Australian actress Cate Blanchett has criticised "public shaming" in modern society and said "we all have dark sides". The 55-year-old actress said there was a "distinct lack of shame" in the modern world during a discussion about her new Apple TV+ series Disclaimer at the Venice Film Festival. The series sees Blanchett's character, Catherine Ravenscroft, face a public shaming as a novel threatens to unveil her darkest secret, and is based on a novel by Renee Knight.

According to The Guardian, Blanchett said: "I always approach every role as a woman, because I am one. I don't really think about that. "There's a distinct lack of shame in society at the moment.

Shame is very different to guilt. Guilt is a very useless emotion, I don't know what you do with that. "But shame and regret, and the lessons one can learn from that, are very powerful.

" But Blanchett who is best known for starring in films such as the Lord Of The Rings trilogy, The Aviator and The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, said there was a lot of "shaming" in society. She said: "Just look at the way you attempt to parent children. If you publicly shame them, it can lead to rage.

"Private conversations are often far more powerful than public ones. I'm not saying public ones are not important, but one-to-one, face-to-face reconciliation type conversations are far more powerful than public shaming. "We all have dark sides, I think there's a belief system going around that if people don't tell you everything they hav.