Kristen Stewart Torches Hollywood: ‘Capitalist Hell’ That ‘Hates Women’

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Kristen Stewart is no stranger to blunt assessments, but her latest critique of Hollywood landed with the force of a sledgehammer. 

According to Fox News, in a wide-ranging conversation for The New York Times’ “The Interview,” the actress described the entertainment industry as a system so constricted, so exclusionary, and so resistant to marginalized voices that she believes it’s headed for a major reckoning.

Instead of easing into the subject, Stewart said the industry has reached what she called a breaking point — not just politically or culturally, but structurally. 

She argued that decades of rigid rules, union limitations, and gatekeeping have turned filmmaking into a rarefied privilege accessible to only a narrow sliver of creators.

“We’re in a pivotal nexus,” Stewart said. “I think we’re ready for a full system break.” She added that, in her view, Hollywood has become hostile to anyone outside its most protected ranks. “I think having it be so impossible for people to tell stories… is capitalist hell, and it hates women, and it hates marginalized voices, and it’s racist.”

Stewart, who repeatedly emphasized her respect for unions, said she believed the industry’s current configuration stifles artistic experimentation and excludes emerging filmmakers. 

The result, she argued, is a landscape dominated by safe bets and repetitive formulas, leaving little room for original storytelling.

“We need to start sort of stealing our movies,” she said, noting her frustration with the barriers facing artists who want to make smaller, non-blockbuster films. “It’s too hard to make movies right now that aren’t blockbustery, whatever, proven equations.”

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She even joked — half-seriously — that she’s been envisioning a kind of “Marxist, Communist-like” approach to filmmaking that removes profit from the equation. 

Stewart said she hopes her next film performs well, but insisted she’d prefer not to make “a dollar on it” if that meant more creative freedom.

“It’s just so difficult to make movies,” she said. “It just doesn’t need to be.”

Stewart also revisited criticisms she raised earlier this year, when she blasted Hollywood for touting a small handful of female filmmakers as proof of progress. 

“It’s easy for them to be like, ‘Look what we’re doing. We’re making Maggie Gyllenhaal’s movie! We’re making Margot Robbie’s movie!’ And you’re like, ‘OK, cool. You’ve chosen four.’”

Her message throughout the interview was direct: Hollywood may celebrate diversity and creativity onstage, but offstage, the system still decides who gets a voice — and who gets shut out.