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Scott Mendelson

Scott Mendelson
Location
Woodland Hills, California, United States
Birthday
April 02
Bio
A ten-year Salon reader, Mendelson also has a film and politics blog/column at Mendelon's Memos: located at: http://scottalanmendelson.blogspot.com/. He is also a free lance voice over artist and occasionally contributes film reviews for www.ValleySceneMagazine.com.

Editor’s Pick
MARCH 8, 2010 7:27PM

Why Bigelow's Oscar win isn't a true feminist triumph.

Rate: 8 Flag

"Where did we go right?" - Zero Mostel in The Producers

After botching the theatrical release and nearly shooting themselves in the foot in the final lap of the Oscar season, Summit Entertainment still managed to stumble their way into their first Best Picture winner at a relatively early age.  Congrats to The Hurt Locker.  It wasn't my favorite of the ten and it's a little overrated, but that's not the fault of the filmmakers or the film.  This is the second year in a row that the Best Picture winner was a movie that almost went directly to DVD due to studio disinterest or regime politics. The irony is that had Avatar not become a true phenomenon and The Hurt Locker just been another movie in the running, it probably would not have won (Precious probably would have won out).  But because the $11 million little indie-war drama was positioned as the antithesis of the 'biggest movie of all time', it kept the momentum completely on the strength of its fabricated David vs. Goliath narrative.  The movie's quality and those who have loved it since the beginning of last year is what got it to the nomination stage, but it was the perceived 'big film vs. little film' and 'girls vs. boys' that propelled it over the top.

"First I would like to thank the Academy for showing it can be about the performance and not the politics." - Mo'Nique upon winning Best Supporting Actress for Precious.

It's the latter part that I find troubling.  While it's terrific that the previously-undervalued Bigelow became the first female to win Best Director, it's more than a little depressing that such a big deal must be made of it.  As I've always said, progress comes when you don't have to talk about it.  The gimmick of having Barbra Streisand present the award was a little cheap, as it would have made it awkward beyond words if anyone other than Bigelow had won.  For that reason alone, I was almost hoping that Streisand would be forced to announce Quentin Tarantino as the winner.  Of course, I felt the same way about Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg presenting the Best Director award back in 2007 ("And the Oscar goes to... Paul Greengrass?!"). Kudos for Streisand for pointing out that Lee Daniels also would have made history had he won for Precious.  On the other hand, how refreshing that a black man was nominated for Best Director and we more or less forgot about the color of his skin during the campaign season? Progress comes when we don't feel the need to mention it.

What bugged me most about the awards season is how so many pundits tried to turn James Cameron into the big male bully and Kathryn Bigelow into some helpless female victim of his male oppression.  Cameron has been nothing but gracious during the entire Oscar season, and I believed him when he said over and over again that he was rooting for his friend, colleague, and former spouse (I'm guessing he voted for her).  But the pundits wouldn't have that, because the battle of the combative exes was a much juicier story and an easier one to sell.  So the story had to be that Cameron was the scorned ex-lover who was scheming behind the scenes to deny his more artistically-inclined ex-wife her moment of glory.  So the entertainment media played up Kathryn Bigelow as a woman whose time had come vs. Cameron as the ego-centric madman who was trying to steal her just-deserts with his big, scary, expensive, and (worst of all) popular Hollywood movie.  As a result, the media at large basically turned the hard-ass director of Point Break and Strange Days into yet another damsel in distress. Thus, it's hard to argue that she was awarded her Oscar last night based on the merits of her work alone, when so many seemed to be merely 'giving' it to her out of their own sense of history, obligation, and wanting to 'get back' at James Cameron for his imagined crimes.  She's not the first person to win an Oscar based as much on politics as the work itself, but it's disappointing that the media circus rendered a worthwhile achievement into something approaching a charity case.

Which is an absolute shame because, if it needs to be said, she was absolutely deserving of winning.  Not because she's a woman and not because she's a woman who makes stereotypically 'guy' movies, but because The Hurt Locker was a damn good movie and she was the primary reason it worked as well as it did.  And, to be honest, I was rooting for her because I've been a fan for years (I even liked K-19: The Widowmaker) and am thrilled that she'll be working more frequently as a result of her 'historic' win.  But saying that she should have won purely because she was a woman is every bit as sexist as saying that she should have lost for the same reason.  And, because this also needs to be said, the fact that it took 82 years for the Academy to give the Best Director award to a female filmmaker should be cause for shame and embarrassment, rather than self-lionizing accolades.

