Category: Columns

  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ & Angelina Jolie’s ‘By the Sea’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Chloé Zhao’s ‘Nomadland’ & Angelina Jolie’s ‘By the Sea’

    Welcome to this week’s edition of Female Filmmakers in Focus, a column where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week.

    Nomadland (2020) – directed by Chloé Zhao

    Frances McDormand & Chloé Zhao on the set of 'Nomadland'
    Frances McDormand & Chloé Zhao on the set of ‘Nomadland’

    With the wide release of her third film ‘Nomadland’ into theaters on Hulu this weekend, writer-director Chloé Zhao is only just beginning. Born in Beijing, China, Zhao attended primary schools in England and Los Angeles. She received a degree in political science at Mount Holyoke before enrolling in film school at NYU – where Spike Lee was one of her teachers – and where she met her creative partner, cinematographer Joshua James Richards, who has shot her first three films. Deciding to set her thesis film in Devils Lake, North Dakota because she liked the name she discovered the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, which inspired her first two films ‘Songs My Brothers Taught Me’ and ‘The Rider,’ both of which opened to critical acclaim. ‘Nomadland’ has positioned Zhao as a frontrunner at the Oscars this year, and she will be following it up with the Marvel film ‘Eternals,’ slated for release in November 2021.

    Based on the book by Jessica Bruder, star Frances McDormand originally optioned Nomadland and was so impressed by Zhao’s film ‘The Rider’ that she approached her to write and direct the film. The result is an emotionally rich, painfully relevant film about the waning days of the American Dream. Set in 2011, McDormand plays Fern, a woman reaching retirement age during the Great Recession who has lost her home after her husband passes and the company town they had lived in together shuts down. Fern begins to live in a van, travelling across the country working seasonal jobs. Like Zhao’s first two films, many of the cast are non-professional actors – subjects of the nonfiction book – with a standout performance from a woman named Swankie. Nomadland examines the importance of interpersonal relationships, the siren’s call of personal freedom, our dependence on capitalism, and the harsh realities of aging in a country that doesn’t seem to care about its older population.

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    By the Sea (2015) – directed by Angelina Jolie

    Angelina Jolie on the set of 'By the Sea'
    Angelina Jolie on the set of ‘By the Sea’

    We are now heading into our fourth decade of Angelina Jolie as a public figure, and as those decades changed, she grew as an artist. Getting her start acting in short films directed by her brother while he attended USC film school, she quickly began starring in iconic music videos like Lenny Kravitz’s “Stand by My Woman” (1991), The Lemonheads’s “It’s About Time” (1993), and Meat Loaf’s “Rock and Roll Dreams Come Through” (1993). Her career trajectory started with cult hits like as ‘Hackers’ and ‘Foxfire’, then award-winning television films like ‘George Wallace’ and ‘Gia.’ Then came her Oscar-winning turn in ‘Girl, Interrupted’, blockbusters like ‘Lara Croft: Tomb Raider’, ‘Mr. & Mrs. Smith,’ and ‘Salt,’ and critically acclaimed dramas like ‘A Mighty Heart’ and ‘Changeling’. In the last decade Angelina Jolie has also come into her own as an accomplished writer-director, with four very different films under her belt: the Bosnian War drama ‘In the Land of Blood and Honey’, a biopic of Olympian and WWII vet Louis “Louie” Zamperini ‘Unbroken’, the 1960s psychological romance drama ‘By The Sea’, and Cambodian Civil War drama ‘First They Killed My Father’.

    Of her directorial filmography, By The Sea was likely her most high-profile in that it was the only one of her films in which she and then-partner Brad Pitt both appeared. And yet this film is also her most misunderstood. Written off as a vanity project by many, the film has a small, but passionate fan base, with at least two masterful close-reads by film writers Kim Morgan and Angelica Jade-Bastien. With shades of 60s filmmakers like Antonioni, Bergman, Polanski, and Losey, ‘By The Sea’ follows writer Roland (Pitt) and his wife Vanessa (Jolie) as they set up camp in a coastal hotel, so he can finish his latest book. In the tradition of the great relationship dramas like ‘Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?’ and ‘La Notte,’ there’s a storm at the heart of this relationship. They may be beautiful people, but anger, malice, resentment, and self-loathing are simmering beneath their façades. All the hallmarks of complicated romance! When Roland and Vanessa begin a voyeuristic fascination with a honeymooning younger couple (Melvil Poupaud and Mélanie Laurent), the tensions in their fraught relationship start to boil over. Sleek and glossy on the surface, with gorgeous cinematography by Christian Berger, a lush score from Gabriel Yared, and to die for costumes by Ellen Mirojnick, at its core the film is melancholic and even unsettling, examining ideas of gaze, fidelity and possession, grief and even vanity itself. Jolie is at the top of her game, both in terms of her performance and her artistry as a filmmaker. ‘By The Sea’ is currently streaming on Netflix.

