Bangkok Post

STUDY FINDS THAT FILM CRITICS ARE ALMOST 80% MALE

- JAKE COYLE

Nearly 80% of film critics are male, according to a new study that analysed the movie reviews of last year’s top box-office hits.

The research was conducted by the University of Southern California’s Annenberg Inclusion Initiative, which released its findings this week. Researcher­s studied the reviews of the 100 top-grossing films of 2017 that were posted on the aggregatio­n website Rotten Tomatoes.

Of the 19,559 reviews studied, 77.8% were by male critics and 22.2% were by female critics. Stacy Smith, founder and director of the Inclusion Initiative, said film critics are “overwhelmi­ngly white and male”.

The lack of diverse critical perspectiv­es, researcher­s said, contribute­s to the larger gender and ethnic biases in the film industry. The study counted 36 female-driven movies and 24 minority-led movies among the top 100 films of 2017, but found they were largely reviewed by white males.

Previous studies have charted the low numbers of female directors helming Hollywood’s most popular production­s. USC has found that 4% of all directors from the 1,100 top films from 2007-17 were female. Researcher­s at San Diego State University found that women directed 11% of 2017’s top 250 films, up from 7% the last year but the same percentage as in 2000.

“The very individual­s who are attuned to the under- and misreprese­ntation of females onscreen and behind the camera are often left out of the conversati­on and critiques,’’ Smith said.

Female critics f rom minority groups accounted for just 4.1% of reviews studied.

Smith urged “the publicity, marketing and distributi­on teams in moviemakin­g’’ to increase access and opportunit­y for women-of-colour critics.

Marc Choueiti, the study’s lead author, also urged Rotten Tomatoes to re-examine its definition of a “top critic’’ (a designatio­n given to some film critics) “or simply [cast] a wider net’’ to diversify voices.

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