Elle Fanning lost film franchise role over Instagram followers

Elle Fanning has revealed she was rejected for a role in a major film franchise because movie bosses thought her Instagram followers count was too low

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Elle Fanning says she missed out on a major movie role because of her Instagram numbers
Elle Fanning says she missed out on a major movie role because of her Instagram numbers

Elle Fanning was rejected for a role in a film franchise because her Instagram followers count was too low.

The 25-year-old actress - who has 6.2 million Instagram followers - has revealed she was lined up for a huge job in a major movie series, but she was turned down because studio bosses were concerned that her social media presence was not strong enough.

In an interview on the 'Happy Sad Confused' podcast, Elle explained: "I didn’t get a part once for something big because – it might not have just been this reason, but this was the feedback that I heard – was because I didn’t have enough Instagram followers at the time.

"That’s something I firmly don’t believe in, for not getting a part."

She was also asked whether she felt pressure to land a part in a big franchise, and Elle insisted it's not something she cares too deeply about. The 'Super 8' star added: "I don’t feel that way. I don’t. It does something for people, you know, but you also don’t know if they’re gonna work sometimes, which is also scary."

Elle previously revealed that she has mixed feelings about being on Instagram because she loves scrolling through her feed but worries the constant exposure to "fake" imagery is taking a toll on young people's mental health.

She told the i newspaper: "Social media is even more of a thing now than it was then. “The comparative nature of it, the striving towards certain beauty standards… I’m still on Instagram all the time, looking at all these images of other girls and comparing myself. A lot of these images are fake, doctored or very well curated, so you can go down this rabbit hole of unattainable beauty, trending body shapes, what’s in and out of style. “That constant comparing can be so damaging to young people and their mental health.”