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  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: Robin Wright’s ‘Land’ & Zeinabu irene Davis’s ‘Compensation’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: Robin Wright’s ‘Land’ & Zeinabu irene Davis’s ‘Compensation’

    Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, a new column where I’ll be recommending films directed by women to watch. Women directors only accounted for 16% of the top 100 grossing films of 2020, but that doesn’t mean that women directed only 16% of all the films released last year; the key phrase in this study is “top grossing.”

    As a viewer, one way to help increase these numbers is to simply watch more films directed by women! They do exist, and I’m here to help you find them. Each week I’ll highlight one new release (in theaters/on premium VOD/streaming) and one old release (from the streaming catalog, an online rental, etc.) that I think is worth your time. I’ll also share a little about the women who made these films. I once spent an entire year watching nothing but films directed by women, and I’ve barely scratched the surface of what is out there, and what continues to be released each week. Hopefully with this guide you’ll discover some new (or new-to-you) favorite filmmakers.


    Land (2021) – directed by Robin Wright

    Director Robin Wright and cinematographer Bobby Bukowski on the set of 'Land'
    Director Robin Wright and cinematographer Bobby Bukowski on the set of ‘Land’

    This week Robin Wright (Wonder Woman) makes her feature directorial debut with the wilderness drama Land. Wright began her career as an actress, debuting in 1986’s ‘Hollywood Vice Squad’ (directed by Penelope Spheeris), before breaking out in Rob Reiner’s classic ‘The Princess Bride’. She has received numerous accolades for her work in front of the camera, including for her performances in Forrest Gump and House of Cards, and also directed several episodes of the latter.

    Land, which had its debut last month at the Sundance Film Festival, was shot over 29 days in the Canadian wilderness and stars Wright as Edee, a depressed woman who, after experiencing a great trauma, moves to a cabin on a remote mountain. Her attempt to isolate herself as a way to move past her grief takes a disastrous turn after most of her food is eaten by a bear that breaks into her cabin, and she almost freezes to death during a blizzard. Eventually she is discovered by a hunter, played to with subtle warmth by Demián Bichir (‘The Hateful Eight’, ‘The Midnight Sky’) and the two form a bond that helps them both feel alive again. While a lesser film might have pushed the drama into a romantic space, this film’s action remains steadfastly in the realm of platonic friendship and the strength that can be found in that kind of camaraderie, something that is still all too rarely explored. Wright and Bichir’s compelling performances, as well as stunning cinematography by Bobby Bukowski, make Land a worthwhile journey from the numbness of loss to the joys of finding peace within.

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    Compensation (1999) – directed by Zeinabu irene Davis

    Michelle A. Banks in Zeinabu irene Davis's 'Compensation'
    Michelle A. Banks in Zeinabu irene Davis’s ‘Compensation’

    Currently streaming on the Criterion Channel, this romantic drama was shot in the summer of 1993 on location in Chicago and eventually played at 2000 Sundance Film Festival. Part of the movement of independent Black filmmakers known as the L.A. Rebellion, Zeinabu irene Davis received an MFA in Film and Video Production from UCLA in 1989 and made several short films before starting work on her first feature. The work of L.A. Rebellion filmmakers like Davis and Julie Dash (whose 1991 film ‘Daughters of the Dust’ was the first feature film directed by an African-American woman to have general theatrical release in the United States) have inspired countless contemporary filmmakers like Ava DuVernay and Beyoncé.

    Compensation follows two parallel love stories – one in 1906 and one in 1993 – between a deaf woman and a hearing man. In each story the couples (played by Michelle A. Banks and John Earl Jelks in dual roles) must learn to communicate with each other, both in terms of their own actual languages, but also in the manner in which they communicate their needs and feelings for each other in a way that each can understand. Shot in black and white, the film uses unique creative ways to showcase these communication issues, mixing silent film style intertitles and subtitles over American Sign Language. A beautiful film about the power of communication and human connection, ‘Compensation’ is perfect for those looking for something to hit the spot during this socially distanced Valentine’s Day weekend.

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