The Facination with Celebrity Women in Crisis

Are women celebs in peril treated differently than male celebs? I don't think I really need to answer that question. Our culture, especially women, are obsessed with celebrity and when these women are in crisis, our interest is only heightened. So the question is, why are we continuously so interested in Britney, Lindsay, Paris, Nicole, Amy etc.? Don't you think we've had enough?

We can lay some of the blame at the foot of Bonnie Fuller who after working at YM and Cosmopolitan went and remade US Weekly and then the Star. I remember the days when the Star was just supermarket trash like the National Enquirer. By making it into a glossy and including tons of pictures of celebrities she made it into a "reputable" magazine like People, except for the fact that it is all celebrity focused. She was profiled in this Sunday's NY Times the 101 Secrets (and 9 Lives) of a Magazine Star as she embarks a creating a new media brand that will, in no doubt, continue to feed our celebrity centric diet. As writer David Carr says in the piece: "celebrities have always been with us, but not quite in the way they are now since Ms. Fuller rethought them as familiars, our fake friends whom we can slag or praise, depending on the moment."

This past week a couple of English professors -- Prof Diane Negra and Dr Susan Holmes -- from University of East Anglia in England, put together a conference that focused on whether female celebs are getting a raw deal. The conference was called Going Cheap? Female Celebrity in the Tabloid, Reality and Scandal Genres and included panels like Britney's Tears: The Abject Female Celebrity in Postemotional Society and Hooker, Victim and/or Doormat: Lindsay Lohan and the Culture of Celebrity Notoriety. Other topics discussed included: Mother of the Year: Dina Lohan, Lynn Spears and the Discourse of Bad Motherhood; Toxic: Perez Hilton, Gossip Blogging and the Spectacle of Female “Train Wreck” Celebrity; and ‘She has it all’—Style, Iconicity, and Celebrity Motherhood in the Sarah Jessica Parker Brand.

The goal of the conference was to study why women celebrities are treated in a more punitive way when in peril than their male peers, why we get pleasure out of seeing these "train wrecks" and as Professor Negra says our "pleasure in seeing women brought low."

Dr. Su Holmes gave a little perspective on the topic for Women & Hollywood.

Women & Hollywood: Why are we so obsessed with these young women in peril and what does that say about us as a culture?

Dr. Su Holmes: First, it reflects on the wider desire to see celebrities ‘stripped bare’ – as ‘damaged’, more ‘ordinary’, and in some ways, apparently more ‘real’. This might be cast as a kind of democratisation of the relationship between audience and celebrity, or at least a means of venting public frustration with inequalities in wealth, privilege etc.

However, in looking at the different treatment of male and female celebrities – especially with respect to young women – it is clear that this is far from a ‘democratic’ culture, as often sexist and misogynist discourses are still in play. Female celebrities are often treated far more punitively – and judged more harshly for their actions – by the media/ public. One of the reasons for this may be a cultural anxiety around gender roles in a post-feminist context.

Seeing Britney Spears ‘fail’ as a mother, or young women lurching in and out of ‘re-hab’, might be seen as ‘proof’ of the fact that women can’t ‘have it all’ (work, career, family, love life) and be successful. This is then seen as essentially ‘reassuring’ in terms of traditional gender boundaries. We might also point to the fact that women, and especially young women, are often positioned as epitomizing a decline in the cultural value of fame (‘famous for being famous’). The fact that women are more likely to be conceived as ‘trivial’ celebrities reflects the fact that women’s work (in terms of career) has always been less valued than men’s.
W&H: What can we (as women) do to not be complicit in this vicious cycle?
SH: In terms of existing debate in the media, it has regularly been claimed that the punitive treatment of young female celebrities is effectively perpetuated by female audiences. After all, the dominant explanation for what was seen as an explosive interest in the female celebrity as ‘trainwreck’ narrative was that the answer was rooted less in ‘sexism, [than]… the demographics of the [celebrity] audience’ (Williams, 2008).

In other words, at least with respect to the celebrity magazine market, it is the desires of the female audience which are posited as driving the interest in these representations (Rebeck, 2008). We are informed that: ‘women readers actually like to see pretty girls screw up, we're positively obsessed by it, to the degree that we want them to do drugs and get into drink-driving accidents and act like total freaks and end up in rehab or worse’ (Rebeck, 2008). Whilst relying on sexist ideologies in itself (women are seen here as innately ‘competitive, jealous and individualist), this certainly suggests that women are complicit in these representations. Yet what ‘drives’ media coverage is clearly a complex issue, and there is also very little research into how ‘female celebrity damage’ is used/ interpreted by audiences.

In other words – do we know that women are ‘all’ complicit? Maybe these images are read critically – and not just by academics? If the audience – whether male or female – stopped consuming such images of celebrity culture, it would cease to be profitable and thus produced, but this doesn’t seem like a likely outcome!
FYI- the Rebeck referred to in Dr. Holmes' second answer is Theresa Rebeck the playwright and novelist who has just written a cautionary tale about the celebrity culture, Three Girls and Their Brother. Here's the Guardian piece:
Why the media will hound the girls - but leave the boys alone

Professor Negra also had some good thoughts.
But Negra said the coverage of women is more judgmental, casting wayward female celebrities as "cautionary tales." She said coverage of female celebrities is less likely to celebrate a troubled star's triumphant comeback, the way Downey has been lauded for "Iron Man," or Owen Wilson has been shown returning to work after a reported suicide attempt.
"We seem to have a lot more fixed ideas about what women's lives should be like than we do of men," she said.

"When we use female celebrities this way, we see them failing and struggling, they serve as proof that for women the work-life balance is impossible. Can you have it all? The answer these stories give again and again is 'absolutely not.'

Experts debate lure of 'train-wreck' female celebs (AP via CNN)
Why are we obsessed with female celebs? (Evening News 24)

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First Mamma Mia Review is a Rave


It doesn't get much better than this.

No matter how many blockbusters there are, Universal's screen version of the global hit stage musical "Mamma Mia!" is the most fun to be had at the movies this or any other recent summer.

Teenage boys may be glued to the latest action adventure, but the rest of the family will have a rollicking good time dancing in the aisles to Swedish pop group ABBA's irresistible songs. It's a delightful piece of filmmaking with a marvelous cast topped by Meryl Streep in one of her smartest and most entertaining performances.

Streep is sensationally good in rendering the whole yarn credible and in performing dramatically moving songs such as "Slipping Through My Fingers," sung to her departing daughter, and "The Winner Takes It All," to a lost love. It's no stretch to think of her performance in Oscar terms, ranking with such previous musical winners as Liza Minnelli, Barbra Streisand and Catherine Zeta-Jones.

And when Streep teams with Walters and Baranski for dynamic and crowd-pleasing numbers such as "Dancing Queen," "Mamma Mia!" and "Super Trouper," there's not an audience anywhere that won't be smiling.

Can't wait. Opens across the US July 18.
"Mamma Mia!" will pull in money, money, money (Hollywood Reporter via Reuters)

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Hollywood Feminist of the Day: Antonio Banderas

For calling out Hollywood on its ageism and sexism.

