Albany Times Union

Film study: Female protagonis­ts led record number of 2018 movies

Representa­tion often matched that of creative team

- By Ashley Lee Los Angeles Times

Female protagonis­ts led a record percentage of 2018’s top movies, according to a new study from San Diego State University’s Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film.

The annual report, which analyzed more than 2,500 characters appearing in the 100 top domestic-grossing films of 2018, found that the percentage of films featuring female protagonis­ts increased to 31 percent in 2018 — a notable jump from 24 percent in 2017, and a slight uptick from the previous high of 29 percent achieved in 2016.

“Frankly, 2017 was a bad year for female protagonis­ts,” Martha Lauzen, professor and executive director of SDSU’S Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film, told The Times on Monday.

“Last year’s movies were a record high since I’ve been doing this research (starting in 2002),” she continued. “Protagonis­ts are tremendous­ly important, because it’s from their perspectiv­e that the story is told, so it’s wonderful to see more women in those roles.”

These female protagonis­ts were most likely to appear in comedies (32 percent), followed by dramas (29 percent), horror films (19 percent), science fiction features (10 percent), action features (7 percent), and films in other genres (3 percent).

“Female protagonis­ts aren’t just in romantic comedies anymore,” Lauzen said with a laugh. “In fact, they were fairly well-presented across genres. This is a positive because, if one genre falls out of favor temporaril­y — as genres sometimes do, the way the romantic comedy did for a while — we won’t see a dramatic decline in the numbers onscreen.”

However, the percentage­s of female-speaking characters and major characters remained relatively stagnant.

Females constitute­d 35 percent of speaking characters (up 1 percentage point from 34 percent in 2017) and 36 percent of major characters (down 1 percentage point from 2017). Generally speaking, major characters are categorize­d as those who appear in more than one scene and are instrument­al to the action of the story.

The study also noted that the gender representa­tion in a movie often correlated to the genders of its creative team. For example, in films with at least one female director and/or writer, females composed 57 percent of protagonis­ts (as opposed to films with exclusivel­y male directors and/or writers, of which females accounted for 21 percent of protagonis­ts). Stressed Lauzen, “It really does matter who is working in those key behind-thescenes roles.”

Regarding race and ethnicity, the percentage of black females in speaking roles increased five percentage points from last year to 21 percent in 2018, a recent historical high.

The percentage of Asian females increased three percentage points to 10 percent in 2018, a jump largely because of one film’s numerous female-speaking characters: “Crazy Rich Asians.” (And when this film is removed from the analysis, the jump is only one percentage point.) “It’s a really important caveat to consider when looking at the numbers,” said Lauzen.

However, the percentage of Latina characters declined three points to 4 percent in 2018. “Latinas remain the most underrepre­sented group, especially when considerin­g this group’s representa­tion in the U.S. population,” Lauzen lamented. “That needs some work.”

 ?? Sanja Bucko / Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent via AP ?? Constance Wu in a scene from the film “Crazy Rich Asians.” A report concluded that the percentage of films featuring female protagonis­ts increased to a record 31 percent in 2018. The percentage of Asian females increased three percentage points largely due to “Crazy Rich Asians.”
Sanja Bucko / Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent via AP Constance Wu in a scene from the film “Crazy Rich Asians.” A report concluded that the percentage of films featuring female protagonis­ts increased to a record 31 percent in 2018. The percentage of Asian females increased three percentage points largely due to “Crazy Rich Asians.”

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