
Little Joe (2019)
Austria | UK | Germany | France
Director: Jessica Hausner
Writer: Jessica Hausner and Géraldine Bajard Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (7): Little Joe (2019)”
Director: Jessica Hausner
Writer: Jessica Hausner and Géraldine Bajard Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (7): Little Joe (2019)”
Director: Mimi Leder
Writer/s: Bruce Joel Rubin and Michael Tolkin Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (5): Deep Impact (1998)”
Director: Martha Coolidge
Writer/s: Neal Israel and Pat Proft (producer: Brian Grazer) Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (4): Real Genius (1985)”
Director: Lucile Hadžihalilović
Writer(s): Lucile Hadžihalilović and Alante Kavaite (with Geoff Cox) Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (3): Évolution (2015)”
Director: Rachel Talalay
Writer: Tedi Sarafian (screenplay) and Alan Martin and Jamie Hewlett (comic strip) Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (2): Tank Girl (1995)”
Director: Ngozi Onwurah
Writer: Ngozi Onwurah Continue reading “#WomenMakeSF Review (1): Welcome II the Terrordome (1993)”
War of the Planet of the Apes is the final instalment of the reboot of 50-year-old Planet of the Apes franchise, empathetically imagining the fall of humanity from the apes’ perspective. It concludes the three-film journey of Caesar (in a mesmerising performance from Andy Serkis) who moves from science experiment to resistance leader to sacrificial saviour. Continue reading “REVIEW: War of the Planet of the Apes (Reeves, 2017)”
Co-written with Dr R. Lyle Skains
Blade Runner is a formative SF film for many fans and scholars, inviting endless revisitation – a multi-layered, visually excessive storyworld that prioritises aesthetics over narrative. Its long-awaited sequel, 2049, is equally beautiful and complex, although more narratively accessible than its predecessor. Similarly, 2049 also asks questions about the essence of humanity while lacking depth in its cultural representation. Continue reading “REVIEW: Blade Runner 2049 (Denis Villeneuve, 2017)”
Originally posted: August 2017
We need women of science on screen – in major summer blockbusters working together to discover, empower, and save the world. As Ghostbusters: Answer the Call’s male ‘evil scientist’ exclaims “do it in the right place, with enough power, and there goes the barrier!” – he’s talking about releasing supernatural creatures on New York but it works for Ghostbusters too as it pushes at the gender barrier. It puts at least a small crack in the glass ceiling by showing that these “sisters in science” are what scientists can and do look like. By normalising women of science on screen and by having them as lead characters rather than sci-candy sidekicks the film industry can show that being a scientist is an entirely achievable goal for the young woman looking to her future career. Continue reading “REVIEW: Sisters in Science – Ghostbusters Answer(s) the Call”