
Molly Haskell (born September 29, 1939 in Charlotte, North Carolina) is a feminist film critic and author. Her most influential book is From Reverence to Rape: the Treatment of Women in the Movies (1974; revised and reissued in 1987). She also co-hosted Turner Classic Movies's The Essentials with Robert Osborne in 2006 for one season.
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Although Haskell was born in North Carolina she grew up in Richmond, Virginia. Haskell attended a few different schools during her education years. She attended Sweet Briar College, the University of London and the Sorbonne before settling down in New York. While there she wrote a newsletter about French films for the New York press. For the opening of new films in America, within the newsletter she interpreted the directors that came to America. To begin as a critic she then went to the Village Voice then became a movie reviewer. Finally Haskell found a steady career with the New York Magazine and Vogue. She is married to fellow critic Andrew Sarris.
When Haskell published From Reverence to Rape it was one of the first books to chronicle women's images in film. It and Marjorie Rosen's Popcorn Venus typified the first feminist expeditions into film history and criticism, adopting the "image of woman" approach. Later developments in feminist film theory have partially rejected Haskell's and Rosen's approach as rudimentary.
One particularly influential chapter in From Reverence to Rape discusses the genre of the "woman's film".
As Haskell points out, woman's film could be a compensation for "all the dominated universes from which she has been excluded: the gangster film, the Western, the war film, the policier, the rodeo film, the adventure film." A woman's film is also more self-pitying in comparison to the male adventure film which Raymond Durgnat calls the "male weepies." The man's film abstracts the times before settling down, when men were battling nature or the enemy. Marriage becomes the killjoy. "All the excitement of life occurs outside of marriage. At a soap opera level, which Haskell considers the lowest level, a woman's film "fills a masturbatory need, it is soft-core emotional porn for the frustrated housewife." These "weepies" are focused on "self-pity and tears, to accept, rather than reject".(155)
Haskell contends, "The domestic and the romantic are entwined, one redeeming the other, in the theme of self-sacrifice, which is the mainstay and oceanic force, high tide and low ebb, of the woman's film" (157).
In the 1930s and 40's most films end tragically.
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