Film Festival And Women Research Proposal

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¶ … justification for this focus? The festival will, via thirty gender sensitivity- and female empowerment- focused movies, attempt at fostering social reform and altering gender stereotypes. It will be able to provide a platform for training women, advocating for women-specific problems, fostering an entrepreneurial drive in them, and urging them to assume non-traditional functions. Furthermore, the university's efforts towards the above goals will be furthered via the festival (DNA, 2016).

One study discovered that female actors had a mere 30.2% of named or speaking roles within Hollywood's 700 greatest films between 2007 and 2014; of these only 28 movies had female directors (DNA, 2016). Through this film festival, it is hoped moviemakers will be influenced to portray women more often and in more prominent, non-traditional, and varied roles. For instance, film scripts can easily incorporate businesswomen, female security officers, taxi drivers, or scientists, who are interwoven into the story without any appreciable impact on the plot. This could go a long way toward broadening societal attitudes with regard to promoting social reform and altering gender stereotypes, if repeated several times (DNA, 2016).

Part 2

Identify three films that will serve as the main event for the festival. Each film must relate back to the theme. In your justification, use specific scenes, rather than general plot summary, from each movie.

A League of Their Own

It is hard to envisage any link between the Second World War and the United States' favorite pastime, baseball, until one takes into account the impact of this sport's loss on Americans' morale, as society looks to sport for entertainment even during times of crises, so as to forget the problems the world is facing for at least a couple of hours (Kinzel, 2014).

At first, contrary to reality, the all-girls baseball league encounters much scorn; in truth, it...

...

Its success was partly facilitated by the teams' visits to little Midwest towns without access to baseball games, which was a big treat to the towns' inhabitants. The movie depicts a tiny, powerful moment wherein females without a chance to choose have been acknowledged -- one ball rolls over towards a fence where some Black spectators are congregated outside (undoubtedly because of restrictions on them entering the stands), and one of the women in this crowd gracefully shoots the ball over two waiting players' heads into the hands of a third, standing at quite a great distance from the periphery. A fundamental connotation of the movie is the brilliant idea that any life choice is acceptable, no one is superior to the other, and following one's dream is vital, irrespective of whether it lies within or beyond societal expectations (Kinzel, 2014).
Kundan Shah's Kya Kehna

This Bollywood movie is a fine example of female-focused movies that kept a number of critics (who slammed it for production delays, its uneven song track, and continuity issues) wondering how it became a hit at the box office. The movie went on to receive numerous awards, one of which was the Filmfare Award for Best Story (Childers, 2002).

The movie centers on the much-debated issue of female morality. However, viewers will instantly understand that Priya (the lead character) is essentially good, despite the censure she experiences throughout. The movie highlights society's double standards in harshly degrading and humiliating the girl and her entire family whilst utterly ignoring the fact that Rahul (the boy who got her pregnant in the first place) was also involved in the illicit affair. The movie makes a strong point on society's unfairness towards women with regard to morality-related issues, by blaming it all on females' behavior whilst totally overlooking men's actions (Childers, 2002).

The movie opens with a scene depicting the lead female's forthrightness -- Priya is dared by friends to slap their school's vice-principal for sexually molesting a…

Sources Used in Documents:

Bibliography

Childers, H. M. (2002). "You go girl!" Nationalism and women's empowernment in the Bollywood film Kya Kehna! Louisiana State University, 5.

DNA. (2016, February 17). Empowering women through films. Retrieved from DNAIndia: http://www.dnaindia.com/mumbai/interview-empowering-women-through-films-2178506

Egbert, R. (1992). A LEAGUE OF THEIR OWN. Retrieved from: http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/a-league-of-their-own-1992

Hawley, J. (2016, February). Why women's empowerment is essential for sustainable development. Retrieved from IIED: http://www.iied.org/why-womens-empowerment-essential-for-sustainable-development
Janviigokanii, (2015). Technical Analysis: -- Bridget Jones' Diary. Retrieved from: https://janvigokanimedia.wordpress.com/2015/10/04/technical-analysis-bridget-jones-diary/
Kinzel, L. (2014, April 25). Why "A League of Their Own" Is An Overlooked Feminist Triumph. Retrieved from Xojane: http://www.xojane.com/entertainment/why-a-league-of-their-own-is-an-overlooked-feminist-triumph
Reichert, N. (2013, April). How Bridget Jones Diary shows women's empowerment of postfeminism as well as freedom of second wave feminism. Retrieved from Feminist Theories and Fiction: https://feministtheoryfictionunil.wordpress.com/2013/04/15/how-bridget-jones-diary-shows-womens-empowerment-of-postfeminism-as-well-as-freedom-of-second-wave-feminism/


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