Her Film Project
  • Home
  • About
  • STORIES
  • Contact

Women and Animation

10/3/2017

0 Comments

 
by Tracey Francis
Animation is a complex art form when explored beyond what we see, because it falls within film and the visual arts. In the twenty-first century animation has been revolutionised by computer-generated imagery (CGI), with the aim of reflecting a life-like image. However, it still has non-conformist elements because this medium can tackle the dark or complex in a simplistic to abstract form. Animation has allowed some women to use this art form as a metaphor to reveal hidden stories. The female-led Leeds Animation Workshop distributes and produces films on social issues. Their first animation, Who Needs Nurseries? – We Do was made in 1978 after ‘a group of women friends who came together to make a film about the need for pre-school childcare’.
 
With a rich but modest history of women animators, those who have made it within animation have made an impact. From the pioneering animator and director Lotte Reiniger, who adapted the shadow puppetry of China and Indonesia beautifully for the cinema to Lillian Friedman Astor who was the first female studio animator in America, to Marjane Satrapi’s autobiographical film Persepolis. The narratives reflect a female perspective and different way of seeing the world.
 
In 2016 The Hollywood Reporter published their annual animation roundtable with the title ‘Seth Rogen and 6 More on avoiding Ethnic Stereotypes and How to Break the Mold of Princesses’ (Giardina, 2016). Elle online reacted to this article with their own titled ‘We Asked 4 Female Animators About Diversity and Women in the Industry’ (Tang, 2016). They reacted because many readers pointed out that every participant was ‘a white man. And, to further highlight the homogeneity of the panel’s composition’ was the diversity headline. Animator Brenda Chapman reacted with,‘ A roundtable about ethnic and female stereotypes—they choose seven white guys as the experts, and give it that title? C'mon!' Puja Patel (@senari) posted on Twitter (2016) ‘this headline and photo! This photo and headline!’
 
In the twenty-first century is it not possible to have more diverse narratives and perspectives within mainstream animation? Diversity is being addressed within mainstream animation, with films such as Moana (2016) to the animation sequence The Tale of Three Brothers (2010) within Harry Potter and Deathly Hallows Part I. However, the impact of feminism and equality laws has changed society, but the dominant narrative is still homogeneous even though it may at times acknowledge we live a diverse world.
In a recent interview, Tracey Francis discusses with animator and visual artist Jessica Ashman about being an animation director.
Picture
Image ©Jessica Ashman
​Jessica Ashman is an award winning animation director and artist, based in London. She recently had an exhibition – I Don’t Protest, I just Dance In My Shadow – at Four Corners in East London that explored race and gender within animation and the visual arts.
​
Picture
Image ©Jessica Ashman
Tracey Francis: When did you first realize that animation was a medium you could use to express your inner voice and creativity?
 
Jessica Ashman: I used to love animation as a kid but actually didn’t realize that it was an actual career that actual people could do for a while. For the longest time I veered between wanting to be a ballerina (love of movement) and journalist (love of stories). I started to get into drawing when I was in secondary school, around the same time I started to get into comics and film and I really couldn’t decide on what I liked creatively because I enjoyed it all so much. It was only when I undertook my Art A Level and discovered artists, film and in particular, animation in art that I thought it was an ideal medium for me. It combines so many things I love: drawing, narratives, film, and movement. I applied to a BA in Animation at the University of Lincoln and then that was it! I still wish I pushed the ballet thing more, though!
 
TF: Who are your most important creative influences and why?

JA: My creative influences come from a lot of different places, so I’ll just mention the ones that first come into my mind! I love the work of artist Daniela Yohannes and her afro-futuristic, philosophical paintings. Same goes for the books of Octavia Butler and how she uses incredibly imaginative sci-fi narratives to present metaphors of race and gender rights. Leonora Carrington’s paintings are so magical. They look like fairy tales, yet have something much more metaphysical underneath. Kara Walker is one of the greats but I love how she tackles narratives in her work about black women – everything has a strong story in her work and the fact she doesn’t stick to one medium resonates with me, and my love of mixed media practices. Music plays a big part, too, in influencing my ideas. I listen to NTS [radio] almost daily, to shows like Touching Bass and Questing; they play a lot of quite spiritual hip-hop, jazz and some downright jams. My friends who are creatively doing their thing inspire me, too! Chardine Taylor-Stone’s activism, Shola Amoo’s film work and Stephanie Philips' music and activism really inspire me, too. Any black girl I see playing in a band excites me. And so many talented animators I graduated with from The Royal College of Art. I really could go on forever.
 
