If Blonde is a feminist film, why is Marilyn Monroe still being exploited? | Martha Gill
There is scarcely a scene in Blonde, Netflix's new Marilyn biopic, in which Monroe is not topless, crying, being raped or having a forced abortion. Thinking gritty realism? Think again. The whole thing is shot in dreamy high-glamour soft focus, with arty choices and the occasional cameo from a squeaky-voiced foetus. As for realism, some of this stuff didn't even happen - there is no evidence for the abortions, for example - and much is left out. Filmmaker Andrew Dominik told interviewers Monroe's activism and success wresting control from a male-dominated industry - forming her own production company, for example - were not so interesting to me".
At present there's something of a fetish for biopics about exploited female celebrities, which tout themselves as feminist while dwelling lasciviously on the suffering of their subjects. Take Pam & Tommy, about the famous sex tape, or Judy, which portrays Judy Garland in her last days, or the endless revisiting of the unravellings of Princess Diana, in ever tighter closeup.
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