The News-Times

Ginsburg’s life story is inspiring

- By Mick LaSalle mlasalle@sfchronicl­e.com

On the Basis of Sex Rated: PG-13 for some language and suggestive content. Running time: 120 minutes. 666 out of 4

Like Ruth Bader Ginsburg herself, the movie about her life, “On the Basis of Sex,” sneaks up slowly, growing steadily in estimation, until a point is reached, not at the end but well into the proceeding­s, that it’s all downright inspiring. Here’s the story of a woman who not only shaped the journey of women in the second half of the 20th century, but whose life embodied that journey.

That life translates well into the movie medium, in that Ginsburg’s story from her days at Harvard law school through her appointmen­t to the Supreme Court has the built-in narrative structure of a dramatic film. As in a rags-to-riches tale, Ginsburg starts off underestim­ated. She’s quiet, she’s little, and she’s female and few will recognize her brilliance. She’s constantly blocked and put down and experience­s doubts and disappoint­ment, but she eventually emerges as a figure of fame and permanent importance.

“On the Basis of Sex” makes you feel the cost it took to build this life, the years and years of work, in the face of almost monolithic resistance. Interestin­gly, and this feels intrinsica­lly true, the movie shows that the obstacles Ginsburg faced often came from her closest male allies, who, after all, were steeped in the very same culture as her political foes. Ginsburg was at a disadvanta­ge with these men, not only because she was a woman, but because she was mild of temperamen­t, not someone who could easily put herself forward. However she did have the most significan­t advantage in her favor — she was smarter than everybody else.

She had the further benefit of a supportive, understand­ing husband, whose outgoing personalit­y complement­ed her watchful reserve. The old line that behind every great man is a great woman sometimes goes the other way, and so “On the Basis of Sex” is also the saga of an exceptiona­l marital partnershi­p.

Felicity Jones plays Ginsburg, and the story goes that when the real Ginsburg met the British actress, she wondered if Jones could do a New York accent. Jones can, sort of, but she misses the Jewish inflection, the sound of a first-generation child of Russian immigrants. Jones gets everything else right — Ginsburg’s absolute authority and confidence in her own intelligen­ce, combined with a certain insecurity within the social world.

The movie deals with her Harvard career, her marriage to Martin Ginsburg (Armie Hammer) and her nursing him through a near-fatal illness; her graduation at the top of her class, followed by her inability to get hired by a top or even second-tier law firm. She’s already middleaged, a professor at Rutgers Law School, when she and her husband seize on a potential test case to overcome gender discrimina­tion laws, that of a man denied the right of a caregiver deduction because he wasn’t female. This sets Ginsburg on her path to becoming the Thurgood Marshall of the women’s movement.

Armie Hammer conveys the ebullience and husbandly pride of the real Martin Ginsburg, who can be seen in the documentar­y “RBG,” which came out earlier this year. And Justin Theroux is flashy and memorable as Mel Wulf, the legal director of the ACLU, which partners with Bader Ginsburg in her court case. Theroux plays Wulf as part jerk and part good guy — that is, mostly good, but very much a man of his time. You know he’s on her side, but you also get the sense that, if he were told that Ruth Bader Ginsburg was going to be remembered as one of the coming century’s most revered jurists, he’d do a spit take.

But we know better. As the movie wears on, we gradually pass from admiration to genuine affection for Jones as Ginsberg, such that the rooting for this unassuming yet relentless woman becomes intense. Just don’t be thrown by the insistence of the sound track in the early going, or by one of the opening shots, which shows the young Ruth Bader looking around at the Harvard Buildings with the innocent wonder of Marlo Thomas in “That Girl.”

“On the Basis of Sex” is a serious movie that slowly earns its emotion and enlists our involvemen­t. Even before the finish, it’s goosebumps all around.

 ?? Jonathan Wenk / Focus Features / Associated Press ?? Armie Hammer portrays Marty Ginsburg and Felicity Jones plays Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a scene from “On the Basis of Sex.”
Jonathan Wenk / Focus Features / Associated Press Armie Hammer portrays Marty Ginsburg and Felicity Jones plays Ruth Bader Ginsburg in a scene from “On the Basis of Sex.”

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