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ARCHIVE

8th(2006)



She¡¯s Beautiful When She¡¯s Angry

New York Newsreel

  • USA
  • 1967
  • 17min
  • Beta
  • black and white

SYNOPSIS

A film documenting guerrilla theater that took place during an abortion rally in 1969. Women playing the roles of a capitalist, an advertiser, a boyfriend, and a mother demand a young woman become the ideal woman, a beautiful and efficient wife who can perfectly tend to household chores. In a public space where there is no separate stage, the performers become one with the audience with whom they discuss each of their roles and relationships. The audience exhibit direct and unfiltered agreement and anger. A lively and effective consciousness-raising takes place on film.
 (Cho Hye-young)
 

PROGRAM NOTE

A film documenting guerrilla theater that took place during an abortion rally in 1969. Women playing the roles of a capitalist, an advertiser, a boyfriend, and a mother demand a young woman become the ideal woman, a beautiful and efficient wife who can perfectly tend to household chores. In a public space where there is no separate stage, the performers become one with the audience with whom they discuss each of their roles and relationships. The audience exhibit direct and unfiltered agreement and anger. A lively and effective consciousness-raising takes place on film.
 (Cho Hye-young)
 

Director

  • New York NewsreelNew York Newsreel

    In 1967, independent filmmakers and activists including Robert Kramer launched the Newsreel movement in order to take active part in social resistance. The media¡¯s distortion of the large-scale anti-war rally that took place in front of the Department of Defense in 1967 triggered the Newsreel movement which instantaneously spread nationwide. To separate itself from other Newsreel organizations in Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Vermont, the New York center was called the New York Newsreel, which changed its name to Third World Newsreel in 1974. Some fifty-odd members including Geri Ashur, director of Janie¡¯s Janie (1971) and Christine Choy of To Love, Honor & Obey, were actively involved in the New York Newsreel, quickly putting together works on social issues and activism that media outlets would usually shy away from, and distributing the films to schools and activist organizations. Their goal was to promote resistance against war, imperialism and discrimination based on sex, class and race. The films co-directed by women filmmakers who worked at New York Newsreel include Make Out (1972), She¡¯s Beautiful When She¡¯s Angry (1967), and Up Against the Wall, Miss America (1968). Other works include, Columbia Revolt (1968), Summer ¡¯68 (1969), No Game (1968), Black Panther (1968) and People¡¯s War (1969).

Credit

  • ProducerNew York Newsreel