Sunday, January 1, 2023

The Films of Karyn Kusama: Jennifer's Body

 

            

              The third film in my retrospective on the films of Karyn Kusama is the late blooming horror classic Jennifer’s Body. Misunderstood, underrepresented and overlooked, this 2009 film was ahead of its time, and the culture at large. The film presents gender and sexuality in a way that we’ve barely touched on, outside of vague indie dramas, in the near 15 years since its release. Even fewer, are the films that are marketed to mass audiences and open wide as this film did. This paper is an exploration of the historical revulsion of the film upon its release, and its reconsideration a decade later, as well as an analysis of the film’s broadly stroked gendered and sexual themes that become more intricately detailed upon further and closer examination.

 


PLOT

            High School friends Anita and Jennifer have been inseparable since childhood. Jennifer, the outgoing aggressive bombshell, is the gravitational force in their relationship, while the diminutive Anita, who goes by the descriptive, albeit narratively deceptive, “Needy”[1], sits comfortably in her orbit. But when Jennifer gets lured away after a bar fire and improperly sacrificed to Satan for an Emo Glam Rock Band’s desire for fame and fortune, Anita “Needs” to take care of what remains, a demon succubus, inside her best friend.  

 

 

HISTORICAL CONTEXT

            Production

            Jennifer’s Body marked the sophomore film for writer/producer Diablo Cody and their second collaboration with Producer Jason Reitman after their smash hit, Juno. Cody wanted to both pay homage to, and subvert, a lot of the Horror tropes of the era by centering the narrative around girls and their friendships, ultimately turning the genre into a double entendre.

While not confirmed, Cody seemed to draw inspiration for Jennifer’s sacrifice from the real-life murder of Elyse Pahler who in 1996 was lured from her home in California and killed as a part of a Satanic ritual; all for the Metal Band Hatred to be granted “The Craziness and Go Professional”. Once captured, the three members of the band pleaded “no contest” and are each serving life sentences in three separate penitentiaries across California. One of these men was denied Parole in 2021 by Gov. Gavin Newsom, the other two have upcoming parole hirings in 2023 and 2024 respectively. Feeling a lack of Justice, The Pahler Family lashed out at the band Slayer, believing that their music and lyrics promoted murder and violence, which in their mind, led to the death of their daughter. All civil court cases were dismissed.      

The script for Jennifer’s Body was written in 2006 at the same time as Juno, but because of the latter’s success, the second script by Diablo Cody was quickly put on the list of the “most anticipated” unmade scripts of that year. Reitman was initially set to direct, given his history with Cody, but realizing his vision wasn’t the right fit, began shopping for directors. Kusama came on in the early months of 2008, drawn to the project by the script and its overall themes, “a fairytale gone psycho”, and was present during the additional drafts of the script that zeroed in and highlighted its feminist messaging. Both Cody and Kusama were adamant in wanting the story to remain about female friendships and write these horror roles that [ so rarely] service women.  While Cody’s popularity assured that this script would be produced, the reactionary nature of the Hollywood industry, ultimately guaranteed that the studio, in this case 20th Century Fox, would not understand it.   

             The studio ignorance of this film festered. Only seeing through the white male gaze of standard Hollywood pictures, Producers believed this film to be a riff on the typical sex comedy in the vein of (what would eventually become) National Lampoon’s trademark in the early 2000’s, a sort of American Pie with a Succubus. Therefore, they hired an all-male marketing team who focused their attention on capturing young white men, by using their promotional budget to sexualize Megan Fox at the center of its advertising. Billboards, posters, one sheets, and trailer editors all leaned in on the hyper sexualized image of Megan Fox cultivated by the Studio in order to get men into the theater with the promise of her naked body. According to Kusama, this crack marketing team even had the deplorable idea that Fox should do live chats for the film on Amateur Porn sites. This failure at the marketing ultimately poisoned the public well of goodwill for the film. Thus, audiences and critics at the time did not know exactly what the film was, nor what it was trying to say; their expectations crashing upon the rocky shores of the film’s actual messages. This incongruity left many (typically male) audience members and critics feeling duped, leading to them unfairly criticizing the film, because of its marketing tactics.

