The thriller “Equity”—written, directed and produced by women—aims to show the sexist realities of being hotshot female investment bankers working on Wall Street.”>
Between Patricia Arquettes rousing 2015 Oscar acceptance speech and the Sony hacking scandal, which revealed that Jennifer Lawrence was paid less than her male co-stars, Hollywoods perceived gender problem has become a political lightning rod, with actresses, producers, and directors decrying an industry where women still play second fiddle to men.
Last year, The New York Times ran a magazine cover story about sexism in Hollywood with personal anecdotes and troubling statistics: In 2013 and 2014, for example, only 1.9 percent of directors in the 100 top-grossing movies were women. Even the feds are investigating gender discrimination in the industry.
Hollywoods Kathleen Kennedys and Kathryn Bigelows are anomalies. Talking about the issue raises awareness, but how do you actually change the narrative?
One way is to rewrite it yourself.
Thats what Sarah Megan Thomas and Alysia Reiner did when conceiving Equity, a thriller about female executives on Wall Street that is released this Friday. Its arguably the first movie since Working Girl (1988) to feature a woman on the rise in the notoriously male arena of finance.
In recent Wall Street films like The Big Short and The Wolf of Wall Street, women are mostly trophy wives, bit players, and playthings.
The women in Equity, by contrast, are hotshot investment bankers who command boardrooms and land deals. Theyre professionally ambitious and they like money, as Equitys protagonist, Naomi Bishop, declares early in the film.
I am so glad that its finally acceptable for women to sit and talk about ambition openly, Bishop, played by Anna Gunn of Breaking Bad, says while speaking at her alma mater. But dont let money be a dirty word. We can like that, too.
Thomas and Reiner, both producers and co-stars in Equity, sought out some two dozen powerfulWall Streetwomenpast and presentto finance the film and provide much of its material: stories about the challenges of being a woman in an alpha male industry.
Working with Thomas and Reiner, screenwriter Amy Fox and director Meera Menon rounded out the films all-female creative team.
Equity follows Bishop (Gunn), a top-tier investment banker in her 40s, as she woos a tech firm to secure their big IPO, keeping her eye on the prize despite sexist slights at every turn. She also has to contend with self-doubt on the heels of a recently botched deal.
Bishop knows shes talented and focused enough to get it right this time around, but her gender works to her disadvantage in the predictable ways we hear about it working against other women in the workplace.
Early in the film, when she approaches her male boss about a promotion, he dismisses her: This doesnt look like its going to be your year. The perception is that you rubbed some people the wrong way.
Its the kind of remark that Barbara Byrne, a vice chairwoman of banking at Barclays who rose to prominence as an investment banker at Lehman Brothers in the 1980s, still deals with as an industry veteran.
Weve all had that experience of being a person who is rubbing someone the wrong way, said Byrne, a co-producer of Equity, during a panel discussion after a screening this week. Just a few weeks ago, I was told after a meeting that Id been overbearing, she continued. I said, Is that because I had an opinion or because I was correct?
The audience laughed at this shrewd retort.
Sallie Krawcheck, another Wall Street vet who consulted on the film and has held top jobs at Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, and Bank of America, spoke about the likability factor for high-powered women and female bosses, particularly in male-centric industries.
She cited Hillary Clintons likability issues, along with research that found likability and success were positively correlated in men, but inversely correlated in women.
Its funny how unlikable I was when I was running Merrill Lynch but how likable I was after I was fired, Krawcheck said during the panel discussion.
Marissa Mayer, once the darling of the media when she started out at Yahoo in 2012, echoed Byrne and Krawcheck in a post-mortem interview with the Financial Times, having agreed to sell Yahoo to Verizon for $4.8 billion on Monday.
We all see the things that only plague women leaders, like articles that focus on their appearance, like Hillary Clinton sporting a new pantsuit, Mayer said. I think all women are aware of that, but I had hoped in 2015 and 2016 that I would see fewer articles like that. Its a shame.
One wonders if her criticism of the medias gender-charged reporting was a reference to, among other things, how her very brief maternity leave was debated ad nauseum in the press.
Equity broaches the career-and-motherhood balancing act with Bishops younger protg, an opportunistic vice president named Erin Manning (played by Thomas). She successfully conceals her pregnancy from everyone but Bishop, who denies her a promotion before she discovers that Manning is knocked up.
Their mentor-mentee relationship becomes increasingly strained from that moment: Manning suspects being pregnant makes her even less likely to get the promotion. Her husband is beaming by her side during her first ultrasound, but shes so singularly focused on climbing the corporate ladder that she scrambles for her buzzing iPhone.
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