Recommendations for the week: 

Hysteria directed by Tanya Wexler and Polisse by Maiwenn.

Films About Women Opening This Weekend

Virginia  
Virginia stars Jennifer Connelly in the title role as a beautiful yet unhinged single mother who struggles to raise her son Emmett (Harrison Gilbertson) while dreaming of escaping her small Southern boardwalk town.  Her long time affair with the very married, Mormon Sheriff Richard Tipton (Ed Harris) is thrown into question when he decides to run for public office.  Things are further complicated when Emmett begins a romantic relationship with Tipton’s daughter (Emma Roberts).  Virginia and the town—populated by Amy Madigan, Toby Jones, Yeardley Smith—are full of secrets and everyone knows Virginia can only keep things together for so long.  (from the press materials)

The Color Wheel
The Color Wheel is the story of JR, an increasingly transient aspiring news-anchor, forcing her disappointing younger brother Colin to embark on a road trip to move her belongings out of her professor-turned-lover's apartment. Problem is these grown up kids do not get along and are both too obnoxious to know better. Chaos and calamity are not far behind her beat up Honda Accord.  The Color Wheel is a familial comedy of disappointment and forgiveness. (Synopsis courtesy of official website)

Lovely Molly
A young newlywed woman is thrust into a supernatural nightmare of the unknown when she moves into her deceased father's house. (Synopsis courtesy of TIFF)

Films Directed by Women Opening This Weekend

Hysteria – directed by Tanya Wexler, co-written by Jonah Lisa Dyer
One of the most vivid memories I have of my college learning experience is a class I took on Women in American History. I remember reading Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper and Kate Chopin's The Awakening, and if I didn't have feminist inclinations before I read those books, I sure did the moment my eyes hit the page.

Those books (and many other in that class) changed me. It was when I discovered that women were thought to be hysterical because they wanted to have lives outside the home and were told by doctors that they needed to sit quietly and rest and not think too much because that would be too taxing on their poor brains and their private parts.  Their diagnosis of hysteria made some of the women actually lose their minds.

The new movie Hysteria directed by Tanya Wexler takes a comedic twist on this very serious and feminist topic.  Read more.
Read Women & Hollywood's interview with director Tanya Wexler.

Polisse – written and directed by Maiwenn
Polisse by Maiwenn was one of the four female directed films from last year's competition at the Cannes Film Festival, and it was awarded the Jury Prize.  It also became huge box office hit in France and was nominated for 13 Cesar Awards.  It tells the story of the the Paris Child Protective Service police unit.  

Unlike Law & Order SVU that shows on an endless loop here in the US which focuses mostly just on the cases, this film gives us a behind the scenes glimpse of the toll this work takes on the team.  It shows the marriage troubles, the drinking problems, the eating disorders, the breakdowns when the work gets to your soul and you can't go on another moment.  These people are flawed heroes.  They don't get many accolades for their work, in fact they constantly get shit.  They are not rich, most of them have serious problems, but they are the people on the front lines every day.  That's what makes it so interesting.  Ordinary people doing extraordinary work.  The film is very fast paced and many things happen at once.  When the characters run, the camera runs.  The story is very gripping and the ending was very unexpected and jarring.

Films Written by Women Opening This Week

What to Expect When You Are Expecting – written by Shauna Cross and Heather Hach
A look at love through the eyes of five interconnected couples experiencing the thrills and surprises of having a baby, and ultimately coming to understand the universal truth that no matter what you plan for, life doesn't always deliver what's expected. (from IMDB)

See the full list of films playing

Women and Hollywood

 

Say something nice…

[‘The Carrie Diaries’ Trailer – VIDEO]

Hollywood Dame

 

It's been very interesting to watch the opening of the Cannes Film Festival.  In light of the fact that there are no women directors in competition and the great work of La Barbe, at the opening press conference the jury as well as the directors of the festival were confronted with a barrage of questions about the issue.

