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Where Are the Women Directors?Posted on Jan 25, 2012
Here’s a thought exercise: In a nation where 33 percent of the Supreme Court justices are women, 17 percent of the seats in the Senate and House are held by women and 12 percent of the statehouses have female governors, what accounts for the fact that only 5 percent of movie directors in 2011 are female? Five percent? According to Martha Lauzen, the San Diego State University professor who has been tracking behind-the-scenes female employment in Hollywood since 1998 and released her annual “Celluloid Ceiling” report on Tuesday, that’s approximately half of what the figure was when she released her first report 13 years ago. That’s the bad news. The good news—or less bad news, as some observers see it—is that women comprise 18 percent of producers, writers, cinematographers and editors working on the top 250 highest-grossing domestic films, an uptick of 2 percent over last year. The stats for women are better in television, where they made up 11 percent of directors in the 2010-11 TV season. Still, Lauzen notes, three years after Kathryn Bigelow became the first woman to win an Oscar for best director, there are fewer female helmers at work in Hollywood than there were 20 years ago. Why is it easier for a woman to get elected to the U.S. Senate than get a place behind the viewfinder of a movie camera? In Hollywood, where two women are studio heads (Sony’s Amy Pascal and DreamWorks’ Stacey Snider), and Nancy Meyers and Nora Ephron are A-list directors, few are willing to talk on the record. One high-ranking executive who spoke on the condition of anonymity—let’s call him Mogul A—cites “subconscious sexism” and the economic crunch: “Studios are making fewer movies, and the effect is last-hired, first laid-off,” he says. Another successful executive who also asked not to be named, let’s call her Mogul B, admits, “There’s still this feeling that making movies for women is risky.” This, despite the success of “The Help” and “Bridesmaids” in 2011, each of which made $169 million. Implied in Mogul B’s admission is that movies by women are movies for women. Not necessarily. “Kung Fu Panda 2,” the top-grossing 2011 movie directed by a woman (Jennifer Yuh Nelson), is a family-friendly animated film. What is true is that of the top 10 highest-grossing movies at the U.S. box office, only one, “The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part I,” boasts a female protagonist. This begs the chicken-or-egg question: Is this because few movies with female protagonists are being made, or because there is a Hollywood perception that men will resist films with a woman at the center? “The idea that men won’t see a film with women in the lead—that’s punditry,” says Jeanine Basinger, chair of Wesleyan University’s film department. “Where’s the data?” Excellent question. While most research, including that of the Gallup Organization, shows an equal number of female and male moviegoers, some movies skew male (“Transformers”) and female (“Sex and the City”). There are two obstacles to getting verifiable across-the-board data about the composition of audiences. One: The studios and the companies that conduct the research for them say that the information is proprietary. Two: Social scientists are skeptical about the accuracy of such information, branding it as “anecdata” collected from opening-weekend screenings in major metropolitan cities. One market-research firm that did not want to be identified reported that for “Haywire,” an action film starring mixed-martial artist Gina Carano, the audience skewed “slightly male,” around 53 percent. Whether it’s true that men will vote for a woman to represent them in Congress but not buy a ticket to a movie with a woman as a central character, it is a Hollywood perception. As is its corollary, says Mogul B: that from childhood women learn to identify with male characters (but that men do not grow up identifying with female characters). “If women have been taught over time that they should identify with male characters, doesn’t that give them authorial capacities men conspicuously lack?”—and thus make them better candidates for the gig of movie director, asks Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania. That argument doesn’t carry much weight with Mogul B.
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By Shenonymous, March 16 at 5:21 am Link to this comment
“Is it merely a farrago of sexual and hallucinatory images of great
skill, or is it a work of multi-layered complexity, crowded with
religious emblems, politico-historical allegory, scathing social
attack and compassion?”
