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Filmmakers ready for their closeup

With more women generating Oscar buzz, Best Director list should look different this year

NEW YORK 鈥 Four. It鈥檚 one of the most glaring numbers in Academy Awards history. That鈥檚 how many women have been nominated for best director in the awards鈥 89 years of existence. Kathryn Bigelow, for The Hurt Locker in 2010, is the only woman to win.

鈥淚 have to say it really bums me out,鈥 says Greta Gerwig, whose solo directorial debut, Lady Bird, opened last week in limited release. 鈥淓very year I see the list of people who are in the running for best director. Kathryn Bigelow got in 鈥 that鈥檚 one.

Every year they nominate five guys. Every year. And four women have been nominated in the history of the Academy Awards. That鈥檚 ridiculous. And it pisses me off.鈥

This year, those lists may be different 鈥 or, at least, it will be especially confounding if they aren鈥檛.

Gerwig鈥檚 sharply observed coming-of-age tale Lady Bird, for one, is among the most acclaimed films of the year. Patty Jenkins鈥 summer sensation Wonder Woman was a runaway hit at the box office. Next week, Dee Rees will release her Sundance Film Festival hit, the Mississippi period drama Mudbound. Handicapping for March鈥檚 Academy Awards is early, but each 鈥 particularly Gerwig and Lady Bird 鈥 is considered among the possible nominees for best picture and for best director.

While Hollywood has been overrun with the Harvey Weinstein scandal and the harsh light it has thrown on widespread gender imbalances throughout the industry, movie screens nationwide have been aglow with ambitious films by female directors who are beating the odds stacked against them.

Oscar nominations won鈥檛 change the overwhelming maleness of the industry, where greenlighting executives, top agents and academy members (despite recent efforts to reshape membership) remain overwhelmingly male. The discrepancy is particularly pronounced behind the camera, where women comprised only seven per cent of directors on the 250 highest-grossing domestic releases in 2016, according to an annual study by the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University. That鈥檚 two percentage points less than in 1998.

But as the 鈥淥scarsSoWhite鈥 protest of recent years has shown, the Academy Awards can throw a spotlight on wider industry inequality.

鈥淭he severe gender imbalance strikes me as a source of considerable potential embarrassment for the academy,鈥 said film professor Martha Lauzen, author of the San Diego State study. 鈥淭ypically, a few high-profile individuals can skew our perceptions about how members of a certain group are faring but result in little, if any, substantial change. This year could prove to be unique in that nerves regarding this issue are raw.鈥

Long before hundreds of women began coming forward with allegations of sexual harassment and assault against Weinstein, director James Toback, producer Brett Ratner and many others, 2017 has been a movie year in many ways defined by female filmmakers. Bigelow, who thought her Oscar win would lead to some industry change, released her powerful race riot docudrama Detroit. Sofia Coppola, one of the four nominees (Lina Wertmuller and Jane Campion are the others), became just the second woman to win the directing prize at the Cannes Film Festival (another cinema institution with a poor track record of gender balance) for her point-of-view-flipping Civil War drama The Beguiled.

But there have been many more, too, including the astonishing festival selection The Rider by Chloe Zhao (Sony Pictures Classics will release it next year), Angelina Jolie鈥檚 intimate Cambodian genocide drama (Cambodia鈥檚 Oscar submission), Rebecca Miller鈥檚 tender documentary of her father, the playwright Arthur Miller (set to air next year) and Angela Robinson鈥檚 Wonder Woman origin story Professor Marston and the Wonder Women. It鈥檚 worth noting that both Detroit and Professor Marston were released by Megan Ellison鈥檚 Annapurna Pictures, one of the few female-led powerhouse production companies in Hollywood.

Robinson, noting the record-setting box office for Jenkins鈥 Wonder Woman (its $821.8 million US worldwide gross is the most for a film directed by a woman) has felt a hint of change is in the air.
鈥淚 do feel like there鈥檚 some give. Usually I feel like I鈥檓 banging against a rock wall,鈥 says Robinson. 鈥淚 do feel that there is a kind of energy and a kind of galvanizing anger happening that鈥檚 demanding that there be more representation of voices.鈥

Rees, whose breakout film Pariah was about a 17-year-old lesbian African-American woman coming to terms with her identity, believes awareness for gender imbalance in the industry has increased but the day-to-day reality is still very much 鈥渁 work in progress.鈥

鈥淯ntil it鈥檚 a non-story, you know we鈥檙e not there yet,鈥 Rees said.

It鈥檚 especially fitting that this year has also brought a new film from 89-year-old Agnes Varda, the Belgian-born filmmaking legend who was one of the leading directors of the French New Wave. Her road-trip odyssey Faces Places, co-directed with the street artist JR, took Cannes鈥 documentary award, and it has since ranked among the most celebrated movies of the year.

Varda, who was given an honorary Oscar at Saturday鈥檚 Governors Awards, has long been an inspirational figure to generations of female filmmakers who have come after her. 鈥淭he Queen,鈥 Gerwig calls her.

鈥淚 hear that. I love that,鈥 says Varda. 鈥淚 say: Be inspired by me about cinema, not because I鈥檓 a woman. Try to be radical. Try to be daring. Don鈥檛 make the prototype. I鈥檝e tried different things, different styles, trying to investigate what cinema can do. I try each time to say: Can I still learn something from images and sound? So I get very excited about being a filmmaker.鈥