Sofia Coppola's triumphant win at Cannes as best director for The Beguiled is the latest in a series of notable successes for a director quietly but forcefully blazing her own trail as a female director in a film world in which most of the awards, kudos and money still go to men.
With only her second film, Lost in Translation, she won an Oscar in 2004 for best screenplay and, in 2010, was only the third woman, and the first American woman, to win a Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, which she garnered for Somewhere.
But Coppola's roots in the cinema go back much further than these successes. She first appeared on screen as a baby boy, Michael, at the end of The Godfather (1972), her father, Francis Ford Coppola's critically acclaimed film based on the novel by Mario Puzo. She is baptised on-screen, in a sacred ceremony marking the importance of birth and continuity of family, both in the story world of The Godfather and in the "real world" of the Coppola family.
Her involuntary transvestite performance nicely sums up the privileges and the difficulties of Coppola's position in contemporary film culture. On the one hand, she is welcomed, on and off screen, into a highly influential family, bound not only by ties of blood but also business and loyalty. On the other, she is marked from the start as being from this family, contained by its meanings and the powerful image her father created as one of the most successful directors of the New Hollywood.