Showing posts with label femininity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label femininity. Show all posts

Sunday, March 9, 2025

The Films of Celine Sciamma: A Portrait of a Lady on Fire



                The fourth film in my analysis of The Films of Celine Sciamma is the sapphic period drama A Portrait of a Lady on Fire. The first film of Sciamma’s career, which isn’t placed in a modern context, is also the film with the most thematic depth and cinematic nuance, where the command of her craft is on full display. Sciamma crystalizes in celluloid the thought, themes, and philosophy that encapsulates her vision as an auteur.  Yet, when taking a critical sociological perspective to Sciamma’s most celebrated work to date, we see the cracks in the acrylic that are caked on the canvas. In fact, through this lens, some of the noted and praiseworthy aspects of the film may be reevaluated; an unfortunate sociological turpentine that dissolves the heavily lauded art on screen.

 


PLOT

Marianne (Moemie Merlant) a 1770’s French painter is called to Brittany, France to paint the portrait of a Noble woman’s daughter, Heloise (Adele Haenel). The portrait is designed to entice a Noble man to marry her client’s progeny. However, because Heloise is resistant to the chattel marriage that she has been thrust into by the suicide of her older sister, the painting must be drawn in secret. As Marianne and Heloise get closer, the objective artist’s gaze turns romantic and is reciprocated. Every day, as the painting becomes closer to being finished, so too is their precociously perennial passion endangered of being snuffed out by time, class status and circumstance.

 

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

            In both the production of A Portrait of a Lady on Fire and the period it is supposed to represent, there are liberties and contrivances that allow for a more modern/postmodern interpretation outside of the conventions of the context depicted. Granted, Sciamma and painting consultant Helene Delmaire, mined history to construct the amalgamated backstory of Marianne, giving her the blended narrative flavor of many female painters of the 1770’s. Still, the whole conceit of the film is in and of itself a respite from the patriarchy, which by design, allows for a more contemporary perspective. Thus, in addition to deploying her pioneered “female gaze” in the picture, Sciamma makes a period film feel contemporary, at the same time, giving historical legitimacy to the anachronisms she adds.

            Production

            Principal Photography for A Portrait of a Lady on Fire occurred in the Fall of 2018, taking only 38 days. Shot entirely on location at Saint-Pierre-Quiberon in Brittany and a château in La Chapelle-Gauthier, Seine-et-Marne; the film embodies the realities of aristocratic life of the time. In vacant hallways and empty rooms, Sciamma and Cinematographer Claire Mathon tangibly render the differences between class status and wealth.

In most (improper) cinematic depictions of the aristocracy, be they English or French, there is a level of opulence that was uncharacteristic of the time[1]. This specific anachronism is more a product of illustrating class struggles, particularly the chasmic gulf between the rich and the poor, almost by a one-to-one comparison. The rich are lavishly dressed and well fed, with gluttonous amounts of food prepared in an assortment of feasts for no actual occasion other than the whims of the ruling royals. Sciamma dispenses with the glitz, glamour and lavishness of an irreconcilable fantasy of familial nobility; indicating through the subtle barrenness of the Chateau, and the sacredness of the green dress for the portrait, that while the family (and their name) still holds esteem and social capital value,[2] they are also poor.  Thus, they use chattel marriage as a necessary way out of destitution.  



   

            In the film, this distinction is vocalized in an argument between Marianne and Heloise:

            Heloise: You blame me for what comes next…My Marriage. You don’t support me.

            Marianne: You are right.

            Heloise: Go on. Say what burdens your heart. I believed you braver.

             Marianne: I believed you were braver, too.

            Heloise: That’s it then. You find me docile. Worse. You imagine me collusive. You imagine my pleasure

            Marianne: It is a way of avoiding hope.

            Heloise: Imagine me Happy or Unhappy if that reassures you. But do not imagine me guilty. You prefer I resist?

            Marianne: Yes.

            Heloise: Are you asking me to? Answer Me!

            Marianne: No.  

This conversation is further punctuated by the freedom Marianne has as a painter because she inherited her father’s business. It affords her the choice to be married or not; something that Heloise points out is a luxury she does not have after her sister’s suicide. It is this sense of and taste of freedom that Marianne both represents and provides Heloise which she first finds attractive; a status that she cannot achieve but through this brief respite.




            Rather than shoot on film, Sciamma and Mathon chose to photograph using 8k cameras, to give the film an overexposed look. In an interview with The Criterion Collection, Sciamma states that this hyperclarity was important to the intimacy of the film and the overall tenderness between the actors. According to Sciamma, skin, and the capturing of its shades and textures were so important to the film, that it needed to have a bold sharpness that would accentuate the subtle nuances of light, shadow, costume and movement. Mathon and Sciamma framed each shot to emulate Victorian paintings; often having the actors in a wide shot with the camera locked off, allowing the actors to move freely about the space, seemingly not worrying about marks, or blocking. To complement the shot composition and the artistic crispness of the images being captured, Mathon and Sciamma decided to only use natural light, candlelight, or light from the cookfire to illuminate the scene. This diegesis articulates the filmmakers desire to emulate literal artwork. The combination of light and shadow drifting across the screen creates a mirrored seductive dance that visually articulates the desires of Marianne and Heloise. With the elements of the 8k cameras, the wide angle locked off camera shots, and use of natural and diegetic lighting, each frame truly is a painting.




