Showing posts with label Jeanne Tripplehorn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeanne Tripplehorn. Show all posts

Sunday, July 12, 2020

Mrs. America (2020)

The miniseries from FX on Hulu is quite good on the whole though some episodes in the middle are not as interesting. I think especially powerful is the Shirley Chisholm episode, helmed by an excellent Uzo Aduba. The episode speaks to the power of representation, even symbolic. Chisholm is the first woman and first African-American to make a run for president. And even if she never really stood a chance, seeing her on the stage was incredibly important. The Bella Abzug episode is also very good, helmed by Margo Martindale who tends to play politician-types, always very well; her costumes and accent and gestures are really great. What makes her episode especially powerful is the argument it makes about radical change. Ideas that may sound radical, over time, can and do move into the mainstream. The moment she realizes this while visiting Betty Friedan, known for her own brand of radicalism. Feminism, which once seen as radical, in her own lifetime, moved into the mainstream, and today (at least in the Obama era) are self-evident ideals, that a woman deserves equal pay as a man, for instance.  And then I also thought the Houston episode was very good, which takes place at the 1977 National Women's Conference. The STOP ERA women are at the Convention without their leader, and left on her own, Sarah Paulson's character in her drunkenness starts to see the light. The episode is a trip like something out of The Good Fight.

In a terrific ensemble cast, Cate Blanchett is the crown jewel as the awful Phyllis Schlafly. Even playing such a hypocritical brainwashed witch, Blanchett is typically excellent. I remember learning about Schlafly in school specifically as part of the anti-ERA movement but not as the mother of modern Republicanism. I think the series may give her a little too much credit for birthing Reaganism. Her valuable mailing list becomes the base of the modern Republican party. The irony is Reagan doesn't offer her a place in his administration, supposedly because he is already unpopular enough with female voters. However the line from Schlafly to Trumpism is much darker.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Gloria Bell (2018)

I am familiar with La Mujer Fantastica, which has a similar use of light and the same enchanting use of music. That was my favorite part. Gloria Bell is a remake of the Chilean film Gloria that I hear is exactly the same, frame for frame, song for song, same crew and all.  I haven't seen the original but I don't really understand why this was necessary except as a vehicle for Julianne Moore. She is excellent and quite funny in a role that is rare for an actress of her age but that's beside the point. Did the director feel compelled to remake his own film in English? Is he saying something about universality?  Was an American audience not willing to watch a more culturally specific movie? Are older white singles really into Earth, Wind and Fire?

Thursday, November 23, 2017

Basic Instinct (1992)

I saw Elle last summer, and was offended by the blatant misogyny of Paul Verhoeven. It is evident that he has been a misogynist for over twenty years. So we know that his depiction of women is offensive, but Verhoeven is actually terrible on all fronts. His depiction of bisexuality/homosexuality is horrendous. And Michael Douglas's heterosexual "hero" is toxic too. It is a little difficult to get past these points. That being said, Sharon Stone is devilishly seductive. Douglas's biases are projected onto the viewer. We know from the start who the murderer is. We are shown her blond locks if you could focus on her hair. And yet we question our recollection because Douglas is so easily manipulated. The plot gets a little muddled towards the end. You have to overlook it. But man, you are kept at the edge of your seat, teeth clenched the whole time. It is suspenseful, even if you know what's coming.