It may seem a little harsh to say this, but this town is like a factory that needs fresh flesh, and once actresses become 40 or 50 they are forgotten," the Latin heartthrob said. "That's the opposite of Europe where actresses like Simone Signoret are respected as they age and work until they die.
via LA Times

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Women at the Box Office This Weekend

Everybody's been talking about Wall-E and I have to say that I might be the only one in the country no interest in seeing this film. I remember seeing a preview and ignoring it thinking that it was a commercial.

I am kind of interested in seeing the Angelina Jolie flick Wanted since we don't see women kick ass often, but the previews are really violent with tons of gun action. Speaking of guns, Jolie now wears a gun charm around her neck which was a gift from her partner Brad Pitt which he had made for her after their son Maddox drew it. Yuck. Angelina, aren't you a peace activist? Do you wear the gun to your UN humanitarian missions in countries where you meet with women who have been raped by men and their guns? Take it off. It sends a really bad message.

Also on tap this weekend is French director Catherine Breillat's new period piece The Last Mistress in limited release. Having missed the screening I can't give any assessment and I am embarrassed to admit that I have never seen one of her films. I have added her to my netflix list and will be hopefully catching up on her work.

Brick Lane expands into the SF, Chicago, and Boston areas. Read my review and some comments from director Sarah Gavron
Kit Kittredge (review and quotes from the producer and director next week) stays in limited release in cities with American Girl doll stores before it expands to 1800 theatres on July 2.

This weekend on my list are Trumbo the documentary about the blacklisted writer (because I am obsessed with the blacklist) and Mongol about Genghis Kahn cause every single review has been spectacular.

Remaining in Theatres
My Blueberry Nights
Sex and the City
Baby Mama
Under the Same Moon

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Is the Academy Sexist?

We know that very few movies starring women are made by Hollywood. Now it seems that the stories Academy of Motion Picture Art sand Sciences the organization that runs the Academy Awards continues the industry marginalization of women by inviting only 32 women to join its ranks out of the 105 invitations. That means they invited 73 men.

Sigh.

I also noticed that Ruby Dee who has been working for ages just got her invitation this year. Shameful.

Here are the list of women.

Actors
Marion Cotillard – La Vie En Rose, A Good Year
Ruby Dee – American Gangster, Just Cause
Allison Janney – Hairspray, Juno

Animators
Caroline Leaf – Two Sisters, The Street
Suzie Templeton – Peter & The Wolf, Dog

At-Large
Sheila Nevins

Casting Directors
Ronna Kress – Beowulf, No Reservations

Costume Designers
Isis Mussenden – 10 Items or Less, The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe

Directors
Kimberly Peirce – Stop-Loss, Boys Don’t Cry

Documentary
Nanette Burstein – The Kid Stays in the Picture, On the Ropes
Heidi Ewing – Jesus Camp, The Boys of Baraka
Liz Garbus – Ghosts of Abu Ghraib, The Farm: Angola, USA
Deborah Shaffer – From the Ashes: 10 Artists, Witness to War: Dr. Charlie Clements

Executives
Dana Goldberg

Film Editors
Juliette Welfling – The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, The Science of Sleep

Makeup/Hairstylists
Jan Archibald – La Vie en Rose, The Illusionist
Kate Biscoe – Memoirs of a Geisha, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas

Producers
Jennifer Fox – Michael Clayton, Syriana
Lianne Halfon – June, Ghost World
Karen Murphy – For Your Consideration, Best in Show
JoAnne Sellar – There Will be Blood, Boogie Nights

Public Relations
Stephanie Allen
Suzanne Fritz
Stephanie Kluft

Set Decorators
Katie Spencer – Atonement, Pride & Prejudice
Sandy Reynolds Wasco – Rushmore, Jackie Brown

Sound
Alyson Dee Moore – American Gangster, Blood Diamond

Stunt Coordinators
Melissa R. Stubbs – Fido, Along Came a Spider

Visual Effects
Helena Packer – Charlie Wilson’s War, X2

Writers
Diablo Cody – Juno
Tamara Jenkins – The Savages, Slums of Beverly Hills
Nancy Oliver – Lars and the Real Girl

via Anne Thompson at Variety

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Rod Lurie Loses All Feminist Credibility

Rod Lurie used to be the feminist guy in Hollywood. No more. He had good credentials. He was the guy who brought us the first potential female Vice President on film in The Contender (which I recently saw again and still love), and did bring us the first female President on TV in Commander in Chief and has an upcoming film Nothing but the Truth based on the Judith Miller saga. BUT now he goes ahead and creates a show for Showtime Hilary Jones about a LA vice cop who moonlights on the weekend as a legal prostitute in Nevada. Double yuck.

He knows he's in trouble with the women when he gave this quote:

"I hope it doesn't obliterate my credentials with women," he quipped about "Hilary Jones." "I imagine feminists will have us in their cross hairs, but once they see it, they will realize it is very warm and humanizing." (Hollywood Reporter)
Note to Rod: Credentials officially obliterated.

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Zeitgeist Films Celebrates 20 Years

Nancy Gerstman and Emily Russo are anomaly in the film business. Their company, Zeitgeist Films is the only woman run distribution company and they have been working successfully together for 20 years. This week the Museum of Modern Art kicks off a retrospective of their cutting edge and exciting work ZEITGEIST: THE FILMS OF OUR TIME that they have been involved with over the last two decades.

Gerstman and Russo talked with Women & Hollywood about their work and some of the keys to success.

Women & Hollywood: What made you start your company?

We didn't know what we were getting into. We had a very strong desire to work for ourselves and to work with each other and to be able to select the films we wanted to work on and to be able to handle them in the way we thought they should be done.
W&H: You've stayed true to your vision throughout the years.
We have grown a lot. For three years it was just the two of us sitting across from each other at a tiny desk. Now we sit across from each other at a slightly bigger desk and have 8 staff members. We have grown organically and gradually.
W&H: Which filmmakers careers are you most proud to have been a part of?
First of all Bruce Weber. He was our first filmmaker. Broken Noses and Let's Get Lost were big films for us. We had Bruce's films for 18 years and he now distributes them himself. We really launched his career. Todd Haynes was also very important to our company because he brought Poison to us. It was an extremely important film in the history of cinema, and that we made almost a million dollars theatrically was extraordinary.
W&H: How do you pick the films?
It's a very personal process. We really have to love a film to take it on. We also need to believe we can find an audience for the film as well. Generally, if we love it we feel that other people will love it. But it really comes from the heart, the emotions of whether we connect with the movie.
W&H: What women's films are you most proud of?
One of our first filmmakers was Yvonne Rainer and we released Privilege. We also distributed her last feature MURDER and Murder. She is a world renowned filmmaker and we have done well with handling her films on a worldwide basis. Her following is enormous and is still growing.

