The spouses celebrated Stewart's directorial debut 'The Chronology of Water' at Cannes on Friday, May 16, alongside stars Imogen Poots and Thora Birch
One month after tying the knot, Kristen Stewart and Dylan Meyer are marking another big milestone.
The newlyweds stepped out together at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday, May 16, to celebrate the premiere of their new movie The Chronology of Water, which is Stewart's directorial debut.
Stewart, 35, and Meyer, who is a producer on the film, posed at a photocall alongside stars Imogen Poots, Thora Birch, Kim Gordon and others.
At one point, amid Stewart giving a talk about the movie at Campari Beach during the French festival, she and her wife were spotted holding hands.Stewart and Meyer, 37, wed on April 20 in Los Angeles, at Mexican restaurant Casita Del Campo. The couple previously went public with their relationship in 2019, and later got engaged in 2021.
In addition to close family and friends, guests at the wedding ceremony included Ashley Benson and her husband Brandon Davis, who were spotted wearing matching black outfits. Stewart's Living for the Dead co-creator CJ Romero was also in attendance.Four days after their wedding, Meyer shared photos from the pair's intimate ceremony in a romantic Instagram post, beginning with a touching photo of Meyer wrapping her arms around Stewart as they gazed into each other's eyes.
In the second image, the couple could be seen sharing a sweet kiss. "I do. I really really really really really do," Meyer captioned the post.The Chronology of Water is an adaptation of author Lidia Yuknvavitch's 2011 memoir of the same name and stars Poots, 35, Birch, 43, Gordon, 72, and Earl Cave, among others.
Stewart recently told The Hollywood Reporter that she's hopeful "we crash and burn, but in a way that feels correct," when the movie premieres in France.
The Twilight alum described getting The Chronology of Water into Cannes as "such a f---ing Hail Mary" and joked that her "head blew off" when she found out the festival had accepted the film into its Un Certain Regard section.
"I am not being false humble — we’re all running on fumes. I was like, 'We can do it.' I was like an absolute basket case," Stewart admitted of the movie's production. "I’m kind of happy to take on something vulnerable. I’m happy to take something with mistakes. Mistakes are f---ing hot."
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