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Directors defend controversial Netflix film against Republican onslaught

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A group of international filmmakers on Tuesday defended the director of Cuties against attacks by Republicans who have pulled the French film into the US election fray.

Directors defend controversial Netflix film against Republican onslaught
 ‘Cuties’ is a film about an 11-year-old Senegalese immigrant in France who rebels against her conservative culture by hurling herself into certain extremities of the modern world.

Statements by Republican lawmakers and an online campaign have tapped into concern over child sexual molestation, making the film political leverage in the battle to re-elect Republican President Donald Trump.

Filmmaker Maimouna Doucoure was the subject of "unfounded, caricatural and despicable attacks" in the US where Cuties is available on Netflix, the film directors said in a statement received by AFP.

"This incredibly violent campaign, which has led to death threats against the director, is being carried out by some Republican senators and ultra-conservative networks who use and manipulate this film for political purposes and as part of the US presidential campaign," the filmmakers said.

Signatories include Gremlins maker Joe Dante, Tin Drum director Volker Schloendorff, Cristian Mungiu, who won the Cannes festival's top prize with 4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days, as well as Frenchman Bertrand Tavernier and Belgians Lucas Belvaux and Luc Dardenne.

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"The controversy thus organized against this film has a name, which unfortunately punctuates the history of cinema: censorship!" they said.

The film, called Mignonnes in French, portrays a young, rebellious French Senegalese girl who joins a pre-teen hip-hop dance group that is pushed into performing suggestive dances.

The film earned director Doucoure an award at the prestigious Sundance Film Festival.

In Washington Post op-ed, Doucoure said her film was about the objectification of women and children, and the pressure pre-teen girls feel to be pretty and sexy. 

She had hoped “to start a debate about the sexualization of children in society today,” she said. 

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