TF: Your award-winning BAFTA film Fixing Luka is a very personal piece. Why did you choose a traditional fairy tale animation style for this project?
 
JA: The idea for the film was one I had for years and was always based around malfunctioning puppets and a metaphor for people, probably due to my love of stop-motion puppet films. As I developed the narrative, I started to borrow from the familiar tropes of fairy tales as a form of structure; the idea that you have to go on a quest to discover an answer for something you probably had inside of you all along. I think this, coupled with its stop-motion styles makes for a very fairy tale-feeling film. 
 
TF: Your most recent work and exhibition, I Don’t Protest, I Just Dance In My Shadow, is an abstract and confessional piece about being a black woman and woman of colour within animation and the visual arts. How can your work challenge race and gender without you being defined by your gender and race?
 
JA: I think this was the question I was thinking about when making ‘I Don’t Protest…; somehow consolidating my very being as a black woman and how it intertwines with my work. Does it even matter? Sometimes I veer between ‘yes’ and ‘no’.  In the end, I feel by just being a black woman existing and creating in the world we live in today feels like a challenge in itself. A protest of sorts.
 
TF: Your work is very diverse and magical – do you feel that your style creates a platform to express unconventional and hidden narratives?
   
JA: Within my work, I’m always trying to find secret worlds or universes in which to explore stories and narratives. If I’m making a project, I’m going to be momentarily stuck in that universe I created until the project is over. And with animation, you can create any type of magical universe and rules for said magical universe that you can think of; all you need to do is draw or build it. So that combination results in some usually mad results, most of the time! But recently, I feel it is important to ground my work with an emotional core or reality that resonates with other people – I think there is room to be political and imaginative at the same time, and the idea of doing this more in my future work quite excites me.

To find out more about Jessica visit: http://www.jessla.co.uk/.

Underwire Film Festival 2017: ‘I Don’t Protest, I Just Dance In My Shadow’ is a short visual essay film by Jessica Ashman, about navigating the visual art and animation world as a black face in a white space.  More information: http://www.underwirefestival.com/events/women-at-war/.


0 Comments

A Pulsing Body Politic: interview with Mulheres no Audiovisual Pernambuco

4/10/2017

0 Comments

 
by Kyna Morgan
Online during the summer of 2016, I came across a group of women in the film and television industry in Brazil called Mulheres no Audiovisual PE (Women in the Audiovisual Industry Pernambuco). It was clear that the group was formed with activist intentions to seek better representation and opportunities for women in the industry, and I approached the group to do an interview for this website. This interview was conducted in August of 2016. (Thanks to Mulheres no Audiovisual PE for doing this interview in English.) Watch their video below and read on to learn more.

Video description on YouTube (English translation):
'The Brazilian media opens up space and echoes old fascist, macho and retrograde speeches, while in the streets another scream becomes urgent. We are the new policy. A pulsing body politic! Feminism is revolution!'
​

​(The first question was answered by members of the Mulheres no Audiovisual PE group, particularly Maria Duda Moendy and Juliana Santos, and the remainder by Laíse Queiroz.)

Her Film Project: Can you please describe your group and why you created it?

Mulheres no Audiovisual PE: We created this group because of many things. However, mainly, it was our frustration and unease at the long-standing, male-dominated nature of broadcasting in which men occupy the most prominent positions. Our first mission was to produce a series of short films in the week leading up to SlutWalk Recife. Our entirely female team of producers and filmmakers documented and reflected upon the many events happening in that short period of time. That very week, a girl was gang-raped by 30 men in Rio de Janeiro, Dilma Roussef was suspended, and a conservative, all-white, all-male interim government was brought in. It was shocking and frightening, but it made it even clearer just how important it is for women to come together to take action.
​
In the beginning we did not define the character of the group. Our goal was simply to produce the SlutWalk Recife videos and share them around the world. The only thing we knew is that we wanted an all-women collaborative working group, a group without a hierarchy. This is something that has not ever existed in Brazil before!

