Tag Archive for 'Whip-It'

Guest Post: A Bird’s Eye View Film Fest Wrap-Up by Hilary Wright

The 2010 Birds Eye View (BEV) festival finished in style Friday night with an awards ceremony followed by a screening of one of the contenders for best feature, Drew Barrymore’s Whip It.

At a time when women’s participation in the film industry continues to shrink, BEV’s role in redressing the balance is vital. Although the festival’s initial remit was to raise public awareness about women filmmakers, it is now so much more than that. In addition to screening features, documentaries and shorts made by women, the festival this year ran a series of networking events and heavily-subsidized training workshops. At one of the workshops it was a huge pleasure to be entertained and educated by three women who clearly were masters of their field: Paula Le Dieu, Margaret Robertson and Alice Taylor.

BEV also managed to lure Susanne Bier to give an informative masterclass to support a retrospective of her work. Interviewed onstage by Briony Hansen of the Script Factory, Bier generously shared her insights on how her work centers on  tiny incidents shattering lives, though she felt that at the end of her films there was usually a lot of hope for the characters.

Speaking on the eve of the closing gala, BEV marketing manager Juliana Zenker reflected that “filmmakers don’t want to be labeled females—that ghettoizes them and prevents them getting jobs.” She pointed to the fact that many men had attended the festival; probably around 15% of festival audiences have been male, which speaks against ghettoizing.

Juliana also emphasized the importance of venue; the festival has principally used the Institute of Contemporary Arts and the British Film Institute, both outstanding venues for film, separated by the Thames. The venues help to validate the importance of the festival and allow audience crossover.

The buzz of excitement as the crowd waited to be allowed into the largest NFT auditorium for the closing gala led judge Louise Jury, chief arts correspondent for the London Evening Standard, to hope that some of the attendees will want to make their own films with a female sensibility. She had judged the feature film section, praising the winner as “an astonishing bit of filmmaking.”

Festival founder Rachel Millward took the stage to introduce the awards ceremony before ceding the bulk of the presentation to new Managing Director Amy Mole, as Millward had been preoccupied with a production of her own: her first baby, born on International Women’s Day.

Amy announced three winners:

  • Best feature: Lourdes, by Jessica Hausner
  • Best documentary: Junior by Jenna Rosher
  • Best short: awarded jointly to The Door, by Juanita Wilson, and Slaves, co-directed by Hanna Heilborn and David Aronowitsch.

Amy pointed out that Kathryn Bigelow’s historic win has “helped focus the international spotlight on the lack of women film-makers within the industry.” To help redress this imbalance, one of the most important ongoing functions of BEV is its First Weekenders Club. This encourages members to “vote with their feet”—attend opening weekend screenings of films made by women in order to ensure highest possible opening weekend figures, thus helping to widen the film’s distribution.

Bird’s Eye View

About the author: Hilary Hadley Wright writes screenplays and non-fiction, and teaches writing and presentation skills to business clients. She spent the last week cheering Kathryn Bigelow.

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Tags: Bird's Eye View, Drew Barrymore, Kathryn Bigelow, Rachel Millward, Susanne Bier, Whip-It

Festival Spotlight: Bird’s Eye View in London Begins March 4

Just wanted to remind you all that the 6th Annual Bird’s Eye View Film Festival kicks off in London next month.

This is one of the most prestigious festivals that highlights films directed by women.

Here’s festival director Rachel Millward talking about why the festival is important:

Birds Eye View is the UK’s only festival celebrating international women filmmakers, founded as a positive response to the still startling fact that women make up only 7% film directors and 12% screenwriters. We passionately believe that a healthy culture requires a balanced perspective and we want to see that on screen. So, we celebrate the talented women making great work today, inspire, encourage and equip more women to make more films, and show the industry and our audiences that without a female perspective in cinema, they’re really missing out!

Birds Eye View keeps working all year round, with a First Weekenders Club, promoting the opening weekend of cinema releases written or directed by women, and bespoke training labs which hothouse exceptional female writers in order to get more commercial features from women into production.

They have a wide variety of films including: Amreeka directed by Cherien Dabis; and Lourdes by Jessica Hauser.

Director Susanne Bier (who directed Brothers which was remade into a horrible Hollywood version) will hold a masterclass, and the festival will close with the London premiere of Whip-It, directed by Drew Barrymore.