Really EmileZ, of course I take you seriously. Where is your self-
confidence? And of course I watched the 1:16 minute very short
bit of it. Having a casual understanding of what is schizophrenia, a
father-in-law was identified and treated with the disorder, and I have
a niece who is getting her Ph.D. in the psychology sciences and we have
had some talk about the condition, it seems to me that if the story of the
film were an allegory for humanity, there would have to be some explicit
one-to-one references in the film. I should have to watch it to see. So I
will. Now I don’t really take you too seriously about Sally Sense though.
Reality is too often where “madness(es) have gone” (see the graffiti on
the wall). If humanity is truly suffering that form of being split off from
reality, schizophrenia, then who is left that could be the therapist(s)?
What is the treatment of a multicultural world with nearly 7 billion
people?
But you, now, to be courteous, will have to experience Seven Beauties.
Report thisBy EmileZ, March 16 at 3:42 am Link to this comment
You’re not going to watch it are you.
You don’t take me seriously.
Report thisBy Shenonymous, March 13 at 11:02 am Link to this comment
We each have our aesthetic, EmileZ. I always enjoy our intellectual
interactions, and will watch the excerpt of the film you like. I didn’t
cry rape, however. Your hallucinating heroine did. You have more or
less fictionalized my reaction. It looks like is is to inflate your
perception of yourself! I have no idea who is Sally Sense.
I have been busy with real life that demands much more time than
does posting on electronic forums. No apologies for that!
As I said Wertmuller is nonpareil in directing films. My favorite of her
contribution is Seven Beauties, which is about ideals that somehow get
sunk in the ridiculous and pathetic rationales humans face in life. The
absurdities we are faced with from time to time force us to take the most
incredible pathways to sanity, if that is at all possible. This film, among
many many excellent specimens is arguably Wertmüller’s masterpiece. It
is as intense as it is a beautiful tragicomedy at its highest dramatic level.
It shows two sides, though not a schizophrenic pathology, a man might
find himself having to deal with simultaneously. Not the least of which
is the most inhuman tragedy of the last century, the Holocaust, becomes
a roman a clef occurring in the middle of the film to give the beginning
and end to buffer to that kind of madness that can underwrite some
human’s action against other humans. Wertmüller used that most
horrific of all human acts, the Final Solution, to illustrate the extremes
of collective irrationality and what one man can do in the face of it. The
story is a microcosm of the savage opposition of individual self-interest
with the salvation of the cohesiveness of the collective, that can be just
as, if not more, savage than men lost in neurotic derangement. All in all,
it is a story of survival. What survives is more than a single man but
humanity as well.
I’d give a list of her most wonderful films but if you are interested, and
Report thisyou really should be interested, you can just google them, or better yet,
rent or buy them. They are worthy of taking up space in one’s home as
would a good book.
By EmileZ, March 12 at 9:13 am Link to this comment
@ Shenonymous
Come on… you just can’t cry rape and run off without even seeing the movie and the alleged rape scene.
Well, there is always Sally Sense, who is pretty fucking awesome.
Report thisBy EmileZ, March 11 at 7:24 pm Link to this comment
@ Sheynonymous
I got to thinking about “No Mercy, No Future” and felt compelled to watch it a second time.
I am glad I did, because it was even better the second time around.
Here is a link to a scene. I think the description provided by the uploader is as good as any I have seen, which is to say… inconclusive.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BnoxcLij054
Report thisBy EmileZ, March 10 at 10:42 pm Link to this comment
@ Sheynonymous
I dunno, I thought it was interesting and well done, though now that I think about it, I suppose it is not for everyone. There is one scene in particular that I found difficult to watch, so I held up my hand in front of the screen until it was over (as I often do in such circumstances).
It is not an easy film to analyze. It is not your typical storyline where someone finds redemption or learns an important lesson or triumphs over hardship or whathaveyou. It is what it is.
Incredible performance by the lead actress. Great camerawork, editing, pacing, music, direction.
A masterpiece in my opinion.
Anyhow, it is my favorite movie by a woman director that I can call to mind.
There is another German woman director who made two films which I kind of liked: Margarethe von Trotta.
The films being “Sheer Madness” and “The Lost Honor Of Katharina Blum”. I noticed that according to IMDB, she is currently filming a movie about Hannah Arendt, at least that is the title.
