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Movie Mix

Alternatives to the Summer Blockbuster

By Melissa Silverstein, AlterNet. Posted May 5, 2007.


As an alternative the teen-targeted summer blockbusters, look beyond the multiplex for films that highlight women's stories.
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The summer movie season kicks off this weekend with Spiderman 3 descending onto thousands of screens at a multiplex near you. Hollywood prognosticators predict the biggest grossing summer ever with such sequels as the Pirates of the Caribbean, Fantastic Four, Harry Potter Die Hard and Shrek among others opening over the next three months.

As an alternative to this mostly teen-targeted fare, look beyond the multiplex for films that highlight women's stories. They also feature women as writers and directors, which is no accident. With women directors virtually shut out from the big budget films-according to the 2006 study from Dr. Martha Lauzen at San Diego State University, women directors account for just 7% of the top 250 films released, the same as 2005-the independent cinema world has become their place to thrive. Granted, thriving might be a stretch, but at least they are present. Less likely to receive offers of many films to direct, much less la crème de la crème, women are more likely to write scripts that they in turn can direct. Ironically, this dearth of opportunity at the highest level has created a wealth of stories of interest to women on the indie circuit.

Three films that illustrate the richness of women's contributions to independent cinema are currently in limited release: Waitress, Away From Her and Stephanie Daley. (If you can't find them in your neighborhood, complain to your local theatre.) Each film is written and directed by a woman and gives prominence to women's issues in different, provocative ways.

Adrienne Shelly is the director who was murdered November 1, 2006, in New York City. Her third, and final, feature Waitress tells the story of Jenna (played by Keri Russell), an unhappily married woman who finds herself pregnant. Shelley wrote the story when she was eight months pregnant and full of questions about the life she would lead after the birth of her daughter. In fact, the process of making Waitress led to her most creative period.

Sadly, Shelley died before she found out her film was accepted into Sundance where it was embraced by both critics and the festival audience. Shelley uses the film to ask classic feminist questions that many women face alone as they go through pregnancy-especially those caught in abusive relationships. Jenna wonders why women are universally expected to be happy about pregnancy while she has a fleeting thought about selling the baby. Being pregnant enhances her fear of being stuck forever with her tormentor husband Earl. "How lonely it is to be a woman so poor and so afraid," she remarks, imagining others caught in the same predicament as she discovers her own talents and works her way through these issues.

Stephanie Daley, the second feature to be written and directed by Hilary Brougher, deals with pregnancy and childbirth in a profoundly different way. Amber Tamblyn stars as Stephanie, a 16-year-old girl about to go on trial for killing her baby. Tilda Swinton plays Lydie Crane, a forensic psychologist hired by the prosecutors to determine whether Stephanie knew she was pregnant before giving birth on a school ski trip. Lydie, herself 29 weeks pregnant, had conceived just three months after suffering a stillbirth. Brougher fluidly addresses such hot button issues as sex education, abstinence, the role of religion, and abortion as well as teen pregnancy in the story without one ounce of preaching. Lydie, in her late 30s or early 40s, knows that the window is closing on her ability to have kids and is convinced her husband is sleeping with someone else. She is guilty about the loss of a baby she never grieved for and nervous that her body is once again going to betray her.


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See more stories tagged with: movies, independent films

Melissa Silverstein is a freelance writer and the web editor of the WMC Daily Update.



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Better idea. Watch what you want.
Posted by: utilitarianist on May 5, 2007 1:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Do you think anyone cares that you watched a movie just because it does or does not have a female director? Are there christian fundamentalists fresh from bible camp stalking your every move who you can defeat by watching a particular movie? Don't be silly.

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» You've missed my point. Posted by: utilitarianist
More chick flicks needed.
Posted by: HughScott on May 5, 2007 6:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I live in Thousand Oaks, California. My wife and I are movie-addicted retirees who see the best of first releases every Friday.

Lucky for us, there are two art theaters 10 minutes from our house – just about the only way to watch works by women where we live, even though there several hundred screens within 30 miles of T.O.

Please, Hollywood, make more chick flicks so we can come home feeling younger than when we left.

Hugh E. Scott, editor of the forthcoming JohnQPublic4PRESIDENT2008.com and King-George.biz, the only website with hardcopy proof of White House corruption.

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An Even Better Idea
Posted by: wawa on May 5, 2007 6:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Why not read a book by an actual eco-feminist on the "hot-button issues" of the Global NONVIOLENT Solidarity Movement which seeks Justice which will lead to Peace for ALL the children in Israel Palestine.

"Memoirs of a Nice Irish-American 'Girl's' Life in Occupied Territory" documents REAL life and tells the stories of REAL people.


As reality supercedes any movie, why not also read the NEWS Alternet and the USA lame stream media totally ignores?

May 1, 2007 WAWA Blog:

Freedom of Speech Denied in Mid East 'Democracy'

http://www.wearewideawake.org/

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Adrienne Shelly didn't just "sadly die" she was murdered by an illegal
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on May 5, 2007 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
alien Diego Pillco in a violent rape/murder/robbery. She was found naked hanging by a bedsheet from the shower rod in the bathtub. At first the police tried to claim suicide but her husband refused to believe it and upon more investigation (footprints from Diego's shoes, missing money, etc) Diego confessed that 'he was having a bad day' and he had killed her. Another model illegal alien.

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Boldly going where no one wants to go
Posted by: TassieDevil on May 6, 2007 6:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Psssst Melissa, I'll give you a clue. When your so called feminist friends decide to make movies that are ENTERTAINING for ALL, men, women and children, is when female directors and actresses will get financial support to their work. As a woman, I will only support those works that hilight positives of and for women, not this continued American victim-status crap we get served here in Australia on midday movie shows.

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