            Sexual Prominence

            As implied in the film, the period of the 1770’s in France was indifferent but not openly hostile to those in the LGBTQAI+ community. While there wasn’t a public embrace of practices; there was an acceptance of existence. Yet, comparatively, just a few years after the time the events of the story take place, France would take some of the biggest and boldest steps toward tolerance and eventual acceptance of the LGBTQ community by being the first country in history to decriminalize sodomy after their Revolution in 1791.  Additionally, like in other geographic locations at the time, it would take generations for these practices to coalesce and solidify into a particular identity that was not only accepted, but welcomed and vigorously defended.

            As with the differences of class and wealth, the film depicts how class differences allow for greater obfuscation of non-heterosexual identities, desires and behaviors. Prior to her sister’s death, Heloise lived in the convent. This is presumably due to her sexual proclivities and thus would have gained some measure of peace had her sister not trapped her in the institution of the heterosexist patriarchy through her suicide. This personified using the green dress in the titular ‘portrait’[3] and the portrait itself.

In prerevolutionary France, as with many other cultures that use the corset (as the green dress does in the film) it is a garment that both “lifts women up and brings her down (Gibson 2020: 109). Both the green dress and the function of the portrait is to entice men. Yet, as we see in the film, the production of the portrait is one that is full of agency, as is the way and under what conditions the corset is warn. Both corset and portrait manufacture a patriarchally pleasing “womanly shape” and both are the product of male fetishization. Yet, the production of these products is female controlled. In Portrait, the women carve out space for themselves to have as much agency and choice they can glean from the ubiquitous and ethereal patriarchy throughout the near totality of the film’s runtime. Even though Marianne and Heloise know their time together is ephemeral, the women still choose to have it. As Dr. Gibson is fond of saying: “You always have a choice. It might be a choice with horrible options, but it is still a choice…and you always have to make it.” (Brutlag 2023).          

The isolation of the characters in the film, not only allows them to escape the latticed interlocking mechanisms of the patriarchy but allows them to build a queer feminist commune; one that is built on mutual respect, friendship and eventually passion. In her novel, Herland, Gilman (1991) illustrates the female commune as a Utopian society that is unraveled by the presence and intervention of men. Each man in Gilman’s story is a representation of consistent masculine stereotypes which are found in the patriarchal society. It is this combined effort which eradicates (through the slow and steady toxicity of masculinity) the feminist commune utopia. A society that had no crime, war, or political strife. A society that had a care model that engages in socialist practices, not just its rhetoric. Yet, Gilman (1991) cannot conceive of women having sex with each other. Instead, because motherhood is so important, children are genetically engineered in “Herland”. Yet, while Gilman (1991) is suspiciously quiet about homosexuality, Sciamma seems to be parroting Simone de Beauvoir (2010) in acknowledging its naturalness; and the complex mechanism of psychology, social circumstances and history that contributes to its self-discovery and active choices. Women just need a chance and space to create this sapphic feminist utopia for themselves.

During the film’s production, French Government launched “The International Strategy for Gender Equality”

 France is enhancing the coherence and effectiveness of gender actions in its development assistance policies and external action. The 3rd International Strategy for Gender Equality (2018-2022) is a steering tool designed to coordinate France’s efforts to improve the situation of women around the world. The strategy is the international embodiment of the President’s commitment to make gender equality the great national cause of his term.

This strategy acknowledges that women and girls are disproportionally affected by poverty, violent conflict and climate change, causing them to experience and face unequal and undo hardships, barriers and a constant threat of sexual violence around the world. Therefore, this strategy “enable survivors of conflict-related sexual violence to access compensation and reparations to help them reintegrate to society” …through a Global Survivors’ Fund. Additionally, this strategy bolstered political support for gender issues, financial equity issues, and made them more visible to the public. During that same time, the Ministry for Europe and Foreign Affairs and the AFD, provided €120 million over three years (2020-2022) to finance the activities of feminist organizations worldwide.

            Concurrently, during the #Metoo movement in the United States, Ninety-nine prominent French women signed a letter accusing the Hollywood anti-abuse campaign of censorship and intolerance.   Stating:

            What began as freeing women up to speak has today turned into the opposite – we intimidate people into speaking ‘correctly’, shout down those who don’t fall into line, and those women who refused to bend [to the new realities] are regarded as complicit and traitors

The article cited perceives a populist puritanism that fails to see nuance in a complicated subject. While these activists are right in principle, their consistent protection of men and their use of the shield of sexual positivity minimizes, deflects, and ignores the ways that sexual assault and the sexual violence of “The Rape culture” is polymorphous.




            A Portrait’ of Sciamma and Haenel: A Revisionist history?

             This was the first film I watched from Celine Sciamma; and it was the brilliance, masterwork and love of this film that made me want to include Sciamma in this director series. As readers can tell from previous essays, as I began to go back into Sciamma’s filmography beginning with her loose “Coming of Age” trilogy, I was troubled by what I found. I had expected to see shades or echoes of the technical mastery that is found here in ‘Portrait’ from a filmmaker who compassionately shows women’s burgeoning love through agency, autonomy and choice. A filmmaking style that was a much-needed relief from the objectifying patriarchal male gaze that propagates in any (moving) picture directed by any cisgendered man with a fragile ego that sees the camera as an extension of his genitals. Instead, I perceived Sciamma’s films to expose predatory sexual behavior, faux trans allyship and racism. So, when I rewatched this film as background and context for this review, I was worried that my perspective would shift and my love for this film would diminish. Surprisingly, even though I revisit this film annually, I still found it to be a feminist, passionately erotic, longingly heart wrenching masterpiece. Yet, I could not reconcile my perceived incongruity between this film and Sciamma’s earlier work[4]. Was I not seeing something darker in Portrait that I had seen in the previous trilogy, because of my affinity for the film? Did I need to give the coming-of-age trilogy another shot? As I was mulling over this inconsistency while I was rewatching Portrait, perplexed by my take of her previous films stating: “I like that this one [Portrait] is about choice and agency from two women of similar ages that have equal power and control in the relationship.” And this was what Adelle Haenel did not have when she entered into a romantic relationship with Sciamma after Water Lillies. Then, taking a broader analytical look, I remembered that the part of Heloise was written for Haenel, and it all clicked into place.