Agnes Varda also made a couple films I thought were interesting: “Vagabond” and “Happiness”.
I just thought I would throw those out there for whatever it’s worth. They are all pretty unconventional. The last two I mentioned are downright wierd.
I have always meant to check out Lena Wertmuller, but have not yet got around to it.
Report thisBy Shenonymous, March 10 at 6:27 pm Link to this comment
EmileZ, thank you for the recommendation. I appreciate it.
Report thisI’ve checked out the storyline of the film and I’m afraid it sounds
dreadful. Poor mentally ill woman with an obsessive need for Jesus
who gets raped , then feels the need to “take up” with various men she
thinks is Jesus and has sex with them? I wonder what that paradigm is
really about? I see nothing “redeeming” about this film that makes me
want to experience it. Why do you find it a good film? Course the
real-life dancer, Nijinsky also had a Jesus complex, and didn’t do too
well after that illness started. His redemption was in the beauty of his
dancing before he took ill.
By EmileZ, March 10 at 4:51 pm Link to this comment
@ Shenonymous
I am quite fond of “No Mercy, No Future” directed by Helma Sanders-Brahms. I would highly recommend it.
I am not so sure that psychology classes are the key to a broad understanding human nature. Such a thing is difficult to manufacture or bestow.
@ diamond
I have been fortunate enough over the course of my life to get much more desirable, intelligent, talented, soulful, incredible, crazy-mad women to befriend, and even at times go to bed with me (among other things) then that particularly vapid lifeless “pretty woman” (and no I didn’t even have to pay, I am quite poor in fact).... and it has driven me insane.
Report thisBy sanda1sculptorNYC, January 29 at 1:15 pm Link to this comment
I think I disappeared my first attempt, sigh.
First, @gerard: Happy Birthday to you, sir. (I used to post comments on here as NYCartist.) I hope to celebrate my 18th Leap Year Birthday at 72 on Feb. 29, 2012.
Next: for all readers of comments:
To answer the question by someone, Where are the women artists in history?, or Why were there more men than women? Short answer: Men wrote women artists out of history and still do. Grants, art shows and reviews of art shows by women, who can get into galleries or museum shows, are fewer in number(s) than men. Fewer work by women are bought for public collections.
There have always been women artists. I’m sure as far back as the cave in “The Cave of Forgotten Dreams”, but it is assumed by men (and women who buy the propaganda) that the artists were all men, based on too little or no evidence.
The National Museum of Women in the Arts was founded in 1986 to work on this gap. See http://www.nmwa.org. Tell every woman artist you know to set up a file in the museum: it’s easy and cheap.
Read Germaine Greer’s book on women in art history and how men wrote us out of history. And still do, but it’s more difficult now.
Women artists are as obsessed with art as are men.
Report thisArt is an itch that must be scratched.
By sanda1sculptorNYC, January 29 at 1:05 pm Link to this comment
First, @gerard: Happy Birthday to you. (I used to post on here as NYCartist.) 98 years old: good for you. I hope to celebrate my 18th Leap Year birthday at 72 on Feb. 29, 2012. When we disagree in future, I’ll remember it’s your birthday.
Next:
For everyone who reads comments:
For more sexist comments on this topic, see the Guardian today http://www.guardian.co.uk.
Why, someone asks, are there more men in art history than women? I suggest you read Germaine Greer’s book on the subject of women artists. Short answer: men write women out of history. There have always been women artists. Sexism lives: most interesting recent example - in the wonderful film, “The Cave of Forgotten Dreams”, one French (woman) scientist gently reminds another French (woman) scientist, who is the head scientist of that department, to say “human” not “man”. It is assumed the artists of the cave paintings of 32,000 years ago were men, with too little to no evidence.
As to obsession and career drive in women artists: it is the same as for men. Art is an itch that must be scratched.
The National Museum of Women in the Arts was started in 1986 to remedy (some) women being left out of art. Visit http://www.nmwa.org. Please tell any woman artist you know to start at file in the museum: it’s cheap and easy and important.