Scott Mendelson

 

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think you raise some very valid points. but unfortunately race & sex will be with us probably as long as there are humans. did you see the articles where people saw racist overtones in avatar?
however, there seems to be a lot of hedging here or something.
so are you saying, unequivocally, you consider her movie best picture of all those running?
maybe not a FEMINIST triumph.
maybe a FEMALE triumph?
so do you think the oscar crowd voted on the media spin, or just voted their opinions which were not based on the media spin? if the former, her award is somewhat tarnished, if the latter, then the media spin is irrelevant and will fade into background as time goes on....
No, Up was my favorite picture of the year, but Pete Docter
and Bob Peterson were not nominated for Best Director. Of the five nominees, I'd argue that Bigelow or Cameron were the most deserving. I do think that many of the votes for Bigelow came from people who wanted to make history or fell for the 'Bigelow the meek vs. Cameron the strong' narrative, irrelevant of whether or not that liked or had even seen The Hurt Locker.
Lee Daniels is not only black, he's gay. In fact he used to go with a (now long-deceased) friend of mine. But as Ishmael Reed points out his film "makes D.W. Griffith look like a progressive."

I suspect what so upsets you about Kathy's win is her drop-dead gorgeousness. What's a woman who ought to be in front of the cmaera doing behind it? She's making movies. Exceptionally well.
Feminist, shmeminist...WHATever - I'm seriously pleased that the director of *Point Break* got an Oscar.

Now THAT was long overdue. Thanks for the reminder, Scott.
You make some excellent points here, Scott. I myself would have been less impressed with The Hurt Locker had a man been at the helm because the subtleties that a female perspective brought to that picture might have been lost in the hands of a dude. At the same time, many of the recurrent classical themes that coursed through the veins of "The Hurt Locker" are the kind of ideas that male directors are more akin than females to incorporate in their pictures (and subsequently fondle themselves to death afterwards, so awed are they by their own grasp of film history), so props to Bigelow for picking up on those themes and making them work.

When watching The Hurt Locker with my wife, she got the sense that the film was mocking machismo, but then again, this is a woman who taught me to read Point Break (another Bigelow actioner) as a feminist comedy mocking the posturings of men (it's much more entertaining that way). Whatever the case, I am glad Bigelow won for an exceptional directoral effort, but I, like you, do not think the film was the best of the year. My assessment has little to do with Bigelow's contribution (which indeed made the film better than it had to be) and more to do with the story as a whole. Give Bigelow the Best Director Oscar, but give Best Picture to someone else. Invictus, anyone?
I don't think Precious is liberal or conservative, it's just a darn good character study. But, regardless, it's nice that his nomination didn't cause anything resembling a fuss. That's progress.

I do take strong issue with your comment (possibly in jest) that I have any qualms about Bigelow winning, let alone that my manufactured qualms are in relation to her looks.

"And, to be honest, I was rooting for her because I've been a fan for years (I even liked K-19: The Widowmaker) and am thrilled that she'll be working more frequently as a result of her 'historic' win."


Point being, I was rooting for her to win because I want her to make more movies.
The "character study" makes no sense whatsoever. it's set in 1989. That means an HIV+ diagnosis would have been A FUCKING DEATH SENTENCE! Yet the film acts as if it were happening last week. So why 1989? Because the story has to line up with the "Crack epidemic" in the Black community -- which as we all know was ever-so-different from the cocaine epidemic in the white community.

AS IF!!!!!
Not only was it cheap and obvious to have Babs present the award, the playoff music as Bigelow left - wasn't it "I Am Woman," or whatever that song is called? It just felt...wrong. It sort of trivialized the whole achievement. But, it IS still an achievement, however the media may have blown it out of proportion or influenced voting; although, I think the political machinations of the Academy have never really needed the media to influence them one way or another, and you cited some examples in your post. And as you also said, it's still good she won because she can go make more movies, and she's a good director who deserves at least that.
I think you're right. The tipoff came when the orchestra played "I am Woman" when the winner was announced. Is it possible to be more condescending?
It really bugs you that a woman won, don't you?

BTW, you probably could have squeezed in a couple more "While it's" and "on the other hand"s in your piece. You might have to move a bit of the damning with faint praises out of the way, but I'm pretty sure they'd have fit.
She's the director of "Strange Days"? I walked out on that one. Couldn't stand the violence.

