The Niagara Falls Review

Five female directors, many stories

A conversati­on on filmmaking, Netflix and why they still don’t rank with the big boys

- MARK OLSEN Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — On any given working day, the bustling lobby of the Netflix office building on Sunset Boulevard can feel like the heart of Hollywood, surging with the twinned energy of promise and anxiety as all manner of the famous and the aspiring pass on through.

One recent Sunday afternoon, it was calm, quiet and empty save for five women having their portrait taken. They made for a formidable and accomplish­ed group, and all have directed projects being released by Netflix by the end of the year.

Indie stalwart Nicole Holofcener’s “The Land of Steady Habits,” starring Ben Mendelsohn, is up first on Sept. 14. One week later, on Sept. 21, comes Haifaa al-Mansour’s romantic dramedy “Nappily Ever After,” starring Sanaa Lathan. Tamara Jenkins’ first film in 11 years, “Private Life,” starring Kathryn Hahn and Paul Giamatti, follows on Oct. 5. Sara Colangelo’s “The Kindergart­en Teacher,” starring Maggie Gyllenhaal, which won the director a prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, debuts Oct. 12. And, finally, Susanne Bier’s post-apocalypti­c “Bird Box,” starring Sandra Bullock and Sarah Paulson, bows Dec. 21.

And with that, Netflix will release more films directed by women in the next four months than thesix major Hollywood studios have in the entire year. (For the record, that number for the studios is four. If you exclude one title from specialty division Sony Classics, it’s just three.)

Photos finished, the quintet sat down in a conference room, named for the children’s show “Beat Bugs.” Almost immediatel­y the talk veered toward why they’ve been gathered together and whether asking them to unite leads to a productive conversati­on or a creative barrier.

Q: I would imagine with the current conversati­on around women filmmakers, that several of you have been through some version of this moment before.

Jenkins: Every year, every decade that I make a movie — because I don’t make them very much.

Q: Does change happen and go away? Why does this conversati­on have to keep coming up?

Bier: Because it’s still a huge problem. It only keeps coming up because it hasn’t gotten better fast enough.

Q: Nicole, was directing the Amy Schumer sketch “Last ... Day,” with Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Patricia Arquette and Tina Fey, your version of answering these questions?

Holofcener: No. That sketch was just a really good job. It was so funny and so true. All of it’s true, and frustratin­g. I just don’t think that putting all of us women in a room together without men is helping anything. Unless they start having male roundtable­s.

Bier: I agree. The fact that it’s a novelty, the fact that we might actually have nothing in common other than our gender, and there is this weird thing where we’re supposed to be aligned. And I’d like to be aligned, but I’d also like to be aligned with male directors.

Al-Mansour: I find it’s an important time now and roundtable­s like this give a chance to have our voice heard. I see it as an opportunit­y and we should seize it. More women? Yes, give us more. Because I come from a place where it’s really hard for women, I always try to see the glass halffull because otherwise you feel very depressed if you’re thinking about what is lacking rather than what it’s giving.

Bier: I don’t think I agree with you. Fundamenta­lly I agree with the glass half-full, but I guess the frustratio­n is it’s a little bit of a way of putting us in a box.

Holofcener: We’re in the female ghetto. I think the more female-y female things get made, we’re still like this oddity. We still don’t rank with the big boys. And we’re all the lucky ones too. We can’t complain, we’re getting our films made.

Al-Mansour: But because there are few of us in the industry, we need a chance to explain our point of view. Whether it is sincere or pretend, there is a moment when we need to take it and voice our opinions on what we really want out of this.

Bier: I personally also feel some responsibi­lity in terms of younger women. Younger women wanting to do this, showing it’s possible, that there is a way.

Colangelo: There’s something about our world now that’s so scary, and the world on Instagram and Facebook and hashtags is so different from the reality. Hopefully that’s not the case with women in film, hopefully we’re making more movies and all of this sort of cultural banter means something on the ground. And I think sometimes I feel that they’re getting better, then you see Stacy Smith’s newest report and things are the same or even worse.

Jenkins: That’s the Annenberg study? I found that really depressing.

Bier: But you also have to see which movies are being made. In other words, the kind of movies are getting more polarized. There’s a whole slate of movies which are not being made at the moment, which are actually being made by Netflix or other TV entities, and those movies have a potential for a more diverse point of view.

Q: Well, the other reason why you are all in this room is that your movies are being released by Netflix. Sara, your film was made independen­tly and then picked up. What imprint does Netflix put on a movie?

Colangelo: I think had this been four or five years ago I might have been more skeptical to a day-and-date release or what that might have looked like. But it’s still going to be in theatres, people will have that experience. And in a way it’s exciting for the audience to be huge. Netflix, people can access it from other countries. So I think there’s a lot of excitement and opportunit­y in that. And I think it’s really shifted in the last few years.

Holofcener: The freedom making a movie at a place like Netflix afforded me was enormous. They let me cast who I want, they didn’t tell me to do anything different, they visited on the set just to say hi. That’s a great experience.

Q: But does it change how you think of your projects?

Jenkins: Is it still a movie if it’s not a movie? If a tree falls and it’s not in cinemas in the same way? I think about that a lot, because I wrote it to be a movie, I never knew how it was going to be made. And I’d think to myself, “Well, did Bergman shoot ‘Fanny and Alexander’ different because it was a television series?” First of all, our television­s are bigger than many screens at the Angelika Film Center, so I think that idea, in terms of scale and size, it’s just different. Have you been to the small cinemas where independen­t films are shown? They’re in basements and the screens are tiny.

Holofcener: I feel relieved I don’t have to worry about how long it’s going to stay in the theatre. That’s always scary — “Is it gone?” I know it’s only going to be in the theatre briefly, and then it can live forever as a postage stamp on everyone’s television­s. And more people will see it.

Bier: We all want to tell stories that are relevant to people. And it is somehow exciting to know that lots of people are going to see these stories. I think all of us put a lot of heart and soul and sleepless nights into everything we do and the least rewarding thing is when no one sees it. So I think it’s pretty amazing actually.

Colangelo: I wonder if viewership has changed due to Netflix, if people only watched films within their niche before because you had to buy a ticket to go in. And now, sometimes people shut it off after 10 minutes if it’s boring, but I wonder if there’s another side to that, which is people trying new things.

 ?? ALISON ROSA/NETFLIX ??
ALISON ROSA/NETFLIX
 ?? KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Director Nicole Holfcener talks with lead actor Ben Mendelsohn on the set of “The Land of Steady Habits.” Despite the fact that she’s one of the lucky ones — her film is being made — she feels she and her colleagues are in a “female ghetto.”
KIRSTY WIGGLESWOR­TH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Director Nicole Holfcener talks with lead actor Ben Mendelsohn on the set of “The Land of Steady Habits.” Despite the fact that she’s one of the lucky ones — her film is being made — she feels she and her colleagues are in a “female ghetto.”
 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Tamara Jenkins’ first film in 11 years, “Private Life,” comes out Oct. 5.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Tamara Jenkins’ first film in 11 years, “Private Life,” comes out Oct. 5.
 ?? GETTY ?? Haifaa al-Mansour’s “Nappily Ever After” opens Sept. 21.
GETTY Haifaa al-Mansour’s “Nappily Ever After” opens Sept. 21.
 ??  ?? Susanne Bier’s“Bird Box,” starring Sandra Bullock and Sarah Paulson, arrives Dec. 21.
Susanne Bier’s“Bird Box,” starring Sandra Bullock and Sarah Paulson, arrives Dec. 21.

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