"This ain't no wobbly-headed doll caper."

acousticrivers:

Where have all the women gone in movies?

Despite the success of ‘Bridesmaids’ and other female-driven movies, female representation in films is at its lowest level in five years, a USC report says.

There’s one mountain in Hollywood that even “The Hunger Games’” scrappy heroine Katniss Everdeen hasn’t been able to move: the number of roles for women.

Despite the success of recent female-driven movies such as “Bridesmaids” and the “Hunger Games” and “Twilight” series, female representation in popular movies is at its lowest level in five years, according to a study being released Monday by the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Among the 100 highest-grossing movies at the U.S. box office in 2012, the study reported, 28.4% of speaking characters were female. That’s a drop from 32.8% three years ago, and a number that has stayed relatively stagnant despite increased research attention to the topic and several high-profile box-office successes starring women.

“There is notable consistency in the number of females on-screen from year to year,” said USC researcher Marc Choueiti. “The slate of films developed and produced each year is almost formulaic — in the aggregate, female representation hardly changed at all.”

When they are on-screen, 31.6% of women are shown wearing sexually revealing clothing, the highest percentage in the five years the USC researchers have been studying the issue.

For teen girls, the number who are provocatively dressed is even higher: 56.6% of teen girl characters in 2012 movies wore sexy clothes, an increase of 20% since 2009.

The USC researchers said these trends persist because those working in Hollywood believe attracting a male audience is the key ingredient to box office success.

“Industry perceptions of the audience drive much of what we see on-screen,” said study author Stacy L. Smith. “There is a perception that movies that pull male sell. Given that females go to the movies as much as males, the lack of change is likely due to entrenched ways of thinking and doing business that perpetuate the status quo.”

Female characters are more prevalent — and less likely to be sexualized — in movies written and directed by women, according to Smith.

A study USC released in January in conjunction with the Sundance Institute and Women in Film Los Angeles found that women have made more inroads in those kinds of behind-the-camera jobs in independent film and documentaries than they have in big-budget studio movies.

But it’s typically the studio movies that drive the box office — and shape audiences.

“Some depictions of females on-screen can have unintended and negative consequences for viewers,” Smith said. “Every voice deserves a chance to be heard and every story a chance to be told. At the moment … that does not seem to be the case in popular film.”

Rebecca Keegan, Los Angeles Times

05-24-13 459   via → stfu-moffat   source: acousticrivers
05-24-13 15607   via → elenaflutterby   source: ameliacarina
05-24-13 1231   via → ghostsinvelvet   source: themagicforest

messypaintingpalettes:

naturalshocks:

You want screwdrivers? Have some screwdrivers. 

Graphite pencils and fineliners on A4 tinted paper.

i’m screaming

05-24-13 7537   via → messypaintingpalettes   source: naturalshocks

Meike Nixdorf

In the Orbit of El Teide (2010-2011)

“In the Orbit of El Teide” holds different visual aspects of the same subject, in this case the mountain El Teide. But other than a piece in a puzzle, each image appears to strongly stand on its own.  And it is only through looking at these images one-by-one that one realizes how much more information, visual aspects, perspectives or stories-to-be-told there are to just one single mountain—or to any subject matter, basically.

05-24-13 1036   via → bimbodinsons   source: razorshapes

vurtual:

Fire and Ice (by AndersonImages)

Laguna Torre, Patagonia.

05-24-13 6231   via → marykatewiles   source: vurtual

bluepueblo:

Courtyard View, Neuschwanstein Castle, Germany

photo via letty

05-24-13 548   via → elenaflutterby   source: bluepueblo
05-23-13 184338   via → ihateallyourgods   source: mediaite

sarahreesbrennan:

abandonedporn:

While under the fascist rule, this small Italian town was flooded for the “greater good” of the nation: the water was meant to fuel a hydroelectric plant, but it was never built. The only remnant of the town is this church tower, which has stood the test of time.
(via)

Pretty. ;) And makes me think of a story…

05-23-13 7319   via → sarahreesbrennan   source: abandonedography

gretchenalice:

danfaust:

Why is this one so gosh-darn adorable? 

I don’t know, but she really is the cutest. 

05-23-13 3060   via → gretchenalice   source: doctorwhos

“VIOLENT AND STILL”

Frozen roses #5

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05-23-13 9228   via → theashleyclements   source: allthingseurope
05-23-13 434   via → elenaflutterby   source: elorablue
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