            Reception

            The initial reviews of the film which were mixed but leaning towards terrible, typically cited the script and direction as being at fault rather than the performances. Yet, due to the mismanaged marketing, praise for the performances rarely went beyond the physical, with one review stating: “Forget Jennifer’s Body. This is all about Megan’s Body”. Several other reviews lambasted the film for its “lack of fun” or stated that it was a film that was “pretty to look at” but “without substance.” or calling the directing amateurish and the writing a “disappointment from an Oscar winner” (meaning Cody). Many critics felt that Cody was “trying too hard” to match her success with Juno while others thought the film was too sexual, or conversely, not sexual enough (which might have been code for not enough nudity, meaning they didn’t get to see Megan Fox naked). While others just saw the finished product as trashy B movie schlock.  

It is difficult to truss out whether these first negative reviews, were conceivably led a stray by the piss poor marketing team, or if it’s a representation of the cultural subtext of the patriarchy. Many of these negative reviews (typically, but not all from men) read like the masculine gatekeeping of a genre. The keyboard warriors and early internet trolls that believe that a female led and directed film, is by its very creation, subpar. They are then inclined, nay, self-empowered, emboldened, even entitled, to have their voice be heard and to “put these women in their place.” These outbursts being tantamount to these men throwing a toddler’s tantrum for the film not being what they wanted or expected. These negative reviews shaped a generation’s opinion on this film. For a decade, anytime anyone would suggest watching it, the inevitable refrain would be: “Oh I heard its bad, isn’t it bad?” Fortunately, vindication and the valorization of Jennifer’s Body eventually came with the shifting of gender politics in the US.


 


The Emancipation of one Jennifer Check    

            Since the film’s release in 2009, US audiences have seen the embolization of a white supremacist misogyny, ever present in our history and culture, congeal, and metastasize into the living tumor that is Donald Trump. His successful run for the presidency against Hillary Clinton set off a wave of anti-immigrant, misogynistic and racist behavior and its resistance. Many people were speaking up to this tyranny that wouldn’t before; whether that be because they have finally had enough or because Trump forced them to be introspective[2] is irrelevant.  Regardless, people were beginning to have conversations about structural forms of systemic racism and sexism that were outside of academia. Yet, these conversations needed a catalytic spark to create change. History would provide two events; the response to which would further a new anti-sexism movement called #MeToo.

 The phrase “MeToo” was coined in 2005 by Tarana Burke, to illustrate the frequency and cultural ubiquity of sexual assault and violence against women. Burke defined the tactic that would eventually become the movement’s mission statement:

 “to empower sexually assaulted people (especially young and vulnerable women of color) through empathy, solidarity, and strength in numbers, by visibly demonstrating how many have experienced sexual assault and harassment, especially in the workplace.”

While the movement started in 2005 it was not until 12 years later that it would gain both traction and a voice. The first event that initiated the Me-Too movement was the New York Times expose on the sex crimes of Miramax producer Harvey Weinstein, receiving over 100 different accusations including many from the Hollywood elite. The #MeToo began trending on social media, giving many who were unaware (mostly men) their first glimpse at the enormity of the problem of sexual assault and sexual violence; ultimately contributing to Weinstein’s unlikely arrest and surprising conviction.  

The second event that solidified the movement was the appointment of an anthropomorphized can of Papts Blue Ribbon to the Supreme Court through Brett Kavanaugh; regardless of Christine Blasey Ford’s testimony about being allegedly assaulted by Kavanaugh while in college. Veterans of the fight against sexism and the newly “woke” watched as the systemic patriarchy rallied around Kavanaugh and protected him and his reputation with all of the power at their disposal.   

            According to Constance Grady (2018) it is among the backdrop of the #MeToo Movement that Jennifer’s Body gets its reconsideration and recompence.

 In a post-#MeToo world, the implications of this storyline look uncomfortably familiar. It’s the story of a group of powerful men sacrificing a girl’s body on the altar of their own professional advancement — and it’s also the story of them using her torment as a bonding activity.

            Several feminist and gender scholars have discussed at length the way that the violation of women by men is used as a mechanism for male group cohesion (Sanday 1984, Kimmel 2008). The members of Low Shoulder, quip, joke and sing just before murdering Jennifer. Not only is this a way to decompress the situation from its immensity, allowing them to either kill her or be complacent to it, but their laughter illustrates more broadly the way that a lot of men in their friendship circles hide from dangerous or uncomfortable situations. They believe that if they can laugh about a situation then the gravity of what they have done is dissipated (Orenstein 2020).  

