Book Reviews

Book Review: Liberating Hollywood

Published by
Harper Lambert

Between the Time’s Up movement, demands for wage equality and historic firsts for female moviemakers, Hollywood is undergoing a sexual revolution.

None of these achievements would be possible if not for earlier generations of women who fought against sexism in the industry.

In Liberating Hollywood, Maya Montañez Smukler chronicles an era in which pant legs were wide and the gender gap even wider. In the 1970s, the book says, “woman directors were entangled in a paradox of progress.” Fueled by the women’s liberation movement, they were eager to lead, yet faced discrimination at every turn.

Writer, director, and producer Barbara Loden, a key figure in Maya Montañez Smulker’s Liberating Hollywood, stars in the title role of her spinal 1970 indie, Wanda. 

At the heart of the book are profiles of the 16 women who accomplished the near-impossible feat of directing feature films in the ’70s. Drawing from various sources, including interviews with the directors and their collaborators, Smukler describes the similar economic and artistic roadblocks they encountered: difficulty in securing financing, loss of creative control, being undermined by studio executives, and lack of union protection. Even with positive critical and box office reception, most were unable to obtain funding for future projects and either directed other formats or stopped directing.

Anecdotes liven up the narrative and allow the reader to feel the weight of the structures and social attitudes conspiring against them. An example of this is Smukler’s profile of Joan Tewkesbury. Even with screenwriting accolades and the support of famed director Robert Altman, Tewksbury only directed one feature because of the barrage of sexist obstacles she faced from the studio and crew on-set.

The lengths to which these 16 women go to realize their vision is what makes Liberating Hollywood a fun and fascinating read. When they do succeed in getting their movies out into the world, it feels like an epic feat that one can’t help but cheer on.

The Takeaway

Liberating Hollywood is an invigorating, detailed account of the women who were denied seats at the directors’ roundtable and sat down anyway. Their bittersweet but valiant efforts paved the way for feminist reform. Smukler’s book is valuable not just because it covers an important piece of Hollywood history, but because it’s a reminder that progress is not to be taken for granted.  MM

Liberating Hollywood: Women Directors and the Feminist Reform of the 1970s American Cinema was released by Rutgers University Press on December 14, 2018. This article appears in MovieMaker’s Winter 2019 issue.

Harper Lambert
Share
Published by
Harper Lambert

Recent Posts

  • Gallery

11 Old Scary Movies That Are Still Quite Terrifying Today

Some old scary movies don't feel scary anymore. Here are 11 exceptions.

3 hours ago
  • Movie News

Why The Fall Guy Doesn’t Rely on Guns: ‘Indiana Jones Didn’t’

Watching the Ryan Gosling action film The Fall Guy, one thing stands out: The lack…

3 hours ago
  • Gallery

7 Horror Remakes No One Really Needed

These seven horror remakes tried to improve on movies that were quite good to begin…

4 hours ago
  • Gallery

13 Actors Who Quit When They Were on Top

These actors quit while they were on top, following the old showbiz rule: Leave 'em…

5 hours ago
  • Movie News

How the 3 Body Problem Artisans Staged the Devastating Judgment Day Sequence

The “Judgment Day” episode of the 3 Body Problem contains one of the most harrowing…

6 hours ago
  • Movie News

The 11 Best Cocky Blond Guys in ’80s Movies

Cocky blond guys are a staple of '80s movies. Here are 11 of our favorites.

18 hours ago