We also worked with Caroline Link who directed Nowhere in Africa which was our highest grossing film and an Academy Award winner. We worked with Laura Poitras on My Country, My Country which was nominated for an Academy Award for best documentary. We also distributed both Fire and Earth by Deepa Mehta.
W&H: There has been a lot of turmoil in the indie film world lately yet you are thriving. What lessons can people learn from you?
We've never overextended ourselves. We do the same thing that we did 20 years ago. We take on 5 or 6 films for theatrical release per year. We're very picky about what we take and we work extremely hard on those films. We now have ancillaries to back us up which has helped us over bumpy roads. This is not the only time that companies have gone out of business. Over the 20 years we've probably seen a hundred go out of business -- sometimes it happens in clusters, sometimes they flame out dramatically and sometimes one big company can bring down a bunch of small companies. But that isn't us.
We've always been a tightly run company, a fiscally conservative company that takes its risks with the films but not in the way we manage the business. That's been the key to our survival. We've been around for 20 years and I can tell you a lot of money has been floating around and Nancy and I have never benefited from that. Sometimes we looked at each other and said gosh everybody's getting rich but it wasn't about that for us and now that the tide is turning and things aren't so good - I won't say that we are not feeling it because the business is tough all around - but we're not feeling it as much. We have a sustainable business and that's what we are able to celebrate on this anniversary.
W&H: What are your hopes for the next 20 years?
We just expect to have a wonderful business identifying some great talent, distributing better films, seeing what new technologies will be out there, and finding out what this wonderful world of distribution will be.
W&H: What advice would you give to women who want to get into the business?
Most of the small businesses in the country are started by women but we have not seen any other distribution companies run by women. I want to encourage women to follow their dreams and while distribution may not be on the top of the list its an interesting area to be in. We would love to see more women in the business.
Check out Zeitgeist's site for information on the films they have released. Most are available for rental and purchase.

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Jon Stewart -- Where are the Women?

I'm a big fan of Jon Stewart's Daily Show. I try to watch it as much as I can. But when I saw the new correspondent Wyatt Cenac it made me realize that hardly any women are on the air (except a couple of guests) on The Daily Show. What's up with that?

The show was started by Lizz Winstead and Madeline Smithberg way back in the day before Jon Stewart got involved, but I haven't been feeling the love lately. Samantha Bee hasn't been on in ages (did she have another kid?) and I've seen Kristin Schaal once or twice in the last six months mostly acting like a complete idiot.

Does anyone know how many of the writers are women? Please don't tell me they can't find any funny women to be correspondents on the show.

Has anyone else noticed?

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Hollywood Feminist of the Day: Meg Ryan

Meg Ryan was given a tribute (by William H. Macy) at the Nantucket Film Festival this past weekend. She's excited about her upcoming film The Women which she has been involved with for 13 years.

Here are some quotes from the Boston Herald:

Meg said English and the cast are hopeful that the big box-office numbers put up by the “Sex and the City” flick will help boost their all-gal flick this fall.
“We were all excited and calling each other,” she laughed. “We hope it opens doors. Especially for the 40-plus set in Hollywood,” said the 46-year-old mother of two.
“Turning 40 in Hollywood was definitely something,” she groused. “But it doesn’t feel like an ending to me. My interests have expanded and I haven’t felt more creative than I do right now.
(photo Mark Garfinkel)

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News Briefs

  • A very interesting story about actress Greta Scacchi who incidentally turned down the Sharon Stone role in Basic Instinct.
A determination to make her own choices has defined Scacchi's career, as well as a desire to be taken seriously as an actress. Her relationship with her looks is fractious - they got her some roles, but they also meant she was often typecast as eye candy. Acting her own age (Sydney Morning Herald)
  • The 61st Locarno International Film Festival has announced it will give its Excellence Award 2008 to actress Anjelica Huston.
  • Mary Tyler Moore will join NBC's Lipstick Jungle playing Brooke Shields mother
  • Penny Marshall will return from directing oblivion to direct episodes According to Jim the Jim, the Jim Belushi show that for some bizarre reason will return for its 8th season. (How is this possible?)
  • Courtney Hunt's Frozen River and Irena Salina's Flow: For the Love of Water won the audience awards at the Provincetown Film Festival.
  • Living Proof the Lifetime film on the doctor who developed Herceptin is currently shooting in New Orleans. Awesome cast includes: Angie Harmon, Amanda Bynes, Bernadette Peters, Swoosie Kurtz, Regina King, Jennifer Coolidge, Trudie Styler, Tammy Blanchard, John Benjamin Hickey Paula Cale and Harry Connick Jr.. Movie is executive produced by Renee Zellweger, Craig Zadan and Neil Meron. (Hollywood Reporter)
  • Ntozake Shange’s For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf, starring India.Arie and produced by Whoopi Goldberg, will begin previews Aug. 19 for a Sept. 8 opening at the Circle in the Square Theater. Show will be the Broadway debut for director Shirley Jo Finney. (Variety)

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What's the Problem with Female Ensembles?

Jeanine Basinger one of the few women who writes about women and film from an accessible academic perspective (have you read A Woman's View: How Hollywood Spoke to Women? It's a great look at women in film from the 30-60s) takes a look at the lack of female ensemble films over the years for Variety.

It's significant that a film starring a female, no matter what other genre it might be (comedy, romance, musical, crime, Western, film noir, melodrama), was always known as "a woman's film." There was no equivalent "man's film" category.

Films with men didn't need to worry about genre status, but the female ensemble gave the woman's film a chance to grab some.

The female ensemble movie spins off from the woman's film, which was usually about a single woman, using her as an individual role model. The ensemble makes women important, and "The Women" is a perfect example. In it, men are simply eliminated. The women become the heroes. Audiences can't ignore them.

Today female ensemble movies are hard to cast since there's a shortage of top-ranked box office stars. It's easier in television, where actresses can be introduced into a series when they are unknowns and made famous as the characters they play. Television's ability to assemble successful female foursomes is a foundation of the sitcom: "Designing Women," "The Golden Girls," "Desperate Housewives" and "Sex and the City" -- all of which are female ensembles.
It seems to me that nowadays whether it is on screen or off anytime more than one woman is discussed in the context of another the whole premise is to try and create a cat fight. Think about the conversation over the last week about Michelle Obama and Cindy McCain. Who did better on The View? Who will make a better first lady? Just wants to make me barf.

I guess the more important point is -- what is so scary about women working together on film or off?
Few female ensemble films (Variety)

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Italian Vogue to Feature All Black Models Issue

Via the folks at Hip Candy -- In response to the lack of diversity on the runways, Italy's Vogue is scheduled to release its July issue that will almost exclusively feature black models.
Very interesting (wish I could read Italian)

Italian VOGUE's Trailblazing Issue On Newsstands This Week. (Hip Candy)
Black is finally in fashion at Vogue (The Independent)

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Blaming Hollywood for Girls Getting Pregnant

Have you read about this supposed teen pregnancy pact in Gloucester, MA? In several articles I've read about this craziness people are blaming Knocked Up, Juno and the newest teenage mom herself Jamie Lynn Spears for giving these girls ideas about having babies.

Blaming Hollywood is easy, but there is something way deeper going on here. Note 1: A researcher at the Guttmacher Institute clarifies that teen pregnancy was on the rise before these films were released. Note 2: Gloucester HS prohibits the distribution of condoms contraceptions without parental consent.

Where are these girls parents?

