Though I do smell a strong whiff of misogyny swelling not only through this thread, but generally around this topic IRL with my film-fan-friends, I just want to tackle the issue of female-driven actions films as put up by
@ancient
Though there are some films in recent memory that have been solid, if not outright box-office winners, that have female leads, the majority of attempts to push through such films has led to rather disappointing BO overall (especially when one considers production costs). Those that
have been successful typically have inbuilt fanbases attached to them (see
The Hunger Games Quartet) and so the lone wanderer of Action Heroine generally does not fare as well as one would hope:
Taken from
Boxoffice Mojo World Wide Unadjusted Grosses based on
action films where the central character(s) are female, or if part of an ensemble/duo the perceived lead:
The Force Awakens (2015): $2.067b
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013): £865m
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay 1(2014): $755m
Gravity (2013): $723.2m
The Hunger Games (2012): $698.4m
The Hunger Games: Mockingjay 1(2014): $653.4
Brave (2012): $539m
Terminator 2: Judgement Day (1991): $519.8m
Twister (1996): $494.5m
Mr & Mrs Smith (2005): $478.2m
Lucy (2014): $463.4m
Prometheus (2012): $403.4m
Snow White & the Huntsman: $393.6m
Mad Max: Fury Road (2015): $378.4
Edge of Tomorrow (2014): $370.5
Wanted (2008): $341.4m
Divergent Series: Insurgent (2015): $297.3m
Resident Evil: Afterlife (2010): $296.2m
Salt (2010): $293.5m
Divergent (2014): $288.9m
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (2001): $274.7m
Charlies Angels (2000): $264.1m
The Fifth Element (1997): $263.9m
Knight & Day (2010): $261.9m
Charlies Angels: Full Throttle (2003): $259.3m
The Mask of Zorro (1998): $250.3
Resident Evil: Retribution (2012): $240.2
Spy (2015): $235.7m
The Heat (2013): $229.9
Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters (2013): $226.3m
Flightplan (2005): $223.3m
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000): $213.5m
Miss Congeniality (2000): $212.7m
Kill Bill 1 (2003): $180.9m
Hero (2004): $177.9m
Alien Resurrection (1997): $161.4m
Underworld: Awakening (2012): $160.1m
Alien 3 (1992): $159.8m
Lara Croft: Tomb Raider: Cradle of Life (2003): $156.5m
Kill Bill 2 (2004): $152.2m
Resident Evil: Extinction (2004): $147.7
Aliens (1986): $131m
Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2007): $129.4
Underworld: Evolution (2006): $111.3m
Resident Evil (2002): $102.4m
Miss Congeniality 2 (2005): $101.3m
Courage Under Fire (1996): $100.8m
GI Jane (1997): $97.1m
Underworld (2003): $95.7m
House of Flying Daggers (2004): $92.9m
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (2009): $91.3m
Sucker Punch (2011): $89.8m
The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996): $89.4m
Catwoman (2004): $82.1m
Elektra (2005): $56.6m
Aeon Flux (2005): $52.3m
Haywire (2012): $33.3m
Ultraviolet (2006): $31.1m
The Assassin (1993): 30.1m (USA only - no international figures)
Cutthroat Island (1995): $18m
Bad Girls (1994): $15.2m domestic (USA only - no international figures)
Supergirl (1984): $14.3m (USA only - no international figures)
Tank Girl (1995): $4.1m (USA only - no international figures)
Barb Wire (1996): $3.8m (USA only - no international figures)
Things of interest that immediately stick out about the above films:
Franchises/Branding: Star Wars / Resident Evil / Alien / Hunger Games / Divergent / Underworld - 21 flms all with built in audiences that have a running-jump start over many others
Stars: Angelina Jolie / Sandra Bullock / Scarlett Johanssen / Mila Jovavich / Kate Beckinsale - a limited number of females regularly playing in the genre
Female Led? - One could happily argue that many of the above films are in fact NOT female led, and even with co-stars one can happily see the film being market male-first...