Report thisBy Shenonymous, January 29 at 9:33 am Link to this comment
EmileZ, January 28 at 5:42 am – 99% of male directors and
male actors in the movies are stinking bastards. So the tribe
of the cinema are mostly whores and bastards. Hmmmm Is
it a wonder the movie industry has entries on the Stock Market
and ticket sales are still in the billions of dollars? Where do the
poor get such fun money? Hmmmm What does that say about
our culture and the lure of fantasy entertainments? And Europe,
and Asia by the way, is not that far behind, if at all. The movie
industry is huge in India. Bet they don’t have that many women
directors either. It is a gender thing that is evolving affected by
culture, but as in all other walks of life, women have to play catch
up without losing their femaleness. Or do they? Maybe good
filmmaking is really genderless? Maybe that is what women need
to learn?
German, Lena Wertmuller, but who directed Italian films, is one of
the great movie directors of all time. Her work ought to be studied
in depth. Almost nothing transcends Seven Beauties. One of
the most unforgettable lines of all times comes from that movie,
“To pee is to live!” LOL
It isn’t that wealthy women don’t have money to invest in films.
Women need producers who can deliver funding for film projects.
Seems the key to more parity to having more female directors is
the same throughout the industry. Aesthetic imagination, but
sophisticated imagination. Projects have to be conceived before
anything else. Then a passion to make it happen is needed.
More schools that have cinema studies departments need to
graduate more females educated in the skill of directing. But
they also need trained skill in selecting or even writing screen-
plays. Women are not as practiced in being dictators which is
what a director turns into on the job. It is a holistic craft, and
a learned art, meaning an understanding of parts to whole and
wholes to parts, what is the difference of quality verses schlock.
Also in order to direct top-notch films, takes a broad understand-
ing of human nature, which then requires the student director to
take psychology courses as well.
Women have to be told as girls at least by high school they have
Report thisthe potential ability to be successful directors in the industry. Most
girls I’ve had experience with in schools haven’t the foggiest idea
they could be anything let alone film directors, mostly chittering on
their iPhones or Blackberries. Nowadays the learning the craft can
be done with social electronic devices. iPhones can make videos.
Schools could sponsor competitions and have an assembly where
productions are shown and voted on. There are all kinds of ways
to encourage more girls to go into areas of occupation that have
had only a few of them.
By diamond, January 28 at 1:07 pm Link to this comment
EmileZ you make no sense, in French or English. I can only imagine that you know you will never get a woman like Julia Roberts to go to bed with you and it has driven you mad.
Report thisBy EmileZ, January 28 at 6:15 am Link to this comment
Dear Angelina Jolie,
Tu es betes comme tes pieds.
Vous avez le cervau d’un sandwich au fromage.
Vous êtes une pomme de terre avec le visage d’un cochon d’inde.
Yours Truly,
Report thisEmileZ
By EmileZ, January 28 at 5:42 am Link to this comment
The big problem that nobody wants to talk about is that (at least) 99% of movies suck and 99% of females who make it in the movie business are stinky whores.
Okay, referring to the latter, maybe not 99%.
But Julia Roberts is a stinky whore.
Perhaps if we drop the statistics and examine what a stinky whore Julia Roberts truly is we might get somewhere. It is as good an angle as any from which to approach the problem with women in cinema.
Report thisBy Kay Johnson, January 27 at 10:25 am Link to this comment
Someone should interview Deborah Kampmeier for her thoughts on the subject
of female directors and stories centered on female protagonists.
2003: Virgin
2007: Hounddog
2013: Lonely Hunter (based on the Carson McCullers book)
IIRC, there is an interview included with the “extras” of Virgin that shed some
light on the subject.
The issues are industry wide.
Thanks to the truthdig writer, jjohnjj, who wrote about the women of the silent
era, and adding those facts to the conversation. Indeed, during the silent era,
women worked as innovators in all areas of the silent film industry.
