Saskatoon StarPhoenix

‘Boys don’t cry’

Oscar-nominated director tackles toxic masculinit­y in anti-bullying video

- VICTORIA AHEARN

TORONTO It lasts just three minutes, but a new video on toxic masculinit­y covers a boy’s entire childhood, from his toddler days hearing phrases like “be brave,” to being bullied in the schoolyard and roughhousi­ng with teenage friends.

In conjunctio­n with Anti-bullying Day in Canada on Feb. 27, advocacy group White Ribbon released Boys Don’t Cry, a public service announceme­nt by Oscar-nominated Toronto director Hubert Davis that paints a powerful picture of the origins of gender-based violence and aggressive behaviour.

“I didn’t realize how volatile the conversati­on is,” Davis, who directed the Toronto-shot film pro bono, said in a recent interview.

“Someone I know had read the script while we were developing it, and he actually got quite angry. For a lot of men it’s a real touchpoint because it’s something we don’t talk about, and I guess for some people, they do not want to talk about it. They really don’t think it’s a conversati­on, that this is just the way it is.”

The short film, has been shared on social media and at boysdontcr­y.ca, is narrated by the young protagonis­t as we see him from infancy to young adulthood.

He remarks on what boys “can be” and “can’t be,” according to societal expectatio­ns and gender stereotype­s.

“It’s such a polarizing topic because I feel like we’re in a time where I guess a lot of men feel threatened, maybe — threatened by the idea that we would even question what it means to be a man, which is crazy,” said Davis, who got an Oscar nomination for his 2005 short documentar­y Hardwood.

Davis came to make the film through his wife, a human resources manager who is on the board for White Ribbon, a movement of men and boys working to end violence against women and girls.

She introduced him to White Ribbon executive director Humberto Carolo, who suggested Davis make a short film and develop a script with ad agency Bensimon Byrne.

Davis said he wanted the story to connect with viewers on a personal level, get them simply thinking about the idea of toxic masculinit­y and emphasize that there isn’t one root cause to the problem.

“I showed it to my mother-inlaw and she said, ‘Oh yeah, I said all those things to my son growing up,’ and it really resonated,” he said. “In her mind, the way that you were supposed to raise a boy is that ‘He’s got to be strong; he’s got to be tough.’ I think it’s generation­al.”

The project had Davis looking back on his own childhood and how he’s raised his two sons, ages 10 and seven — the things he’s said to them, his reactions to certain situations, whether in the past he has shut down their feelings instead of exploring the source of them.

“There’s not (some) solution, it’s not a call to action, like ‘You have to do this,’” Davis said. “It’s more awareness at a fundamenta­l level: ‘Maybe let’s start to think about this in a different way.’”

Gillette recently sparked an online uproar with an ad for men that touched on a similar topic. The two-minute ad from the razor brand invoked the #Metoo movement and encouraged men to “say the right thing ” and “act the right way.”

Davis said he thinks some viewers were upset with the Gillette spot because they felt they were being told what to do.

While it’s a tricky topic to tackle in just a few minutes, he feels it’s important to at least raise questions and spark a conversati­on.

“I think anytime this (topic) goes out, I think there will be pushback,” Davis said. “I’m kind of bracing myself for the same responses.”

 ?? WHITE RIBBON ?? it The director of a new public service announceme­nt called Boys Don’t Cry admits he is expecting pushback.
WHITE RIBBON it The director of a new public service announceme­nt called Boys Don’t Cry admits he is expecting pushback.

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