The Signal

COMEDIES WHY WOMEN-LED CAN’T GET NO RESPECT

Hollywood remains skeptical of movies such as ‘Rough Night’

- Andrea Mandell @andreamand­ell USA TODAY MACALL POLLEY

Girls just wanna booze, let loose and avoid jail for accidental­ly killing a stripper, too.

Rough Night, the raunchy female ensemble comedy in theaters now, offers exactly that. As the straight (wo)man, Scarlett Johansson plays a bride-to-be who heads to Miami for a weekend of penisstraw-fueled debauchery with four girlfriend­s (Kate McKinnon, Jillian Bell, Ilana Glazer and Zoë Kravitz) — until things take a deadly turn.

Directed and co-written by Lucia Aniello (Broad City), Rough Night’s trailers promise

Hangover-style antics from a female perspectiv­e. (The poster goes so far as to note “the hangover will be the least of their problems.”) But despite its star power, the R-rated comedy is arriving in theaters like day-old confetti, with analysts anticipati­ng the film will finish fourth at the box office, behind Wonder Woman, Cars 3 and Tupac Shakur biopic All Eyez on Me.

At a recent screening in Los Angeles, the comedy played exceedingl­y well, with rolling laughter and gasps filling the theater as the Miami mayhem played out. What gives?

“People are quick to judge comedies led by women,” Aniello says. “I know for ours, based on just trailers or posters, (it’s) like, ‘Oh, this is just a remake of this’ or ‘a female version of that.’ (People assume they know) what it is just because women are in it, which is really unfortunat­e and a sign of a bigger problem with society, more than just how we market movies.”

The same out-of-the-gate dismissal was memorably dealt to last summer’s hit Bad Moms, the Mila Kunis-led rejection of white-glove parenting that scored $113 million (and has spawned a sequel, A Bad Moms

Christmas).

With fellow hits like Kristen Wiig and Maya Rudolph’s

Bridesmaid­s ($169 million) and Amy Schumer’s semi-autobiogra­phical Trainwreck ($110 million) in Hollywood’s rear-view mirror, why must female-led comedies continuall­y be forced to rise above sleeper status?

The disparity often starts with production budgets.

Rough Night was green-lit at a bargain price of $20 million. “In general, movies by and about women, whatever they’re rated, don’t have as big of an investment as movies by and about men,” says Melissa Silverstei­n, founder of the Women and Hollywood website, which advocates for gender diversity in the film industry.

But even as they hit theaters, female-led R-rated comedies are still received as something as a curiosity, says Kate Erbland, film editor at IndieWire.com.

“Those sorts of films fall under a boys-will-be-boys spirit that simply isn’t applied to femaledriv­en comedies, no matter how wrong that might be,” she says. “When women act in a raunchy manner, most audiences still think it’s somehow shocking, and that seems to be what inevitably becomes the focus, not the actual humor of the films.”

So there’s money, and then there’s perception.

The genre is haunted by “these outmoded ideas that raunchines­s belongs to the guys,” says Paul Dergarabed­ian, senior media analyst for com Score. “There’s always been this line that filmmakers or society didn’t want to cross that women can be just as funny, raunchy, crude and crass as the guys, to great comedic effect. We’re just seeing the evolution of that. But for every movie that’s good, there’s probably one or two that are bad, and that sets it back.”

It’s true that there lies a graveyard of comedies headlined by women that choked (Hot Pursuit,

How to Be Single and the ill-fated Ghostbuste­rs reboot come to mind). But let’s be fair: The guys have their flops, too (looking at you, CHIPS and Baywatch).

The key to success is often authentici­ty. Bridesmaid­s “told a lot

of truth about female friendship­s and female relationsh­ips,” says Alicia Malone, correspond­ent for the movie ticketing website Fandango and author of the upcoming Backwards & In Heels: The Past, Present and Future of Women Working in Film (out Aug. 1). On July 21, the similarly raucous Girls Trip, starring Queen Latifah, Jada Pinkett Smith, Tiffany Haddish and Regina Hall, hits theaters, sending its foursome to New Orleans for let loose antics. Girls Trip is co-written by a female screenwrit­er, Tracy Oliver, while Rough Night is the first R-rated studio comedy to be directed by a woman in 20 years (the last was 1998’s Half

Baked, directed by Tamra Davis). History shows women line up for R-rated comedies that reflect them in a nuanced, real way, while mixing in hysterics. Yet despite Rough Night and

Girls Trip snagging spots on Fandango’s list of the top five mostantici­pated comedies this summer, the tired question — are women funny? — seems to persist. Dergarabed­ian calls the genre of female-based comedies “the Rodney Dangerfiel­d of movies. They just can’t get no respect.”

But every hit edges the industry forward, and as talents like Haddish, Latifah, Glazer, McKinnon, Schumer, Leslie Jones and Melissa McCarthy (whose Dangerfiel­d-esque Life of the Party is in the works) flex, the success stories continue to reshape the Hollywood landscape.

“As studios trust stories about women to open at the box office on a consistent basis, we will see more of these,” says Silverstei­n. “They’re starting to get the message that women are a reliable audience, and it’s only up from here.”

“When women act in a raunchy manner, most audiences still think it’s somehow shocking, and that seems to be what inevitably becomes the focus, not the actual humor of the films.”

Kate Erbland of IndieWire.com

 ?? DAVID GIESBRECHT ?? Rough Night’s Kate McKinnon, left, Ilana Glazer, Scarlett Johansson, Zoë Kravitz and Jillian Bell have fun wherever they go. The ensemble comedy, in theaters now, promises “the hangover will be the least of their problems.”
DAVID GIESBRECHT Rough Night’s Kate McKinnon, left, Ilana Glazer, Scarlett Johansson, Zoë Kravitz and Jillian Bell have fun wherever they go. The ensemble comedy, in theaters now, promises “the hangover will be the least of their problems.”
 ?? MICHELE K. SHORT ?? Regina Hall, Tiffany Haddish, Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Latifah are on a Girls Trip July 21.
MICHELE K. SHORT Regina Hall, Tiffany Haddish, Jada Pinkett Smith and Queen Latifah are on a Girls Trip July 21.
 ??  ?? Kravitz, Bell, Johansson, Glazer and McKinnon play old friends who reunite for some fun and mayhem.
Kravitz, Bell, Johansson, Glazer and McKinnon play old friends who reunite for some fun and mayhem.

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