            When you look at Portrait through the lens of Sciamma’s and Haenel’s relationship, coupled with the knowledge that Heloise was written for Haenel; the relationship between Marianne and Heloise becomes both autobiographical and revisionist. Sciamma seems bent on reconceptualizing her relationship with Haenel without the imbalance of power that existed when they met through their roles in the film production of Water Lillies, and their considerable age difference. Marianne, the painter, is Sciamma’s surrogate observing Haenel’s Heloise. The framing and shooting of Haenel betray the intimacy that was once between the director and actor; just as Marianne in the film can capture Heloise with a loving grace that is unmatched. Art imitates life in Portrait as Marianne’s existence (as a free Queer woman) entices Heloise, and it is through Marianne’s guidance that Heloise’s (sexual) world opens. Through this critique, every aspect of erotic passion and intimacy seems like an abuser in their contrition stage gaslighting their victim into believing their version of events. This cinematic gaslighting allows Sciamma to attempt to reframe her past relationship with Haenel as less predatory. But this practice also recontextualizes the female gaze, one of this film’s most lauded strengths.



 

SOCIAL ANALYSIS           

            A Portrait of a Lady on Fire has a forward-facing feminism at every level. Writer/director Celine Sciamma is a self-identified feminist that cites French Feminist literature and art,  95% of the cast and 65% of the crew that worked on the project are women, the overarching themes are feminist, collectively dealing with contemporary women’s issues, and many journalist and scholars have written about the film regarding: The feminist politics of love, female solidarity, erotic entanglements of ambition, and of course the female gaze. The film also won the Screenplay award at Cannes and even won that year’s Queer Palm; marking the first time the prize has been given to a female director. The praise for this film is exceptional, because this is an exceptional film. On every technical and narrative level, this film is perfect; allowing a richness of commentary that is widely diverse, extending well into the cultural zeitgeist. Genovese and Paige (2024) update Adrianne Rich’s landmark “Compulsory Heterosexuality and the Lesbian Existence” through the prism of ‘A Portrait’, discussing the way that queerness can be a freedom within a heteropatriarchal society that continue to plague these relationships, lurking around the corner like some horror movie villain. Meanwhile, they see the use of the Orpheus and Euridice myth both romanticizes and gives agency to the tragedy of Marianne and Heloise’s fleeting relationship (Genovese and Paige 2024).

In the face of such excellent analysis and work on the subject, much of what follows may seem both shallow and derivative, as the power and excellence of this film is well documented. Yet, the splinter that continues to dig its way into my brain throughout all my reviews of Sciamma’s work thus far, is the incongruity between what the films say they represent, and aspects of the film’s production that contradict that messaging. As stated earlier, Sciamma’s predatory shot composition in Water Lilies, her disingenuous trans allyship without taking a stance on Trans politics in Tomboy, the white savor-y way that Sciamma looks at Black girls in  Girlhood, and the revisionist gaslighting of Sciamma’s previous relationship with Haenel in Portrait speak to a hypocrisy that is difficult to ignore. Thus, this section will both echo the film’s acclaim and interrogate the unresolved criticism I have with Sciamma as a filmmaker.

The Female Gaze

Sciamma is credited with articulating “the female gaze” in cinema. “The female gaze” is often framed against the typically cinephilic “male gaze” that genders the perspective of the camera as being heterosexually male. This is due to the historical sexism of the industry and the longevity of female exclusion behind the camera, especially as writers, cinematographers and directors. The longitudinal result of this is a film culture with established filmmaking techniques that objectify women. Since camera movement and angles, shot structures, and compositions all assume a male perspective, many of those movie methods are inherently sexist, often without the awareness of those that participate in its re-creation…especially if those people identify as men. Unfortunately, this also led to a shallow understanding of “the female gaze” to only mean: “when the camera is gendered heterosexually female”, which resulted in the increasing practice of men being objectified by the camera in a similar way. It is important to note that this can never be an equal one-to-one comparison due to the patriarchal power dynamics that are still in the industry. Sexualizing men in a similar way as the sexualization of women does not have the same level of impact. Conversely to this popular opinion, “the female gaze” is a point of view of the camera that respects the subjectivity of the person being looked at by seeing them as an individual and indelible to the person who is looking (Genovese and Paige 2024).




Sciamma illustrates this definition beautifully in this conversation between Marianne and Heloise:

Marianne: I did not mean to hurt you.

Heloise: You haven’t hurt me.

Marianne: I have, I can tell. When you are moved you do this thing with your hand.

Heloise: Really?

Marianne: Yes. And when you’re embarrassed, you bite your lips. And when you are annoyed, you don’t blink.

Heloise: You know it all.

Marianne: Forgive me. I’d hate to be in your place.

Heloise: We are in the same place.  Exactly in the same place. Come here.  Come.