When we created the
Facebook page, the reaction and support was huge – we were like WOW! We knew then that many women in broadcasting shared our frustrations both in the work place and in life, too. It is very hard to be a woman and occupy spaces of leadership – I think you know that. We can say that after this first experience of producing together we can see very clearly that we are heading in the right direction. The group is growing and growing - it is amazing! We won’t stop. We want women's voices to fill every position, every space and we’re gonna be the ones filming and recording it happen.

Laíse Queiroz: The audiovisual from Pernambuco is a highlight in Brazil. We are known for having a strong market and a significant production, internationally recognized. In this context, we are forming a strong group of women working on this market and trying to reverse years of invisibility and male dominance. Our intention is to produce, qualify and prepare women to occupy any positions they want. We are getting to know each other and become stronger, getting to know that, yes, there are women working in certain functions that are particularly dominated by men; we are empowering each other. We are talking, promoting debates, movie sessions, ofering workshops and everything. Besides, we are creating campaigns and videos to discuss the role of women in general. We have many, many ideas and hopes that they will become true. And the response is awesome!

HFP: What are some of the reasons why women have joined your group?

LQ: To create, to get to know each other, to become stronger and stronger. Groups of feminist women are getting together everywhere to learn, to demand their rights. And that's exactly what we are doing, but focusing on audiovisual work. It's our main weapon.

HFP: In the U.S., financing of film is mostly through private investment; however, most of the rest of the world has public funding. Does governmental funding of media exist in Brazil? 

LQ: Yes, Brazilian films have public funding support. I suppose that favors individual freedom, but unfortunately, that ends up excluding people who can't understand the paper work, that's a whole lot of it! We need to facilitate the paths and democratize production.

HFP: How does the current and uncertain condition of the Brazilian government (the coup against President Dilma Rousseff and the negative actions by the new President Michel Temer to cancel several ministries such as education) affect what you do as audiovisual professionals?

LQ: We are living in a political coup that has brought many setbacks in many areas and many years of rights achievements. The Ministry of Culture, for example, has been eliminated as one of the first actions of the coup -- disgusting president. We do know that many funds and financing primarily related to education are being destroyed.

HFP: Why do you think it is important for Brazil, or the world, to hear the voices and perspectives of women through media?

LQ:
It is extremely important that women CREATE audiovisual pieces and work in the CREATION of the films. The way women are represented on the screen completely changes from the view of a woman compared to the point of view of a man. And the way that women are represented on the screen has great impact on society as a whole. Besides that, we believe in the importance of enabling women to hold the position she wants in the audiovisual chain, which does not happen. Many positions are mostly dominated by men.

Learn more about Mulheres no Audiovisual PE and connect:
Facebook
YouTube
0 Comments

Interview: Therese Shechter, filmmaker

8/26/2013

0 Comments

 
(Originally published at Her Film on June 21, 2010)

This week’s installment of the rapid-fire Q & A with women filmmakers focuses on the work of Therese Shechter, a widely recognized feminist filmmaker (woot!) who makes fascinating movies.  In particular, we focus on the topic of virginity and how she is making her newest documentary film How to Lose Your Virginity.  After I noticed she was following Her Film on Twitter I thought that would be a nice intro to asking her if she’d like to do a Q & A for the blog.  She was kind enough to say “yes” and I had a real ball reading her responses.  Here’s hoping you do, too!  Lots to learn from this important artist…

BIO: Therese Shechter is a filmmaker who uses humor-spiked, personal narrative to make award-winning documentaries including I Was A Teenage Feminist and How I Learned to Speak Turkish.   She writes about virginity and feminism for her blog The American Virgin and other blogs and publications.

After 10 years as a Chicago Tribune graphics editor, she gave it all up to work for Robert DeNiro’s Tribeca Productions in New York, before going out on her own. She’s won coveted spots in the Doc Lab Master Class (Toronto Hot Docs 2008 Festival) and was one of 5 filmmakers selected for the Paley DocFest 2009 Pitch Workshop. Therese worked at Sundance through 7 festivals, where she was inspired by countless independent filmmakers. Therese is a stealth Canadian who is based in Brooklyn.

Learn more about Therese Shechter’s work:

KICKSTARTER page for Therese Shechter’s new film

The American Virgin blog


@TrixieFilms on Twitter

Trixie Films website

On to the Q & A…

Q: With the feature documentary film I Was a Teenage Feminist under your belt, you are now focusing on a new project, How to Lose Your Virginity, which is another feature doc.  Can you discuss how you came to concentrate your efforts on this topic and how your two films might relate?

