The film industry continues to be dominated by men, new research shows.
In 2014, 85% of films had no female directors, 80% had no female writers, 33% had no female producers, 78% had no female editors, and 92% had no female cinematographers, according to the Center for the Study of Women in TV and Film at San Diego State University.
The study’s author Martha Lauzen has been examining the representation of women both in front of and behind the camera for two decades.
The topic is receiving greater media attention than when she started, but she also notes that the status quo has remained resistant to change.
“The cultural zeitgeist at the moment is very concerned with providing more people with more opportunities, but the numbers have yet to move,” said Lauzen. “We’re getting a lot of public dialogue about the issue as actors like Patricia Arquette and Meryl Streep speak up, but we haven’t seen that groundswell result in higher numbers.”
The problem of discrimination has also attracted interest from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The federal agency has been setting up interviews with industry figures to try to find out why women directors are not better represented in the business.
Lauzen is disappointed that women don’t get the same opportunities on film sets as their male counterparts.
Instead of focusing on just the 250 top grossing films, researchers looked at the 700 highest-grossing productions, which comprise nearly every film that scored a theatrical release. The study found that there were more women employed on lower budgeted, lower grossing productions.
Women comprised 13% of directors on the top 700 films, but just 7% on the top 250 films.
Women made up 13% of writers on the top 700 films, and 11% on the top 250 films.
27% of producers on the top 700 films were female, while 23% on the top 250 films were female.
Women accounted for 9% of cinematographers on the top 700 films, but 5% of cinematographers on the top 250 pictures.
The number of female editors stayed consistent, 18% in both test samples.
“There may be some bias at work,” said Lauzen. “On independently produced films there is the perception of there being lower risk. I think there is a notion that women are not being hired as directors on big films because they are somehow riskier hires. The problem is that’s not how Hollywood works. There’s a growing list of male directors who are relative newbies and are placed at the helm of $100 million-plus films with little feature experience.”
The lack of women making hiring decisions leads to a less diverse personnel. Women in positions of power are more likely to employ other women.
Films with female directors have 52% female writers, 35% editors and 26% of cinematographers.
When men directed, the number of female writers shrank to 8%, editors fell to 15% and cinematographers dropped to 5%.
The same is true for directing opportunities: Women comprised 20% of directors on projects where at least a third of the producers were female, but 7% of directors when the representation of female producers fell below that percentage.
Recent Successes by Women Directors
The center’s study is only about 2014, and so some recent, high-profile examples of behind-the-camera success have not been taken into account.
In the past few months, Elizabeth Banks scored one of the summer’s biggest box office hits directing and producing Pitch Perfect 2.
Director Sam Taylor Johnson made Fifty Shades of Grey, which gross globally $570 million.
British Director Sarah Gavron and writer Abi Morgan are behind Suffragette, which may become an Oscar contender.
Lauzen cautions that these women’s accomplishments aren’t necessarily indicative of a wider change: “We can’t rely on a few anecdotal cases to let us know how the situation is for all women.”
Sexism in Hollywood: Industry Still Dominated by Men
The film industry continues to be dominated by men, new research shows.
In 2014, 85% of films had no female directors, 80% had no female writers, 33% had no female producers, 78% had no female editors, and 92% had no female cinematographers, according to the Center for the Study of Women in TV and Film at San Diego State University.
The study’s author Martha Lauzen has been examining the representation of women both in front of and behind the camera for two decades.
The topic is receiving greater media attention than when she started, but she also notes that the status quo has remained resistant to change.
“The cultural zeitgeist at the moment is very concerned with providing more people with more opportunities, but the numbers have yet to move,” said Lauzen. “We’re getting a lot of public dialogue about the issue as actors like Patricia Arquette and Meryl Streep speak up, but we haven’t seen that groundswell result in higher numbers.”
The problem of discrimination has also attracted interest from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The federal agency has been setting up interviews with industry figures to try to find out why women directors are not better represented in the business.
Lauzen is disappointed that women don’t get the same opportunities on film sets as their male counterparts.
Instead of focusing on just the 250 top grossing films, researchers looked at the 700 highest-grossing productions, which comprise nearly every film that scored a theatrical release. The study found that there were more women employed on lower budgeted, lower grossing productions.
Women comprised 13% of directors on the top 700 films, but just 7% on the top 250 films.
Women made up 13% of writers on the top 700 films, and 11% on the top 250 films.
27% of producers on the top 700 films were female, while 23% on the top 250 films were female.
Women accounted for 9% of cinematographers on the top 700 films, but 5% of cinematographers on the top 250 pictures.
The number of female editors stayed consistent, 18% in both test samples.
“There may be some bias at work,” said Lauzen. “On independently produced films there is the perception of there being lower risk. I think there is a notion that women are not being hired as directors on big films because they are somehow riskier hires. The problem is that’s not how Hollywood works. There’s a growing list of male directors who are relative newbies and are placed at the helm of $100 million-plus films with little feature experience.”
The lack of women making hiring decisions leads to a less diverse personnel. Women in positions of power are more likely to employ other women.
Films with female directors have 52% female writers, 35% editors and 26% of cinematographers.
When men directed, the number of female writers shrank to 8%, editors fell to 15% and cinematographers dropped to 5%.
The same is true for directing opportunities: Women comprised 20% of directors on projects where at least a third of the producers were female, but 7% of directors when the representation of female producers fell below that percentage.
Recent Successes by Women Directors
The center’s study is only about 2014, and so some recent, high-profile examples of behind-the-camera success have not been taken into account.
In the past few months, Elizabeth Banks scored one of the summer’s biggest box office hits directing and producing Pitch Perfect 2.
Director Sam Taylor Johnson made Fifty Shades of Grey, which gross globally $570 million.
British Director Sarah Gavron and writer Abi Morgan are behind Suffragette, which may become an Oscar contender.
Lauzen cautions that these women’s accomplishments aren’t necessarily indicative of a wider change: “We can’t rely on a few anecdotal cases to let us know how the situation is for all women.”