            Marianne approaches and stands next to Heloise

Step Closer.  Look. If you look at me, who do I look at? When you don’t know what to say you touch your forehead. When you lose control, you raise your eyebrows. And when you are troubled, you breathe through your mouth

When viewing this scene through a feminist lens, the audience is witnessing the building of a sapphic romance with a melancholic tragedy at its core; but one that is based on equal power, as Heloise states “They are exactly in the same place.” Objectively, this is as Sciamma describes in interviews, “the manifesto of the female gaze.” However, when you frame this same scene in the context of Haenel’s and Sciamma’s past relationship, the motivation seems more nefarious. Sciamma, the writer director, having Heloise say, “They are in the exact same place.” is a line spoken by her former lover, Haenel, to the character of Marianne, the Sciamma surrogate in the narrative. This can be taken as an attempt at providing Sciamma with absolution. Through this dialogue, Sciamma recontextualizes her past relationship with Haenel as being more egalitarian by proxy than it was in reality. By eliminating the power imbalance of both age and occupation when their relationship began, Sciamma revises her relationship with Haenel without taking any of the responsibility.  Additionally, through this critique, every single instance of positive, informed and active consent between Heloise and Marianne depicted in the film, cast doubt on how much active and informed consent there actually was in the relationship between Haenel and Sciamma themselves.    




Abortion and Access to reproductive care

A major subplot of A Portrait of a Lady on Fire is the solidarity that Heloise and Marianne have with Sophie as they create a temporary feminine collective (Genovese and Paige 2024). Together, Marianne and Heloise assist Sophie in ending her pregnancy once Sophie expresses that she wishes not to remain so. As the first few attempts prove to be unsuccessful, Marianne and Heloise accompany Sophie to a female commune where she undergoes a procedure to terminate the pregnancy. Genovese and Paige (2024) along with many other scholars and journalist reviewing this film, focused on the symbolic importance of the male coded infant in the bed with Sophie as the representation of masculine fragility and the social construction of toxic masculinity that eliminates the natural compassion all humans possess when witnessing the pain and anguish of another person.

Just as important, but less frequently mentioned, is Sophie and Heloise’s re-creation of the procedure for Marianne to paint for posterity. The depiction of these abortions is not only a way to catalog history, but provides those looking for similar procedures with hope that such a thing is possible. This is the feminist power of female solidarity and the strength of women as a collective when they are not socialized through the patriarchy to “bargain” away their power; causing the alienation and vilification of each other for the benefit of men. It is this unity that truly scares the patriarchal power, because men are socialized to not be complete human beings without women. Instead, they are socialized to outsource emotional labor and compassion to women. This is in addition to the lack of life skills that keep men in conditional dependency to the structure of patriarchy. Thus, female solidarity, a feminine collective or a matriarchal society is a principled threat to the patriarchy and therefore must be eradicated. Gilman (1991) illustrated this over a century ago in Herland where the insecurity of men attempts to dismantle the matriarchy of a feminist utopia. It is this very same fear and insecurity that has played out in US politics over the last 50 years.         

 In 1969, prior to the ratification of Roe v. Wade, the Abortion Counseling Service, code named “Jane”, referred women to abortion providers who set both prices and conditions (Kaplan 2019). This was an underground effort by a group of women to provide necessary life saving and changing services to women at a time when unwanted pregnancies increased the mortality rate of women through botched abortions with coat hangers in “back alleys”[5]. These remarkable women curbed the dangers of non-state sanctioned abortions until the process was governmentally regulated; the Abortion Counseling Service being one of the first legal abortion clinics established in 1973 after Roe. With Roe being repealed in June of 2022, and the 18 state trigger bans on the procedure, that were enacted once the federal law was eliminated, the US saw a 2.3 % increase in maternal deaths in the near three years hence. Thus, as predicted by women’s health advocates and scholars, the total number of abortions have not decreased; only the number of safe abortions where the lives of women are in less jeopardy. Therefore, like Sophie, many of today’s US women are leaning on female community solidarity to provide a service that was once determined to be an autonomous body right for women for nearly 50 years.

 

CONCLUSION

            The much-deserved accolades for Sciamma’s fourth film in her filmography, A Portrait of a Lady on Fire, position it to be the writer/director’s Magnum Opus, and the work she will be most associated with in perpetuity. It is a masterpiece of filmmaking in both technical skill and feminist thematic ideology. A miraculous cinematic achievement: a period piece that both centers itself on the realities of the past, while allegorically connecting to the same struggles of the present. Yet, it cannot be ignored that the development of the story and the overarching narrative seems retroactively self-serving; allowing Sciamma to absolve herself of criticism and guilt by using the language of film to recontextualize past relationships and abdicate blame.  

 

REFERENCES

Brutlag, Brian 2023. “Episode 29: The Handmaid’s Tale Franchise with Dr. Rebecca Gibson” in The Sociologist’s Dojo Podcast 142:22  https://thesociologistsdojo.libsyn.com/episode-29-the-handmaids-tale-franchise-with-dr-rebecca-gibson

de Beauvior, Simone 2010.  The Second Sex new York: Vintage books  

Genovese, Emma and Tamsin Phillipa Paige 2024. “Life as Distinct from Patriarchal Influence: Exploring Queerness and Freedom through A Portrait of a Lady on Fire.” In Australian Feminist Law Journal 50: 1 pp. 91-112.

Gibson, Rebecca 2020. The Corseted Skeleton: A Bioarcheology of Binding New York: Palgrave Macmillian

Gilman, Charolette Perkins 1991. Herland and Selected Stories Barbara Soloman eds. New York: Signet Classic.

Kaplan, Laura 2019. The Legendary Underground Abortion Service New York: Vintage Books.

Sciamma, Celine 2019. A Portrait of a Lady on Fire Lillie Films/Neon France   



[1] Especially in the late 1770’s France where the seeds of revolution were being planted for a harvest that bore fruit in 1789.