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Expired- directed by Cecilia Miniucchi

When I started writing this site I decided that I would try and get information out about as many films by and about women that I could. I also decided that I would not write about films I didn't like that were directed by women because I'm not interested in writing about things that I can't support. I made that decision because I'm not a paid daily reviewer and don't feel that obligation to see and review everything.

I'm still sticking with my position but I will make sure to give information on other women's films opening even if I don't review it or write about it.

Here's a NY Times piece on Cecilia Miniucchi thw writer/director of Expired which opened in limited release last weekend. Miniucchi has been influenced by one of pioneering female directors, Lina Wertmuller.

Low-Cost Film With Friends in High Places (NY Times)

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Variety's Screenwriters to Watch

For the last ten years Variety has assembled a list of 10 screenwriters to watch. Suffice it to say that most of them have been men.

This year's list has two women Ann Cherkis and Shauna Cross. Meet them.

Ann Cherkis

"For every Diablo Cody, there are hundreds who are writing and can't get their scripts seen," she says. "Even if you get discovered quick, you've got to stick at it and keep up the quality."

Shauna Cross
Shauna Cross is inspired by all the "girl writers" working these days: "It's completely badass," she says. "I root for the girls. I'm a total girl's girl."

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Women at the Box Office This Weekend

The two women centric films opening in limited releases this weekend couldn't be more different from a content perspective. Brick Lane is about the awakening of an immigrant woman in London, and Kit Kittredge: An American Girl is about a 9-year-old girl and how the depression effects her, her family and friends in Cincinnati.

But the one thing they have in common which is so unique is that they are both written, directed, and produced by women. Awesome.

Brick Lane opens in NY and LA today and will be rolling out wider throughout the summer. (Read my full review and comments from director Sarah Gavron below.)
Kit Kittredge: An American Girl will open wide on July 2. It's currently playing in cities with American Girl doll stores. A review and some comments from the producers and director will be coming next week. Just so you know - I liked it and think it's a great family movie. Girls and boys should love it.

Remaining in Theatres
Sex and the City
Baby Mama
Under the Same Moon
My Blueberry Nights
How the Garcia Girls Spent Their Summer
Then She Found Me

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Brick Lane- Review

Brick Lane tells the story of the awakening of Nazneen, (Tannishtha Chatterjee) a woman who was shipped off at the age seventeen in an arranged marriage to an older man she never met in London. Nazneen's story is in many ways a universal story about the restrictions placed on women in different cultures. For many years she lived in silence and misery taking care of the home, her husband and her children in the immigrant neighborhood of Brick Lane in London.

Brick Lane is a very British film. Think Mike Leigh. It's quiet, nothing blows up and tells a story of a woman whose life is quite unremarkable. Nazneen is stuck, she believes that life is about endurance, but when she meets Karim (Christopher Simpson) a young activist who gives her sewing work, she comes alive. Karim gives her the gift of passion, and while after all these years she has grown to love her bumbling, unsuccessful husband Chanu (Satish Kaushik), more importantly through Karim she has grown to love and trust herself.

Women are everywhere in the creative company of Brick Lane. The film is based on the award winning novel by Monica Ali, was written by Abi Morgan and Laura Jones was produced by Alison Owens along with Christopher Collins, and it was directed by Sarah Gavron.

This is the kind of movie where you have to pay attention. It's not light and fluffy. If you are looking for a different, interesting story about a woman whose voice and story is usually not heard or seen, check out this film. The film opens in NY and LA today and will roll out across the country over the next few weeks.

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Some Thoughts from Sarah Gavron, Director of Brick Lane

One thing that is important to me in this work is to go and meet as many female directors and producers as I can to get their voices and thoughts out to the world. I was able to meet director Sarah Gavron as she spoke to a group of reporters. Here are some things I learned about her, the film as well as some quotes.

This is her first full length feature film. She first started working in documentaries to tell a story and change the world but spent a lot of time fantasizing about fiction so she retrained herself to direct fiction.

Brick Lane was a daunting film for a number of reasons.

It was about a community that was outside me. It was based on this acclaimed novel with myriad fans. It was political from the interior told the story from a marginalized voice of Nazneen.
The story is about her sexual awakening but not about sex - it's about the effect it has. It can be more suggestive if you leave more to the imagination. One of the interesting things is the effect it had on the rest of her life and how it infused the rest of her life.
The film is not political in an obvious way. It's rare to see a film that just deals with the female perspective and narrows the world down to that.
These women's stories are not told so often. We see women who wear western dress who come to England to get rid of their cultural roots. You don't see the more traditional woman having a quieter journey.
Controversy:
Three weeks into the shoot they got a threat as they were about to shoot exteriors on Brick Lane. Turns out it was a small fringe group who were citing scenes not even in the book and they tried to shut down production. It all blew up when Germaine Greer wrote that the Bangladeshi community ought not to see the film, then and in response Salman Rushdie said that was ridiculous. On top of everything the film was also selected to screen for a benefit that Prince Charles would attend. After all the press reports, the Prince backed out.

When talking about the lack of female directors:
The Time Out book of 1,000 films only had five by women. It's quite striking. I'm hopeful that things are changing. I think I am benefiting from the women a half a generation before me like Jane Campion, Mira Nair and Gurinder Chadha who made films that reached wider audiences. Now people are more open to more women centered and women directed films. I think there's a real sea change happening.

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Geez, Could My Co-Star be Any Younger

The Love Guru
Mike Myers = 45
Jessica Alba = 27


Get Smart
Steve Carrell = 46 (47 this summer)
Anne Hathaway = 25

YUCK!

(shout out to Liz Chesney for the idea)

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Celebrating Diane English and The Women

We're going to hear a lot over the next couple of months how it took Diane English one of the most successful female TV producers over a decade to get her passion project The Women made. I think it's important to keep telling this story because honestly if Diane English has such a hard time, what about the rest of the women who don't have her money and stature.

Women in Film gave English its Crystal award for excellence in film.

Key quotes:

I was advised by people I have the utmost respect for to walk away, Ironically, in 1939, (the all-female cast) was not an issue. The movie was made, and it was a smash. But in the year 2008, it is a huge issue.

Now, English and company hope that female filmgoers who feel underserved by traditional Hollywood fare will support the film when it's released later this year. Women need to reach into their purses and vote with their wallets, she says. Money talks, and Hollywood listens. That's the only way things will change.
Diane English, 'The Women' receive the WIF Crystal Award for excellence in film (Hollywood Reporter)
Women in Film salutes 'The Women' director, along with cast (USA Today)

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Women in Film Celebrates 35 Years

Congratulations to Women in Film on your 35th anniversary. Welcome to middle age. In celebration, the organization gave out its annual Crystal + Lucy awards to some very worthy insiders: Diane English and the women of The Women; Salma Hayek; Sherry Lansing; Ginnifer Goodwin, Mandy Walker and Jeff Katzenberg.