I did like "Hurt Locker" though, so good for her for winning.
I've long thought of Kathryn Bigelow as one of the best and under appreciated directors out there, male or female. Her films never garnered the critical acclaim I thought they were deserving of, and it's really great to finally see her get recognized for her talent. Why does her win have to mean anything other than a great director finally getting recognized for her talent and skill?
I always wonder when people make these kinds of statements about feminists, feminism or point them at particular women. Who made the statements about this film and its director? Was it really a campaign or was it one of those things that get going in the media and after a while you can't pull them down out of the air we breathe?

Secondly, as a Feminist myself I wonder, would you call yourself a Feminist? If not, then what do you know about Feminism? I don't mean that sarcastically so much as wondering, since I spent a fw semesters in college studying Feminism from a variety of backgrounds, when folks use that word I wonder, "Do they know what a big word it really is?" Did Bigelow say that she is a Feminist? So who really is manufacturing this hoopla?

I do think it is historically significant and of benefit to women in film that she won in both the Best Director and Best Picture catgories. That makes the win undeniable and inarguable. That's the kind of win that women need in general so as not to fall into the fluke category.

I think that most women would like to just go out and do what they want to do when they want to do it and would rather not have to think about whether or not it's good for all women. It's a lot of burden to place on anyone that whatever they do it has to be historic or groundbreaking. What if it was simply satisfying and worth the time and money? The whole focus on women and on race is a burden that weighs us all down and makes people weary. I pray for the day that such things will be unremarkable and full self-expression is considered to be normal behavior encouraged for all people.
yeah probably more feminine triumph...not quite feminist triumph. I think Hurt Locker was the the right movie to win. It's a great movie for now and our generation. I assumed Avatar would win...but then it dawned on me that it probably wouldn't because of past history. In 1980, The Elephant Man was nominated for best picture and best actor. John Hurt did not (in a performance which he definitely deserved) because the academy said his face was covered, so it wasn't "natural acting." It wasn't his face that we saw or his face that was acting as a character. It's a quirky kind of logic but when it comes to Avatar - you kind of have to apply the same kind of method when it boils down to it.
Anyone attempting to defend their feminist credentials runs the risk of falling into traps of pandering ('Oh, some of my best friends are women', 'I've never made a sexist joke', etc). I do consider myself a feminist in that I believe that men and women should be treated as equals regardless of gender. Is that enough to make me a feminist? I don't know, but it's good enough for me. Some of my own favorite pieces of film writing have concerned how Hollywood deals with gender in regards to mainstream movies. I'm not bragging, it's just something I've always been attuned to for whatever reason.

I'm fully aware that there is something odd about a white Jewish male telling people (including women) that the narrative of the Oscar campaign runs the risk of somehow diminishing Bigelow's achievement. So to that I say that I am offended by the sexist narrative, but offended only for myself, not for anyone else. I would no more want to represent how all women should react to what went down as I would want other non-Jews telling me that A Serious Man is somehow anti-Semitic or that Phantom Menace contains Jewish stereotypes.

The pressure on females and minorities to somehow represent everyone in their specific demographic is a daunting and unfair one (why can't Precious just be about one African-American female living in poverty?). But, as I said in my original post, the fact that everyone kept going on about Bigelow's big win only makes it that much more obvious that we still haven't 'cracked the ceiling'. True progress will come when a female is nominated for Best Director and no one really cares to discuss it in those terms.
As for my potential misuse of the phrase 'feminist triumph', I blame Open Salon, which severely limits the length of a title for a given post.
Scott, I completely agree with you.

I had to grapple with some of those issues about what I want to do as opposed to the burden of trying to do what I want with my life as woman who people expected to do certain kinds of things. I rose out of my economic and cultural class and people have had their expectations of how I am supposed to dedicate my life to causes.

My law school was pretty disappointed when I won their first alumni scholarship and then didn't become a lawyer. Law School cleared up a lot of things for me, one of them being the issue of whether or not I ought to practice law.

No one needed me to do that, least of all me! After you spend a lot of time preparing for a particular career, investing yourself in what you are doing and how completely you go after it, to have anything or anyone else in on the decision of how your decisions will affect your life, well we go into that room alone if we have any sense of ourselves at all.

As a trailer trash redneck kid, becoming educated didn't change everything about me. There were essential things that are the 'me' in here that somehow insist on remaining the strongest influence on what I do with my life. I am never completely sure if that is cultural or spiritual for me, but it is always there and I find it to be something of my Self.

I tell you this because I think in the Hurt Locker we saw something essentially similar about Katherine Bigelow's film and her direction, it was something about her that was exposed. Anyone who finds they can do that in their work is successful in their self-expression whether it is appreciated or not.

Thanks for writing. I do enjoy your point of view.