[2] Social Capital is a Bourdieuian term to mean the value of a person’s  social relationships within a particular society. The value of those relationship have the ability to change depending on the changing context and dynamics of a particular social situation.

[3] I am aware that the actual “Portrait of a lady on fire” is not the portrait we see Marianne creating through the film but the picture she paints afterword of the image of Heloise by a bonfire with a streak of flame climbing up her dress.

[4] Granted, many directors lack consistency, many of them play with genre and tone that make them eclectic and well rounded. Plus, the inconsistent criticism is also unfairly lobbed at non-male directors as a not-so-subtle jab at their competence  

[5]  It should be mentioned that many of these clinics also provide general reproductive healthcare but because they are also tied to abortion access all of those other services like pap smears, mammograms, and breast cancer screenings are also lost.


Sunday, May 14, 2023

The Films of Karyn Kusama: Yellowjackets

 


This final essay in my series on the films of Karyn Kusama will be looking at the director’s ‘small screen’ work; focusing on the gendering and sexist misogyny of being a non-male director in Hollywood using the lens of their recently produced and directed critical darling, Yellowjackets. Through this focus, this paper will address the historical consequences of identifying as a female director, many of them languishing in either director jail, regulated to television or both; and in the analysis of the narrative of Yellowjackets, tackle the subversion of and disintegration of societal and gender norms for the sake of survival, ritualism, tribalism, and Durkheimian Totemism.


 




PLOT

            In 1996, high school female soccer champions traveling to a National Competition get stranded in the Canadian wilderness after a plane crash. For 19 months, friendship, honor, loyalty, and morals are tested among the group as they await rescue. Bonds are broken, pacts and promises thwarted, as a cult and tribalism start to rise.  In present day, some of the remaining survivors, now middle-aged adults, begin to be blackmailed by an unknown source. After so much time, the “Yellowjackets” must ban together once again to stop this new threat, lest the secrets (and bodies) they buried out there in the wilderness come back to haunt them.

 


HISTORICAL CONTEXT

            The Hollywood incarceration of Female Directors

            The trajectory of Karyn Kusama’s career can be used to track the parabolic arc of sexism through the industry.  She “paid her dues[read as “for being a woman”] through the independent movie scene and was praised for her first feature Girlfight because at the time (early 2000’s), it was novel, and the then flavor of Hollywood “girl power” feminism, to take a typical near cliché story about a man, in this case a boxing film, and make it innovative by putting a woman at the center.  Like the characters of Ripley in Aliens, or Sara Connor, in Terminator 2, Diana (Gina Rodriguez) was characterized as masculine with the aesthetic trappings of femininity, rather than be a full three-dimensional human being.  This was not threatening to the Hollywood structure because it forced women (both behind and in front of the camera) to still tell stories about men and masculinity.  The success and support of Girlfight, especially by director John Sales, catapulted Kusama into being a premiere young director. From there, she took on Aeon Flux,   but too much studio interference, and a lack of producers understanding of the source material, lead it to box office failure. However, the blame was not laid at the feet of the producers. Instead, Kusama took the brunt of the criticism for the film and the industry, once again, came to the erroneous conclusion that “Maybe” [ Read as “Definitely] women should not be at the helm of big budget tent pole blockbuster films anymore. This put Kusama in “director jail”.

As noted in my Aeon Flux review “Director Jail”:

  …is a state of limbo filmmakers get put into after a notable or typically horrendous film is poorly received by both audiences and critics. Incarcerated directors are given few offers to direct projects, and any personal or independent projects they have will not gain traction.  Unfortunately, but to no one’s surprise, female directors often are given longer sentences than male directors. Since the patriarchy tends to see women in occupations to be niche, and therefore both being too specific and too general at the same time, the industry is unwilling to “take a chance” on another “female director.” Meanwhile, if male directors get sent to “jail” they often do not stay long, constantly giving many of them another shot. However, there has been an increasing trend of male directors being allowed to fail upwards. In these situations, male directors don’t go to jail, they’re given the industry equivalent of diplomatic immunity.

 

One method of Incarceration for directors at that time was to be regulated to directing episodic television. At this point, as film reigned supreme as the content of prestige and status, television directors had less clout, responsibilities, and overall influence on the projects they oversaw. They were a glorified camera operator that often had to defer to the cinematographer and producers to maintain continuity. They were often pejoratively referred to as “directors -for-hire.” It was designed as penance, and unfortunately for many female directors, became a life sentence.  Thus, it was after the box office flop of Aeon Flux, that Kusama started directing TV.

 


            Riding the tide back into a Still Rocky Shore

           

            As Kusama began to “do her time” by direct episodic television of The L word, Halt and Catch Fire, Chicago Fire, The Man in the High Castle the television landscape began to change.  Beginning in the early 2000’s, with the popularity of such shows as Mad Men, and The Sopranos, ushered in a shift in status and value from long form to short form content. We were moving away from “Features” (Films) and entered into “ The Golden Age of Television”.   This new age was manifested through the development and accessibility of home theater technology. Through the distribution of high quality, high frame rate televisions (HDTV’s with 1080+ 4 k resolution) for home use, television production had to increase their quality[1]. The increase in the quality of the production, and the lure of an expanding narrative[2] began to attract creative talent to television that would have sworn it off just a few years prior.  By the time Kusama was exclusively doing Tv gigs, after once again being thrown back into “Director Jail” between her modest features Jennifer’s Body and Destroyer, she was directing a total of 18 episodes of a variety of well-known shows including Casual, Masters of Sex, and The Outsider. Suddenly, the prison didn’t seem so much like a punishment anymore.

