Wednesday 10 October 2012

The Bechdel Test for women in movies

This movie has two women who talk to each other about something other than men (but only once)
By Gabrielle Jackson

I'd like to draw your attention to the Bechdel Test for films. It goes like this:

Does the film:
1. Have at least two (named) women in it?
     2. Who talk to each other?
          3. About something besides men?

If you answer yes to all three questions, the film has passed the test. Woohoo!

The fact that such a test exists is testament to how few films actually pass. And passing doesn't mean it's a feminist film, by any means, or that it's good, simply that it has parts for a couple of chicks.

The film industry is structured to make movies about men, for men. Are you happy with that? Women are half the world. You wouldn't know it by looking at Hollywood films. Independent cinema tends to score better, but there's still a huge gap between what is represented on the silver screen and what actually happens in real life.

I know that films are an escape and that they don't have to be representative of real life. But are we really saying that women don't feature in any fantasy world? That women are not interesting to anybody? That women have no stories to tell? 

Nobody is saying that all films should have women in them. Or that films with all male casts are bad. Or that we shouldn't watch films that fail the test. I'd never give up Top Gun.

But I think we should be aware of it, and apply the test to the films we see and the films we like. Maybe we should seek out films that pass the test.

I remember going on a date with a man when I first moved to New York in 2002. He asked me if I wanted to see Black Hawk Down, and I replied, 'Does it have any female characters?' He laughed, said, 'There's probably a love interest' and we saw The Royal Tenenbaums instead. He brought up that response often. He'd never thought about it before. It wasn't a feminist theory I'd researched and developed; it was just an instinct I had for what I liked.

I know a lot of men and women who love Black Hawk Down. I don't. I know a lot of men and women who hate The Royal Tenenbaums. It's one of my all-time favourite films and I felt that way before I even knew about the Bechdel test, let alone that it passed. Maybe I just like films that have women in them? I know I don't enjoy movies where lots of men go around shooting each other and I know if there's a car chase, I will probably hate it. But not all women are like me. I know women who love shoot 'em up movies and I'm happy for them that they have so much choice in what to see at the cinema.

But I'd like more choice too, please. So spread the word, be aware and watch some movies that pass the test. That way, more will be made. It's the box office, after all, that dictates the next films that are funded.

For the record, the last two films I've seen at the cinema both pass the test: Your Sister's Sister (with the added benefit of a female director AND writer) and Mental. I enjoyed both, but I think Your Sister's Sister is one of the best films I've seen all year. And I saw it with a MAN. WHO LIKED IT! I saw Mental with a woman who like it too, but since I know women's opinions are not as important, I won't capitalise that.

The Bechdel Test website is basic, but serves it purpose.

The Bechdel Test: What It Is and Why It Matters does a better job than me of explaining it. 

The Bechdel Test For Women In Movies is a short but good explanatory clip






1 comment:

  1. Well my friend, stand by for 'Girls'...coming at your from Williamsbeug New York, written, directed and featuring 26 year old Lena Dunham as one of the main characters Hannah Horvarth. The series goes something like this...and while there's a nod to Sex In The City, this is billed as being about real women. 'Aspiring writer Hannah gets a shock when her parents visit from Michigan and announce they will no longer financially support her as they have done since her college graduation two years prior. Left to her own devices in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, she and her friends navigate their twenties, "one mistake at a time."'

    I cannot wait. Apparently it's fist chewingly realistic and we may have to hide behind our fingers as we watch it. I'm thinking it's the women's version of The Inbetweeners - which was brilliant but for boys. I have male friends who loved InBetweeners but only watched 3 minutes in every 30 because they had to cover their eyes and ears from the truth of thing.

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