In the Me-Too era, Jennifer’s Body can also be framed as a rape revenge fantasy, a reclamation of a woman’s body after an assault. Living in the Rape Culture which defines sexuality as violent and minimizes sexual assault by gaslighting women into silence, how many assault stories end like Jennifer’s: bloodied, near catatonic, and looking for comfort in the presence and safety of a best friend? What the public has learned is that the story of what happens to Jennifer’s body, could have happened to anybody. To that end, the only criticism I have of how this film handles the assault is that it reinforces the tired trope that violence (typically sexual violence) is the catalyst for Jennifer becoming powerful. Regardless of what she eventually does with that power, it still has its origin in male violence against her, which she then turns on others.

In 2023, Jennifer’s story, or at least the beginnings of it, are all too familiar. This reframing transforms the film from the marketed sex fantasy for men, to a revenge fantasy for women and the importance, and complexity of female friendships. The broader (male) society can now look at the film and rather than be distracted by the “male gazey hotness of Megan Fox” put forth by the marketing, they can recognize the allegorical gender messages the film always portended but was obfuscated by the patriarchal and misogynistic industry standards of Hollywood. Many terribly sexist films have been tacitly accepted through the socio-cultural hand waving of “it was a product of the times.” The speech being used as a shield against any intricate investigation through a more modern/less forgiving lens. Yet, films like Jennifer’s Body become richer within the present context. While the cynically glib part of me wants to flippantly exclaim that “the world had to get bad enough in order to appreciate the film” But part of the point of the #MeToo Movement is that it was always like this, we’ve now decided to see it…for a while.    

        

“You’re Killing people.” “No, I’m killing Boys.”

SOCIAL ANALYSIS

The social analysis of Cody and Kusama’s Jennifer’s Body developed in part along the same timeline as the film’s reclamation. While there have always been supporters, the film surviving on its cult status, the revivification of the love story between Anita and Jennifer in the public discourse began with a Feminist theoretical reading of the film. Through this lens, Jennifer’s Body becomes a subversive and Feminist treatise on female social expectations, anger, and friendships, while providing a space for the exploration of bisexuality, something that is still radical today.

Upending The Patriarchal Power of men

Part of the amenable power of Jennifer’s Body is in its ability to shine a lens on the gendered expectations and the fragile nature of masculinity within the patriarchy. To say masculinity is fragile means that the veneer of manhood is easily broken because the acceptable criterion for masculinity is so narrow and specific, often surrounding violence, being tough, numerous sexual conquests, as well as protection, provision, and alcohol consumption, that a person’s masculine presentation can be obliterated with a simple question or a small behavioral slip. Say the “wrong” thing, order the “wrong” drink, where the “wrong” clothes and you leave yourself open to ridicule. Because the tenuous nature of masculinity is known, masculinity needs to be reaffirmed/solidified in (nearly) every social situation. Jennifer’s Body highlights the fact that boys and men are not the only ones that learn these masculine rules, girls do too and use them to glean power (In Jennifer’s case, their lifeforce) from them. Yet, because she is working within the confines of already established gender norms, exploiting them, rather than breaking them, she goes undetected.

  In the film, although Jennifer is always the last person to be seen with the victims, she is never suspected. The tacit implication being that it is unthinkable that a girl/woman could be the killer, especially given the horrifically gory cannibalistic nature of the crimes. This gendered invisibility allows her to hunt without interruption. Part of Jennifer’s stalking process is playing on the socially constructed gender norms that police both men and women’s bodies. These boys willfully go with Jennifer, or are lured by her, to secluded locations so that she can feed. They do not fear her, even when the context of the situation screams danger, because she is a girl. And still, they persist into danger because of the promise of sex, because of the promise of “Jennifer’s Body.”

