Born in Flames

Born in Flames is a 1983 documentary-style feminist fiction film by Lizzie Borden that explores racism, classism, sexism, and heterosexism in an alternative United States socialist democracy.[1] The title comes from the song "Born in Flames" written by a member of Art & Language, Mayo Thompson of the band Red Krayola.[2]

Born in Flames
Directed byLizzie Borden
Produced byLizzie Borden
Written byLizzie Borden
Starring
Music byIbis
Red Krayola
Cinematography
  • Ed Bowes
  • Al Santana Michael Oblowitz
  • Lizzie Borden
Edited byLizzie Borden
Distributed byFirst Run Features
Release date
  • February 20, 1983 (1983-02-20)
Running time
90 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

The plot concerns two feminist groups in New York City, each voicing their concerns to the public by pirate radio. One group, led by an outspoken white lesbian, Isabel (Adele Bertei), operates "Radio Ragazza". The other group, led by a soft-spoken African-American, Honey (Honey), operates "Phoenix Radio." The local community is stimulated into action after a world-traveling political activist, Adelaide Norris (Jean Satterfield), is arrested upon arriving at a New York City airport, and suspiciously dies while in police custody. Also, there is a Women's Army led by Hilary Hurst (Hilary Hurst) and advised by Zella (Flo Kennedy) that initially both Honey and Isabel refuse to join. This group, along with Norris and the radio stations, are under investigation by a callous FBI agent (Ron Vawter). Their progress is tracked by three editors (Becky Johnston, Pat Murphy, Kathryn Bigelow) for a socialist newspaper, who go so far they get fired.

The story involves several different women coming from different perspectives and attempts to show several examples of how sexism plays out on the street, and how it can be dealt with through direct action. At one point, two men attack a woman on the street, and dozens of women on bicycles with whistles come to chase the men away and comfort the woman. The movie shows women, despite their various differences, organizing in meetings, doing radio shows, creating art, wheatpasting, putting a condom on a penis, wrapping raw chicken at a processing plant, etc. The film portrays a world rife with violence against women, high female unemployment, and government oppression. The women in the film start to come together to make a bigger impact, by means that some would call terrorism.

Ultimately, after both radio stations are suspiciously burned down, Honey and Isabel team up and broadcast "Phoenix Ragazza Radio" from stolen U-Haul vans. They also join the Women's Army, which sends a group of terrorists to interrupt a broadcast of the President of the United States proposing that women be paid to do housework, followed by bombing the antenna on top of the World Trade Center to prevent additionally destructive messages from the mainstream.

Cast

  • Honey as Honey, host of the Phoenix Radio
  • Adele Bertei as Isabel, host of the Radio Ragazza
  • Jean Satterfield as Adelaide Norris
  • Florynce Kennedy (credited as "Flo Kennedy") as Zella Wylie
  • Becky Johnston as Becky Dunlop, newspaper editor
  • Pat Murphy as Pat Crosby, newspaper editor
  • Kathryn Bigelow as Kathy Larson, newspaper editor
  • Hillary Hurst as the leader of Women's Army
  • Sheila McLaughlin as other leader
  • Marty Pottenger as other leader/woman at site
  • Bell Chevigny as Belle Gayle, the talk show host
  • Joel Kovel as the talk show guest
  • Ron Vawter as FBI Agent
  • John Coplans as chief
  • John Rudolph as TV newscaster
  • Warner Schreiner as TV newscaster
  • Valerie Smaldone as TV newscaster
  • Hal Miller as detective
  • Bill Tatum as Mayor Zubrinsky
  • Mark Boone Jr. as man in subway harassing woman

This film marks the first screen appearance of Eric Bogosian.[3] He plays a technician at a TV station who is forced at gunpoint to run a videotape on the network feed. The movie also features a rare acting appearance by Academy Award-winning film director Kathryn Bigelow.[1] Story contributor Ed Bowes portrays the head of the socialist newspaper that ultimately fires the female journalists.

Awards

In 1983, the film won the Reader Jury prize at the Berlin International Film Festival and the Grand Prix at the Créteil International Women's Film Festival.

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes, a review aggregator, reports a 79% approval rating based on 12 reviews, with an average rating of 6.94/10.[4] Variety wrote that it has "all the advantages and the disadvantages of a home movie".[5] Janet Maslin of The New York Times wrote, "Only those who already share Miss Borden's ideas are apt to find her film persuasive."[1] Marjorie Baumgarten of The Austin Chronicle wrote, "Beautifully made, courageously edited, and swift-moving, this challenging, provocative film is a work that is both humanist and revolutionary."[6] Frances Dickinson of Time Out London wrote that Borden "[handles] her story with audacity and make[s] even the driest argument crackle with humour, while the more poignant moments burn with a fierce white heat."[7] TV Guide rated it 2/4 stars and wrote, "This feminist film wins laurels for close attention to detail in a radical filmmaking effort."[8] Greg Baise of the Metro Times called it "an early '80s landmark of indie and queer cinema".[9] The film has had experienced somewhat of a renaissance after the 35mm restoration print premiered in 2016 at the Anthology Film Archives. Richard Brody of The New Yorker wrote, "...the free, ardent, spontaneous creativity of “Born in Flames” emerges as an indispensable mode of radical change—one that many contemporary filmmakers with political intentions have yet to assimilate." He also wrote, "Borden's exhilarating collage-like story stages news reports, documentary sequences, and surveillance footage alongside tough action scenes and musical numbers; her violent vision is both ideologically complex and chilling." Melissa Anderson of The Village Voice wrote "this unruly, unclassifiable film — perhaps the sole entry in the hybrid genre of radical-lesbian-feminist sci-fi vérité — premiered two years into the Reagan regime, but its fury proves as bracing today as it was back when this country began its inexorable shift to the right."