I remember two years ago when there were no women directors in competition and there was a petition started "You Cannes Not Be Serious" but there was not that much media converage and that was just after Kathryn Bigelow won the Academy Award for best director.

What a difference two years makes.  The media and the public (thanks to social media) are way more attuned to this issue and we refuse to let the issue rest.

I feel for Andrea Arnold — the only female director on the jury — for having to be the representative to speak out on the topic.  She spoke about her disappoinment but not surprise but defended the festival against sexism.  It's a tough spot for any director to be put in, even one as feminst as Arnold.  Here's what she said:

In response to this continuing problem, Women and Hollywood has put together a petition directed to the jurors of the festival.  Here it is:

You will spend the next 11 days watching 22 films that the programmers and leaders of the Cannes Film Festival deemed to be the worthiest of this year's competition.

The Cannes Film Festival is one of the most prestigious festivals in the world.  Festival Films including last year's Oscar winner The Artist have gone on to have long and successful lives, and filmmakers' careers have been launched on the Croisette.  As we all know, the opportunities to have your film seen on a world stage is invaluable.

For the 2012 edition, as with the 2010 edition, there are NO FEMALE DIRECTED FILMS in competition, and in the 64 years of the Festival only one woman — Jane Campion — has been awarded the Palme D'Or.

Read the rest of the petition and join the over 1,000 people calling for transparency in the selection process.

I want to thank everyone for their support and help.

Here are some media stories about the petition:

Women on Cannes red carpet — but not in directors' chairs (LA Times)

In 65 Years of the Cannes Film Festival, Only One Woman Has Been Awarded the Palme D’Or (Jezebel)

Cannes 2012: 700 Protesters Sign Petition Demanding More Women Directors (Hollywood Reporter)

Cannes 2012 Sexist? Lack Of Woman Directors In Competition Spurs Outrage (Huffington Post)

Women and Hollywood

 


Final Result & Elimination by IdolxMuzic

For those of you who couldn’t decide between watching the season finale of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ and ‘American Idol’ we have the elimination cut down into one 6:37 clip. The final three was narrowed down to two hopefuls.

(We also have the full episode of ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ season 8 finale! Click HERE for that…

Jessica Sanchez was first to get a pass to the end. Phillip Phillips (his parents must be geniuses) was second to make it to the end. Sadly, that meant Joshua Ledet was eliminated.

Jennifer Lopez to Leave ‘American Idol’ ?!

I haven’t watched ‘American Idol’ since Paula Abdul was tossed out like a one night stand asking me if I wanna do lunch and then help him look for houses in good school districts. So, I continue to cross my arms and refuse to play into the temptation to watch Steven Tyler give advice.

Hollywood Dame Link Worthy

5 Celebrities Who’ve Used Drugs Because They Were Bored – Girls Talkin’ Smack

MTV’s Teen Wolf Season 2 Premiere: First 10 Minutes (VIDEO) – Bumpshack

Tom Cruise is Going to be in Playboy, You Guys – Evil Beet Gossip

Hollywood Dame

 

Diane Kruger and Joshua Jackson hit up a Calvin Klein party together during the 65th Cannes Film Festival.

Kruger’s boobs are making mine try in hide in fear that I will attempt the same look. While her cleavage is probably courtesy of prayer and really good genetics, I’d need 12 feet of duct tape some fishing wire and an entire rodeo of spandex to get them level.

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Diane Kruger
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Hollywood Dame

 

Obligatory SPOILER ALERT!

Last night one of the beloved doctors on ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ died on the season finale. Many are googling the answer and trying to catch up on the tear inducing cliffhanger. The doctors find themselves trying to handle yet another crisis situation. After their plane crashes, many are left seriously injured. Arizona can see one her leg bones, Christina’s arm hangs limply at her side, is Lexi is trapped under a part of the plane, Mark seems to be disoriented but unscathed (that’s usually ends up being bad), Derek’s left hand is mangled into a piece of the plane and Meredith rips a piece of shrapnel out of her thigh.