            Kusama was on the cutting edge of the next transformation of entertainment distribution with the development and release of her 2015 feature: The Invitation. Because Kusama wanted to retain final cut for her films, she became a pariah to most producers in Hollywood. It wasn’t until she was approached by then film rental company Netflix, who was branching out into creating and producing content to put on their own platform, that she was able to work out a deal where Kusama would be able to retain final cut of the film, as long as distribution of the film (aside from independent film festivals to create buzz) would be exclusive to Netflix.

With more and more of Millennials cutting the cord from cable in the early 2000s, coupled with the increase in high-speed bandwidth internet, Netflix became an early streaming juggernaut because they were able to license content from other prestige producers at the time (like Showtime, HBO, Warner bros, and Paramount) who did not, as of yet, have a platform.  However, much like Movie Pass was the test case for Theater chain subscription services, Netflix was the experiment that would lead to our current “Streaming War” where every producer and owner of intellectual property (IP) attempts to have their own service; thereby pulling, or more likely, letting contracts on licensed content expire for other older services like Netflix and Hulu.  This became a boon for monopolistic media conglomerates like Disney who’ve not only acquired the Marvel and Star Wars content to increase their hold on young boys attention, but recently took control of all of the 20th century Fox creative IP including all of MGM’s catalog of content. 

These mergers and acquisitions are a key factor in the current “Streaming War” because of Streaming’s unsustainable business model. Profit for these streaming services  is not based on the number of viewers of each piece of content, or even the number of viewers on the service per month,  but in how many new subscribers sign up each month. This has a built-in saturation point. Even if you cut down on password sharing  and other fraudulent behaviors, there is only so many people, and at some point everyone (or most of them) will already be subscribers (Arditi 2021).

For the consumer, with each new production company launching their new premium service with exclusive access to their own IP, the cost of these services (each one often hovering around $10-15.99) a subscription to three or more streamers is more expensive than cable. Inevitably now, consumers often make the choice to stick with a Streamer until they get through the content that they want and then cancel their subscription and get another one in order to keep costs low. They will dip in for The Mandalorian, or Stranger Things but once they are done, they are out, again.  This has lead to content providers now breaking up seasons, or going back to the weekly model like broadcast television in hopes of keeping their viewership numbers up. This has lead to many companies not only losing money (Disney Plus is at an operating loss of 1.5 billion dollars) but to enter into a scramble for new content (Arditi 2021).  This has become a financial windfall for companies like Sony and Showtime who have opted out of the Streaming wars and instead just be the arms dealers of premium content.  One of those pieces of content is the Karyn Kusama Produced Yellowjackets.




Production

Yellowjackets was first conceived by Ashley Lyne and Bart Nikerson as an amalgam of The Donner Party, the Andres Flight Disaster and an adaptation of Lord of the Flies featuring a majority female cast. While many were skeptical that girls would resort to the same level of barbarism that is depicted in Golding’s classic story, Lyne and Nikerson new that given the social hierarchy of teenage girls, and the female relational aggression that exists between them, that the barbarism is not only possible, but inevitable (Simmons 2002).  Lyle and Nikerson serve as showrunners on the series along with Jonathan Lisco who brought in Kusama as an executive producer.  Kusama got the pilot script three years before it went in front of a camera. She was initially intrigued by the shows premise, believing that:

 “ putting women in these types of stories is still undiscovered territory…we romanticize the notion that if women were just left to fend for themselves [it would be a utopia]. But what would that really look like?...It would just be as thorny and as problematic as any clan fighting for survival” (Ford 2022).

To get to that place, Kusama took inspiration from Elem Klimov’s Come and See, a 1980’s Russian war film about a boy who glorifies the war against the Nazi’s until he gets directly affected by it. Through this lens, Kusama saw the story of the Yellowjackets soccer team as a war story (Ford 2022). “I saw these women [like soldiers] coming home from war…and how their experiences followed them and shaped their lives.” To that end, Kusama decided to link the two timelines together, not through typical action callbacks where the behavior a character does in the future, is a call back to the past, and vice versa. Instead, the links between the timelines are more psychological and thematic, illustrating the changes in the characters from their younger counterparts; allowing the audience to ask the questions about the characters rather than the basic plot of the story. For example, the audience will question how does the character of Natalie played in the 1996 timeline by Sophie Thatcher as a troubled grunge obsessed goth, but straight edged burnout, transform into the Natalie of the present, a gun toting drug fueled one-woman badass wrecking crew of revenge? The Natalie of the present holds all the clues to the journey we will watch her younger counterpart experience in the past through each subsequent season of the show.

Since Kusama got in on the production early, and got the opportunity to direct the pilot, she was allowed to imprint her visual aesthetic into the overall style of the show moving forward, making sure all future episodes would have a “Karyn Kusama flavor” in each shot.  Kusama plans to return to directing future episodes of the series (now renewed for a third season out of a planned series arc of 5) including the season finale of season two, which, as of this writing, is said to be a “doosey” (Ford 2022).



 

SOCIAL ANALYSIS  

Setting the Unequal Gender table of Hollywood

In 2022, 31% of producers, 24% of the directors, 21 % of editors, 19% of writers  and only 7% of cinematographers of the top 250 films were women. In front of the camera, it is not much better: 38% of major characters 33% of Protagonists with many of the roles, going to younger female actors (14% of roles featured female actors in their 40’s) and overrepresented in the horror genre.  Only 11% had more female characters than male characters and 9% had an equal number.