A: I think all my films look at the world through a feminist lens. Of the two shorts I’ve done, How I Learned to Speak Turkish is about sexuality and power and Womanly Perfection is about body image. Taken along with I Was A Teenage Feminist, which I think is about finding a political and personal identity, they all feed into to the ideas I’m playing with in How to Lose your Virginity.  I also would say that the virginity project is similar stylistically to I Was a Teenage Feminist—it’s funny, there’s a lot of intimacy with subjects, and I use my personal experience to make universal points.

When my editor and I were cutting I Was A Teenage Feminist, we watched a lot of those old ‘Now You Are A Woman’ films from the 1950s. I was struck not only by how useless the information was, but also how they kept telling girls that the only way to avoid social and physical ruin was to be a ‘good’ girl (read: a girl who doesn’t have sex). The abstinence-until-marriage programs (which the government still funds, by the way) are really just a present-day extension of those ideas. I started to wonder what we were telling young women about their sexuality, especially given that pop culture is full of highly sexualized girls that seem to be the polar opposite of this ‘good girl’ expectation.

I realized that it all comes down to the same message: that women should model themselves on images of male desire. In trying to mold themselves into either virgin or whore (or an impossible combination of both), women are constantly working to fit someone else’s needs instead of pursuing their own sexual identities.

On a personal note, I was planning my own wedding at the time of the shooting, and was getting a little freaked out by all the chastity-based wedding rituals and coded wedding accessories. What would it mean for me to embrace the white dress, don a veil, and be ‘given away’?  What would that say about my own sexual autonomy and identity? It echoes the narration of I Was a Teenage Feminist where I refer to myself as “a woman who feels incredible pressure to conform to an ideal that I don’t even buy into. Is it possible to be who I want to be without judgment, or apology or compromise?”

Q: In American culture, virginity experiences a dichotomous treatment.  The social state of virginity is also binary in nature — you either are or you aren’t, at least socially.  What differences do you see between gender, age and sexual orientation when the topic of virginity is discussed?

A: Virginity is basically a complex social construct that’s always been more about female sexuality than male. There’s actually no medical definition, and our conventional concept of ‘losing your virginity’ through penis-in-vagina sex is incredibly narrow. Is a penis really the only way to turn a woman into a sexual person? How then do lesbians lose their virginity? Do we suddenly become sexual beings or is it gradual? When we lose our virginity, what specifically are we losing, if anything at all?

In queer communities, the concept of virginity loss is far more nuanced and individualistic because it doesn’t fit into established hetero understandings about sex. But although ideas about how a person loses his or her virginity might vary, there is still some point where most of us cross a threshold of sexual initiation. It may be a construct, but it’s still an important defining moment – however we define it.

You can see how important it is when you speak to older virgins who for whatever reason haven’t yet had sex. I hear from a lot of them through my blog The American Virgin, and there’s a lot of shame and secrecy around being an older virgin (which I think can begin as young as your early 20s). Everyone thinks everyone else is having sex but them, but it’s just not true.

In the same way that the blog offers young women the space to be sexual beings on their own terms, it tells people who don’t feel ready for sex (or aren’t into it at all) that they’re not freaks. I get a lot of letters along the lines of: “I generally feel like I’m harboring a shameful secret, and before I found your blog was pretty convinced that I was the only woman in her mid-twenties who had never had sex.” Speaking as someone who became sexually active only after college, I can really relate. I hope to make that perspective a dynamic part of the film.

Q: I hear from filmmakers over and over that people don’t give money to films, they give money to people.  How do you approach potential financial supporters of your film when dealing with what is seen by many as an extraordinarily private topic?  How do you sell the story?  (Feel free to plug away!)

A: You know, it was hard enough to fundraise for a film about feminism. Some people had such negative reactions to even just the word. But imagine a film that uses “penis,” “vagina” and ‘anal sex’ liberally. With older people especially, the pitch and the trailer can get uncomfortable. And I’m pretty sure that my parents, while being personally supportive, are not bragging about it to their friends.

On the other hand, I Was A Teenage Feminist is really well known in the feminist community, so I come with some good references and a sort of anticipation for what I’ll do next.

