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Open Salon's resident movie nerd and box office geek.

Scott Mendelson

Scott Mendelson
Location
Woodland Hills, California, United States
Birthday
April 02
Bio
A ten-year Salon reader, Mendelson also has a film and politics blog/column at Mendelon's Memos: located at: http://scottalanmendelson.blogspot.com/. He is also a free lance voice over artist and occasionally contributes film reviews for www.ValleySceneMagazine.com.

Editor’s Pick
SEPTEMBER 28, 2011 4:29PM

Why it matters if Patty Jenkins gets hired to direct Thor 2.

Rate: 3 Flag
Variety has apparently confirmed that Marvel Studios is indeed in talks with Patty Jenkins to replace departing Kenneth Branagh in directing Thor 2, which is due for release on July 26th, 2013 (review of Thor HERE).  I generally don't comment on news about who is 'in talks' or who is 'on the wish-list', but Patty Jenkins inclusion on this specific wishlist is worth commenting on.  Jenkins is best known for having helmed Monster, which won Charlize Theron a Best Actress Oscar in 2003 for her portrayal of serial killer Aileen Wuornos.  Since that triumph, she has unfortunately been relegated to directing occasional episodes of television, most recently helming the Emmy-nominated pilot for the AMC series The Killing.  This is a pleasantly out-of-left field choice that plays to Marvel's greatest strength as a studio, picking talented filmmakers who aren't necessarily known for comic book spectacle and/or aren't 'the hip new flavor of the month'. 

While much of the coverage will focus on 'YAY, Marvel is possibly/probably hiring the first-ever woman to direct one of its superhero movies!', there are two things worth noting.  First of all, Lexi Aexander, who directed Punisher: War Zone in 2008 (review) is also of the female persuasion.  Second of all, the lack of credits on Jenkins's IMDB page brings up a troubling double-standard.  Had a male, arguably any male, directed a critically-acclaimed and Oscar-winning drama like Monster, they surely would have been on every studio's wishlist for every major project (see Hopper, Tom or Forrester, Marc).  But, Jenkins has barely worked in the last eight years.  The problem is of course not there there is a fiendish conspiracy to keep female directors out of the big leagues.  The problem is that there is an expectation that female directors cannot possibly helm the kind of pulpy, big-budget and special-effects-filled genre pictures that currently dominate the landscape. 

Why couldn't Sophia Coppola helm the next James Bond picture?  For that matter, why can't Drew Barrymore, who juggled a large ensemble cast with the dynamite Whip It (review), take over for the rebooted Fantastic Four franchise?  Why did it take Kathryn Bigelow winning a bloody Oscar for Hollywood to take her seriously?  Hell, why has Mimi Leder, who helmed two big-budget genre pictures (the emotionally engaging Deep Impact and the ahead-of-its-time The Peacemaker) been in the proverbial doghouse for ELEVEN YEARS (!!) following the disappointment of the character drama Pay It Forward?  She is only just now prepping for her first big screen feature since 2000, a remake of All Quiet On the Western Front.  Not only is it almost impossible for female directors to be considered for films that aren't stereo-typically 'womens' pictures', but once they do get their foot in the door, it's One Strike And You're Out! (as opposed to someone like Marcus Nispel, who fails with Pathfinder and then is given $90 million to fail with Conan the Barbarian).

The real progress of Marvel hiring a female to direct one of its comic book tent-poles is not that a woman is directing a big-budget comic book film (Punisher: War Zone cost just $30 million and more-or-less tanked).  It's the potential for female directors writ-large to be considered on the same 'wish-list' as male directors when the next big action picture or fantasy spectacle goes into pre-production.  Once we see at least one or two female names on the studio wish-lists for the next 007 film or the next big comic book adaptation... that's real progress.  What are your thoughts?  What female directors do you think deserve a shot at directing more mainstream genre product?

Scott Mendelson

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Comments

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I hope Thor 2 is better than Thor 1. The acting was atrocious, in my humble opinion.
Superb article! Now Patty better bring us VALKYRIES! Lots and lots of VALKYRIES!!!!
Excellent, post, Scott! Rated.
I don't really care who directs, or even stars in, a movie. All I care about is if I pay my money and get my popcorn is that I'm entertained for the next 2 hours. Do you care who serves you in a restaurant past was the service good?
Why wasn't this posted yesterday on Thors-day? (Jupiter's Day) Why today on Venus' Day? All would be served well to open their eyes to the appropriation of God's by the Roman's, and the Jews, and why the legends continue on now ... Egyptian, Greek, Celtic, Roman- oh, and what are so many false God-ing to in these times? Where did he come from? The path is clear.
Maybe the type of person who is discriminated against the most in Hollywood is the kind of person who would not find directing Thor II to be a career advancement.