T2 as an Arnie film first, even though Linda Hamilton runs the show /
Edge of Tomorrow and
Knight & Day are Tom Cruise films first, co-female-lead/star second /
Fifth Element would have been advertised as a Bruce Willis film even though Jovavich is an equal star throughout
Statistically Few: The top 33 are taken from the top 650 films grossing of all time (approx $200m or more). The remainder clearly fall well short, but they are not adjusted grosses. So those 33, in the top 650 account for approximately 5% of the films. There are MANY other female led films outside of the action genre that are in the top 650, but none of those ladies were fighting.
Poor Films: clearly a subjective thing here, but on that list, many of the films are poor to downright awful. One can say that about many male-centric action films also, yet when one looks at the list as is, the proportion sticks out - I class 33 out of the 61 films to be below average (watchable). Again, utterly subjective, but did highlight to me how many female centric films are ideas and barely real scripts
Genre: 41 of the films are SF/F oriented, which is likely to be matched by those male-oriented action flicks
Recent: 13 of the films are pre 2000. Trying to find a female-led action film in the 1990's is tricky, outside of the Alien franchise, almost unheard of.
Domestic Box Office: International BO is important. Good examples:
Resident Evil: Afterlife - US $60m / INT $236m
Gravity - US $275m / INT $449m
Mr & Mrs Smith - US $186 / INT $292
Lucy - US $126m / INT 336m
Salt - US $118m / INT $175m
Snow White & The Huntsman - US $155m / INT $241m
Mad Max: Fury Road - US $153m / INT $225m
Knight & Day - US $76m / INT $186m
Wanted - US $134m / INT $207m
Kill Bill 1 - US $70m / INT $111m
It's clear to me that there is in fact a dearth of solid female-led action films, regardless of sub-genre. There are some good highs but overall there appears to be little investment in them given I went back to 1984 and found barely 60, with the rules stretched somewhat to include a few. What the above does state to me, if I had to create a formula would be:
Previous fanbase + SF/F trappings + BO strong female actor + international appeal = hit
Hence why we are getting
Ghost in the Shell with ScarJo next year
Or why a female Ghostbusters, to an ad-man and accountant sounds like it should be a winner...
Previous fanbase + S/F trappings + Wiig/McCarthy + international appeal = hit...??
Yet this formula pretty much works for ANY film these days - get something lots of people know or love, chuck in the flavour of the month, blend in big spectacle and effects and... tada.
So why choose almost solely women, over men, or even a combination? From a beancounters perspective it is a greater gamble. Why not just have Chris Hemsworth, Chris Pratt, Dev Patel and Zac Efron and run with a young male reboot. Fiscally this would make more sense as, noted above, risk is reduced, reward (hopefully) increased.
Paul Feig I guess wanted to make a film with people he likes and convinced the studio to let him do it. I see no obvious studio agenda to undermine what came before or even jump on a "bandwagon". What I do see is a fanbase agenda screaming through their keyboards because someone is not following
their formula. Ghostbusters (1984) is a fine, fine film. A lightening bolt of talents firing on all cylinders (terrible mixed metaphor). Unlikely to be recaptured? Yup, just look at the amusing but mostly lifeless sequel. Burnt into the psyche of a generation? Perhaps, but it's that same generation that seems to think that their cultural touchstones are theirs and theirs alone (Star Wars / Indiana Jones / A-Team / Knight Rider / Terminator / Star Trek etc) and not a property to be shaped, reshaped, melded or flushed at the owners will.
Some reboots work, most don't. Just because ladies are up front and centre doesn't mean it is an automatic fail, or even an insult to your fandom. What is an insult is looking at your fandom in such a rigid fashion that anything outside of that box is "abomination".
I will likely watch this film if only because, thus far, Paul Fieg has shown a general knack for comedy direction. Will the writing match up, who knows, but I do know that if I don't like it I still have Ray, Egon, Peter and Winston on my Blu Ray shelf, untarnished, unmolested. Why? Because history can't be undone.
Hugo - Awaits the backlash.