gollark: See, powercells *are* somewhat expensive, and placing them on every machine isn't practical.
gollark: But most of the base runs on cabling because it's more cost-effective, and doesn't have the 5%ish loss of powercells.
gollark: What? We totally use wireless power transfer.
gollark: HUMOR 90000
gollark: HAHA YES VERY FUNNY BECAUSE YOU COULD BE MORE HORRIBLE TO THEM BUT AREN'T!¡!¡¡¡!

References

  • The movie refers to many feminist movements and tools, including black feminism, white feminism, consciousness raising, independent radio, and police brutality.
  • There is also a reference to wages for housework, a feminist social movement from the seventies addressing women's reproductive labor, in a scene in which the president announces on TV that “For the first time in our history we’ll provide women with wages for housework”, just before a group of women hijack the broadcast to pass a militant message. This moment in the film highlights political antagonisms, between white hetero-normative feminism and anti-racist and anti-capitalist feminism.[10]
  • The movie refers to US policies like the workfare programme and the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1976, which discriminate single and queer women (news scene where the journalist announces that ‘male heads of families’ would get jobs).[10]
  • Media historian Lucas Hilderbrand made a parallel with A Black Feminist Statement, from the Combahee River Collective (1977), a Black feminist lesbian organization.[11]
  • The film includes the Red Krayola song "Born In Flames", released as a single in 1980,[12] as well as the songs "I’ll Take You There" by the African-American gospel, R&B, and soul group The Staple Singers, "Strange Fruit" by Billie Holiday, "Voodoo Child" by Jimi Hendrix and "New Town" by the British female punk rock group The Slits.
  • The casting of the movie stages civil rights lawyer and activist Florynce "Flo" Kennedy, Adele Bertei from the bands The Bloods and The Contortions, actress Kathryn Bigelow, and actors Ron Vawter and Eric Bogosian.

Influence

The film is discussed in Christina Lane's book Feminist Hollywood: From "Born in Flames" to "Point Break".[13]

A “graphic translation” of the movie made by artist Kaisa Lassinaro, which contains an interview of Lizzie Borden, was published by Occasional Papers in 2011.[14] The book is a collage composition made of screencaps with a selection of dialogues from the movie.

In 2013, a dossier on the film was published as a special issue of Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory.[15] With an introduction from Craig Willse and Dean Spade, the dossier includes a number of essays that address race, queerness, intersectionality, radicalism, violence, and feminism in the film.

The film was restored in 2016 by Anthology Film Archives. The 35mm restoration film premiered in Feb. 2016 at the Anthology. It was very well received, with glowing reviews, from Richard Brody in New Yorker.com, The Political Science Fiction of “Born in Flames” and from many other journalists, including Melissa Anderson in The Village Voice. Borden was invited to show the new 35mm print in Brussels, Barcelona, Madrid, San Sebastian, Milan, Toronto, The Edinburgh Film Festival, The London Film Festival, along with screenings in Detroit, Rochester, San Francisco, Los Angeles and including in series of "films of resistance."

See also

References

  1. Maslin, Janet (November 10, 1983). "Born in Flames (1983) FILM: 'BORN IN FLAMES,' RADICAL FEMINIST IDEAS". The New York Times.
  2. Baise, Greg. "Lizzie Borden talks about her scrappy, feminist magnum opus, 'Born in Flames'". Detroit Metro Times. Retrieved 2017-08-21.
  3. "Eric Bogosian Biography". Film Reference. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  4. "Born in Flames (1983)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 2019-07-09.
  5. "Review: 'Born in Flames'". Variety. 1984. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  6. Baumgarten, Marjorie (2001-06-20). "Born in Flames". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  7. Dickinson, Frances. "Born in Flames". Time Out London. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  8. "Born In Flames". TV Guide. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  9. Baise, Greg (2010-06-16). "Born in Flames". Metro Times. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  10. Beth Capper (2017) Domestic Unrest, Third Text, 31:1, p. 97-116
  11. Lucas Hilderbrand, ‘In the Heat of the Moment: Notes on the Past, Present, and Future of Born in Flames’, Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory, vol 23, no 1, 2013, p 8
  12. "The Red Crayola* – Born In Flames". discogs.com. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
  13. Kessler, Kelly (2001-03-22). "Feminist Hollywood: From Born in Flames to Point Break.(Book Review)". Velvet Light Trap. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2015-04-11.
  14. Born in Flames, Occasional Papers, 2011, ISBN 978-0-9562605-9-8
  15. "Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory - Volume 23, Issue 1". www.tandfonline.com. Retrieved 2015-12-07.
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