Ida Lupino, Forgotten Auteur: From Film Noir to the Director’s Chair
Alexandra Seros. Univ. of Texas, $45 (240p) ISBN 978-1-4773-3065-4
Screenwriter Seros debuts with a discerning reevaluation of the directorial career of Ida Lupino (1918–1995), an actor known for her femme fatale roles before she stepped behind the camera in the late 1940s. Seros presents Lupino as an underappreciated pioneer, arguing that her founding of the independent production company the Filmakers, which backed the six movies she directed between 1948 and 1953, put her “at the heart of the independent film movement.” Those six films were daring for tackling taboo issues affecting women, Seros contends, discussing how Lupino had to “tone down the melodrama” to secure the Production Code Administration’s approval for Outrage, about a young woman’s rape. Pushing back against feminist critics who have faulted Lupino’s movies for their conservative endings, Seros posits that the films actually contain overlooked subtleties, pointing out that though Hard, Fast and Beautiful concludes with teenage tennis phenom Florence Farley happily forgoing a sports career for marriage, the final shot of Florence’s mother—who sacrificed so that her daughter might enjoy the financial independence from men she never did—sitting alone with Florence’s trophy sounds a bittersweet note. Seros’s nuanced takes on Lupino’s films and legacy reveal the frustrating strictures of the male-dominated mid-century film industry while making a strong case that her oeuvre deserves critical reappraisal. It’s an overdue celebration of an overlooked trailblazer. (Dec.)
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Reviewed on: 10/01/2024
Genre: Nonfiction