Because of this bleak landscape, made more barren when you take an intersectional analysis and include Race, Sexuality and Disability into the equation; when women creatives attempt to get anything made that is not reinforcing at least one of the plethora of sexist tropes that permeate the medium, they run into a variety of roadblocks: reluctance of producers, funding drying up, and being dropped from studio consideration. The fact that 40% of unproduced “black list” scripts were penned by women in part because of these roadblocks and the inability of major studios to believe in women is both expected and disheartening       

            The sexism of the Hollywood industry can be measured by the assumptions and wrong lessons that it takes from female creatively led projects.  Firstly, women have always been considered a niche/specialty market. Granted, this is nothing new since white women are  still considered to be a member of a marginalized group, and remain the biggest recipients of gains made by affirmative action policies. Yet, because female lead projects often tell stories about women, the industry standard assumption is that those types of stories will not attract the coveted 18-40 male demographic. Even when streaming content has since changed the landscape and narrowed the gap between, and the importance of, that once coveted group. Still, the industry persists, continuing to see women and their stories as a risk; and Hollywood is famously risk adverse even though women consume 71% of all media content. And when something does manage to break through, the industry, being short term profit driven, desperately wants to jump on the bandwagon…without really understanding why unique stories about women are important and necessary.  

One such cinematic example where Hollywood took the wrong lessons is the Callie Khouri written, Ridley Scott helmed  Thelma and Louise.[3] After the initial blowback upon the film’s release calling the film “degrading to men” the film found a resurgence among female audiences seeing themselves in one of the two titular characters, and their decision to live their life for them, right to the end, spoke to a whole market Hollywood did not consider. But instead of focusing on the creative voices, choice and perspectives of women, Hollywood, in true patriarchal form, just saw the aesthetics. They saw attractive gun toting women go on a bank robbing road trip kicking ass and blowing shit up. Thus, we get subjected to the Charlie’s Angles remake franchise and numerous other films that reinforce a male crafted story with masculine energy just featuring women.




Thirty years later, this criticism is still apt when looking at a story of High School female soccer team fighting for survival while stranded in the Canadian Wilderness, in Yellowjackets. On the surface, this seems like another example of Hollywood taking the wrong lessons: just taking a typical male story and gender swapping the male protagonists. If this story was just an ill-advised cynical cash grab, like so many of its ilk, that is what we would have gotten, something barren and lifeless. However, under the care of Showrunners and creators Ashley Lyne, Bart Nikerson and Jonathan Lisco, with Kusama at the helm, they tell a story of female aggression and survival, the difficulty of shaking patriarchal norms, and religious devotion in extreme situations.  

 


Yellowjackets and the embracing of Direct Aggression

 

In their landmark analysis on female aggression, Rachel Simmons (2002) discusses the mechanisms of female aggression bound by patriarchically misogynistic gender norms. Briefly, because the gender messages that girls receive through the process of gender socialization impedes their ability to express anger in direct and open ways lest they be sanctioned as being somehow unfeminine; their expression of their anger is societally manufactured to take an indirect approach (Simmons 2002). Since girls and women are judged through their relationships, those relationships, especially with other girls, need to remain strong and intact, at least on the surface. This is in order for girls to maintain a moral air and good standing with adults in their orbit, otherwise the girls’ innocence, moral goodness, and purity are put into question. Therefore, the expression of direct form of aggression, often popularized by men and gendered as masculine, is elusive for girls in a western social order. Just think of how any angry emotional outburst is still minimized and gaslit by the assumption of menstruation.  Instead, to avoid this sanctioning, girls develop, and women perfect, indirect forms of aggression to express their natural feelings of anger and frustration. This includes using relationships as weapons through the practices of rumor spreading, silent treatments, nonverbal gesturing, and sarcasm (Simmons 2002). This relational aggression takes its form in the halls of middle and high schools, at parties and other social events, thereby shaping the inner interrelated life of young girls.

          It is this world of indirect relational aggression that the characters of Yellowjackets are familiar with when they find themselves stranded in the Canadian wilderness at the end of the first episode.  Throughout the first season, the leadership, support, and importance of each character shifts as the old gendered social hierarchy collapses, replaced by one based on survival. As the value of each person to the group changes, so does their gain and loss of prestige and social power.   This is exemplified through the two-character arcs of Young Jackie (Ella Purnell) and Young Misty (Samantha Hanratty) in season 1. “Back in the World” in the patriarchical organization of societal gender norms and high school clicks, Jackie reins supreme. She is beautiful, popular, accomplished and is well versed in the delicate social mechanisms of the teenage girl hierarchy. In the beginning of the first episode, we watch as she expertly deploys every indirect and relational aggression in her arsenal to get what she wants. She has clout, and the attention of her peers. Misty, on the other hand, is the weirdo outcast that doesn’t wear the right clothes, say the right things, recognize social cues, and desperately wants to be accepted. She actively cares too much about seeking attention and validation from others. After the plane crash, with Misty’s knowledge of medicine and survival strategies, she quickly garners favor with the remaining survivors. Whereas, without the lattice work of the overarching bureaucratic social structure to support her, Jackie, and her talents, become effectively useless.

