Connect Savannah 2012-10-31

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news & opinion

Savannah Film festival | from previous page

classroom with technology and leadership with the young women. Some of them are too freaked out to even hold a camera. It was a real surprise that these clichés and stereotypes are still embedded in their lives. You have to push hard to get them to think around them.

Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: The whole contradiction of Wonder Women is so interesting and provocative. She was definitely created as a very idealistic concept. When her creator, William Moulten Marston, passed away, the whole thing was watered down. We do still associate her with power and empowerment, but it’s almost just an emblem on a t–shirt. People don’t really understand. It’s the only image we have when we want to use that metaphor for the strong woman. She’s it. In the 80s, we saw Terminator 2’s Linda Hamilton and her biceps and Sigourney Weaver wielding machine guns in Aliens. Where are the badass women of this generation? Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: I can’t think of anyone else who has that iconic of a stature. There was Buffy, who’s already over 15 years old, and she didn’t have that overt physical strength. It’ll be interesting to see if Katniss of the Hunger Games rises to become a strong complex female figure. And there’s Lisbeth from the Girl from the Dragon Tattoo…but wow, is she damaged. It’s this horrible revenge rape story line. In your film, Kathleen Hanna of Bikini Kill laments how “girl power” was co– opted by the Spice Girls. How do we prevent the concept of female power from being trivialized and cutened up?

OCT 31-NOV 6, 2012 | WWW.CONNECTSAVANNAH.COM

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Your film shows that the Wonder Woman character was created in the 1940s as “psychological propaganda in preparation for the kind of women who would soon be running the world,” yet we all know how far away we are from that. What does she represent now?

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Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: That’s the challenge, right? Well, you have to have hope. Sometimes I feel completely despondent about it. But I think by really training our children—both girls and boys—to be media literate, to ask questions and analyze so that they can recognize stereotypes. When they become a more educated audience, they’ll crave and want something more nuanced rather than these flat images. I also think we need to support women creators—go out and see the films directed by women or those that have strong female leads. And we need to demand more from those in charge. Maybe not in Hollywood, but interesting things happen at comic conventions when DC or Marvel kills off one of its female characters and people speak out. It’s created some real change in those industries. Most importantly, we need to start training ourselves to make our own media. We have the technology. Should we riot because they’ve hired a man to write the screenplay for an upcoming Wonder Woman blockbuster? Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: [laughs] Yeah, yeah…we’ll see if that even happens. That concept has gotten started then fallen by the wayside repeatedly.

You end your film with a shot of Oscar–winning Hurt Locker director Katherine Bigelow. Why? Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: Because we need to support women as directors and in these colorful positions in the media and recognize how seldom this happens. In certain areas women have made great gains, but it the arenas where it really matter—business, politics and media—the dearth is still proportionately outrageous. We need to cultivate girls rising to be leaders in all of these areas. How will your work change now that you have a daughter? Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: It’s interesting. I found out her gender while I was pregnant so it’s something I’ve been thinking about for a while. I’m really wanting to build the world I want my daughter to live. I realize that the gender typecasting starts at a very young age. Like immediately. Seeing all the pink and blue stuff... I’ve been really aware of wanting to resist the gender stereotypes in a healthy way. Having a baby has been a huge change in my identity—caring for her, finding time for some work— I had always respected moms, but now, whoa. Gives a lot more meaning to the term

Wonder Woman. Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: It does! Next project? Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: I’m going to be working on the outreach of Wonder Women for a while. We’re also trying to raise money for a game concept. I couldn’t include much about the gaming industry in my film, but that community is of great interest to me since games are what our youth are playing every day. And wow, talk about some pretty abysmal representations of women. We want to make a game called Wonder City that more of a social issue behind it. Players would embody a female superhero, create a secret identity and have to make decisions about how to rule the world. Sounds so much more awesome than killing zombies. Kristy Guevara–Flanagan: Yes, it’s about embracing your own superhero and identifying your own leadership skills. We want to create media that nurtures that. cs Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines screens Friday, Nov. 2 at 9:30 a.m. at the Lucas Theatre.


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