
Last week I gave a workshop for students who are applying to get in to my advanced production class. This is sort of a capstone filmmaking class. The films produced in this class go to film festivals and are screened publicly. These students make good films despite (maybe because of?) of their teacher. At the end of the session a student came up to me and asked if there are any women in the class. I was embarrassed. Sure there are women in the class- five of the 20 students- but this student was the only woman who attended the workshop. I am afraid this is a bad sign.
What if only one out of every five doctors, lawyers, teachers, vets, newspaper reporters, TV weathercasters was a woman? Wouldn't we think it strange? We need, we want to see films from other perspectives. This is not a good trend. We need more women filmmakers.
We need more Ida Lupinos.
PeterH
can i apply to be ur student? haha
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteAccording to what I see coming from Hollywonk the last many years, some fresh directors would be a great breath of fresh air, regardless of their gender.
Especially if the director, or the actors hired for the jobs, would stay out of the political arena and stick to their jobs for a change.
Salon had an alright article about this a few years ago. Might interest you.
ReplyDeletehttp://dir.salon.com/story/ent/movies/feature/2002/08/27/women_directors/index.html
Donnacha,
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link and for stopping by.
PeterH
Do you think that shows like On The Lot (coming to Fox http://www.thelot.com/) or websites like YouTube (http://www.youtube.com) will influence the future of film making? Will it diversify these groups of film makers? Could it even bring personal short films to more mainstream audiences?
ReplyDeleteBlindeh,
ReplyDeleteThat is a really good question. I don't know the answer. It might just default into bad TV which will do no one any good. I'll ponder it.
PeterH
I made a home video once... does that count?
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