So, which character met their end?

Click ‘Read More’ for a recap…

Lexie Grey dies within the first 15 minutes of the show. Mark holds her hand as he professes his undying love for her and explains that she cannot die because they are “suppose to end up together.” She breathes her last words of “meant to be” and Meredith and Christina stumbled upon a weeping Mark. Commercial.

Back in Seattle things are as quick quipped and bouncy which makes you a wee bit resentful despite the fact that the characters are unaware of the crash. Jackson is contemplating going to Tulane while Bailey and Ben discuss their decision to get married.

Back in the woods Meredith is losing her shiz and needs slapped by Christina. Instead, she tries to talk her down from the ledge. Derek comes stumbling out of nowhere and mumbles about her Mer’s voice but feared he was dreaming before he passes out.

Christina continues to be the lone voice of sanity and task managing. Seriously…all these people would be sitting around crying and shrugging their gimpy shoulders if it wasn’t for her. She locates some supplies and gets to helping Derek. Arizona starts coughing up blood and the news that Lexi is dead becomes evident as Mark refuses to leave her body and continues holding her hand.

Finally, Christina demands that Mark snap out of it and help. He appears to be ignoring her as she starts to try and rally for survival…

“If there’s one thing that I’ve learned with all the bombs and the guns to my head and the buses running down my friends is that I am not interested in dying! I want to get out of here, and I want to go home, and everyone has to help!”

Turns out Mark is nearly catatonic.

She rips open his shirt to find a red rash spreading across his chest as his pale face lolls lifeless on the ground. Christina diagnoses it as a cardiac tamponade and it sounds like something you’d spread on bread or stuff a filet with. Google says otherwise: “Cardiac tamponade is compression of the heart that occurs when blood or fluid builds up in the space between the myocardium (heart muscle) and the pericardium (outer covering sac of the heart).”

Basically, they need to drain the buildup of fluid or his heart will stop. Simultaneously, Owen and Teddy perform the same procedure back in Seattle. While the war vets use fancy medical equipment, Christina, Meredith and Derek use a straw from a bottle of hairspray. He gets drained and survives.

Back at the hospital Callie tells the remaining residents to man up and enjoy their celebratory dinner that Webber is “jazzed” about. She talks about how awesome her life turned out as her wife, unbeknownst to her, is fighting for life post plane crash.

Speaking of survival, the sound of a chopper interrupts the minor bickering going on at the scene of the crash. They desperately try and use the flare gun to attract attention, but it fails and the savior flies by unable to see them through the canopy of trees.

Avery announces his decision to leave and Kepner whines about no longer being a virgin and not passing her exam. She continues to her little rant and demands they be happy just for the night. Karev continues to try and call Arizona, but obviously she isn’t going to be answering anytime soon. He leaves a message that he thinks she is great, but he is taking the deal at John Hopkins.

Seemingly, no help is coming to the aid of the victims stranded in the woods. Derek and the pilot chat about the possibility that it could be days before any form of help arrives.

They wonder aloud whether or not anyone knows and Christina maintains faith that Owen has figured it out. Mark seems near the edge of death as he lays on Arizona’s good leg and talks about the fact that Lexi is waiting for him. She demands he fight for his life.

Back to Seattle. Owen and Teddy go another round. She insists she is happy to stay at Seattle Grace, but Owen fires her. He fires her point blank and informs her she doesn’t want her at the hospital anymore. He pulls the Chief of Surgery card and tells her to pack it up and GTFO. She slams the door screaming about the fact that he is a S.O.B and a moment passes before she comes back in crying as they hug it out. Bailey and Ben have another one of their I’ll Sit Here All Sexy and Make Quips While You Make a Poignant Statement Followed by a Joke.

Owen finally gets the voice-mails that he had been putting off all day as Callie gets ready to make sexy times with Arizona upon her arrival. Webber interrupts his own speech to wait for Meredith and Christina. Owen finally pieces together the fact that something is very wrong.