Frances Marion wrote many of Mary Pickford’s scripts, and went on to win two
Oscars, one for The Big House in 1930, and the second for the 1931 film, The
Champ. By the middle 1930s the Hollywood moguls were effectively
marginalizing women and pushing them aside. Cari Beauchamp wrote a
biography about Ms. Marion, published in 1998—Without Lying Down: Frances
Marion and the Powerful Women of Early Hollywood.
Although Agnieszka Holland (scenario collaborator for Blue) worked on the
Report this1993 film, Blue, she did not direct the film. Krzysztof Kieslowski directed the
film. Indeed, though, Agnieszka Holland has an impressive resume as a
director.
By jjohnjj, January 26 at 11:28 pm Link to this comment
“These Amazing Shadows” is a documentary I saw recently on PBS, about the National Film Registry and how films are nominated and chosen for preservation at the Library of Congress.
One of the curators interviewed in the film spoke at length about about the large number of women involved in production, writing, and directing during the silent era. They were innovators and their films took on significant issues; domestic violence, birth control, even abortion.
After sound came along, production costs went up, banks exerted control over production and the Hollywood studio system was born. Only one woman, Dorothy Arzner, continued directing feature films on a regular basis, and she retired in 1943.
It appears that when cinema was a new and independent medium, women were the first to put it to creative use. Once the old-boy network took over, the women were pushed aside.
I wonder if that’s been also true in other “new media”... were there women pioneers in the early computer game industry?
http://www.theseamazingshadows.com/
This is from Wikipedia’s entry on “Women’s Cinema”
http://en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Women’s_cinema#Silent_films
Report thisBy rumblingspire, January 26 at 10:04 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
@kazy.
just for the record, i do know there are great female artists. and i do understand that there have been cultural barriers for centuries; that both sexes must deal with. i for one never had an interest in being manly, proposing to the girl, being the sole supporter of the household, cheering for sports, etc. even though i’m heterosexual i distinctly remember, as a child in the 50s/60s, wishing i was a girl so i could take it easy. my point, we both suffer from cultural expectations/oppression.
i think blogdog might be pointing to the truth of it with regard to the arts, “few women are so obsessed”.
what are the differences between men and women. i have been hearing that they might as well be different species, they are so different.
certainly the climate does not permit a quiet contemplative study of the matter. to much politics and PC in the way of an adequate study.
Report thiswe must never forget we are not above being merely mammals, no matter what our intelligence and pretense toward equality.
By US_Idiocracy, January 26 at 2:10 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
People are individuals, I really hate articles that focus on
gender, why not understand that each person is an individual
and has their own interests?
I don’t see any articles wondering why “why aren’t there
more women miners?” or “Why aren’t their more women
janitors?”
It’s always women complaining about high status jobs where
Report thisif the job were low status no one would give a damn.
By bluejeanne, January 26 at 1:19 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
CORRECTION Glenn Close did NOT direct Albert Nobbs but rather co-wrote it for film adaptation. Rodrigo Garcia is the Director. My appologies . . .
Report thisBy bluejeanne, January 26 at 1:07 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Women Directors ? Where are they ? Australia, New Zealand, New York . . . These are brilliant artistes who are not wooed by the artificiality of Hollywood glitz. Gillian May Armstrong: My Brilliant Career; Little Women; Charlotte Gray. Jane Campion: The Piano; Julie Taymor: Frida and currently Glenn Close directing as well as herself portraying, Albert Nobbs.
No, women don’t genererally direct violent action flicks that rake in the inane amounts of money that blood and gore attracts and for which the vapid-minded masses are willingto pay.
