Posted on 11/03/2003 4:16:06 PM PST by jrherreid
Marketing Outrage
How Miramax uses prejudice to sell its product
By John Herreid
The phone rang, and I picked it up.
Hello. This is Lori Johnson from Miramax. Is this Ignatius Press?
Yes.
Good! Can I talk to you about a movie we have showing in your area? Its a really beautiful film about faith and Catholic culture in Ireland.
Ok.
We can send you passes to a press screening of the film. Its about a convent of nuns in the 1960s
Whats the name?
The Magdalene Sisters.
STARK THEMES
A quick online search showed that The Magdalene Sisters is a movie directed by Peter Mullan, a self-professed Marxist. After opening to critical acclaim in England it has been picked up for distribution in the United States by Miramax, a division of Disney. It garnered the Golden Lion award for best film at the Venice Film Festival in 2002. A few more clicks and I read that the movie had been condemned by the Vatican for its depiction of religious life. From what I had heard from the woman on the phone, it seemed that the last distinction was what Miramax was after: nothing sells like controversy.
I attended the press screening with a friend. We filed into the theater, a hip San Francisco spot known for showing independent movies, especially ones with gay/lesbian themes. We sat down and the movie began.
The Magdalene Sisters, set in the 1960s, depicts the Magdalene laundries in Ireland where fallen women were sent to work. The opening of the film shows a wall with names, looking much like the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, DC. Brigid Therese Mary Charlotte is the background upon which the words BASED ON TRUE EVENTS are superimposed. Subtle.
We see three girls. One is raped at a wedding. When she tells her sister about it, she is promptly sent away. Where is Margaret goin? her young brother cries. No answer.
The second girl has just given birth to an illegitimate child. A priest arrives at the hospital and bullies her into giving the baby away. The sorrowful mother is led away to the laundries.
The third girl is an orphan. A pretty teenager, she flirts with some boys through the iron fence of the orphanage. Branded a temptress, she is also hustled away to the workhouse.
The director, Peter Mullan, is outraged. And he makes damned sure everyone else is, too.
The remainder of the film is designed to provoke gasps of horror, sighs of sympathy, and cries of rage. The mother superior, played by Geraldine McEwan, seems to have been based on equal parts Squeers from Nicholas Nickleby and Scrooge McDuck. Her day consists of beating girls with canes, belts, and whatnot, and cackling over the hoards of money brought in from their work. The camera lingers over the crisp paper notes as the nun lovingly packs them away in cookie tins.
The other nuns range from sadistic to sadistic. Scenes in the movie show them feasting on sausages and bacon as the girls eat colorless gruel, and forcing the girls to strip and parade for them as the nuns make cruel jibes about their bodies. The three priests portrayed arent any better. Two are cruel monsters who have a puritanical zeal to rival any 19th century Calvinist, and the third a sexual pervert who preys on a simple-minded girl at the laundry. When the girl finally accuses him, shouting Youre not a man of God!, she is hauled away to the insane asylum.
REDEEMING SPIRITUAL VALUE?
Movie critic James Bowman, in giving a negative review of the film, said: Was there among them not the faintest whiff of sanctity, nor a single soul to protest at the scandalous treatment of the girls? To believe that there was not, you would have to be quite as naïve as someone who believed that such things as this film represents never happened at all. But the anti-religious sensibility in our time always tends to overstate its caseperhaps because at some level it must know what a powerful force for good it is trying to portray as unremittingly bad.
The audience reaction was something to behold. Everyone was deeply moved; a movie critic behind me murmured What a powerful film! as I got up to leave. It appeared that no one seemed to mind that there was no alternative provided to counterbalance the evil nuns in the movie. No committed Catholic is shown to be anything less than a sadist, and the conclusion Peter Mullan has come to is that the horror of the laundries is something that is not just natural, but essential to the Catholic faith.
A comparison, which has been made many times by Catholic conservatives, is that no one would dare make such a movie about Muslims or Jews. True, but it misses a point. Jews and Muslims do not have a large number who claim to be Muslim or Jew but deride anything traditional about those religions. The Catholics most influential to the media in this country would like nothing more than to see the Vaticans authority demolished. Their social perspective on such products as The Magdalene Sisters is naturally going to be skewed in favor of the anti-Catholic. This makes it possible for such films or books to be created without widespread condemnation from the American Catholic elite.
CYNICAL MARKETING
What is especially reprehensible about this film is not the film itself, but the way it has been marketed. The original poster reads, Based on true events. Good enough, but the trailer says in a dramatic voice-over The true story of three courageous women which is an out-and-out falsehood. As Mullan explained in an interview, he didnt do any research in writing and directing this film other than watching a BBC documentary about the Magdalene laundries. Furthermore, Miramax specifically approached traditionally minded Catholic publications, attempting to shock and outrage them by presenting the movie as a heartwarming story of faith. Here in San Francisco, Miramax handed out free passes for a screening of the film by taking out ads in local newspapers. To qualify for the free tickets, you had to answer a series of questions correctlyquestions that would be known primarily by devout Catholics, such as biographical information about saints, trivia about Church dogma, etc. It seems Miramax wanted not just a campaign of outrage from the orthodox Catholic media, but a word-of-mouth condemnation as well.
And it has worked. William Donohue of the Catholic League played into the Miramax trap, ending up having his organization being quoted in an embarrassingly naïve statement as a spokesman for the U.S.-based Catholic League quickly defended the asylums as appropriate to the social standards of their day (SF Weekly, July 30th). Other Catholic groups will surely follow, and build up a storm of controversy that will only lead more people to see the film. Its genius really, and its a marketing move that only works when you exploit Catholics. This campaign leaves orthodox Catholics between a rock and a hard place. Either condemn something that you know is wrong and thereby provide more publicity for it, or remain silent and let it get a free pass.
Companies like Miramax know this, which makes their marketing of outrage a sure thing a strategy that they can utilize time and again. Dont bother trying to shame them out of itas everyone knows; Hollywood lost its sense of shame as soon as it could walk.
This article appeared in the November 2003 issue of The Catholic World Report
Good! Can I talk to you about a movie we have showing in your area? Its a really beautiful film about faith and Catholic culture in Ireland.
You have got to be kidding!
Yes, but if you made a movie that attacked observant Jews, most of these liberal Jews would complain. They don't follow the traditions of their forefathers, but they do respect them. I.e. Speilberg, Dershowitz, Lieberman.
Since they called you first, you got to write the article!
I will never forget Mark Green saying of the Hasidim, "They are not my kind of Jews."
Tikkun gave it a positive review.
<a href="http://www.momentmag.com/archive/apr01/feat1.html>Moment</a> gave it a positive review.<P>
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