More from Rachel Millward:

This is the 6th Birds Eye View Film Festival and it’s a hum-dinger of a programme, celebrating such amazing women filmmakers as Drew Barrymore (Whip It), Jessica Hausner (Lourdes), Isabel Coixet (Map of the Sounds of Tokyo), Kim Longinotto (Rough Aunties), Wanuri Kahiu (From a Whisper) and Susanne Bier (with a retrospective and masterclass).

Plus Blonde Crazy: a celebration of dazzling iconic blondes from the silent era to the present day, and special live music commissions from female artists to silent film, including the first ever animated feature film The Adventures of Prince Achmed from pioneering artist Lotte Reineger. All this with BEV’s usual sprinkling of celeb presence… It looks set to be one to remember.

Support women directed films by attending this festival.

PS- If anyone is planning on attending and wants to write a report for all of us, just get in touch with me. Thanks.

Bird’s Eye View Film Festival


Drew Barrymore debut at Birds Eye View Fest
(Hollywood Reporter)

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Tags: Amreeka, Bird's Eye View, Cherien Dabis, Drew Barrymore, Isabel Coixet, Susanne Bier, Whip-It

The Disconnect: Women, Money & Hollywood (Part Two)

By now everyone has seen the Manohla Dargis’ piece in the NY Times Women in the Seats but Not Behind the Camera which is a solid but late to the party piece about how even though women are buying tickets they still have few opportunities to direct.  I guess people care more about the lack of directors this year because a) women are actually making a difference at the box office and must be reckoned with, and b) for the first time a woman could potentially take home the best director statuette at the Oscars.

It’s not news to me or anyone who reads this site that women have been full and equal participants at the box office buying 50% of the tickets (according to MPAA stats).  And according to a piece in The Wrap last week, women won the battle at the box office this year, Look Who’s Winning the B.O. Battle of the Sexes:

“This is the year of the woman,” Paul Dergarabedian, a box-office analyst with Hollywood.com, told TheWrap. “Female stars or female-driven movies have been unexpectedly dominant. I mean, Meryl Streep is just as vital today as ever.”

But here is where the disconnect comes in.  Women buy tickets, yet still don’t get directing gigs.  As Dargis writes:

Women need to develop their own muscles.  I’m not talking about those buff babes who pop up in adolescent fantasies, licking their lips as they lock and load; I’m talking about movies made for and with women. I’m also talking about movies directed by women.

Why is it so hard for women to get the gigs?  Women spend the money to go to film school and want to direct, yet for reasons that no one has really figured out how to assess (because hardly anyone will talk on the record about it) women do not get the big studio directing gigs.  They just don’t.  You can blame it the old boy’s club.  You can say that men don’t want to see the type of movies women direct.  You can call it whatever you want.  But to me it’s plain old bullshit sexism.  For some reason the studio executives — male and female — don’t want to buy what women have to sell.

If we as women (and men) went out and supported films like Whip It the studios would make more of them.  Nobody went to see Whip It which was an awesome film.  We can blame that on marketing issues but if we don’t go see the good films by women the studios won’t make them.  It’s really simple and yes it is a double standard.  We need to support films by women more than we need to support the film by men.  That’s just the way it is.

Here are some more of the depressing stats:

Of the almost 600 new movies that will be reviewed in The New York Times by the end of 2009, about 60 were directed by women, or 10 percent.

Of the major and mini major studios, here’s what women have directed in 2009:
20th Century Fox: Jennifer’s Body (Karyn Kusama) and Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel (Betty Thomas)
Fox Searchlight: Amelia (Mira Nair), Post Grad (Vicky Jenson) and Whip It (Drew Barrymore)
Disney: The Proposal (Anne Fletcher)
Sony: Julie & Julia (Nora Ephron)
Sony Pictures Classics: An Education (Lone Scherfig), Coco Before Chanel (Anne Fontaine) and Sugar (Anna Boden, directing with Ryan Fleck).
Universal Pictures: It’s Complicated (Nancy Meyers)

Miramax Films, Focus Features, Paramount Pictures and Warner Brothers Pictures released no films directed by a woman.

Look Who’s Winning the B.O. Battle of the Sexes (The Wrap)

Women in the Seats but Not Behind the Camera (NY Times)

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Tags: Manohla Dargis, Meryl Streep, Paul Dergarabedian, Whip-It

Drew Barrymore on 60 Minutes

It seems that this smart, young woman basically raised herself.  Wolves would have been an improvement over her parents.  How she got herself back on track and to the success she is today is a testimony to her strength and intelligence.

My respect for her continues to grow.

