‘Self-Defense’, satirizes toxic masculinity

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This image released by Bleecker Street shows Imogen Poots (left), and Jesse Eisenberg in a scene from ‘The Art of Self-Defense’. (AP)

‘A film about men, starring men, written by a man’

Director Riley Stearns says he didn’t realize he was making a perfect movie for 2019 when he started writing “The Art of Self-Defense” four years ago.

But his darkly comedic riff on toxic masculinity starring Jesse Eisenberg as a timid and “weak” man who takes up karate just kept becoming more relevant. The Harvey Weinstein allegations broke during the shoot in 2017 and the #MeToo movement became a phenomenon.

“It was kind of weird that this idea that I had been feeling was very personal to me was really starting to spread into a direct discussion,” Stearns said. “More and more people are relating to the film in ways that I originally wouldn’t have intended, which is hugely humbling and very interesting to see.”

“The Art of Self-Defense” is currently in 540 theaters in the US, where it’s finding a healthy audience amid all the flashier blockbusters and superhero films in the multiplex.

Eisenberg’s character Casey Davies is mocked even for his “feminine” sounding name. After getting brutally beaten one night by horde of masked motorcyclists, he stumbles on a local dojo run by an over-the-top alpha played by Alessandro Nivola and signs up for classes. And things take an unexpectedly dark turn.

“There’s an absurdity to him because he’s timid in such an extreme way and aggressive in such an extreme way,” Eisenberg said. “Casey is a product of this very unusual world. As much as I loved the character I also loved the world he exists in which is a world where people speak in this very unusual, blunt, earnest way.”

Imogen Poots plays the film’s sole main female character, an instructor at the dojo who despite all her skills has not been promoted to black belt. Sterns did this knowingly, but also made a concerted effort to make sure his below the line team was predominantly women.

“It’s a film about men, starring men, written by a man. Everything about it was so overtly masculine, which I knew, I was making fun of it, but still at the end of the day was not going to be on the side of films passing the Bechdel Test,” Stearns said.

Counteract

“My intent then was to say, let’s find the best people for the job to take on these department head jobs but also really try to focus on finding the best women for the jobs as well, to really try to counteract that. I just knew I didn’t want it to be a set full of men. It was really important for me to have that female perspective.”

Both Stearns and Eisenberg see some of the changes happening in the industry as many wake up to the injustices women have been subject to for too long. Soon after filming “The Art of Self-Defense”, Eisenberg found himself on the set of “The Hummingbird Project”, with Salma Hayek and Erika Rosenbaum, who both allege Weinstein sexually harassed them.

He remembers that the day that Hayek was writing her New York Times op-ed on set about the alleged harassment, something else happened in another department.

“This guy on set made some misogynistic comment in the wardrobe department and was fired on the spot,” Eisenberg set. “And I remember thinking, ‘This is amazing. This day fully crystalizes the changes that are possible: Two women bravely telling their stories about a person with outsized power in our field and another guy having to be held accountable for something he did that was awful on set… I just thought, if this is sustainable this is great.”

Also:

LOS ANGELES: Mexican director, producer and screenwriter Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu is to receive the Honorary Heart of Sarajevo Award at the 25th Sarajevo Film Festival. The honor is given “in recognition for his exceptional contribution to the art of film.”

“It gives us great pleasure to honor this distinguished auteur who keeps pushing the limits by transforming his unique artistic vision into unpredictable and outstanding movies,” said festival director Mirsad Purivatra. “His films are characterized by a distinctive style and pace and they captivate and thrill audiences and film critics around the world.”

Inarritu made his feature directorial debut in Cannes’ Critics’ Week in 2000 with “Amores Perros”, which was nominated for a foreign-language film Oscar. His credits include “21 Grams”, which received two Oscar nominations in 2004; “Babel”, which won Cannes’ best director award in 2006, and garnered seven Oscar nominations, winning in one category; and “Biutiful”, presented in competition in 2010 at Cannes, where it won best actor for Javier Bardem, and picked up two Oscar nominations.

Inarritu took home Oscars for director, picture and original screenplay for “Birdman” in 2015, and the following year, he won the best director Oscar again for “The Revenant”.

He created the VR installation “Carne Y Arena”, which previewed at Cannes in 2017 as the first VR project ever included in the Official Selection, and garnered him his fifth Academy Award.

During the 25th Sarajevo Film Festival, Inarritu will hold a masterclass, and the festival will screen “Birdman”. (Agencies)

By Lindsey Bahr

This news has been read 7913 times!

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