To coincide with the awards, The Hollywood Reporter did its semi-annual roundup talking about women's roles in Hollywood. Being a trade paper it seems to me that they can't really have a realistic assessment on the gravity of the situation, (since they get all their ads from people working in the business.) That was confirmed by the first sentence in the lead story, What Women Want:

Oscar was good to women this year.
What? How can that be true? Does Shannon L. Bowen (the reporter) live in the same universe that I do? I clearly remember around Oscar time reading all these stories about how women were missing from most all the best picture nominees.
Of the 176 nominations for the 80th Annual Academy Awards, 43 (24%) went to women. Three of the films nominated for best picture had female producers: Lianne Halfon ("Juno"), Jennifer Fox ("Michael Clayton") and JoAnne Sellar ("There Will Be Blood"). Four of the 10 writing nominees were women: Diablo Cody ("Juno"), Nancy Oliver ("Lars and the Real Girl"), Tamara Jenkins ("The Savages"), and Sarah Polley ("Away From Her").
I mean, I guess it's better than years past, but 24% is still pathetic. On the other hand its probably a miracle that women even got that many nominations when women comprise a measly "15% of all directors, executive producers, producers, writers, cinematographers and editors working on the top 250 domestic-grossing films of 2007." (The Celluloid Ceiling: Dr. Martha Lauzen, San Diego State U).

Iris Grossman ICM agent and president emeritus of Women in Film said: "There are women producers and studio heads and network heads and agents and managers...at the executive level, I think we're doing great."

My question is also about what these women are doing with their power. Are they helping other women? Are they trying to make more movies about women? Are they hiring more women directors? Clearly movies by and about women are not being effected by having more women in powerful positions when in 2007 only 5 of the top 50 grossing films starred women and only 6% of the top grossing 250 films were directed by women. Is there a disconnect here?

Martha Lauzen lays it out as bluntly as possible:
"That the numbers of women working behind the scenes in the film industry are actually on the decline is mind-boggling when you consider that these are the architects of our culture," Lauzen explains. "The people who tell the stories in our culture ultimately control that culture and have a lot of power over how we see groups of people, events, etc. -- and that remains a mostly male activity."
Women in Film celebrates female achievements

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Hollywood Feminist of the Day: Ricki Lake

For standing up to the big birth machine and giving women the information about how best they want to give birth.

Ricki Lake fires back at AMA for childbirth statement
Docs to Women: Pay No Attention to Ricki Lake's Home Birth
photo: Albert L. Ortega PR Photos

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Hollywood Feminist of the Day: Roseanne Barr

For her comment at the TV Land Awards where she was honored with the Innovator Award:

That's the one great thing woen you're getting old- when you get called an innovator instead of a loudmouthed, pushy bitch. It's awesome. (from EW)

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Doc Film Makers Keep Women's Issues on the Agenda

Check out the piece I wrote for the Women's Media Center on women documentarians keeping women's issues on the agenda.

The news regarding women directors of fictional films in Hollywood continues to be bleak: in 2007, only 6 percent of these films were directed by women. But the non-fiction film world is a whole different story. While no one has exact figures, anecdotally most experts in the documentary community believe that women directors make up at least 50 percent of the directing ranks. Take a look at all the major film festivals that include documentaries and you will see women's names as prominent as the men’s.
Read full piece here: Doc Film Makers Keep Women's Issues on the Agenda

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RIP Men in Trees

I am still so angry at ABC for its treatment of Men in Trees. The show never got a chance to find an audience because it was moved so many times and was given some stupidly long hiatuses. They didn't even let the show end during the regular TV season so many people, even fans, probably just thought it was gone.

I always loved the show. It was so quirky and adorable and starred Anne Heche as a relationship writer/coach who wound up in Elmo, Alaska after her engagement blew up. The characters on that show were as original as any I have ever seen on TV from the woman (Suleka Mathew) who became a prostitute to support her son, to book editor and die-hard New Yorker Jane (Seana Kofoed) who fell in love with "plow guy." The best, most unexpected moment on TV this season was at Jane's wedding to Sam (the plow guy) when her parents turned out to be midgets. Brilliant TV.

But the heart of the show was always the commentaries by Marin played by Anne Heche that asked great questions about life and love. In tribute to the show and in tribute to Jenny Bicks the show's creator (who also wrote for Sex and the City and the screenplay for one of my favorite teen dramas What a Girl Wants) here is Marin's final commentary from last week's episode which focused on relationships and money.

We are the daughters of the feminist movement taught from an early age that nothing can stop us, that we can rise as high and achieve as much as any man. And in some ways that's true that we have taken great strides stepping over traditional gender roles and going after and getting exactly what we want. But part of being powerful is knowing when to take the back seat and look at life from another perspective. Cause the thing is in a relationship there is no CEO -- it's a delicate dance, a push and pull, a back and forth, an up and down. But we endure because at the end of the day we don't want to go it alone and when we find someone, a partner, we compromise loving everything we can and putting blinders onto everything else because love isn't perfect, but it's the really great imperfect love that keeps us evolving, happy and in the end isn't that what life's all about?
Thanks for too short a run. I'll miss this show a lot.

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September 12th Just Got Really Busy

Note to distributors and producers. It's hard enough for one female focused film to be successful but now there are three films targeted at women opening on September 12th. Sounds like trouble to me.

The busy September 12th now includes Towelhead, a coming of age story of an Arab-American girl sent to Houston to live with her restrictive father. Also, opening is The Duchess with Keira Knightley as the Duchess of Devonshire and the previously mentioned The Women written and directed by Diane English.

Will this glut prevent any of them from breaking out?

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Top Girls Seen Through the Prism of Sex and the City

I admit that I haven't seen the revival of feminist playwright Caryl Churchill's 1982 drama Top Girls now playing at the Biltmore Theatre under the auspices of the Manhattan Theatre Club. The reviews have been fantastic, but it was virtually ignored at the Tonys (with one nomination for Martha Plimpton). In The NY Times this weekend, Charles Isherwood (not necessarily know for his great writing about women) discussed Top Girls in the context of Sex and the City.

What's interesting is that while high brow critics on the one hand berate the low art of Sex and the City, they also validate its success precisely because the conversation about Top Girls and its cultural implications would not be happening had Sex and the City not been the success it is. Sex and the City is a change making movie. It has changed the conversation about women and film and now its spilled into theatre. Mr. Isherwood begins his article talking about Top Girls but ends it with question about women and films.

Hollywood movies, on the other hand, have all but abandoned women’s experience as a fertile subject for entertainment. The relentless pursuit of adolescent boys of all ages seems to have taken over almost completely. I look back with nostalgia at the wealth of women who had major film careers in the 1970s and ’80s: Jane Fonda and Sissy Spacek, Barbra Streisand and Jessica Lange, Diane Keaton and Meryl Streep and Bette Midler.

Now it seems that a superb central role for a woman — as opposed to the girlfriend-foil roles taken by the ingénues of the moment, like Anne Hathaway or Katherine Heigl — comes along once a year. Increasingly they seem to be given, as if by rights, to the rangy Ms. Streep, who stars in the forthcoming film versions of “Mamma Mia!” and “Doubt.” (Both of those, incidentally, or perhaps not so incidentally, are based on stage properties.)

“Sex and the City” at least gave women’s lives, however romanticized, a foothold at the multiplex. The superb foursome of actresses who star in the film were the top girls at the box office for a glittering, attention-getting moment, relegating even Indiana Jones — still swashbuckling into his dotage, apparently — to second place.