Arizona gives a weak, but concerning cough as the fire the stranded crash victims managed to start goes out. They are all left with one match to make a fire. It immediately goes out after it is struck.

End of show.

The writer/creator of the show also confirmed that Chyler Leigh (Lexie) and Kim Raver (Teddy) will not be returning to the show…

“This finale was incredibly hard to write. I did not enjoy it. It made me sick and it made me sad. We end the season not knowing ANYTHING about the future. Except for two things. We know we are definitely saying goodbye to two of my favorite people: Chyler Leigh and Kim Raver .” I know this season’s finale had some surprises for viewers and the exit of Kim Raver was one of the big ones. But Kim’s series option was up and she was ready to give Teddy Altman a much-needed vacation. It’s been a pleasure working with someone as talented and funny and kind as Kim; everyone is going to miss her terribly. I like to imagine that Teddy is still out there in the Grey’s Anatomy universe, running Army Medical Command and building a new life.”

Hollywood Dame

 

Here is a repost of the review of the review I wrote after I saw the film at the Toronto Film Festival.  The film opens in the US today.

One of the most vivid memories I have of my college learning experience is a class I took on Women in American History. I remember reading Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper and Kate Chopin's The Awakening, and if I didn't have feminist inclinations before I read those books, I sure did the moment my eyes hit the page.

Those books (and many other in that class) changed me. It was when I discovered that women were thought to be hysterical because they wanted to have lives outside the home and were told by doctors that they needed to sit quietly and rest and not think too much because that would be too taxing on their poor brains and their private parts.  Their diagnosis of hysteria made some of the women actually lose their minds.

The new movie Hysteria directed by Tanya Wexler takes a comedic twist on this very serious and feminist topic.

Based on a true story, the film tells the story of the invention of the vibrator. It takes place in the 1880's England when many upper middle class (white) women are being sent to the doctor because they are depressed. The answer the brilliant medical establishment came up with was that these women needed to have an orgasm and everything would be ok for them. Clearly the women needed to have an orgasm, but that was just the beginning of the revolution for women. Maggie Gyllenhaal plays the daughter of the doctor (Jonathan Pryce) whose practice was created to satisfy rich women when their husbands couldn't.  She's not on board with his diagnosis because isn't it surprising that this seems to be a problem only rich women suffer from.

This was really one of the most heartfelt, feminist and funny films I saw at the festival. Hugh Dancy plays an up and coming young doctor who becomes widely known for his satisfaction skills, and then busts his hand so he can't do it any longer. Rupert Everett plays his friend, a rich inventor, and together they come up with the first vibrator made from a feather duster. Needless to say after the vibrator becomes mobile nobody needed to go to the doctor anymore to have an orgasm.

Maggie Gyllenhaal plays an early social worker who has dedicated her life, much to her father's chagrin, to working with the poor educating them and doing her best to bridge the class differences. She is, of course, thought to be hysterical herself and is treated like a troublemaker.

While the film takes a very light approach to the topic, one can't help but remember the consequences women suffered when they stepped out of line. When Gyllenhaal's character Charlotte hits a police officer she is hauled off to court and threatened with a hysterectomy or the insane asylum.   This is what was happened to women who demanded rights like the suffragists.  They were said to be crazy and hysterical.  This was no laughing matter for many women who just didn't toe the line and were made to undergo a devastating procedure just because they said things that society didn't agree with.

Here is an interview with director Tanya Wexler.

Women and Hollywood

 

This is my kind of movie.  It stars Maggie Gyllenhaal, Viola Davis, and Holly Hunter.  Look for it in Theatres September 28.

Women and Hollywood

 

According to the Prince of the Bowties over at E!, Jennifer Lopez is leaving ‘American Idol’ after giving the show two years of her life (which is like a decade in JLo years).