Unfortunately, there’s also very little money in this community, so with our current fundraising campaign on Kickstarter, we’re relying on a lot of small contributions adding up to a large goal. We’ve raised almost $7000 this way, but we still need another $3000 to meet our July 1 deadline.  Kickstarter is a great new way for creative projects to get funding, but it comes with a catch: if you don’t meet your goal, you don’t get a cent. We’re all working really hard to get the word out to as many people as possible. Even a $10 donation makes a difference.  Plus, if people give more, we give them cool rewards. We’re like public television, but without the tote bags.

Q: Please talk a bit about your experiences with interviewees… [and] tell us a bit about your production team and how you work with a crew when dealing with people’s (interviewees’) deeply personal experiences?

A: When I interview someone, I want it to be as casual and as intimate as possible. I want them to talk right to the audience, so they look directly at the camera, not off to the side. And I like to shoot them in their natural environments as much as possible. We have a tiny crew.  Sometimes it’s just me, and at most it’s my DP and one PA and minimal if any lights. We give up on some of the beauty, but like I said, I want it to be intimate so subjects can talk about really personal things and feel safe doing it. I’m always humbled by the things they’re willing to share. Of course, the more they are able to share, the more likely it is someone in the audience might find something to relate to.

I’m also very open with them about my own experiences during the interview. I figure I should be just as willing to talk about whatever I’m asking of them. It helps to have a blog I can point to so they can see my approach to the topic. Of course, that backfires when you’re trying to get the Purity Ball people on camera. It doesn’t take much of a Google search to find out I’m not a fan of their philosophy, but I’m not going to misrepresent myself to get an interview. So that’s an ongoing challenge.

Another challenge has been finding older virgins who are willing to be on camera. If they’re religious and are waiting until marriage, they’re more comfortable with talking about it. But people who are virgins of circumstance are often too embarrassed to be on camera, even in shadow. So, I’m currently in search of more subjects who are older virgins, especially people of color and members of queer or trans communities. People should definitely contact me if they’re interested.

Q: How long have you spent thus far on How to Lose Your Virginity and what have you personally taken away from it?

A: I first started researching the topic four years ago. But in terms of more concentrated work, it’s been about three years on and off. You know how it is–you work in spurts when there’s funding and when there’s inspiration. When the economy tanked I had to focus on paid work, so it went on the back burner. Since last fall it’s been a priority again. We were part of the Paley Docfest Pitch Workshop late last year, which prompted me to cut a new trailer. The audience and panel response was so great that I knew I had to get the thing done as soon as I could.

Personally, it’s been an interesting way to look at my own sexual history and see if and how it defines me. I started late, but then really made up for lost time, as they say. The abstinence people claim a lot of casual pre-marital sex will doom my marriage, so I’m waiting to see how that goes. And now people refer to me as a sex blogger, which I find sort of hilarious, even though I guess they’re more or less right.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A heartfelt thank you to Therese Shechter for doing this Q & A and helping to support Her Film!

NOTES: Some pieces by and about Therese Shechter are linked below, but this is by no means a comprehensive list!

“The Difficulty in Defining Virginity: A Conversation that Continues”

“Rave On: Filmmaker Therese Shechter on Woman: An Intimate Geography”

“The Doc Doctor’s Anatomy of a Film: ‘I Was a Teenage Feminist’”

“How Funders are like Crushes and Other Sundance Morsels”

0 Comments

Her.Stories: Al Mansour and Steinem, first Chinese-American female director, female filmmakers night and more

4/27/2013

0 Comments

 
Saudi film ‘Wadjda’ prompts women’s rights conversation with Gloria Steinem at Tribeca

Interview: MOLLY MAXWELL Director Sara St. Onge

Bridging The Gap Between Art And Technology (Warner Bros.’s Wendy Aylsworth)
‘Golden Gate Silver Light’ Doc Reveals Life of First Chinese-American Female Director

EVENT:  May 7, 2013 -- Annual Female Filmmakers Night in Chicago (part of Midwest Independent Film Festival)

Silent film star speaks volumes through new book

Why We Should Care About The Massive Age Gaps Between A-List Actors And Their Love Interests
Meera Menon Wins Inaugural Nora Ephron Award at Tribeca Film Festival

The North’s stars shine at Ottawa’s Northern Scene festival  (Quebec filmmaker Sylvia Cloutier)


Inside the female psyche (director Shalini Usha Nair's new film 'Akam')
Lela Lee's online comic strip 'Angry Little Girls' about Asian American female rage, coming to TV this summer

Tribeca Film Festival: Director Jane Weinstock, Alia Shawkat talk 'The Moment'

Women Directors Infographic: Why Are There So Few Female Directors In Hollywood?
'Gippi' director's next will be comedy (director Sonam Nair first woman launched by Dharma Prods.)