    The scene that clearly articulates this exploitation of fragile Masculinity is when Colin (Kyle Gallner) is driving to a supposed “date” with Jennifer. As he is driving, he notices that the streets get less populated, homes get darker, and eventually everything looks abandoned. As he approaches the house where he is supposed to meet Jennifer, he knows that at the very least, this seems like a prank (and at worse he is in danger). Yet, he continues into the house because of the allure of uncertainty, the possibility of Jennifer, and the masculine gender police of his fellow men, that will mercilessly ridicule him for leaving.  Jennifer weaponizes fragile masculinity and she wields it with perfect precision.    

The filmmaking intention of scenes like the one above is to upend the trope of women dying in horror movies. While the film is successful, to that end, it also goes further and makes all the male characters utterly faceless and disposable, only identified by their particular aesthetic (jackets, piercings, hairstyles etc.) much like female gendered tropes in traditional horror movies.  The subversive thing about Jennifer’s Body is that the boys and men in this film are one-dimensional mechanisms by which the relationship between Jennifer and “Needy” play out; they are a function by which the relational dynamics of the principal characters are explored.

 


“Do You have a Tampon? I thought you might be plugging.”

           

“Needy” and Jennifer: Best Frenemies Forever  

 At first glance, and in the opening scene, Jennifer and “Needy” are supposed to embody a gaggle of female friendship tropes. Jennifer is “the hot girl” and Anita is “the nerdy best friend”; each identified with specific hairstyles, clothing, and make-up. The filmmakers even go so far as to resurrect the 90’s trope of making an attractive girl seem ugly by putting Amanda Seyfried behind a pair of glasses and tying her hair back. This is even called out early in the film after Jennifer tells “Needy” to “Wear something cute.” “Needy” understands exactly what that means. Her proceeding explanation is so razor thin specific that she only needs to try on a few outfits/ combinations that fit the criteria.

Woven into the character tropes of “Needy” and Jennifer is an exploration of female relational aggression (Simmons 2002). Because direct aggression is often coded as masculine, women have been socialized to express their anger in subtle indirect ways. This keeps them from seeming overtly hostile, and maintaining a “good girl” image, and therefore not sanctioned. This anger manifests through the weaponizing of relationships and using the practices of group exclusion, rumor spreading, and name calling (Simmons 2002).  A lot of the aggression that “Needy” and Jennifer feel for each other is expressed through their interactions with other people. Jennifer expertly pits “Needy” against others (mostly Chip) in order to make “Needy” choose Jennifer; effectively sabotaging her other relationships so that they only belong to each other.   



      

            Jennifer and “Needy’s” Bisexual Journey

            Jennifer and Anita’s love story begins in a sandbox when they were children (Sandbox love never dies). Throughout the film, that bond is tweaked and stretched the way a lot of young love develops, through flirtation and experimentation. Jennifer and “Needy” are shown engaging in playful, semi aggressive shoving early in the film which can often be a precursor to a sexual encounter. Moreover, when Jennifer shows up in “Needy’s” bed in a t-shirt, underwear, and leggings, Jennifer mentions that “[She] found her way back to [Needy]” and passively mentions that they used to play “boyfriend and girlfriend”. In these moments, their love, desire, and passion for each other is palpable; especially for “Needy”. For Jennifer, because she is always sexually confident, it is in her quiet caring, and unwillingness to harm “Needy”, that shows her tenderness and love.  While these ideas were originally assumed by critics to be solely for and about the heterosexual male audience, creating titillation for the male gaze, what Jennifer and “Needy” display here is a clear presentation of Adrianne Rich’s “Lesbian Existence”    

In a previous essay I provided an articulation of Rich’s main point and context that is valid in Understanding the Sexual Politics of Jennifer’s Body

 

“Lesbian existence comprises both the breaking of a taboo and the rejection of a compulsory way of life. It is also a direct or indirect attack on male right of access to women. But it is more than these, although we may first begin to perceive it as a form of nay-saying to patriarchy, an act of resistance. It has of course included role playing, self-hatred, breakdown, alcoholism, suicide, and intrawoman violence; we romanticize at our peril what it means to love and act against the grain, and under heavy penalties; and lesbian existence has been lived (unlike, say, Jewish or Catholic existence) without access to any knowledge of a tradition, a continuity, a social underpinning. The destruction of records and memorabilia and letters documenting the realities of lesbian existence must be taken very seriously as a means of keeping heterosexuality compulsory for women, since what has been kept from our knowledge is joy, sensuality, courage, and community, as well as guilt, self-betrayal, and pain”

