Image by José Cruz/ABr CC-BY-SA-3.0
Last year, independent film icon and NYU professor Spike Lee turned to the crowdsourcing site Kickstarter to raise $ 1.25 million dollars for his latest film. To drum up publicity, he published his list of 87 âessentialâ movies that he hands out in his graduate film classes. And it is a very idiosyncratic list. Some great, overlooked movies like Charles Burnettâs Killer of Sheep and Steve Jamesâs Hoop Dreams make the cut while other inclusions are more puzzling — Mel Gibsonâs Apocalypto, for instance. Or Abel Ferreraâs Bad Lieutenant. The listâs exclusions, however, raised eyebrows. Citizen Kane (?!) somehow didnât get a mention. Neither did Seven Samurai. Stanley Kubrickâs Spartacus somehow won out over 2001: A Space Oddity. And such canonical directors as Yasujiro Ozu, Ingmar Bergman, Fritz Lang, John Ford and Charlie Chaplin were left out entirely.
But the internet really took Lee to task for the listâs most glaring omission â there are no women. To that last issue, Lee made amends. In his updated blog entry â âThank You For That Coat Pullingâ â Lee revamped the list to include eight movies by five female directors, bringing the total to 95.
- The Piano- Jane Campion (1993)
- Daughters of the Dust- Julie Dash (1991)
- The Hurt Locker- Kathryn Bigelow (2008)
- Sugar Cane Alley - Euzhan Palcy (1983)
- The Seduction of Mimi- Lina Wertmuller (1972)
- Love and Anarchy - Lina Wertmuller (1973)
- Swept Away - Lina Wertmuller (1974)
- Seven Beauties –Â Lina Wertmuller (1975)
Three of the four women ever to be nominated for a Best Director Oscar wound up on the list â Wertmuller, Champion, Bigelow. I guess Lee isnât a fan of Sophia Coppola.
Lina Wertmuller managed to get four films on the new list â a feat not shared by any of her male counterparts. Thatâs right, she bested Kurosawa, Kubrick and Hitchcock. In her heyday, Wertmuller courted controversy by combining sex and left wing politics, which sounds right up Leeâs alley. Fairly or not, Wertmullerâs reputation hasnât aged well, mostly because feminist critics pilloried her movie for being misogynous. And Guy Ritchieâs unfortunate remake of her 1974 movie Swept Away, starring Madonna, did little to burnish her prestige.
Also on the list is Julie Dashâs Daughter of the Dust, a lyrical landmark of indie cinema about Gullah women living on one of South Carolinaâs barrier islands, and French director Euzhan Palcyâs little seen Sugar Cane Alley is about blacks toiling in the sugar cane fields of rural Martinique.
Indiewire notes that Leeâs additions bump the gender disparity up from 0% to about 8.7%. Thatâs not a lot, but according to Celluloid Ceilingâs 2013 report, itâs better than it is currently in Hollywood. Of the top 250 earning movies last year, only 6 were directed by women.
You can see Leeâs original list below:
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The 10 Greatest Films of All Time According to 846 Film Critics
Jonathan Crow is a Los Angeles-based writer and filmmaker whose work has appeared in Yahoo!, The Hollywood Reporter, and other publications. You can follow him at @jonccrow. And check out his blog Veeptopus, featuring lots of pictures of vice presidents with octopuses on their heads.  The Veeptopus store is here.
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Spike Leeâs List of 95 Essential Movies â Now with Women Filmmakers
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