Glass Ceiling, Meet Sisterhood (NY Times)
(photo: Aubrey Reuben)

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Gale Anne Hurd - Billion Dollar Producer

Gale Anne Hurd is one of the most successful Hollywood producers that you've probably never heard of, but I guarantee you have seen one or more of her movies. The movies this woman has produced have made a billion dollars. She is the producer of such films as The Terminator (all of the them), Aliens (the second really good one) and The Abyss. She's also a female producer in the action genre and she stands unafraid to hire female directors as she has on Aeon Flux (Karyn Kusama) and the upcoming Punisher: War Zone (Lexi Alexander).

This weekend her latest film The Incredible Hulk opened with $54.5 million.

Here are some quotes from a Variety story celebrating her career:

A production designer slated to do "Aliens" offhandedly told her he could never work for a woman producer. She calmly shook his hand and told him she was sorry he wouldn't be working on her movie, leaving the man speechless. And fired.

Dispassion is something of a trademark for Hurd, and while she admits she will lose her temper like anyone else, she has made a conscious effort not to do so in her work.

"To some degree I think it's still a sociocultural situation," she says, "where if women lose their temper they're labeled ballbusters, or whatever, that would never be applied to a male producer.

Gale Anne Hurd dives into deep end
Gale Anne Hurd pics in the pipeline (Variety)

(photo Monsters and Critics.com)

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Debra Winger Surfaces with New Book

I got excited when I heard that Debra Winger has written a book. I thought, finally, a tell-all where we can all learn where the fuck she's been all these years and why she wasn't making movies. Her last big movie was Shadowlands in 1993, and she was the female star of the 80s with Urban Cowboy, Terms of Endearment, An Officer and a Gentleman and Black Widow. But then she disappeared. Winger became the touchstone for the lack of opportunities for women as they age in Hollywood. People have thought that if the great Debra Winger can't make it, what chance do I have as they all exhibited in the Rosanna Arquette documentary Searching for Debra Winger.

The news about the book is that it is not a tell all at all. It is a book of meditations, and at first I didn't really like it because I wanted so much more. I wanted to know why she fought with Shirley MacLaine and about all the other crap I read over the years. But after I went to see Winger speak the other evening at a NY Times event, I understand why this is the only type of book she could write.

The thing about Debra Winger that I never really got until this week is that this is a woman who does not give a shit about Hollywood in the least. She loves to act (and even said that if you have to ask the question should you become an actor then you shouldn't because it is the type of life that chooses you) but hates the business. She made most of her movies before the town become obsessed with box office and youth and she just got out because she had other things she wanted to do with her life.

You gotta respect that. I think all the rumors about her being difficult (I pride myself on being difficult) are probably real and blown out of proportion because she turned her back on Hollywood and Hollywood hates that. Hollywood can kick you out, but you can't leave Hollywood.

I found her in person to be so real, introspective and inquisitive.

Here are some of most interesting tidbits she shared:

  • An Officer and a Gentleman was basically shelved and they released it only because there was a strike.
  • She never watches her old movies, it makes her self conscious.
  • She has no relationship to the film business - "I don't need to"
  • "I really love acting, but the business, you just have to keep stepping away from it."
  • She'd love to produce.
  • The Rosanna Arquette film was called State of the Art which is why Winger agreed to do it. Arquette later called and told her she had changed the name.
  • She said that women need to go out and see movies the first week just to have our "vote." "Next time you see something interesting go and see it."
One of the things I've noticed in the coverage of her book (and return to public life for a brief moment) is that there are tons of questions about whether she has had plastic surgery. Just from my brief encounter with her I can pretty much tell that plastic surgery or botox is not something she is interested in. She says it best in this section Aging Gracefully from her book Undiscovered
Each time I travel to another country and encounter another culture, when I return I am struck by how much American culture is led by the media and not the lives and inherent beauty of its general population. Popular culture has no room for real wrinkles. The movie industry in the United States promotes a lineless, motionless look for women of all ages that is so completely nonthreatening as to be, ironically, scary. We are the specialists in no lines, no map, no history, including the history of many other lands.
Here she is on the View from earlier this week.

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Sexist Blog Comment of the Day

Katherine Heigl created a bit of a storm the other day by pulling her name out of Emmy contention for her role on Grey's Anatomy (she won the Emmy last year). She basically publicly said that she felt her part on the show this year was crap. Immediately, Heigl was skewered as she was last year for saying that Knocked Up was "a little sexist." Why is it when a woman speaks out she is tared and feathered. Check out this great piece examining whether the treatment Heigl is receiving is sexist from Rope of Silicon Is Sexism the Overlooked -Ism?

This comment from David Poland of Movie City News (who now joins Jeff Wells in the Hollywood blogger Hall of Shame) is just vile.

And then, in a few years, the almost-40 topless work, hoping to remind Hollywood that they really wanted to bang this blonde just a few years before. And who knows, maybe she will become a real actress as she hits movie-parental age and can play the lonely wife opposite a 60something Jim Carrey.
Shame on you.

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My Boys Second Season Premieres Tonight on TBS

Last summer I happened upon a new TBS series about a female sportswriter and her posse of guy friends. There are no other shows that have a female sportswriter as the focus and while it doesn't really deal much with her work issues, there were a couple of episodes that had her deal with being one of the only women in the locker room.

Of course it helps that PJ played by Jordana Spiro is cute and blonde and non threatening and very straight. But it's beyond cool that she really, really loves sports, can keep up with all the guys on everything, and that they don't talk down to her in any way. She's just a woman who loves sports and probably because she liked sports most of her friends turned out to be guys.

The second season kicks off with PJ and a mystery man going to Italy (I'm not going to reveal who it is, but I felt it was kind of anti-climactic) along with her best friend Stephanie who has been her guiding female force since grad school.

I like this show cause it's light and all the guys surrounding PJ are great, especially comedian Jim Gaffigan who plays her brother Andy, a guy who after many years of floundering sells out and goes to work for a big law firm.

The second episode focuses on Andy's beautiful Scandinavian nanny and I thought it was a bit pathetic.

The show was created by Betsy Thomas and Jamie Tarses (remember her from when she was the first woman to run a network?) is one of the executive producers.

Check it out tonight at 9:30pm on TBS.
(photo: Patrick Ecclesine/TBS)

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A Show I Really Would Love to Have Seen Aired

When I saw this article about a show called The Tower I got so excited my heart started palpitating -- Marcia Gay Harden playing a news mogul in a drama from Meredith Stiehm (the creator of Cold case). Could this be true? Was it coming to CBS?

Alas, the show didn't make the fall schedule but the question is why did the story run on CBS' Show buzz site? Maybe its not dead? Are they trying to get another network to pick it up? Please someone pick this up. Sounds sooo good.

Here's the description of the show: "The show follows a group of reporters as they investigate stories and solve mysteries against the backdrop of the struggle between journalistic ideals and the pursuit of profit."

