Sofia Coppola's triumphant win at Cannes as best director for The Beguiled is the latest in a series of notable successes for a director quietly but forcefully blazing her own trail as a female director in a film world in which most of the awards, kudos and money still go
Director Sofia Coppola soaring on her own terms
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Sofia Coppola's best director award for The Beguiled at Cannes is another win for a CV of films which determinedly evoke the female perspective. Photo / AP
It is depressing - but hardly surprising - then, that when interviewed by David Letterman in October 2004, following her two Academy Award nominations for Lost in Translation (best director and best screenplay), Letterman spent the interview asking her about following in her father's footsteps and what advice he gave. Similarly, when interviewed for Italian television by Anna Praderio on winning the Golden Lion, Coppola was asked whether she was pleased for her father who recently had been given the Irving Thalberg Memorial Award.
Coppola clearly has benefited from her father's contacts and production know-how, using his experience to help her stitch up co-production deals working alongside her brother, Roman (often but not always with Focus Features). But the persistent interest in her position as the child of a famous director never seems to affect sons in the same way. Look at Jason Reitman (son of director and producer Ivan Reitman) or Noah Baumbach (son of film critic Jonathan Baumbach).
Sofia's world
Nor is having a famous movie director as a father a guarantee of the kind of commercial and critical success Sofia Coppola has achieved, as is illustrated by Jennifer Lynch (daughter of David Lynch) and Zoe Cassavetes (daughter of John Cassavetes). What is remarkable is how Coppola has taken the very question of her own privilege - and how it functions as both an enabler and a cage - and explored it across her film worlds.
She places us alongside pampered, privileged daughters - from the adored and luminous Lisbon girls in the Virgin Suicides to the teen queen Marie Antoinette, from a movie star's charming 11-year-old with her ice-skating lessons and gelato fests in an upscale Milan hotel in Somewhere to the scheming wannabes, home educated by a new-age mother and breaking into celebrity mansions at night, in The Bling Ring. She lingers on the textures and delights in these girls' lives, rather than dismissing them as stupid, trivial or useless.
In a world that refuses to take you seriously the decision to find alternative ways of being seems in contrast eminently sensible.
The Beguiled places us in a young ladies' seminary in the Deep South, where all the men have left to fight. An injured soldier turns up and the introduction of a man to the all-female school evokes various passions - the trailer promises kissing, disrobing and tousled sheets. Violence simmers beneath the surface, however, and the trailer finishes with the soldier's distressed call: "What have you done to me, you vengeful bitches?!"
If earlier films have shown us girls attempting to carve out some space for self-expression in a world ruled by dads, here we have a film that shows us women ready to turn to violence to protect their sanctuary. As she emerges from the long shadow cast by her father, making films that determinedly and repeatedly show us stories from the female perspective, Coppola also suggests a new strength both on and off screen.
Fiona Handyside is a senior lecturer in Film Studies, University of Exeter.
- This story first appeared on The Conversation and is republished with permission