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TOPIC: Wonder Women Female Power Icons in Pop Culture (MTV Movies Blog 07.23.09)


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Wonder Women Female Power Icons in Pop Culture (MTV Movies Blog 07.23.09)
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http://moviesblog.mtv.com/2009/07/23/wonder-women-female-power-icons-in-pop-culture-at-san-diego-comic-con/



Zoe Saldanaby Michael Avila

One of the more interesting panels at Comic-Con this year not specifically geared to plug an upcoming movie was Entertainment Weekly’s forum discussing the role of female heroes in modern pop culture. Sigourney Weaver, Eliza Dushku, Zoe Saldana and Elizabeth Mitchell were seated on the dais before an enthusiastic standing room only crowd. It took about 20 minutes for someone onstage to realize Saldana's and Mitchell’s nameplates were misplaced.

Before Buffy slayed, Lara Croft raided and Starbuck, er… drank, Weaver was bitch-slapping Paul Reiser and basically inventing the archetype for ass-kicking women as Ridley in James Cameron's 1986 sci-fi action flick “Aliens.” Five years later, Cameron would release “T2: Judgment Day” featuring another female action hero. Sarah Connor, played by Linda Hamilton, paved the way for the modern-day heroine who can balance motherhood with her need to pound skulls and work out.

It all started with Ripley. Weaver said when she did Ridley Scott's “Alien” in 1979, she had no idea it would turn into a film series that stretched across several decades. “I got lucky,” she said.

When asked why Hollywood has so much trouble coming up with strong female action heroes, each actress had a different perspective. “To me, its really about character. Hollywood goes crazy wondering what you’re going to wear. I was lucky in that I could wear real clothes. I never thought about being a woman. I was just playing a person,” Weaver said, before cheerfully plugging her latest Cameron project.

Dushku said thatshe and “Dollhouse” creator Joss Whedon have always seen eye to eye on the balance between sex appeal and female empowerment. The actress says it is all very "feminine and empowering, but sex is a part of all our lives. Why run from it?"

Saldana, who plays Uhura in J.J. Abrams' "Star Trek," said it’s all about picking your battles. "Women in Hollywood," she says, "are all united in finding better projects, in fighting for better interpretations and better roles."

Saldana brought it back to Weaver, pointing out that Ellen Ripley was a role that could have been a man, but wasn’t. “Thank God for that,” she said. “We’ve come so far in the last 50 years. I mean, we have a black President, for God’s sake.”

Mitchell, who said she was a big sci-fi fan as a child, loves what the genre has allowed women to do. “I’m allowed to be as sexy or not sexy as I want to be,” she said. “There’s a code of honor [in science fiction], even among villains,” Mitchell said, which allows for more challenging opportunities for actresses.

Has it gotten any better for women in film and TV?

Dushku name-dropped "Buffy" in her answer, leading to a brief pop from the crowd. She said the lack of strong roles is what drew her back to Whedon’s world, because she knew she could trust him to come up with a juicy opportunity for her.

Weaver almost defiantly pointed out she’s about to turn 60, and said Hollywood is badly sagging behind the times in recognizing how women’s place in society has changed. She said TV is the place where far more complex female roles are found, pointing out her tablemates as perfect examples.

The last question had to do with Wonder Woman, and why this iconic hero still doesn’t have a feature film! Superman has a movie, and Batman. Even the Green Hornet has a film due out for Pete’s sake. Where’s the love for Diana?

Dushku made a sly reference to several people taking a pass at a Wonder Woman script, but she thinks too many people are simply scared of messing it up.

Saldana said filmmakers need to turn the heroine into a "Matrix"-style kung fu chick, and that they need to find someone with great buns and a great rack for the title role. The “Star Trek” star also gave the most honest answer of the panel when asked about the industry’s current It Girl, Megan Fox. Saldana said 65-year-old men are the powerbrokers in Hollywood, and those guys want to see 25-year-old hotties in their movies.



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Yep - wonder woman does deserve her own movie. Of course if/when she does, she will not look like most of us. She'll be a barbie proto-type, but stronger and with special powers. But, at least she'll actually be doing something constructive - not just riding around in her pink jeep looking for Ken.lol

Hollywood has done very little for women - period. Not only are women not usually portrayed as super-heroes, they're cast in roles that are degrading. As we know Hollywood is all about the bucks - and whatever it takes to make them is just fine with them.

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It was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the Union.... Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less.  ~Susan B. Anthony

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