Marcia Gay Harden Building "The Tower"
(photo: CBS)

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News Briefs

  • Producers Sara Risher and Stephanie Austin have teamed to form indie production shingle Chickflicks, aimed at generating two to three pics annually aimed at the female demo. (Variety)
  • Katie Jacobs, Executive Producer of House, optioned Girls Like Us the Sheila Weller biography of Carly Simon, Carol King and Joni Mitchell. (Variety)
  • Joan Allen will be back on Broadway in 2009 co-starring with Jeremy Irons in Impressionism by Michael Jacobs. Can it be that Allen hasn't been on the stage since the Heidi Chronicles in 1989? (Broadway World)
  • Army Wives broke the record for Lifetime series with its second season premiere this past Sunday. 4.5 m viewers tuned in. (Variety)
  • Zeitgeist has picked up Sundance doc prize winner "Trouble the Water" by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal for a late summer release, the company unveiled Tuesday. It will open August 22 a week before the anniversary of Katrina.
  • Katherine Heigl will star in and produce the feature film adaptation of "Escape," the bestselling memoir of Carolyn Jessop, whose testimony helped convict polygamist sect leader Warren Jeffs. (Variety)
  • Lifetime Television ordered thirteen episodes of the new original comedy, Rita Rocks. With a premiere date slated for this fall, the series stars Nicole Sullivan as Rita Clements, a busy mom and wife who finds herself by starting her own garage band. Also starring is Richard Ruccolo and Tisha Campbell-Martin. The series will be paired in a one-hour comedy block with Reba. (Cynopsis)

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Hollywood Thinks About Thinking About Taking Women Seriously as a Market

Sometimes I wonder if being 3,000 miles away from Hollywood I can get enough of a sense of Hollywood's prickly relationship to women and why its so contentious.

So I kind of felt good when I read Rachel Abramowitz' LA Times piece Hollywood Rethinks Chick Flicks for confirmation that yes, I do get it. I get it 100%. I usually like Abramowitz but this story is a rehash of old news and really doesn't do anything to push the conversation any further.

I guess we should be happy that women are finally saying things out loud that have been whispered for a long time. But I'm not happy. I want more and better movies about women.

"Why does the fate of female audiences rest on one movie?" asks producer Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, who produced the upcoming film "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl," as well as such women-driven hits as "Maid in Manhattan." "There are many movies made for male audiences that work and don't work, but it doesn't seem that the fate of gender-based movies rested on them."
The NY Times reported yesterday that Goldsmith-Thomas is incredibly nervous that the folks at Picturehouse are rolling out her film on July 2 to 1800 theatres. I'd be nervous too because those geniuses at the NY Times did her and her films a complete disservice when they pushed it as the next "women's movie" of the summer. Nothing can live up to Sex and the City. We all knew that before it opened.

The deal is we need to have more than one movie to hang our hats on. If there are still so few in the pipeline every one that opens will be overly scrutinized and held to an unreachable standard just like some woman I know (well I don't know, but I wish I did know) who is off the campaign trail this week.

But she does get Alan Horn the head of Warner Brothers to go on the record about North Country.
"I love that movie," says Horn, referring to "North Country," the Charlize Theron drama based on a landmark sexual harassment case. "It did not perform well commercially. Does that say anything about a movie starring women? No, it doesn't. Sometimes there's a difference between quality and commerciality or marketability."
Bullshit. It absolutely said something about a movie starring a woman. Has there been another film like North Country since North Country? The only ones I can think of are Angelina Jolie in A Might Heart and Reese Witherspoon in Rendition. Both of those failed for a myriad of reasons other than the fact that they starred women.

I also found Horn's quote about the success of Sex and the City quite patronizing:
It seems pretty clear we ought to be talking about a sequel, though there's no immediate conclusion we draw regarding the women's audience. We at Warner Bros. do not wish to be set up as industry seers.
Any movie that was about a guy that opened the way Sex did would have a sequel deal signed this week and announced in the trades. Give me a break. And what the hell does he mean that Warner Brothers does not want to be set up as industry seers? Isn't that the fucking point of the business? To be ahead of your competitors? To make movies that others don't? Do you mean that you don't want to be the studio that actually gets behind the women's market because that would tarnish your reputation as being for boys only? Don't you want to make money? These guys just totally don't get that women are desperate for good movies.

Donna Langley the president of production at Universal which will release Mamma Mia! later this summer said:
"I hope the film's success encourages not only studios to make more films for women but more female writers and directors to step forward with their own unique voices,"
It's time for women like Langley and her female peers to stand up and hire those women that she is asking to step forward. That's the only way women will get a foot in the door. I will be shocked and happy if it happens.

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Feminists Write About Sex and the City

It's been a bit lonely out here. (I know that everyone and their sister has written about Sex and the City, but not too many from a feminist perspective. Here are some other opinions.

Amanda Marcotte aka Pandagon writing in Alternet
All these attacks on “Sex and the City” in light of the movie that has come out---mostly from people who probably never watched a minute of the show---are sexist. And they’re a particularly insidious form of sexism, one that feminists are prone to falling for, which suggests that women don’t deserve respect unless they distance themselves from unserious things.

But the worst is the assumption that because it’s about four women and it’s funny and it’s about sex and there’s expensive clothes, then it is by definition stupid. Why? Because it’s feminine, admit it.

And that’s why, as I’ve said before, the show is a fantasy for a lot of fans who don’t have that opportunity to live, well, like men get to. And that’s why the show is such a sore spot in our country, because it put a friendly face on that demonized woman, the independent woman. There’s not a lot of room for independent women still in the Hollywood machine. Movies like “Knocked Up” can push the envelope of raunchy humor, but still play it very safe and deny the threatening idea that a woman (gasp!) might not want to be tied down to just any random dude who asks. The Sexual Politics of Sex and the City
Sarah Seltzer on RH Reality Check
SATC allows its characters to feel the omnipresent judgments and conflicts in women's lives, and feel them deeply, in a way that resonates with truths about modern womanhood. But then, as the arc or episode draws to an end, the four characters always accept each other. That kind of unassailable sisterhood is a feminist ideal, even when accented by silly designer shoes.

Let's hope that the triumph of this film, combined with that of Juno, means that there will more smart movies for women. But more importantly, let's hope that it gives Sex and the City II, and other movies of its ilk, license to be more risky, to be more real, and to include racial diversity that's more than just a gesture. Sex And The City: Eww It's For Girls!
Anita Diamant in the Boston Globe
Ah friendship; the love that dare not speak its name. I speak of women's friendship, a thing nearly invisible in popular culture where women seem to operate in a near-friendless vacuum. Friends and the city
Judith Warner on the NY Times website
“Sex and the City” is the perfect movie for our allegedly ever-so-promising post-feminist era, when “angry” is out and Restalyne is in, and virtually all our country’s most powerful women look younger now than they did 20 years ago. Woman in Charge, Women Who Charge
Paula Kamen on Women in Media and News
But the reviews have gone above and beyond just criticizing the movie to being very defensive about the characters’ sexuality, to the point of exhibiting a strange hostility. New Yorker hostility beyond being ‘just not that into’ SATC

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Will a Hit Movie About a Girl Help Make More Movies About Women?

