Edmonton Journal

And justice for Ruth Bader Ginsburg …

Documentar­y makers put spotlight on iconic feminist’s rise to power

- DAVID BAUDER

So how do you ask 85-year-old U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to let you bring video cameras into the gym to record her workout?

The answer, according to the makers of the RBG documentar­y that’s in theatres now and bound for CNN later this year, is “very meekly.”

A trainer pushing Ginsburg on the free weights provides one of the smile-worthy moments in the documentar­y, which puts meat behind the cultural phenomenon created by the 2015 book, Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. The film’s story traces her legal work advancing rights for women leading up to her 1993 elevation to the top court, and her role as a justice since.

Mixed in is the tender love story with her husband Martin Ginsburg, who died in 2010, and rich personal touches including her friendship with the late Justice Antonin Scalia — bringing a liberal and conservati­ve together in a way that seems alien to modern Washington.

Watching Notorious RBG grow in fame, film director Betsy West said that “we felt that many of her millennial fans didn’t know her full story.” West and co-director Julie Cohen set out to tell it.

When they first approached Ginsburg with the idea, her answer was “not yet.”

“We noticed the two words not in her email to us were ‘no’ and ‘never,’” Cohen said. So they got to work, and later Ginsburg cooperated with interviews.

Ginsburg met her husband as an undergradu­ate at Cornell University. When she was admitted to Harvard Law School, a dean famously asked her and the other eight women in the class why they deserved to take a place in the class that should have gone to a man.

It was a far different time. Ginsburg attacked sexism methodical­ly while working for the American Civil Liberties Union, using the words of the U.S. Constituti­on to fight gender roles that had been enshrined into law. She won five of the six cases she argued before the Supreme Court.

Filmmakers outline that effort by mining archives with tapes of her legal arguments. Research also uncovered one priceless moment in Ginsburg ’s confirmati­on hearing to the court. As the still-novel idea of women on the court was being discussed, the camera pans to senators at the hearing where, behind them, a young legislativ­e aide and Ginsburg’s future colleague on the court, Elena Kagan, was working.

Ginsburg provides a still-relevant model for activism, Cohen said — even if her quiet, persistent, “long game” strategy can make younger idealists impatient.

Cohen and West’s portrait is mostly loving, although Ginsburg ’s unusual criticisms of Donald Trump when he was a presidenti­al candidate were addressed. Trump’s supporters didn’t like them and many Ginsburg fans thought them ill-advised.

Perhaps unexpected­ly, the film received a three-star review (out of four) from the conservati­ve website Newsmax.

“You can completely disagree with everything Ginsburg has ever done as a lawyer and/or a judge, but as a subject for a non-fiction film, she has few peers,” wrote Newsmax’s Michael Clark.

“Like it or not, Ginsburg ’s story is captivatin­g and ideal fodder for a movie.”

The film began appearing in a limited number of theatres this month and is starting to expand its reach this weekend. The one critic Cohen and West were most interested in saw it for the first time at the Sundance Film Festival. Cohen and West sat across the aisle from Ginsburg, stealing nervous glances.

.You can completely disagree with everything Ginsburg has ever done … but as a subject for a non-fiction film, she has few peers.

“As it went on, I think we started to relax because she was completely engrossed throughout,” Cohen said.

“She laughed repeatedly, she pulled out a tissue and cried a number of times, including in an earlier scene of watching herself watching a beautiful opera duet that she loves. Wouldn’t have occurred to us as being ... a strong emotional point in the movie, but that really seemed to move her.”

For the workout scene, it had been West’s job to ask if Ginsburg would allow a camera. The request was met, as was often the case, with a dramatic pause. Then came the answer: “Yes, I think that would be possible.”

“We weren’t in that room for more than a few minutes, then we knew why she’d let us film this,” West said.

“She’s an elderly woman who is keeping herself in very good shape to do the job that she loves and I think she’s proud of this.”

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