Jenny on Suffragette
I made myself go to this film.
I find myself at odds with what so many of the critics have to say about it. Since they are almost all men perhaps they're afraid of being seen not to like it for fear of being dubbed sexist or unsympathetic to the Cause.
I thought it was good acting applied to bad history. The film suggests the following – all exaggerations, sloppily thought through, or just plain wrong
I find myself at odds with what so many of the critics have to say about it. Since they are almost all men perhaps they're afraid of being seen not to like it for fear of being dubbed sexist or unsympathetic to the Cause.
I thought it was good acting applied to bad history. The film suggests the following – all exaggerations, sloppily thought through, or just plain wrong
All male persons are total bastards or just feeble wimps
All women are heroines
The acts of terrorism by the militant branch of the Suffragettes were justified
Emily Davison's reckless and heroic act resulted in women getting the vote
The Suffragette movement resulted in getting universal suffrage for women (hmm, only 16 years later so there’s a bit of a time lag, and since it's entirely set in 1912 the film overlooks the impact of WW1)
A working class woman could rise to a position of influence in a movement run by aristocrats and upper middle class women
It was always winter
It was always raining
There was always smog and every room was smoky
People only ever lit their rooms with candles and paraffin lamps
You can get away with lumpen extras and terrible CGI in a period film especially if you film on available light in dark, smoky wintery rooms and against whatever light there is
If you have fussy hand held camera work and equally fussy editing that makes up for a very boring script
Brendan Gleeson will be condemned to playing policemen until he is too old to be plausible in the part.
It reminded me of
Vera Drake, another period film shot in grey, dark green and sepia with a
working class heroine, and which I also disliked for its
utter lack of plausibility and specious stereotyping.
I thought by far the best bit was the brutal
horror of the force feeding scene and the acknowledgement that women could not
be allowed to die because of the political embarrassment it would cause. The
film does succeed in making the point that so many men hate and fear women -
interesting that one of the trailers was for the film about Malala, so the
issue is still with us.
Joe’s heckle
Joe’s heckle
Oh, Jenny, I liked
it so much more than you did! Of course I’m sympathetic to the cause of female
suffrage (aren’t we all?) but that wouldn’t be enough to persuade me. I’m
actually quite resistant to the sentimental treatment of modish causes. Pride bothered me, much as I enjoyed it,
because it felt too easy to have our tears jerked over the destruction of South
Wales mining communities in a nostalgic kind of way, when, as a society, we’d
let it happen and had just installed an ultra-Thatcherite government to do more
of the same.
I’m probably less
concerned about historical accuracy than you are. I could have tolerated the
historical distortions in The Imitation
Game if they’d made the story more rather than less internally coherent. To
take just one example, it made no sense that the rest of the code-breakers were
so resistant to Turing’s machine, even to the point of violence (in observance
of the Hollywood convention that drama is not occurring unless things are
getting smashed) when they clearly all understood the enormous odds against
solving the problem with nothing but pencil and paper.
At a human level, I
found the story told in Suffragette fairly
compelling. If there were inaccurate period details I didn’t spot them. I think
you may be right on the unlikely rise of the working class heroine through the
ranks of the movement. I didn’t register it in class terms, though, but rather
as an issue of pace and scope – a bit too much happening too quickly to too few
characters. Perhaps the film erred here on the side of dramatic economy, with
Maud serving as survivor of sexual abuse, oppressed female worker, powerless
mother, suffragette recruit, potential government agent, torture victim, and
witness to the final horror. This filled out her role at the cost of
making the suffragette organisation feel under-populated.
I don’t think the
film suggested that Emily Davison’s death led directly to female suffrage. Maud
is clearly traumatised by it. Helen Bonham Carter’s character, Edith Ellyn
(also fictional, I now see) seems deeply despondent. They both react as if to a
defeat. Maud’s last words to Edith are to the effect that they must go on (with
the struggle). The upswing in mood comes only right at the end, with the funeral
presented as publicity coup, which is immediately followed by the actual dates
of legislation. Films about historic struggles tend to simplify the causes of
victory. This one struck me as being less guilty than most.
You felt that the
film justified acts of terrorism. I thought it was more ambiguous. Inspector
Steed (Brendan Gleeson) has a persuasive moment when he tells Maud how close the
bombing of Lloyd-George’s country house came to killing the housekeeper. When Edith
is criticised for leading impressionable young women into violent criminal
behaviour, it seemed to me we were invited to make the connection with the grooming methods of today’s
ISIS recruiters.
I assume Steed fell
into the bastard category for you. I found him more complicated. The class
issue is interestingly touched on when he tries to persuade Maud that she is
being exploited by privileged women with much less to lose. His appeal to some
kind of class solidarity here felt like more than just a “good cop” routine.
His ministerial boss
(Samuel West) was more one-dimensional, as was Maud’s employer – another
character burdened, you could argue, with too much social weight, representing
both cruel overseer and unrestrained abuser. Her husband Sonny (Ben Wishaw), on
the other hand, though he gives up their child for adoption while she’s on the
run, is certainly no brute, and not exactly a wimp either, just a decent man of
his time, trapped within socially determined limits. The women of the
neighbourhood who ostracise the family play their own role in this desperate outcome.
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