Orlando Sentinel

TCM shines spotlight on female directors, their art

- By Lindsey Bahr AP

Barbara Kopple, from left, Sofia Coppola, Julie Dash, Claire Denis and Vera Chytilova, whose works will be featured in Turner Classic Movies’ four-month “Women Make Film” series, airing every Tuesday night through December.

Women have been making great films since the silent era, although you might not know it to look at a list of the best films of all time. The American Film Institute’s top 100 famously does not include any female directors at all.

But Turner Classic Movies is helping craft a revisionis­t history of women in film with an epic series programmed around a groundbrea­king 14-hour documentar­y by film historian Mark Cousins titled “Women Make Film: A New Road Movie Through Cinema.”

Every Tuesday night through December, audiences will be treated to one hour of Cousins’ docuseries, which exhaustive­ly examines the work of some 183 directors from around the world, narrated by the likes of Tilda Swinton, Thandie Newton and Jane Fonda. After each installmen­t, the night continues with thematical­ly relevant films commentary from directors like Mira Nair, Kimberly Peirce and Nicole Holofcener. In total, TCM has programmed 100 films directed by women from A (as in Dorothy Arzner ) to Z (as in Mai Zetterling ) that span 12 decades and hail from 44 countries and six continents.

Film historian and TCM host Alicia Malone, who has written books on women in film, said she was surprised by just how many films she had never seen in the programmin­g and the documentar­y. Malone and fellow TCM host Jacqueline Stewart are leading discussion­s with some contempora­ry filmmakers around the evening’s programmin­g.

“I consider myself to be someone who has made an effort to learn about movies made by women, to seek them out and to watch them whenever I can,” Malone said. “For me to find movies and filmmakers that I’ve never heard of is both maddening and thrilling.”

And she wasn’t the only one to find herself reaching for her notebook and making a list of films to watch. “Born in Flames” director Lizzie Borden said she “went into study mode.”

“I’ve been seeing excerpts and thinking, why don’t I know about this film?” Borden said. She’ll be featured on Night 10, airing Nov. 3, and focusing on melodrama, sci fi and horror. Films that evening include Ida Lupino’s rape culture-themed “Outrage” (1950), Ann Hui’s Vietnamset “Boat People” (1982) and Lois Weber’s silent film “Shoes” (1916), about a shop girl who needs a new pair.

“‘Outrage’ is an extraordin­ary film to watch after the #MeToo revelation,”

Borden said. “Ida Lupino has always been compared to Dorothy Arzner. But she’s nothing like Dorothy Arzner. And it’s only because there have been so few visible women. It’s an unfair comparison. Her films are so interestin­g. She’s reflecting an inner life of women going into the ’50s.”

Borden also said the documentar­y has made her appreciate films she’s seen many times even more, including her friend Kathryn Bigelow ‘s Oscarwinni­ng “The Hurt Locker” (which will be airing Nov. 10). She likened it to a film school.

“It encourages your mind to be really active,” Borden said. “I never took apart an action scene that (Bigelow) does the way Mark Cousins does or count the number of shots as he does.”

“Boys Don’t Cry” director Peirce, whose “StopLoss” is airing Oct. 20 during Night Eight, is excited to showcase the breadth of experience of female filmmakers throughout history.

“It’s a miracle if you’ve seen any woman’s content,” Peirce said. “And if you know a woman’s name, that’s awesome because it means she probably made more than one movie. I don’t think I’ve met a woman artist who doesn’t know that her career should have been tenfold from what it is.”

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