott would have wanted, this more egalitarian world."

"Feminism is not about exclusion, but about lifting everyone and finding a better form of masculinity, as well as more freedom and opportunity for women," the writer-director added.

This week the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative said 10.6 percent of the top 100 Hollywood movies of 20Read More – Source

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