While the juxtaposition is interesting at its core, the creators and Kusama make it more compelling by having these power dynamics shift slowly. It is the slow burn of the transformation from civilized to tribal that makes these character transitions so delicious. The creators question the nature of the female perspective when it is not tied to patriarchy. Those that seek to recreate it and have been propped up by the patriarchal bargain that they struck (Jackie), illustrate just how malignant and pervasive these toxic traits actually are. This is also again demonstrated when the survivors see whom among them is the best with a rifle (to hunt food). Travis exhibits some toxic masculine qualities as he assumes he will be the best shot. While he is good, predominantly because, like a lot of societal behaviors and products, rifles and other firearms were built with only men in mind, Natalie is the best. While the other girls support Natalie’s supremacy in this task, she still feels compelled to save Travis’ fragile masculinity by at first downplaying her accomplishments, even after Travis criticizes her. It is only when Natalie receives masculine validation from Ben (their coach) that she begins to accept her newfound power and status. Eventually, albeit under the influence of drugs and alcohol (Shrooms and berry fermented Hooch), the girls fully able to shed off the Hegemonic Masculinity of their previous lives and embrace the power of the lesbian existence[4] through the schism of the survivors into different factions based around matriarchical shamanism (Rich 1980).




Religion and Tribalism among the Survivors

 According to Emile Durkheim (2001), the power of religion is in the people’s ability to believe in it. This is the social construction of religion. The content of the stories surrounding religion, and the use of allegories and metaphors, matter less than the belief that is placed on those stories. Effectively, it is not what you believe that matters as much as that you believe. Belief is the point.  A product of this religious belief is “collective effervescence”, the feeling of energy and harmony when people are all engaging in the same behavior for a shared purpose (Durkheim 2001).

Kusama and the creators root the religious rituals in the ancient religion of Totemism, which uses symbols as sacred objects to unify and embody a particular group (Durkheim 2001). The symbol that becomes religiously important predates the crash but is reappropriated by some factions of survivors to represent their worship of the wilderness, the manufacturing of “The Antler Queen”, and justify their practice of murder and Cannibalism which, in the first few minutes of Episode 1, seems fully ritualized and made sacred by their actions.  However, since we are dropped into media res, and meet the girls as they are accustomed to their stranded life in the wilderness, there are still many unanswered questions about how the girls we leave at the end of season 1, become those we see at the beginning of that first episode.

Another interesting religious thread the creators weave into the first season in the interplay between mental illness and religiosity. The character of Lottie Mathews is shown to have schizophrenia, and in the first handful of episodes she is shown taking medication to keep her condition stabilized. But as she first rations her pills, and later runs out, her mental illness manifests as worshiping of the wilderness. Through schizophrenic episodes, she is able to convince several other survivors to pledge their fealty to her and the Wilderness at the end of season 1. Similarly, Taissa, who exhibits characteristics of a as of yet diagnosed Dissociative disorder, sees visions of an eyeless man that may be a manifestation of death.  In her dissociative state, Adult Taissa murdered their family dog and ritualized it as an offering to an unknown entity. At the end of season 1 we see that young Taissa begins to disassociate when she and some of the survivors are attacked by a pack of wolves. While these depictions of mental illness are a part of the three-dimensional layering of these complex characters, it is yet to be seen if these interpretations will be ultimately compassionate and sympathetically humanizing, or devolve into yet another tired trope of mental illness being a short hand for villainy and the deplorably evil.

 


CONCLUSION

Kusama has always been underrated as a director, especially her feature work. In the spirit of other female filmmakers, like Elaine May, and Ana Lilly Amirpour she is uncompromising in her vision, recently directing her first political ad campaign to secure federal protections for body rights for women  and continues to pay the female tax for directing,   However, with the success of Yellowjackets, Karyn Kusama is starting to get the recognition that she richly deserves having been nominated for an Emmy and Winning the HCA  award for outstanding achievement in directing for the Yellowjacket pilot. Yet, even with her brilliance being recognized on the “small screen” in film she seems to still get the shaft. Earlier this year it was revealed that her Dracula film surrounding the character of Mina Harker was scrapped because the studio would not give Kusama final cut (again), unlike the weakly rumored reason that two competing Dracula themed projects (the other being Renfield staring Nic Cage) would lead to oversaturation. I will always long for this film, and I mourn that it will never come to fruition. Therefore, if you have come to Kusama’s work through the success of Yellowjackets, please check out her feature work. I’d start with Jennifer’s Body. If you didn’t know Yellowjackets was connected to Kusama, may you be as pleasantly surprised as I was, and continue to follow her trajectory, hoping that recognition finally catches up to her brilliance as is the hope for all non-cisgendered white male able bodied creatives.       

 

REFERENCES

Arditi, David 2021. Streaming Culture: Subscription Platforms and the Unending Consumption of Culture Washington: Emerald publishing  

Durkheim, Emile 2001. Thw Elementary Forms of Religious Life Oxford: Oxford University Press

Ford, Rebecca 2022. “Karyn Kusama says YellowJackets is a ‘War Story’ about Women.” In Vanity Fair Retrieved at https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2022/07/awards-insider-karyn-kusama-yellowjackets-interview Retrived on 5/12/2023

 

Rich Adrienne 1980. “Compulsory Heterosexuality and the Lesbian Existence.” In Blood Bread and Poetry: Selected Prose 1979-1985. Retrieved at https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/493756  Retrieved on 5/13/2023

 

Simmons, Rachel K 2002.  Odd Girl Out: The Hidden Culture of Aggression in Girls New York: Harcourt.



[1] Seriously, try and watch the 4:3 shot Buffy the Vampire Slayer or early episodes of ER  it’s a slog

[2] Instead of a single contained story that can be told and digested in a single sitting, now that could be extended over multiple episodes.

[3] Now getting a Criterion release on May 30th 2023

[4] Even though this is an important moment in the transformation of the protagonists, this metamorphosis is unfortunately still not complete until there is an attempt at rape and sexual assault when the girls victimize Travis. The assault maintaining  the flavors of hegemonic toxic masculinity that the girls perform.