News

Kimberly Peirce: “How Many More Movies Could I Have Made?”

Yesterday, the NY Times Magazine featured a profile of director Kimberly Peirce as she readies the release of the remake of Carrie starring Chloe Grace Moretz and Julianne Moore. This is a highly anticipated film for a variety of reasons It was produced by MGM and will be released by Sony’s Screen Gems. And while I’m taking a guess here — because the numbers have not yet been released — but based on the genre and the fact that this is a remake of a popular film, and that it is being released by Screen Gems, I’m thinking that it will most likely open on at least 2,000 screens.

Sadly, the number of screens will put Peirce is very limited company. A female director with a film opening wide. You wouldn’t think that would be such a big deal. Didn’t it feel that we recently saw a lot of movies directed by women? August was full of movies directed by women. But they didn’t open wide. In A World… Directed by Lake Bell has grossed over $2 million and that film only topped off at 144 screens (boxofficemojo.com)

It is hard for women to get the big movies, the ones that open on enough screens to make a dent in the box office. Box office gross is clearly linked to the amount of theatres that a film opens on. According to boxofficemojo.com, so far there is not a single woman directed film in the top 100 grossing films of the year. Last year, the statistics showed that women directors made 9% of the top 250 grossing films. The statistics for 2013 for the top 100 grossing films so far is a big fat zero percent.

Peirce has an interesting, yet small, body of work. Carrie is her third movie. Her first is the heartbreaking Boys Don’t Cry and her second is the vastly under-appreciated Stop-Loss. There was nine years between her first two films and five years between her second and third. Sadly, that’s not too far out of the norm for women directors. It’s a shame that she’s only gotten three movies done in 14 years.

Kimberly Peirce’s trajectory shows us how much harder it is for a woman, especially a woman who wants to push the boundaries of gender and convention. There are a variety of reasons as to why she has not been able to get more films done and clearly gender is one of those issues. It’s something she talked about in the NY Times piece. She talked about how the male members of the crew thought of her as “a mother who is telling them to pick up their socks,” even though she is not actually a mother, and how she wasn’t invited to join some members at a social event because she was a “girl.”

Here’s her response:

And I was like, Wow. He thought it was a joke to say that to me, which would be like telling a person of color that they weren’t invited because they aren’t white, and no one would say that now.

Amy Pascal who seems to be the only studio head to talk about this issue at all, weighs in on how hard it is for women directors (her studio is the co-producer and distributor of Carrie)

She says it’s hard for female directors because the movie industry is “institutionalized not to support women, even if a lot of us are trying to change it.” She continued, “If female directors are driven and single-minded and want to protect their actors as Kim does, they’re problematic. If it’s a man, he’s passionate.”

The whole piece reads the a primer of sexism in Hollywood. “Woman equals problematic. Man equals passionate.” The heartbreaking thing is that even while you are trying to fight the sexism because it is so pervasive you also buy into it. You buy into it because it is institutionalized. It is institutionalized because they have gotten away with it for so long that people don’t notice how easy it is to fall into sexist patterns.

And that’s what Kimberly Peirce is saying here. She’s saying I am fighting this. I am fighting this by hiring a woman for a job because she was the best person for the job and because she was a woman. Why must hiring women be constantly justified in the way hiring men is not? You never have to justify hiring a man for a job because that is what is expected.

There were so many reasons to go and see Carrie before this amazing stand that Peirce took for all women directors. (And hey, if you don’t think she took a stand read the ending again.) She takes a big stand and now the ball is in the court of the public.

Carrie opens October 18.


Women and Hollywood Transition

Dear friends- A little over 15 years ago I had a crazy idea: to try and start a conversation asking where the women were in front of the camera and behind the scenes in Hollywood. I called my blog...

Gina Rodriguez Developing Series Adaptation of “Princess of South Beach” Podcast for Netflix

Gina Rodriguez is celebrating the success of her new ABC comedy “Not Dead Yet” by developing a series adaptation of a popular podcast for Netflix. Deadline reports that the streamer has...

Sophie Lane Curtis Feature Debut “On Our Way” Acquired by Gravitas Ventures

Sophie Lane Curtis’ feature debut has secured distribution. Deadline reports that Gravitas Ventures landed worldwide rights to “On Our Way” with plans to release the award-winning...

Posts Search

Publishing Dates
Start date
- select start date -
End date
- select end date -
Category
News
Films
Interviews
Features
Trailers
Festivals
Television
RESET