trinityvixen: (lifes a bitch)
[personal profile] trinityvixen
[livejournal.com profile] droidguy1119 has an update for me on the Warner Brothers "we don't like female stars" policy that I mentioned a day or two ago. Apparently, the blogger who broke it is a crazy person. who is not well liked.

By people who might actually have made the exact faux pas blogged about. Read this article denying the no-female-lead clause. Yep, sounds like an average blogger just trying to stir up trouble...

...except for this part in the supposed "defense" of character of the studio against claims of misogyny:

As for Neil Jordan's brainy twist on the vigilante genre, "The Brave One," Robinov said he is "proud of the movie," which Foster continues to support around the world. "It's tricky," he said. "It may have been too rough for women, and we didn't get the reviews we had expected."
(emphasis mine)

That's right, ladies. A movie about a woman who experienced violence and loss and went vigilante is "too rough" for you. Any woman who claims to have sat through--and enjoyed!--Batman Begins two years ago is a filthy, lying whore. That role was clearly too rough for you, and it's a damned good thing Batman's not a chick, because no way would a chick have been able to pull that off.

When Warner Brothers would like try to try and rally a defense of what was supposedly said that isn't patronizing, self-important, and completely insulting, I'm all ears. Hell, at this point, I'd prefer to hear them fucking admit what exactly was said, even if it was, "Fucking bitches, man. They can't open movies for shit. We ain't making no more girlie pictures."

(Ire aside, there was one sterling moment of clarity that shone through the Hollywood-ese bullshit where the person being quoted suggested that a problem of marketing the film The Invasion--which was already troubled by reports of rewrites, accidents, and friggin name changes up the wazoo because until yesterday I was sure it was only called Invasion--was to blame and that the male and female leads did not promote it hurt the film's box office. That's great. I'm truly thrilled to see Hollywood exercise the old standby of, "It must be the actors!" so long as the blame is shared. But perhaps all the other things I mentioned might have had an impact? No?)

Date: 2007-10-11 04:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
Now that's being a little unfair. People didn't watch it, he's just speculating that the brutality of the movie scared the female demographic away. That's close-minded but I mean, he has the exit polls -- they clearly say that women were not showing up and WB expected them to. It's not like he's making a comment about women and roughness in general, he's just suggesting a reason about a movie he more than likely has audience data on.

Date: 2007-10-12 07:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com
If he's making a comment on the demographics of who did and did not attend The Brave One, he needs to specifically say as much or risk being misunderstood. As he is trying to correct what WB is saying were words taken out of context, he'd do well to be more careful choosing his own. If he is referring to polls taken from test audiences or the like, he should say so. He should also remember that test audiences are hardly the scientific sampler of mainstream attitudes that Hollywood desperately would like them to be.

That's entirely aside from the matter of his generalizing--something that got WB into trouble in the first place (when someone decided women can't open pictures). He chose not to say "The Brave One didn't seem to attract a female audience." He backwards generalized and came up with, "Women don't like rough movies." This ignores everything, all the many, many myriad reasons women might not have shown up for this film. I bet you a shiny nickel that women showed up in nearly equal numbers to see Eastern Promises (most people I know who've seen it are women) and that's got A LOT of "rough" stuff (especially for women to see what happens to other women onscreen). I bet they even equalled the men in the audience for Resident Evil: Apocalypse. The failure of one movie with blood and violence and victimization and exploitation to attract women is not a fault of women or their taste but of the movie. This is precisely why he's out there damage-controlling over another guy who flapped his gums out of turn.

Date: 2007-10-12 05:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] droidguy1119.livejournal.com
But he didn't say "Women don't like rough movies," he said "Maybe this one specific movie turned out too rough to attract a female audience." It may be a generalization but I really don't think it's quite the generalization you are saying it is. The sentence, I think, suggests less that roughness was the issue and more that the roughness was too strong, which directly indicts The Brave One and only The Brave One. For instance, had he said "I don't think women saw it because it was brutal" or "The roughness probably scared the female audience away" then those are generalized and refer to all roughness in movies but in this case I feel he's kept it specific enough to refer to the one movie.

And I'm suggesting he has exit polls, which is when someone stands at the door after general admission screenings and not only looks at who's in the theater, but even asks some of them questions -- these are the people who actually shelled out nine bucks to go see it after it opened.

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