Let's be honest. There are only a couple of female centric films opening this summer. Mamma Mia is the largest one and then there are a couple of smaller films notable Brick Lane and Frozen River (I've seen and liked both) but not too much else.

But Hollywood is really trying to figure out how to build on the Sex and the City audience so they're pitching the girl movies like Kit Kittredge: An American Girl to women. I haven't seen Kit Kittredge yet (I will later this week) but I am pretty offended by today's NY Times piece that basically says that Picturehouse is trying to get the Sex and the City audience to see Kit Kittredge: An American Girl. Pleeze.

I have nothing against Kit. In fact you can probably bet that I will like it. It's directed by a woman (Patricia Rozema), written by women (Ann Peacock and Valerie Tripp), produced by a woman (Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas) and stars the lovable Abigail Breslin as a young girl reporter trying to be taken seriously in 1934 Cincinnati. Shit, that's some serious women power.

Sounds pretty good to me. It's based on the American Girl doll (character) and I know some girls worship those dolls (they are way better than Barbies) and the store has become a serious destination for the young set in the cities where they are located.

But this is a movie about a girl. This is not a movie about a woman or women and that's where I take offense. It's just not the same. Movies about girls and young women even movies with feminist messages like this one sounds like it has, have always been ok. Think about Bend it Like Beckham, Mean Girls, Nancy Drew and the upcoming Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2. But movies about women is where we are faltering.

If they really wanted to build on the Sex and the City "womentum" wouldn't it have been smarter to move up the date of The Women into the summer and try to make it another group outing?

I hope Kit Kittredge does great, but Hollywood still needs to pay attention to women and films about girls won't cut it,
More Girls, Little Ones, Try to Take Back the Multiplex (NY Times)

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Women in Leadership Positions in the Arts in the UK

Why is it that the British papers actually analyze issues while we spend time talking in circles? In a well-researched piece, Maddy Costa of The Guardian looks into why women who are excelling in the arts fields are not making it to the top jobs. The story began when Culture Minister Margaret Hodge unleashed a scathing diatribe about the lack of women in artistic leadership positions. The Guardian talked to women in all areas of the arts and here are some of the notable quotes.

Vikki Heywood, executive director of the Royal Shakespeare Company, thinks we've reached the tipping point: on this, she's absolutely confident. "In 10 years' time," she says, "you and I won't be having this conversation."
Nadia Stern, chief executive of Rambert Dance Company, says, "Margaret Hodge is right, and it's a bit depressing that this is still newsworthy. Dance is still very male-dominated: most of the choreographers are male; most of the designers are male; when I meet my counterparts in venues around the country, they are almost always male. Given the talent that is out there, something is going on if most of the people in those positions are men."
Talk to enough successful women, and you start thinking that women are on an equal footing with men. And yet it's difficult to reconcile that with the fact that fewer than 25% of British theatres have female artistic directors, that Kathryn McDowell is the only managing director of a British orchestra (the London Symphony), or that four of the 14 senior staff at Tate are women.
The work-family balance issue gets some comments:
Polly Teale, who co-runs the theatre company Shared Experience, says that when her husband Ian Rickson was artistic director of the Royal Court, the pair felt that "we both needed a wife, in the old-fashioned sense". Joking aside, she wonders whether leadership positions need to be restructured to allow women to maintain those jobs alongside a family life.
To a degree, long hours, low pay and the work-life imbalance are not gender-specific problems. Depressingly, the problem that seems to be unique to women is their own self-doubt.
Some women think there are now other, more pressing diversity issues to be addressed. Heywood highlights the frustration felt by black and ethnic minority theatre directors, whose opportunities to work in the mainstream are few.
We could really use an analysis like this here, don't you think?
Thinking Outside the Box

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Flying - Confessions of a Free Woman Out on DVD Today

Jennifer Fox's epic documentary explorations on women's roles is available for purchase today. The series focuses on Jennifer Fox's questions about gender issues, motherhood, marriage and in the parts airing tonight she asks these questions of women activists working on issues in countries around the world. Check out my recent interview with Jennifer: Interview with Jennifer Fox

Purchase the DVD here ($3 from each DVD sale goes to Our Bodies Ourselves): Buy Flying

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Sarah Jessica Parker on The View

Last Friday Sarah Jessica Parker went to The View to talk about Sex and the City. Some high points:

I had an instinct that the time was right. There were no numbers to look at because there are no films with women over 40 to look at.
What this hopefully means is that we have put a white hot spotlight in the fact that half the population of this country are women and they want to go to the movies and they want to see a story that is well told.
She also said that 41% of the audience had not been to the movies in two months. Duh, what would they have seen? It's a desert out there.

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Sex and the City- Week Two Box Office

Sex and the City dropped a whopping 63% from last weekend and made $21.3 million for a cumulative total domestically of $99.3. The fall was expected but put the damper on the conversation over whether it would have any legs. But on the other side it did make $22 million during the week. Sex was also the overseas box office champ beating Indiana Jones racking up over $91 m in two weeks of international release. So, cumulatively, Sex has made almost $200 million worldwide in two weeks. Wow.

A Variety article last week tried to analyze whether the success of Sex would and could lead to more women's films. We still live in a world where studios have to be and prodded almost kicking and screaming into making films about women. I just don't understand what the problem is. They have potential to be successful if they are good. And we just had the most successful female film ever and the women of Hollywood (even the successful ones) know from their experience that the success of women's films does not breed more women's films.

Wendy Finerman (one of the most successful female producers says):

"When 'X-Men' does well and a studio decides to do 'Iron Man,' that's a reasonable business decision," says Wendy Finerman, who has produced "Prada," "Stepmom" and "P.S. I Love You" and recently set up "I Didn't Fancy Him Anyway" at CBS Films. "It doesn't happen that way with films that serve the female audience."
Diane English the writer and director of The Women (whose film will probably benefit the most from the success of Sex and the City) talks about her experiences:
Writer-director Diane English spent 13 years trying to get her redo of "The Women" into production, getting turned down by one female studio topper after another along the way before Bob Berney at Picturehouse finally said yes.

"I would come in with my list," she says, citing "The Hours" and "Steel Magnolia" as examples of similar fare that worked, only to hear studio execs dismiss each example as a fluke.

"We have to start over every time," English says.

The "Murphy Brown" creator admits she once considered it her mission to break the barrier against femme fare, but Bette Midler, one of stars of "The Women," advised her not to hold her breath, noting "First Wives Club" had no lasting effect. Nonetheless, English has two more femme-centric projects in the works -- an adaptation of Erica Jong's "Fear of Flying" and "The First Man," a romantic comedy about the first man married to a U.S. president.
Come on, this is the woman who made Murphy Brown one of the best sitcoms EVER which ran for a decade and did more to make the Republicans look like assholes than any democratic presidential candidate ever could. She is the top of the line and has spent over a decade literally begging for the measly 16 million to get her movie made. It just disgusts me. I can't wait to see The First Man. Some studio has to think its a good idea epecially now after Hillary Clinton's presidential run. If I had more than 22 cents, I'd be investing in Diane English.

Will Hollywood embrace femme pics? (Variety)

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