As the term "lesbian" has been held to limiting, clinical associations in its patriarchal definition, female friendship and comradeship have been set apart from the erotic, thus limiting the erotic itself. But as we deepen and broaden the range of what we define as lesbian existence, as we delineate a lesbian continuum, we begin to discover the erotic in female terms: as that which is unconfined to any single part of the body or solely to the body itself, as an energy not only diffuse but, as Audre Lorde has described it, omnipresent in "the sharing of joy, whether physical, emotional, psychic," and in the sharing of work; as the empowering joy which "makes us less willing to accept powerlessness, or those other supplied states of being which are not native to me, such as resignation, despair, self-effacement, depression, self-denial[7]

 

Rich identifies in this stitched together passage, (as in the article as a whole) that in a patriarchal system women are taught to see other women as a source of contention and competition for male attention (Thus making heterosexuality compulsory through socialized behaviors, reinforced by rewards from social structural institutions (Marriage, family, Military economy etc.)), and denying the reality of the power women have among and with each other by placing undue emphasis on the type and nature of a relationship rather than what that relationship provides for the individuals involved. Thus, women are socially trained through compulsory heterosexuality and patriarchal oppression that the most important relationships that they have are with men, and that all other relationships are secondary within this structure.

            We see this play out in Jennifer’s Body in the way that “Needy” only engages in sexual contact with her boyfriend, Chip, because she feels threatened by Jennifer (contention and competition for male attention) “Needy” never initiates romantic or sexual contact with him that isn’t motivated by Jennifer’s presence or her mentioning. Consistent to that point, Jennifer’s pursuit of Chip is in service of affecting her relationship with “Needy”

Additionally, Amanda Seyfried and Johnny Simmons (“Needy” and Chip respectively) have nonexistent on-screen chemistry. When Chip is first introduced in “Needy’s” room, in the context of the scene, the audience could just as easily infer that Chip is her brother rather than her boyfriend. This is solidified when you juxtapose “Needy’s” participation in her sexual interactions with both Chip and Jennifer. With Chip, “Needy” is in the passive receiving missionary position with little to no eye contact with her partner (to which Chip makes no notice or care for).  Instead, it is clear in the context of the scene that she is thinking about/linked with Jennifer. Conversely, later in the film, after Jennifer initiates their kiss, it is “Needy” that becomes desirably aggressive towards Jennifer, overcome with a passionate hunger neither she, nor the audience, have seen from her before.

In the end, the confluence of Jennifer and “Needy’s” relationship is a near perfect distillation of Rich’s argument for the power of “The Lesbian existence”. They do not define themselves by the patriarchal definition of lesbian, but instead define the erotic in feminine terms, thereby allowing for the creation of a “lesbian continuum” which includes their Bisexuality. Carmen Maria Machado (2022) reinforces this in the way that they deconstruct the final confrontation between Jennifer and “Needy”:

When Needy eventually kills Jennifer, she does it facing her, straddling her; this is how Jennifer’s mother finds them, compromised in Jennifer’s canopy bed.

The scene is shot less like a death scene and more like teens being caught in a romantic entanglement. The culmination of the fight has the subtext of mild sex play, and when the final blow is struck, it plays out like a sexual climax rather than a death. This seems intentional considering that orgasms have been historically referred to as “the little death” and acts as a satisfying narrative metaphor for the pinnacle of their relationship. To further this point, the reaction of Jennifer’s mother is first one of surprise in seeing “Needy” intimately atop her daughter, and her reaction to Jennifer’s (dead) body is one of sorrowful disappointment rather than anger which is also consistent in many “coming out” stories.