Report thisBy kazy, January 26 at 11:32 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Hey rumblingspire: your remark: “might one ask why there are so many more male artist throughout history.take your pick; music, paint, literature, drama. maybe there are differences other than genital between the sexes?” What are you from the 13th century? My God, man, women were nothing more than property throughout history up to fairly recently. How the hell were they able to compose music, paint, and write. Damn they couldn’t even act in the theatre. Men played women’s roles, sang women’s parts in opera. With all due respect you seem quite ignorant of women’s history. And currently now, still men control those institutions and have not readily allowed women to enter them. It’s still quite difficult if you’re not a man. Compounded by the fact that from the moment she’s born her choices are limited. She’s constantly encouraged to have children and marry, dolls are thrown at her from a young age, her worth is measured by the children she has and the man she marries, along with the limited areas of work that are considered acceptable, more often than not steering her in more feminine occupations and away from manly careers that pay more. No it hasn’t stopped her from entering those male domains but she certainly hits a glass ceiling that men don’t. And all those feminine archtypes that have been created for her are all around her, she can’t escape it. It’s on billboards and it’s in books and in movies and commercials all along while she watches men doing everything they want to do, even saving her ass because she always needs his help. Occasionally a kick ass female is represented in our culture but usually in parody - which according to gerard doesn’t even exist in real life - he never, of course, bothers to mention that neither do kickass men exist either - another fabrication by our culture to create mutated personas of the sexes while we all believe and support these differences, placing favor with those qualities attributed to men, while ridiculing and belittling those attributed to women, offering up skewered evidence to validate the differences that exist so that everyone remains completely blind to those traits that we actually have more in common with. This cultural necessity to uphold and advertise the differences between the sexes always shows men as better, more admirable, more worthy, much in the way Eurocentrism tries to prove they’re civilization is superior over other cultures, which, of course, led to colonialism. If you want to stress a real masculine trait - that would be it. Colonialism. And it’s that kind of mentality that has created the exaggerated differences between the sexes in which man looms so much larger than woman.
Report thisBy SarcastiCanuck, January 26 at 11:08 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
I also have a bone to pick on how few female garbagemen there are in our society.Even the name smacks of domination.I have been studying garbage trucks all over the place and have yet to see more then a token few women,manning them.This is a disgrace and smacks of typical male dominated,glass floor,old boys club control.Come on ladies,grab your coveralls and gloves and show those guys what your made of.Don’t be held back anymore,you too can be a Garbageperson.
Report thisBy A Bird in the Hand, January 26 at 10:33 am Link to this comment
This is such BS…We don’t have enough women landscapers either. Oh AND there are way too many whites in AA and not enough blacks or women either for that matter..Blah..blah..blah..Some cheese with your Whine??
dbr: You don’t want ‘gender-equitable norms’ you want ‘special norms’...
Report thisBy kazy, January 26 at 10:20 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Maybe because like everything else in this world, it’s still a boyz club and this is a man’s world. There’s no equal opportunity here when gender biases are so ingrained into our cultures we don’t even see it and when we rarely question it, there has been such a backlash of the feminist movement from men that for a woman to point out the inequities is to bring the wrath of the angry male culture down on your head. And it an anger that has sufficiently garnered females as well into their way of thinking. You go on any board on any thread that brings up gender issues on the Internet, and the venom, and viciousness that spews out of men’s mouths when it comes to pointing out their prejudices - it’s absolutely terrifying and it’s that kind of hatred that keeps women from even voicing their opinion.
Report thisBy bluejeanne, January 26 at 8:48 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Where are the women directors ? Have you heard of Agnieszka Holland ? The last I heard she was living in Paris.
Agnieszka Holland
Director: Olivier, Olivier (1992) · Europa Europa (1990) The Secret Garden (1993) · Three Colors: Blue (1993). She was born 28 of November 1948 in Warsaw, Poland, the daughter of a Jewish father and a Catholic mother . . .
Hollywood is too mercenary and commercial for many creative people.
Report thisBy Doubtom, January 26 at 8:07 am Link to this comment
It’s a matter of culture; the jews control Hollyweird and women are relegated to
Report thislesser roles as a result. They also have to sit in separate areas within their
temples—they’re unclean donchaknow. Thanks to religion were so damn
advanced! Monkeys make more sense!
By sallytomata, January 26 at 6:36 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
WOMEN DIRECTORS???????? How about women representatives in our local, state
Report thisand federal governments. The US is is 90th in the WORLD in this regard. Until
there is parity within our “representational” government, there will be NO parity
anywhere else. PERIOD. 90th in the World, people. GOOD GRIEF.
