The New Zealand Herald

Raybon Kan

Director’s pay rise for sequel great but no industry game-changer

- Continued from A36 Alyssa Rosenberg — Washington Post

anecdote, somebody’s in traction, or trying to delete video from the internet.

Oh yeah — butter. Just when dairy farmers are coming under public pressure, butter’s at a record high price. When butter’s doing well, living in New Zealand is like living in the Apple factory but still having to pay full retail on an iPhone. Show me the butter!

Surely there should be some amount of universal butter allowance — so we could really smear that butter all over, like Saudis swimming in a petrol jacuzzi. I don’t even eat butter — being one of those people who enjoys being difficult when I order food — but still, it seems odd to cheer for a staple becoming more expensive.

Does butter trickle down? I suppose it does if the climate makes it melt.

Early voting has begun. It’s quite tempting to get it done early for a change. But the pace of intrigue in this election is so nutso, it’d be like watching a whodunnit, and before the title sequence is over, calling the culprit. There’s nine days to go. For all we know, we haven’t met all the party leaders yet.

The media don’t even have to fluff

Wonder Woman has pulled in US$816 million ($1.12 billion) at the internatio­nal box office this summer. And on Monday the news broke that director Patty Jenkins would get paid for the sequel accordingl­y: She will reportedly make about US$8m for writing, directing and producing the movie. This is no real surprise: Joss Whedon, who directed Marvel’s The Avengers, has been frank about the fact that he got a much richer deal to direct its sequel, Avengers: Age of Ultron. The shocker — and a testament to the potency of Hollywood sexism — would have been if Jenkins hadn’t levelled up for the Wonder Woman sequel. This is delightful news for Jenkins but moments such as this shouldn’t be considered the end of the struggle for pay equity, or for equity of opportunit­y in a business that loves to promote a few women or people of colour at a time as long as those changes don’t imperil the establishe­d order. Instead, we should use them to set new baselines and ask hard questions of Hollywood. The first benchmark that’s useful to extract from Jenkins’ Wonder Woman contract is monetary: Her deal apparently makes her the highest-paid female director ever and this one. It’s genuinely suspensefu­l.

What about that poll? What’s the margin of error on the margin of error? Who’s even responding to these polls? It must be hard for pollsters to catch people with landlines, who still have hearing. sets a new mark that other women will be able to use in comparable situations. One measure of whether Jenkins’ contract is a force for change in Hollywood is whether another female director is able to sign a similar deal or whether Jenkins will end up alone on that pinnacle.

Of course, we should also be careful not to over-interpret this baseline, either. If Kathryn Bigelow or Ava DuVernay decides to take the minimum weekly salary of US$18,676, as guaranteed by the Directors Guild of America contract, in order to make a movie come in under budget, that doesn’t make them sellouts to feminism or mean their production companies are being unfair. Instead, the test is whether female directors in the same situation as Jenkins — directing a sequel to an extremely popular movie — get paid the same. A secondary measure is whether salaries for first-time female and non-white directors of blockbuste­rs keep pace with those of their white male counterpar­ts.

The second measuremen­t to keep an eye on is whether Jenkins’ deal gives her a meaningful amount of creative freedom, keeping in mind that she’s working in a highly regimented franchise system.

And finally, the real test for whether big franchise deals for innovative directors is a good thing for the industry is what they do next.

What would make it interestin­g is if the Electoral Commission released daily results of early voting. Now that would be a juicy opinion poll. Why don’t they? They must feel some voters would be influenced by how the election is going, and either not bother to front, or vote just to be on the winning side. Humans, huh?

In a throwaway remark on-air, one of TV3’s breakfast hosts revealed that he supported National. For some reason he’s come under attack. I think it’s laudable. If every news presenter, reporter and editor revealed how they voted in the past election or two, we’d all be better able to assess what they say. (“Riiiight. You would say Since directing The Avengers, Whedon has directed a low-budget adaptation of Shakespear­e’s Much Ado About Nothing and is rumoured to have something called “Untitled Joss Whedon/WWII Horror Project” in the works. But otherwise, he has been largely sucked into the world of superheroi­cs. Unless Jenkins decides this is what she wants to do fulltime, I would consider Jenkins’ Wonder Woman deal a failure if it means that she spends the rest of her career directing franchise movies.

In an ideal world, the relationsh­ip would go both ways. Franchises like Marvel, DC and Star Wars would get an infusion of energy and personalit­y from promising directors with distinctiv­e visions. And in turn, those directors would get a lot of attention and the credential of having directed a huge, logistical­ly complex movie in a challengin­g corporate environmen­t that ought to make it easier for them to get their original projects funded.

Otherwise, the exchange looks a little bit vampiric: Talented directors get paid large sums of money to essentiall­y take themselves off the original movie market. I’m excited for Jenkins to get paid because she deserves it, and because I want to see what she does with that money and reputation. Wonder Woman was fun, but it’s not the true revolution that Hollywood needs.

There’s nine days to go. For all we know, we haven’t met all the party leaders yet.

that.”). Imagine if those banners on the screen didn’t just display the host’s name, but also the logo of the party they voted for last time.

I suppose it’d create an incentive for media people not to vote — or to say they didn’t — so they could claim to be impartial. But the reality — that all of us in the media are blobs of emotion, and fiercely tribal, and selfjustif­ying — needs to be pointed out.

I’d say I’ve made my decision. As it happens, it’ll be exactly what I did last time. In other words, nothing in three years has had any impact whatsoever. 2015, 2016, threequart­ers of 2017: I might as well have been in a coma. Five stars.

 ??  ?? Patty Jenkins
Patty Jenkins
 ??  ?? Wonder Woman has pulled in $1.12b at the box office globally.
Wonder Woman has pulled in $1.12b at the box office globally.

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