            Machado (2022) goes on to identify the Bisexual diversity through “Needy” and Jennifer’s characters, believing that if Jennifer were not to be invaded by Satan, that she would have turned out to be a bisexual that is primarily lesbian in practice and “Needy” as a bisexual that also consistently dates men. While I believe there is just as much evidence for the opposite given “Needy’s” desert of chemistry with her Gaslighting jackass of a boyfriend; it’s important to understand that stories of sexuality, actual, non-romanticized versions are complicated and messy especially around the subject of sexual Identity…and “such little grace is given to the perfect messiness of desire.” (Machado 2022:3)

            Thus, the bisexual queerness of Jennifer and “Needy’s” love story is complex and multifaceted; set in direct opposition to the common bisexual stories we are subjected to in our “post-modern” culture. The bisexual identity is less accepted and vilified on both sides of the sexuality binary, with many people (on both sides) believing that the bisexuality identity is a layover rather than a destination. This is further complicated by the way the heteronormative structure allows for “spaces of experimentation” usually college, where fluid sexual identities are more accepted. Granted, many of these spaces were created still under the male gaze and women in sexual congress with other women has been commodified by heterosexual men for their own pleasure. But regardless of intention and motivation, women are allowed to sexually experiment more openly in these spaces and that has the potential to allow for greater sexual diversity beyond the binary. Therefore, we need more complex messy stories like Jennifer and Needy’s because not everything is blissfully explicit and wonderfully clean.  

Machado (2022) sums this up nicely in a recent interview:

 People want queer representation to be perfect, and it doesn’t have to be perfect — and also, people have different ideas about what makes something perfect. And there is a deliciousness in subtext and uncertainty… But also, the standards are so high. Subtext is really fun! I feel like a lot of younger people are like, “If it’s not explicit, it’s not worth it.” And I’m like, “Eat your vegetables!”


 


CONCLUSION

Jennifer’s Body is a wonderfully schlocky B movie horror feminist cult classic. It was undercut by the marketing team and sold to the group that would hate it the most; under the guise that the objectification of Megan Fox would continue in the service of the white male gaze. Instead, what many of these men received was a understanding of their minimal importance in the lives of girls and women when compared to the complexity of female friendships. Upset, they decided to lash out at the film for making them face this realization rather than be introspective about their relationships and how they treat women. In a recent court ruling, the US courts have determined that individuals can sue production companies over the validity of their movie trailers. Meaning that if something that is presented as significant in the trailers does not make it into the final film, that could be grounds for a lawsuit. If this was precedence in 2009, how quickly does anyone think these butthurt, dude-bros. would sue the studio for not being this films target audience, feeling a sense of entitlement to ogle at Megan Fox’s fully nude body. One of the key aspects of denial is deflection. These men do not want to recognize that the power of “Jennifer’s Body” has nothing to do with them, and that irrelevance is the harshest weapon against the misogynistic patriarchy.

 

REFERENCES

   Grady, Constance (2018)  “How Jennifer’s Body went from a flop in 2009 to a feminist cult classic today The critical reevaluation of Jennifer’s Body, explained” Retrieved at https://www.vox.com/culture/2018/10/31/18037996/jennifers-body-flop-cult-classic-feminist-horror Retrieved on 12/30/2022

 

  Kimmel, Micheal (2008) Guyland: The perilous world where boys become men New York: Harper Collins

 

Machado, Carmen Maria (2022) “ Both Ways” In It Came From The Closet: Queer Reflections on Horror Retrieved at https://www.autostraddle.com/in-queer-horror-anthology-it-came-from-the-closet-carmen-maria-machado-considers-jennifers-body/ Retrieved on 12/30/2022

 

Orenstein, Peggy (2020) Boys and Sex: Young men on Hookups, Love, Porn, Consent, and Navigating the New Masculinity New York: Harper Collins

 

 Rich, Adrianne (1980) “Compulsory Heterosexuality and the Lesbian Existence” In Women, Sexand Sexuality 5(4) Chicago University Press Retrieved at https://www.jstor.org/stable/3173834 retrieved on 12/22/22.

 

  Sanday, Peggy Reeves (1984). Fraternity Gang Rape New York: New York University Press.

 

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



[1] After my rewatch of this film, I am convinced that the nickname of “Needy” was something that Jennifer came up with (a constant subtle jab) and Anita accepted it to maintain a relationship with Jennifer

[2] It is important to keep in mind that during this many White men who openly and vocally came out against Donald Trump did so under the guise of using Trump’s openly inflammatory and blatantly discriminatory statements to distance themselves from their own levels of racism and sexism. Because compared to Trump, their level of Misogyny seems quaint. May people justifying their actions by saying “At least I am not that bad”