Quote:
"I was a curator-in-the-making who would never have presumed to stage a
women's film festival if not for a fortuitous phone call from the Chicago
Tribune's film critic, Gene Siskel, just back from two weeks of Army Reserve
duty in Washington, D.C. While there, he'd checked out a women's film festival
and was staggered by what he saw: a scene in Mireille Dansereau's Dream Life
that showed a teenage pickup scene from the girl's point of view instead of
the boy's. Bowled over by the difference a woman behind the camera could make,
he'd filed a column for the Tribune announcing that 'it gave me an appetite
for more films conceived and shot from the female point of view. Not because
they necessarily would be better, but because they would be different.'"
-- B. Ruby Rich
Source:
Rich, B. Ruby. Chick Flicks: Theories and Memories of the Feminist Film Movement. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1998.
(p. 33)