Dayton Daily News

YOUNG GIRLS THE NEW ACTION STARS

- By Sandy Cohen Associated Press

From the murderous Laura in “Logan” to the mysterious Eleven in “Stranger Things” to the audacious determinat­ion of Mija in “Okja,” a movie now open in limited release, powerful young girls are starring in mainstream action fare like never before.

Though Nancy Drew was solving mysteries in the 1930s and Buffy slayed vampires all through high school in the late 1990s, young girls are rarely shown as heroes in programs aimed at general audiences, said Mary Celeste Kearney, director of gender studies and a professor of film, television and theater at University of Notre Dame.

“Girls have seen these figures … but when they’ve looked to mainstream stuff and what their brothers and their dads and boys are watching, those girls are never there,” Kearney said. “And now they are, and that’s huge.”

It means girls don’t have to look to grown-up heroes like Katniss Everdeen in “The Hunger Games” or Rey in “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” Like 10-year-old Elliot on the flying bicycle in “E.T. the Extraterre­strial,” now girls are having awesome genre adventures as powerful young kids onscreen.

The Duffer Brothers said gender was never a question when it came to creating the super-powered star character in their Netflix series “Stranger Things.” Eleven, played by 13-yearold Millie Bobby Brown, can move things with her mind and is the fascinatin­g secret friend of a group of pre-teen boys in the fictional town of Hawkins, Ind.

“Eleven was always a girl. I don’t even remember when or why we made that decision except that was always the case,” Matt Duffer said in a recent interview. “Eleven was the centerpiec­e of the show for us always and was always going to be this girl who escaped the lab… I think we liked the idea because it wasn’t something we had seen before.”

A second little girl is joining the cast for the show’s second season, which premieres Oct. 31.

Writer-director Bong Joon Ho intentiona­lly made his central human character a girl in “Okja,” an internatio­nal adventure film named for the geneticall­y engineered six-ton “super pig” at its heart.

“In cartoons or movies, young girls are often portrayed as characters that need to be protected or rescued. I wanted to do the opposite,” the filmmaker said in an email. “I liked that a young

One thing that’s missing from ‘Okja’ and the other projects is a stereotypi­cal little girl who needs saving.

female character was the unstoppabl­e guardian of a creature, and that she had to charge and break through all obstacles that stood in her way. I liked this feeling.”

Played by 13-year-old An Seo Hyun, Mija has grown up with Okja, and risks everything to protect the massive creature when the corporatio­n that sponsored the super-pig program comes to claim its product.

One thing that’s missing from “Okja” and the other projects is a stereotypi­cal little girl who needs saving.

“Logan” writer-director James Mangold can’t take credit for creating the young female mutant Laura — he mined the character from “X-Men” history. But Mangold cast an exceptiona­l actress, 11-year-old Dafne Keen, and successful­ly brought a killer female character to the ultramale world of big-screen superheroe­s.

He chose to make Laura a child rather than the teenager she is in the comics because of the bond it would allow with Hugh Jackman’s character and the shock it might elicit when Laura draws her claws.

Like Hit-Girl in 2010’s “Kick-Ass,” Laura is a character created in her father’s image. She’s Wolverine’s daughter and has just as much flesh-shredding power as her dad.

Mangold said he took care with Laura’s character, who’s mute for the first half of the film and speaks only Spanish in the second, to “undermine the kind of cute factor of what this young woman would be and allow her to exist as her own unique character.”

It’s notable, too, that these young heroines are not all embodied by white actresses.

Kearney says it’s more than just the “Wonder Woman” effect inspiring these empowered characters: “History has everything to do with this and the gender politics of different historical moments.”

The powerful women and girls onscreen reflect more progressiv­e gender attitudes, she said, adding that some writers and producers may have been inspired to create such heroes out of a desire to see more real-life female leaders.

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