Women In Film Talk About Why There Are So Few Women In Film

Bridesmaids Director Paul Feig on Who Gets Second Chances in Hollywood—and Who Doesn't

0 Comments

Her.Stories: McCarthy and Bullock, Palestine's first female director, women at Tribeca, mentoring directors and more 

4/20/2013

0 Comments

 
Melissa McCarthy, Sandra Bullock defend women in comedy 'what cave do you live in?'
at Entertainment.ie
A plea from Palestine's first female director
at The Independent
Tribeca Film Festival to Honor Memory of Nora Ephron
at Reel Life with Jane
Spotlight on Women Directors at Tribeca Film Festival
at Reel Life with Jane

Girls on Film: Of course we need more female directors!
at The Week
Women of Influence: A director empowering women in film
at Portland Business Journal

Kathleen Kennedy Accepts 2013 Pioneer of the Year Award at CinemaCon
at Indiewire

Malgorzata Szumowska's film about gay priest wins at International Women's Festival in Dortmund
at Polish Radio

Cannes Unveils 2013 Line Up With One Female Director in Main Competition
at Women and Hollywood

Only Two Percent of 2012's Top Films Were Shot by Women
at Jezebel
Tribeca: Elaine Stritch On (Not) Wearing Pants, Being Hungover With James Gandolfini and Hating The Title of Her New Documentary
at Indiwire

How Battlestar Galactica sets the standard for feminist television
at Nashville Scene
0 Comments

Rosario Dawson on Producing Women-Led Feature Films

4/17/2013

0 Comments

 
Excerpted from "Q&A: Rosario Dawson" in Dame Magazine
Picture
Is there a demand to see women portrayed as multi-faceted, not just victims or not just powerful?

The demand is really there to seeing different types of entertainment, and different types of positions for women, and just different types of stories. Not to say that we’re not going to play women who are bad, women who are abused, women who might be many different things. Those are real stories about real people, but we shouldn’t only feel like we can only watch prostitutes.

So where will those opportunities come from?

I want to produce more now. I need to step back a little bit and use the things that I have learned from this industry for so long, and the people that I have met and the resources that I have built. I’m hoping I can make stories happen that no one is writing that I would really like to see.

Click here to read the entire article and interview by Jordan Riefe at Dame Magazine.
0 Comments

Why So Few Female Directors? 2012 Data and Solutions

4/15/2013

1 Comment

 
Guest post by Kate Chaplin

The River Bend Film Festival was so kind to ask me to give a presentation entitled, "Why so few female directors." I was first asked to give presentation in October of 2011 to a group of filmmakers and it freaked me out. Who was I to describe what it's like for every female filmmaker? Who am I to know what the truth to this problem is? But it was a topic that is very close to my heart. As a mother of two girls who I want to inspire to be anything they want in this world, I gave it my all. I researched for months. I dove into my own experiences of being the only woman on set and being harassed and bullied. I tried my best to come up with solutions and even counter solutions that others have been suggesting for years that have found little results. Over the months since my first talk, which is online here [and embedded below] I have done more research, heard more testimonials from women and gotten the most amazing feedback -- and backlash.
Each time I announce that I've given a Directing While Female talk I take heat publicly and privately from male filmmakers who do not see the fact that only 9% of directors are female is a problem. "It's hard for all filmmakers," they say. Which is totally true but I've been flat out told many times that I won't succeed in filmmaking because I'm a woman. It's different being told a career is hard vs. you can't do it because of how you were born.  The week before giving a presentation (I've done this 4 times now) I have nightmares of people throwing chairs, having a pie thrown in my face, or someone storming out of the room. So far, this has not happened. Those who come to my presentations leave smiling, empowered and having learned something new that they can turn into action.
I talk a lot about ads being negative triggers for women in telling them their place in the world. I love after giving a talk seeing those men and women posting on social media ads that most of us blow off, and questioning them. I love seeing the people who came to the talk being excited they found a movie that passed the Bechdel Test. In the few hundreds of people my talks have reached, I'm seeing a change in perception. I'm seeing conversation start. I'm one person in this large group like Her Film Project, The Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media, and the Center for the Study of Women in Television & Film (to name a few). I'm scheduled to do more talks and am so happy that I can share my latest with you. If you are interested in me coming to your school, library or organization, my contact info is below.