Lopez is busy riding around one of her dancers and planning a new tour with Enrique Iglesias. Britney is throwing all sorts of YOU IN DANGER GIRL! at this, but Casper Smart has already moved in with her and ordered monogrammed hand towels. Now, she wants to quit the show to focus on her kids, tour and her music career.

“I’m told Lopez will be on the road, at the very least, through the end of the year. The next round of Idol auditions will begin while she’s overseas.

The superstar apparently wants to free up her schedule next year, possibly taking a little hiatus from work to be with her kids.”

X-Factorjust scored Britney Spears and Demi Lovato as judges, so who would replace Jenny? Lets see what Mariah has to say about all this

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Hollywood Dame

 

Hysteria first premiered at the Toronto Film Festival and it recently screened at Tribeca.  It opens in the US tomorrow, Friday, May 18.

Women and Hollywood: This movie feels very contemporary in terms of the issues, even though it was set in the 1880’s.  How did you accomplish that?

Tanya Wexler:  I’m glad you think so because that was the goal.  People ask about the tone and what the movie would feel like and I always said that I wanted to make a film that looks like a Merchant Ivory film and feels like a Richard Curtis kind of movie.  He has that great pace and it was important to me that it feel relevant, even though it was about an event in the 1880’s.  They weren’t sitting around thinking they were quaint Victorians.  They were thinking they were the cutting edge, and it’s a movie about Progressives. So it needed to feel like there was a new age dawning.

WaH:  What drew you to the script?

TW:  It was brought to me as a two-page treatment.  My friend Tracey came to me and said, ‘I’ve got your next movie and it’s a romantic comedy about the invention of the vibrator in Victorian England.’  I thought that was the funniest thing I’ve ever heard.  And I had a lot of kids at home and I was tired and I could not deal with a harrowing, searing, realistic, tortured tale.  I wanted to laugh, and it this was a movie I wanted to see and no one had made it.  That was it.  Then I went and got the writers.

WaH: You put the film together?

TW: It was me and Tracey Becker and then there was a network of women.  A husband and wife team — Stephen Dyer and Jonah Lisa Dyer — wrote it and producer Sarah Curtis, read it and fell in love with it.  And then Judy Cairo, who made Crazy Heart, came on as we were finishing the financing and she brought in the money and Maggie.  It was this great snowball of power women.  It took a village.

WaH:  How long did it take to go from the two page treatment to completed script?

TW:  It was 18 months and then Sarah came aboard and we did more work.  And then we started to cast. 

WaH: How long after the 18 months did it take to get the financing together?

TW:  Four or five years.  It was like seven years total.

WaH:  I read that you took some time off to have your kids.  That’s always an interesting conversation to have with women directors because men don’t have to get off the merry-go-round.  It’s really hard for women to get back on.  How were you able to get back on?  And what advice do you have for other people trying to get back on?

TW:  Some of it was by choice and some of it was enforced by the world.  I think if a movie had shown up that I wanted to make – I probably would have done it. With each film, there are a couple of big salient lessons I’ve learned.  The first film was about getting the script perfect.  The second lesson is about having great actors who can punch through the crazy noise that fills all of our lives.  But the real lesson, is finding a film that is your voice.  I think my first tiny movie was in my voice.  My second film, which I’m really proud of, was a bit more in the writer’s voice.  And when this showed up as an idea – I knew I had to do it.  Whatever my voice was, and I wasn’t sure what it was, I just I had to do it.  And it’s funny because I found another project that I’m about to join, and I thought the same thing about it.

So, with me and moviemaking and taking time off for kids was much more organic.  I didn’t sit down and say I was going to take time off.  At one point we had four kids under six, and we were insane.  I have a wife, who is a stay at home mom, which is awesome and helpful, but I think my relationship to being home with the kids was really different then maybe a guy in a same situation.  I still very much experienced that feeling that almost every mom has.  That kind of working mom struggle where I felt like I’m not being a very good filmmaker and I’m not being a very good mom.  Instead of feeling like I’m doing decently at both, sometimes I felt like I was doing a crap job at both.

