Steve McQueen's heist movie 'Widows' premieres in Toronto
Director Steve McQueen returned to the limelight at the Toronto film
festival Sunday with the kick-ass feminist heist movie "Widows," at a
time when calls are multiplying for heftier roles for women.
It's been five years since the British director released his last movie
"12 Years A Slave," which won an Academy Award for best picture, and
other accolades.
His newest film, starring Viola Davis -- the first black woman to be
nominated for three Academy Awards, winning one for "Fences" last year
-- was adapted from Lynda La Plante's 1983-85 British television series,
which McQueen says "just spoke to me as a 13-year-old black boy in
London."
"On screen, these four women were being judged by their appearance
rather than their character," McQueen told a press conference in Toronto
for the film's world premiere.
"And at that point I was too."
In the film, Viola Davis plays Veronica who lives a cushy life in
Chicago bought by her partner Rawlins (Liam Neeson) robbing people.
When a job goes wrong leaving Rawlins's gang dead, a local crime boss
(Brian Tyree Henry) and his muscle (Daniel Kaluuya) come looking for the
money, forcing Veronica to enlist the other women who lost their
partners (Michelle Rodriguez, Cynthia Erivo and Elizabeth Debicki) for a
heist of their own, in order to win their lives back.
"The best thing we have going for us is being who we are, because no one
thinks we have the balls to pull this off," Veronica says in the film.
Rodriguez's character Linda adds: "If this whole thing goes wrong, I
want my kids to know that I didn't just sit there and take it, I did
something."
The film, co-written by Gillian Flynn ("Gone Girl", also stars Jacki Weaver, Colin Farrell and Robert Duvall.
- 'Kicking ass' -
"These women are absolutely catapulted together in dire circumstances
and I think it's a terrific metaphor for how change happens, because
change happens when you're forced into it kicking and screaming and
these women are forced to take ownership of their lives," Davis said.
"I certainly loved kicking ass," she added.
Cynthia Erivo, making her feature film debut, commented: "It's rare that
we find a film that allows women to work together in their own
individual ways.
"Each one of these women has their quirk, they're all very different and
yet somehow they find connection with each other and they help each
other take control of their individual lives."
Hans Zimmer, who scored the film, had actually worked on the original television series.
He described how he wanted to believe at the time that the show "was
going to change the world and things were going to get good... and women
were going to have a place and a voice."
But after conversing with McQueen, he felt disheartened because he
realized that in fact "things hadn't gotten better, if anything they had
gotten worse and more brutal and fragmented."
He said he was eager to work on McQueen's film to show women's strength, "because we're all in this together."
A dearth of good roles for women in Hollywood has in recent years precipitated a movement to call for change.
Reflecting on the lack of roles for black women in particular, Davis
said: "I just feel like the narratives that are created in Hollywood
right now have got to become inclusive, they have got to reflect the
changing world and the changing cultures.
"I no longer want to see a movie in which the person of color is
introduced in the second scene and they're the bus driver, the social
worker or the lawyer and people are saying, 'At least they're part of
the cast. They're not part of the main storyline but they're there,'"
she said.
"It's not enough for them to just be there. I want them to be in the story."
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