By blogdog, January 26 at 2:19 am Link to this comment
as a composer working in the classical tradition, the question once came up in a
symposium: “Why so few women composers? It came to me without giving it a
thought: “They’re smarter than us.”
some think this sort of work glamorous - perhaps for .01% - those who really
break through, by whatever means - in this time and place, everyone else is
deemed a looser - most women are too smart to play at odds like that
and for most in the fray it has nothing to do with fame or fortune - it’s
Report thiscompulsion to project voice and vision - again, few women are so obsessed
By Marian Griffith, January 26 at 1:43 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Hello bump-on-head, meet glass ceiling.
Report thisBy diamond, January 25 at 8:56 pm Link to this comment
Where are the women directors? When they direct things like ‘The Hurt Locker’, who cares? The quality of the work is what matters, not the gender of the director.
Report thisBy rumblingspire, January 25 at 8:17 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
might one ask why there are so many more male artist throughout history. take your pick; music, paint, literature, drama.
Report thismaybe there are differences other than genital between the sexes?
By gerard, January 25 at 8:17 pm Link to this comment
“...women’s interior life is badly skewed.” (My comment on this one: If it is badly skewed,, some badly skewed male with no interior life should be held responsible!)
“Now we have real kick-ass females, but too often their behavior and attitudes reflect male fantasies,”
Report this(My comment on this sentence, for what it’s worth, is that “real kick-ass females” are reflecting real masculine violence and sexusl abuse rather than actually being “real kick-ass females.”
Why? Because for some reason or pressure, they have to do so to “git ‘er done”. Oddly enough, I’ve lived within two weeks of 98 years and have never known a “real kick-ass female” in that entire time.)
By prisnersdilema, January 25 at 8:17 pm Link to this comment
This is exactly the kind of thinking that has turned the left into little more than a political
oddity..
That what matters most is the outside of a person and not what they think and feel on
the inside….
I guarantee that more women could be elected politically, but those women will more
than likely be conservatives..This is the kind of thinking that led the left to the hang
mans noose behind their first African American president, for all intents and purposes he
behaved like George Bush number 2.
Cosmetic change means nothing… It only serves to keep up appearances and nothing
more…
Please don’t try and destroy Hollywood, with your out dated mental software, this kind of
Report thisthinking has done enough damage already.
By NABNYC, January 25 at 6:36 pm Link to this comment
Each of the statistics cited (17% of all seats in Congress held by women, 12% of the governor seats) are unacceptable because they are the result if sexism, bigotry and exclusion, denial of equal opportunity to women.
I could give you some more statistics, such as only 18% of partners in law firms are women. In my county, 18% of the judges are women, and it’s been like that for decades, almost as if somebody decided “that’s enough.” It just goes on and on. The demand should be 50% and not one less, in all these positions. Tenured university professors: predominantly white male. The director on a film is like the boss, and sexism continues to exclude women.
The interesting development in this area is in television. Women actresses over a certain age (40) are turning to TV to find good roles for themselves on the small screen, sometimes on HBO or Showtime, but sometimes on other stations. Now we see older male actors (Dustin Hoffman, Steve Buscemi) moving towards TV to find better roles for themselves. The movies are unfortunately controlled by a small group of white men who mostly sponsor violence and sex. If you want anything else, go to independent film, foreign, or sometimes TV.
We should have a woman’s union for all working women, support each other, demand all businesses and employers reach the 50% point. Let’s start with Congress.
Report thisBy dbr, January 25 at 6:23 pm Link to this comment
Thanks for this important article. The perpetuation of such sexist practices in a major social institution like popular media undermines progress toward gender-equitable norms across society.
And I hope that more studies release data on the average marketing budgets for films directed by women vs. by men.
Report thisBy John Poole, January 25 at 5:38 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)
Don’t show up at a drag queen bar with the speculation that few men want to
Report thisidentify with female characters.