Website: www.katechaplin.com
Facebook
Twitter @katechaplin
IMDB
Picture
_________________________________
Picture
Kate Chaplin is a director, writer and producer who has been named “The Queen of Indie Film” and “A Powerful Woman” by the Indy Star (Indianapolis, Indiana). Chaplin is a multi-award winning filmmaker, author and public speaker. Chaplin’s projects have appeared on MTV, VH1, Discovery Channel, in film festivals, sci-fi conventions, in print and online. Chaplin's project First They Came for… won the Indy Award, the Gold Award in Hollywood, and was nominated for the Hoosier Lens Award. Ms. Chaplin works on many film productions as a Co-Producer, Assistant Director, or Script Supervisor. Ms. Chaplin is passionate about film and sought after to provide film classes at local schools, libraries and leadership organizations to help inspire others to learn more about filmmaking.

1 Comment

Her.Stories: the Bollywood Effect, Ekta Kapoor's witchcraft controversy, study of women in indie film, film fest news and more

4/13/2013

0 Comments

 
The Bollywood Effect: Women and Film in South Asia
at Foreign Policy

Regressive role of women in film? Ekta's 'Daayan' angers National Commission for Women
at One India
Women cannot be portrayed as sex objects or daayans: Ipsita Roy Chakraverti
at Times of India

Centre's efforts to ensure positive depiction of women
at New Indian Express

Canal+ supports women filmmakers in Africa
at Vivendi

Aflamnah, YallaTV partner to promote crowdfunding and online distribution for Arab filmmakers
at AME info

Study Finds More Women in Independent Films
at Voice of America

PHOTOS AND VIDEO:  100 Years of Indian Cinema: The first women directors
at IBN Live
AUDIO:  Sally Potter's 'Ginger And Rosa': A Study Of Women's Relationships
at National Public Radio (NPR)

Offering Women a Sweeter Deal: A Film Company Aims at the Glass Ceiling
at the Wall Street Journal

Film on Iowa women’s prison wins Best Documentary, Des Moines screenings scheduled
at the Des Moines Register
Don't call me a woman filmmaker: Anjali Menon
at The Indian Express

Ankara's Flying Broom Film Fest To Mark 16th Edition In May
at Haberler

Birds Eye View: a festival of female Arabian film-makers
at The Guardian
(Article in Italian)  1ST EUROPEAN WOMEN FILMMAKERS FESTIVAL (EWF- Festival)
at Roma Daily News
IBW (Images of Black Women) Film Festival UK - Full Lineup & Dates
at Shadow & Act

Film Festival Focuses On Women’s Rights

at the Payson Roundup
0 Comments

Her.Stories: SWAN Day, Female directors behind the camera, filmmaker Kim Longinotto, and more

3/30/2013

0 Comments

 
TODAY: Support Women Artists Now (SWAN)
at Huffington Post

Visit the SWAN day calendar at WomenArts

Bringing Films and Their 'Extended Families' to the 2103 Women Deliver Cinema Corner
at Huffington Post
How Two Women Aim to Get More Female Directors Behind the Camera
at Forbes

It’s high time more women ran the arts
at The Telegraph

There are many inspirational women directors - they're just not rewarded in the same way men are
at the London Evening Standard

Arab women directors find acclaim worldwide

at CNN
Film-maker Kim Longinotto: Uncovering a global crime
at the BBC


EVENT (April 12):  Diablo Cody, Maya Rudolph, Nancy Meyers on Chapman Film School Women in Comedy Panel
at OC Weekly

VIDEO: Oscar-winner Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy talking about Sex and Commodification of Women in Film
Undercover director: Saudi film-maker Haifaa al-Mansour
at FT

Montclair teen's phone video wins top prize in Women in Media-Newark's Cell Phone Cinema Contest
at North Jersey

Art Alert: Bibliotheca Alexandrina honours Algerian female filmmakers
at Ahram Online
0 Comments

    RSS Feed


Her Film Project elevates inclusive storytelling that broadens representation in global cinema. ​
              Home                    
              About 
              News  ​                 
              Contact