Los Angeles Times

Some progress for an industry still woefully in need of it

- By Glenn Whipp

If, as expected, “La La Land” wins the Oscar on Sunday, it would be the first best-picture winner since Clint Eastwood’s “Million Dollar Baby” to feature a woman nominated for lead actress.

Let that rattle around your brain a minute.

That’s 12 years of kings and compromise­d cops, angst-ridden actors and Afflecks without a bestpictur­e Oscar winner that focused on telling a woman’s story.

If you’re looking for a symbol of where women stand in movies right now, that’s a pretty good place to start, particular­ly after the Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission announced last week that it’s now engaged in settlement talks with studios to settle allegation­s of systemic discrimina­tion against female directors.

While academy voters have long been fixated on giving the best-picture Oscar to movies telling the stories of great (or greatly compromise­d) men, there have been stretches where films spotlighti­ng women have won too. (Look at the ’90s run of “The English Patient,” “Titanic” and “Shakespear­e in Love” or the five-year stretch that started with Vivien Leigh’s Scarlett O’Hara in 1939’s “Gone With the Wind” and ended with Ingrid Bergman’s Ilsa in “Casablanca.”)

Lately, though, movies focusing on women — “Jackie,” “Carol,” “Wild” and “Gone Girl,” to name a few — have been overlooked in the best picture category, though their actresses have found favor with the academy.

And none of these films was directed by a woman.

“It’s the latent sexism that’s the

biggest problem,” says Angie Fielder, a producer on the Oscar-nominated drama “Lion.” “It’s there. It’s under the skin of everything.”

Yet Fielder and the producers of the year’s other best-picture Oscar nominees express an optimism that change is not just on the horizon but here. And that next year, when San Diego State’s Center for the Study of Women in Television & Film puts out its annual Celluloid Ceiling study, there will be a jump in representa­tion. OK, maybe not a jump, but perhaps a small step forward from this year’s findings that women constitute­d just 17% of all the directors, writers, producers, executive producers, editors and cinematogr­aphers working on the 250 top-grossing movies.

Why the hopefulnes­s in the face of numbers that have remained static for so many years? For starters, the commercial success of female-driven movies such as “Hidden Figures” and “Arrival” have some believing that studios, financiers and agencies will let go of the fallacy that films starring women don’t make money.

There’s also the fact that in the past year, Walt Disney Studios has hired two women — Ava DuVernay for “A Wrinkle in Time” and Niki Caro for “Mulan” — to direct tent-pole movies sporting $100-million-plus budgets. And this too: Five of the nine movies nominated for the best picture Oscar this year have female producers.

But mostly, these producers say, the optimism comes from what they’re doing with their own hiring power.

“It’s a conscious decision to really question each hire that you make and consciousl­y try to bring people in that don’t look like you,” says “Moonlight” producer Adele Romanski. “That’s how you start to have a ripple effect.”

Adds Theodore Melfi, producer, co-writer and director of “Hidden Figures”: “Everyone has to take responsibi­lity for it themselves. You can’t just talk about it.”

For “Hidden Figures,” the rousing period drama about the African American women mathematic­ians who helped the space program in the early 1960s, Melfi hired a crew that was 35% female, including cinematogr­apher Mandy Walker.

Likewise, when putting together the production team for “Fences,” director (and star) Denzel Washington and the film’s producers hired cinematogr­apher Charlotte Bruus Christense­n as well as women for the key jobs of line producer, art director and set decorator, among others.

“You have to look to find them,” Washington says. “But these women are there. And they’re ready.”

Beyond these conscious choices, there’s evidence in the Disney hires that the studio mentality that ignores women or limits their choices of projects may be beginning to change, though not as quickly as most would like.

“There’s such a thing where we’re so narrowly focused on women directing female-driven stories,” “Hell or High Water” producer Julie Yorn offered at a recent producers panel at the Santa Barbara Internatio­nal Film Festival. “Why aren’t they directing the big action movies?”

“I heard they don’t want to,” Romanski jokingly replied.

That institutio­nal bias against women directing genre movies — horror, thriller, action and sciencefic­tion — is a long-standing problem, but obviously, given the grim annual employment numbers, far from the only one.

Lower-budget indie films provide a place for new talent to emerge and different stories to be told. But “La La Land” producer Jordan Horowitz notes that it’s often hard to find financing for female-driven movies because internatio­nal sales are predicated on what’s worked before. And if the opportunit­ies haven’t been there, that sort of precedent hasn’t been establishe­d.

“In the TV space, they’re hungrily looking for stuff that’s female-driven or made by creators of color,” Horowitz says. “And I’m starting to sense that in the film space too, but it’s still a tricky conversati­on. You have to bang pretty hard at the institutio­ns — agencies, management, studios — to get them to champion people and material that’s new.”

Horowitz knows this from experience, running a production company, Original Headquarte­rs, with his wife, Julia Hart. They have written two movies together — “Miss Stevens,” a charming, well-reviewed drama centered on a female high school teacher that premiered last fall, and the upcoming thriller “Fast Color,” which will begin filming next month. Hart directs both films.

“Fast Color” stars Gugu Mbatha-Raw as a woman forced to go on the run when her superhuman abilities are discovered. It’s a genre movie, an origin story of a woman with supernatur­al powers that’s in conversati­on with genre films of the past. In that respect, Horowitz says, it’s like “La La Land,” a synthesis of old and new. But because it’s told and directed by a woman, he adds, it feels fresh simply because it’s coming from a different angle.

DuVernay recently told me much the same thing about her take on “A Wrinkle in Time,” an adaptation of Madeleine L'Engle’s classic fantasy novel.

“Nobody who looks like me has ever made a movie like this, a movie this size before,” DuVernay says. “And because I am black and because I am a woman, I’m going to bring a different perspectiv­e — because I’m an artist and I’m doing what artists do. I’m bringing myself.” Dozens of women directors will be doing just that in movies coming out this year — Kathryn Bigelow (still the only woman to win an Oscar for directing), Sofia Coppola, Sally Potter, “Broad City’s” Lucia Aniello, Patty Jenkins and Caro, who helms an adaptation of Diane Ackerman’s bestseller “The Zookeeper’s Wife.”

“The momentum’s there,” says Kimberly Steward, who earned an Oscar nomination this year for “Manchester by the Sea,” the first movie she has produced. “Women are in the conversati­on everywhere. I’d like to think it’s more than just lip service.”

Adds Horowitz: “Let me put it this way: I don’t think we’re going to have to wait another 12 years for a best picture winner to focus on a woman.”

 ?? Hopper Stone 20th Century Fox ?? THE SUCCESS of a female-driven film like “Hidden Figures” (Janelle Monáe, left, Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer) is significan­t.
Hopper Stone 20th Century Fox THE SUCCESS of a female-driven film like “Hidden Figures” (Janelle Monáe, left, Taraji P. Henson and Octavia Spencer) is significan­t.

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