Mark Kermode on… Kathryn Bigelow, a stylish ruffler of feathers

From vampire noir to Bin Laden, Point Break to Detroit, the first woman to win an Oscar for best director has never pulled her punches Watching new Jeff Nichols release The Bikeriders , starring Austin Butler and Tom Hardy as 60s Chicago greasers, I was reminded of two other movies: László Benedek’s 1953 Marlon Brando vehicle The Wild One , explicitly cited as an inspiration, and The Loveless , the 1981 feature debut of Kathryn Bigelow , the American film-maker (b.1951) who would go on to become the first woman to win a best director Oscar with her 2008 war drama The Hurt Locker . A symphony of leather-clad posing (with just a touch of Kenneth Anger ), The Loveless was a staple of the late-night circuit in the 80s, often on a double bill with David Lynch’s Eraserhead . Sharing directing credits with Monty Montgomery, Bigelow playfully deconstructed masculinity and machismo in a manner that was one part wry to two parts relish. I remember seeing The Loveless at the Phoenix in East

Geena Davis States That In The 1980s, She Rejected Sexual Approaches From Jack Nicholson

Geena Davis tells how she supposedly rejected Jack Nicholson's sexual approaches by referencing some words of wisdom from her co-star in Tootsie, Dustin Hoffman. The 66-year-old Oscar winner revealed in an article published on Thursday by The New Yorker that she picked up some valuable acting tips from the 85-year-old veteran actor after being cast opposite him in a romantic comedy in 1982. Hoffman supposedly advised the inexperienced actress to reply, "Well, you're beautiful," to men in the industry who were too eager to get with her because of her looks. I wish I could, but it would kill the chemistry we share. She stated to the publication she would keep that piece of advice for later. When Davis got the role of April Page in Tootsie, she was a New York-based Victoria's Secret lingerie model hoping to get into the theater. She claimed that she and a couple of other actors/models were sent to Hollywood by their modeling agent shortly after the film's release. Davis revealed that Nicholson, 85, "had supper" with the rising star and her contemporaries every night since her agent became aware of him. Davis remembers finding a note under the door from Jack Nicholson's assistant with a phone number on it one day. She called up the Shining star in shock and disbelief, saying she couldn't believe it. Greetings, Mr. Nicholson! Geena is a model, and here she is! Are you calling me? Hey, Geena, he greeted her. When is this going to occur? What she said The reported questioning caught Davis off guard. And I was all like, "Oh, no, why didn't I think this is what it was going to be about?" as she revealed to the New Yorker. But, unfortunately, the words "uh, Jack, I would love to" popped into my thoughts very instantly. You have a lot of visual appeals. But I get the impression that we'll be working together in the not-too-distant future, and I'd hate to have deflated the sexual tension by saying or doing something inappropriate.

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