But my advice is find something you have to make.  For me, I have a fairly mainstream sensibility.  I like esoteric stuff but it’s not my voice – it’s not what I have to make.  It helps to make something that’s accessible.  It’s an expensive medium and people put up a lot of money and you can’t take that lightly.  It’s a privilege and it’s easy to be flip about it.  There’s a lot of bullshit, but most people in the film business aren’t getting rich.  They’re working hard.

WaH:  When I was watching this film I was thinking it was about how women don’t fit into the conventional box and how things have changed for women.  While many things have changed for women, many things have not, which is why this film feels so contemporary.   Do you want to comment on that?

TW: For me it was important that it was a fun romantic comedy, which is considered a women's genre, but that it had to have a little bit more to it.  What I love about movies is that you go into the dark with a bunch of strangers and you go for the ride. You laugh and you have fun.  We all work really hard so it’s good for us to be able to have fun that also connects us.  And if people ask what the message of the movie is, I say, you are in charge of your own happiness.

WaH:  Your movie is really subversive at the same time as being really mainstream, which is what is so funny about it.  You talk about women’s sexuality, which we still don’t talk about, and women wanting pleasure.

TW: If we get a criticism from a certain type of critic, it’s always like the film is not edgy or subversive enough. And I wonder is it because the women aren’t victims enough?  I want to let women have fun and enjoy it and show their orgasms.  For me, it’s much more subversive to make a film about the inventor of the vibrator that you can bring your grandma or mother to, than something that’s edgy and makes you uncomfortable.  I want us to be comfortable with sexuality. 

WaH:  You were saying there were a lot of great strong women on this production.  Talk a little about the fact that this was such a pro-women movie and having all these great women involved and what it meant for the shoot.

TW:  I don’t know how much of it was because they were women, but Sarah, Tracey and Judy, my three producers, were my mommies.  They were just incredibly supportive.  What I mean is that when they read the material, they got it.  They loved it and knew there was a huge audience. And if there was any struggle in getting the movie made, it was convincing people who wrote checks and put movies in the theaters. And they’re really good producers, having nothing to do with their gender. They’re just good and they supported me in my job and called me on my shit when they didn’t think something was working. And they fought for the like hell for the movie.  They fought for more days on camera, and more prep time, and the best cast, and getting everything we could.  For me, it was the biggest budget I had ever worked on.

WaH: How many days did you shoot?

TW: 33 days. There was no overtime and there was no money for reshoots.  And it was a period piece so you lose time on camera with the hair, makeup, wigs, props, carriages, etc.  It was crazy, but they just knew it had to be done right and I think my production designer Sophie is a genius. I think the movie looks like a twenty-five million dollar Hollywood feature. My team, my designers, my cinematographer – it was a credit to them, but part of that is having great producers who help you pick all of those people.

WaH: Since Toronto you’ve been getting more scripts and having more meetings. This is a already a big success for you. 

TW: It’s a life changer.  And that comes from the film and how people are perceiving it. I know there is a big audience for it. I know that women know about the film and they’re going to come see it. 

WaH: What’s the line to bring them into the theater?  What’s the tagline for you?

TW:  The tagline is, “He made an invention that turned on half the world.”  Mine is more like you’re going to laugh your ass off, and I think everyone needs a good laugh.

It’s funny because when I was handing out vibrators to some of the guys for a scene they would go, ‘I don’t want the competition.‘  I think the guys who are more comfortable, who did grow up in a co-ed world, who love the women in their lives, are not threatened by it.  My guy friends are not so fragile. They want the women in their lives to be happy. In a way, the pitch is, ‘Do you want the women in your life to be happy?‘   I don’t know how to say that in a pithy way, but I think that for men, it is a kind of movie about the men who love the women in their lives.  And I think that’s really the best way to go.

Women and Hollywood

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