If you haven’t seen Whip It yet, please do.


Watch CBS News Videos Online

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Tags: Whip-It

What happened to Whip It?

whipI am seriously sad.

Whip-It didn’t do well at the box office this weekend.  The chatter has started about how the future of young women’s movies.

Here’s what Cinetic Media’s Matt Dentler asks on Twitter: “After the very poor starts for Whip It, Jennifer’s Body, and Bright Star, what does that mean for the future of young women’s movies?” (h/t Thompson on Hollywood)

So now we won’t have movies about older women and we won’t have movies about younger women.  Great.

But let’s be real.  While I might put Whip-It and Jennifer’s Body in the same category, I wouldn’t put Bright Star in there.  First, because it’s a smaller movie not released by a big studio and secondly, because even though Fanny drives the story at times, this film is an artistic triumph and draws a very different type of audience than both Whip-It and Jennifer’s Body.   I really don’t want these trend stories to start happening especially when we have An Education opening this weekend and Precious coming soon.  Both those films (as well as Bright Star) are Oscar contenders and need to get some sort of box office traction is order to have legs for awards season.

The bigger story to me, which I find disturbing, is that all three of this so-called underperforming films (and keep in mind their budgets were very low so they will probably make money) are directed by women.

I hear from people that they want to see Bright Star.  I hear from people that they are going to see Whip-It.  Maybe because we are out of summer they will have time to develop some word of mouth.  One can only hope.  BTW, Julie & Julia has quietly amassed almost $100 million at the box office, it is still playing in places and has been open since August 7th.

Here’s some more box office info:

Box Office Mojo: According to distributor 20th Century Fox, the audience was 70 percent female and 52 percent 25 years and older.

From Thompson on Hollywood: “Women aren’t showing up,” said one studio marketing exec. “Girls don’t get into roller derby.” Searchlight downplayed that aspect in favor of the movie’s girl power theme.

More thoughts: What I find interesting about the numbers is not the 70% women, it is the 52% over 25.  (I really wish they broke down those numbers better for us in the public)  What this says to me is that they didn’t figure out how to get the young girls who live the “girl power” lives.  Maybe they couldn’t get their guy friends/boy friends to go, so they just acquiesced and went to see Zombieland.  Maybe the girl power message is a turn off to guys?  Maybe some of it is about how women’s sports is treated in the culture?

So the people were adult women, ones who are comfortable saying I want to see women onscreen.  This shouldn’t be news.  We know that women over 25 go to see movies starring women, it’s just that not enough of them come out on opening weekends to make a dent in the box office except on the rare occasion.

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Tags: Bright Star, Drew Barrymore, Ellen Page, Jennifer's Body, Whip-It

Hollywood Feminist of the Day: Drew Barrymore

drewDrew Barrymore is a real feminist.  All the pre-press for her directorial debut, Whip-It (opening on October 2.) is making me so excited to see the film. Here’s what she had to say to Time Out NY.

Your upcoming directorial debut, Whip It, is about roller derby. Why?
I relate to a theme of it: women who have not only an alter ego but a capability. I love these women who totally have day jobs—they’re nurses and librarians and waitresses.

And then they get the shit beaten out of them at night.
Yeah—what I love about the sport is that it’s real and high stakes. And by the way, it’s scary as shit to do. I wouldn’t have guessed that the first film I directed would have a sports element, but then again it doesn’t surprise me, because I love girls getting to do what boys do.

And you totally love having bloody snot hanging out of your nose, don’t you?
I do, I do, I love it! And I love when [women] get to be women and not feel like they have to become a man in order to play in a man’s world.

The good news is that Drew is going to keep on acting and directing.

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Tags: Whip-It

Trailer Watch

Here are a bunch of films that I am excited about: Whip-It, Fame, An Education and The Countess. Enjoy.

Drew Barrymore’s directorial debut Whip-It starring Ellen Page looks awesome. It opens October 9. Think Juno on skates and without the pregnancy.

Fame was one of those movies I loved when I was a teen. it’s being remade and will be released this fall. I AM THERE.

An Education

I am excited for this one directed by Lone Scherfig starring Carey Mulligan that will open on October 2.

h/t Awards Daily

Coco Before Chanel directed by Anne Fontaine opens in the US on September 25

The Countess directed by Julie Delpy- doesn’t have a release date here yet in the US

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Tags: Anne Fontaine, Audrey Tatou, Coco Before Chanel, Drew Barrymore, Ellen Page, Fame, July Delpy, Whip-It