Réalisé par Gail Singer |
Canada, 1997 (documentaire, 96 minutes, couleurs, anglais) |
Autre |
Image : © Office national du film du Canada |
Description du film [en anglais] : « A documentary with a punch, You Can't Beat a Woman delves into violence against women, journeying to six very different countries. In segments shot in Canada, Russia, Israel, South Africa, Chile and Japan, women survive their violent relationships with men. Reclaiming their lives from experiences of rape, incest and verbal and physical abuse, they search for sources of healing. Sometimes shocking, sometimes uplifting, the film presents a provocative perspective on the universal issue of women's human rights. » -- Office national du film du Canada (source) |
Générique (partiel) : | |
Scénario : | Gail Singer |
Produit par : | Joe MacDonald, Gail Singer, Ches Yetman, Graydon McCrea |
Narrateur : | Gail Singer |
Montage images : | David New |
Musique : | Donald Quan |
Société de production : | National Film Board of Canada / Office national du film du Canada |
« A feature-length documentary about battered women may not sound like your idea of a good time, but Gail Singer is a witty, irreverent film director with a knack for confounding expectations. You Can't Beat a Woman, which opens at Toronto's Carlton Cinema in mid-January and will also turn up shortly in Winnipeg, Vancouver and Ottawa, is far from the grim ordeal you might expect, given the topic. Singer has been tracking this subject for the better part of two decades. In 1979, she made a 25-minute film called Loved, Honored and Bruised, in which an abused Winnipeg woman named Jeannie Fox and her husband talked with startling candor about their own domestic violence. A few years ago, the National Film Board asked Singer to make a full-length documentary on the subject of wife-battering, but she realized that a solemn, straightforward approach would no longer work. »
-- Martin Knelman
(source)
« You Can't Beat a Woman [is] a sprawling, long, ambitious
take on the theme of domestic violence and recovery. It crosses five
continents, lasts 94 minutes and has actually devoured her 1977 film
[Loved, Honoured and Bruised] which is deconstructed in the
first half-hour of this new film. In many ways, it is a film about films about
wife battering. »
-- Doug Saunders
(source)