Friday, October 14, 2016

Down the Rabbit Hole… and into the White House



“I don't think..." then you shouldn't talk, said the Hatter.” 
 Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland


I have taken quite a hiatus from my blog. I haven’t stopped going to movies (check out the updated Fresh Cuts tab where I rate the movies seen). In fact, I’ve needed films more than ever to survive what has kept me away from the keyboard: the 2016 Presidential Campaign.

As everybody that lives in the United States knows, reality has given way to fiction in this presidential race. As one tweet put it, we’re caught between trying to break the glass ceiling and hitting rock bottom.

It has been maddening to see the misogynist, vulgar, narcissist candidate running for the GOP ticket take this election into a rabbit hole of chaos. The support he has received, not just from his base and the GOP, but from the media/press has been even more infuriating. That he ended up being the candidate for the Republican Party is definitely not due to any merit of his. This support has come on the back of the unwarranted and despicable attacks that have been made to Hillary Clinton. Since it has been clear to me since the 2008 campaign who the best person fit to run this country is, I have been hard at work providing my grain-of-sand support to get the first woman president of the United States into an office she well deserves.



As we have very clearly come to see in the final days of the campaign, sexism has raised its abominable head and has tried to drag the race into the gutter, succeeding in getting the GOP there. Despite this and because this country is still a nation where good things happen and often, we will very probably finally have a woman president in the White House come January 2017!

The idea of a woman in the White House in the movies has only been seen as science fiction and as a rather ridiculous proposition. You can count these movies on two hands. Since this is a movie blog, let’s take a quick peek at how utterly preposterous the idea of a woman American President has been to filmmakers.


Let’s begin by saying that most movies that portray a woman in the White House as President are usually quite mediocre, if not downright bad. The idea first appeared on film in 1953, in the movie Project Moonbase, directed by Richard Talmadge. The movie took place in the futuristic world of 1970, so science fiction, and to cement how futuristic it was there was a Madame President. The lunar expedition in the movie is foiled by the mission doctor who turns out to be a spy, so the crew crashes on the moon to stop him. The officer in charge of the mission is actually a woman, but one who turns to her male subordinate whenever there’s trouble and marries him after landing on the moon. What’s more, she requests her husband be promoted so she won’t outrank him!

It would take 33 years for another movie to portray a woman as President of the United States in 1986. The title of the movie is an indicator of just how ludicrous the idea seemed to the movie industry: Whoops Apocalypse. What’s more, in this British satire directed by Tom Bussman, the actress Loretta Swit plays the first woman president of the United States, who takes up the office only after the previous president, a former circus clown, dies as a result of daring a journalist to hit him with a crowbar.

Loretta Swit as US President in Whoops Apocalypse


The following year, 1987, Joan Rivers took the commander-in-chief position in the Australian movie Les Patterson Saves the World (directed by George Miller), another political farce where Rivers is really just the comedian-in-chief.

So, yes, after sci-fi, the comedy genre is the one used to portray women as presidents. Another decade would pass and Christina Applegate would bring the chuckles to that idea in 1998 when she played President Diane Steen in Jim Abrahams’ film comedy Mafia! (Originally entitled Jane Austen’s Mafia!). Another ludicrous and sexist plot that leads this woman president to almost declare world disarmament before her gangster ex-boyfriend convinces her they should get married.

Christina Applegate in Mafia!
Argentine director Gabriela Tagliavini tries to do a better job portraying the President of the United States as a woman, but again it has to be in a science fiction setting. Perfect Lover, released in 2001, was also known as “The Woman Every Man Wants” because it takes place in a future, the year 2030, in which women are the dominant gender and the plot still centers on a man wanting an old-fashioned complacent and sexy woman.

Still about another decade later the film Iron Sky (2012 - Timo Vuorensola), this time a science-fiction comedy for heaven’s sake, brings us the year 2018 (so close) in which a Sarah Palin-like President of the United States leads the US against an attack by Nazis from the moon, while nuclear war breaks out on Earth. Believe it or not, there is an Iron Sky 2 in the making.


Iron Sky

We arrive at this year’s Independence Day: Resurgence (2016-Roland Emmerich). Another science fiction movie in which the President is a woman, played by Sela Ward. It’s another end of the world movie, so I guess that’s why a woman is the president, one who is, this time, killed by the alien queen. So much for democracy winning!


Sela Ward in Independence Day: Resurgence


Such a short and sorry list! TV has done a little better, with 24, Commander in Chief, Madame Secretary, Scandal, State of Affairs, Prison Break, and a couple of other non-sci-fi or comedy shows that have a women as President of the United States (although women in politics are still getting laughs: Hail to the Chief, Veep, Parks & Recreation). But here’s hoping that once that final glass ceiling is shattered, it will become a bit more common to see women leaders in film, as Hillary Clinton takes us out of the rabbit hole and into wonderland.






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