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IMDbPro

Miss Representation

  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
3.9K
YOUR RATING
Miss Representation (2011)
Trailer for Miss Representation
Play trailer2:50
1 Video
99+ Photos
Documentary

Explores the under-representation of women in positions of power and influence in America, and challenges the media's limited portrayal of what it means to be a powerful woman.Explores the under-representation of women in positions of power and influence in America, and challenges the media's limited portrayal of what it means to be a powerful woman.Explores the under-representation of women in positions of power and influence in America, and challenges the media's limited portrayal of what it means to be a powerful woman.

  • Director
    • Jennifer Siebel Newsom
  • Writers
    • Jacoba Atlas
    • Jessica Congdon
    • Claire Dietrich
  • Stars
    • Jennifer Siebel Newsom
    • Jean Kilbourne
    • Jim Steyer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    3.9K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jennifer Siebel Newsom
    • Writers
      • Jacoba Atlas
      • Jessica Congdon
      • Claire Dietrich
    • Stars
      • Jennifer Siebel Newsom
      • Jean Kilbourne
      • Jim Steyer
    • 23User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Miss Representation
    Trailer 2:50
    Miss Representation

    Photos103

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    Top cast99+

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    Jennifer Siebel Newsom
    Jennifer Siebel Newsom
    • Self
    Jean Kilbourne
    Jean Kilbourne
    • Self - Filmmaker, 'Killing Us Softly', Author and Senior Scholar, Wellesley Centers for Women
    • (as Jean Kilbourne EdD)
    Jim Steyer
    Jim Steyer
    • Self - CEO, Common Sense Media, Lawyer & Professor of Civil Rights, Stanford University
    Katie Couric
    Katie Couric
    • Self - Anchor, CBS Evening News
    Margaret Cho
    Margaret Cho
    • Self - Comedienne, Actor & Activist
    Meenakshi Durham
    Meenakshi Durham
    • Self - Author 'The Lolita Effect', Associate Professor of Journalism, University of Iowa
    • (as M. Gigi Durham)
    Jennifer Pozner
    Jennifer Pozner
    • Self - Executive Director Women in Media & News, Author Reality Bites Back
    Caroline Heldman
    Caroline Heldman
    • Self - Associate Professor of Political Science, Occidental College
    • (as Caroline Heldman Ph.D.)
    Pat Mitchell
    Pat Mitchell
    • Self - President & CEO, Paley Center for Media, Former President & CEO of PBS
    Gavin Newsom
    Gavin Newsom
    • Self - Lieutenant Governor, California, Former Mayor of San Francisco
    Gloria Steinem
    Gloria Steinem
    • Self - Feminist Organizer & Writer, Co-Founder Women's Media Center
    Jennifer Lawless
    Jennifer Lawless
    • Self - Associate Professor of Government, Director, Women & Politics Institute, American University
    Cory Booker
    Cory Booker
    • Self - Mayor of Newark, New Jersey
    Condoleezza Rice
    Condoleezza Rice
    • Self - Former U.S. Secretary of State, Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, Professor of Political Economy, Stanford University
    Dolores Huerta
    Dolores Huerta
    • Self - Activist & Co-Founder, United Farm Workers Union, Dolores Huerta Foundation
    Marie Wilson
    Marie Wilson
    • Self - Founding President, The White House Project
    Devanshi Patel
    Devanshi Patel
    • Self - High School Senior
    Ranna Patel
    Ranna Patel
    • Self - Devanshi's Mother
    • Director
      • Jennifer Siebel Newsom
    • Writers
      • Jacoba Atlas
      • Jessica Congdon
      • Claire Dietrich
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    7.53.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7darladark

    Thought provoking and well summarised but production quality varied

    The overall aim of this documentary is well received. It's clear what the subject is and it makes its points clearly. But the editing and production was a little confusing at times, and I found the narration of the producer to be at times not really related to the context. I understand the role of bringing it back to a newly born child. I also felt there could have been a greater emphasis on what society should do, not just on women lifting women up. As a mother of boys, I felt that part was missing. Overall though, really good work
    makhrinskyd

    Honest, but could be understood under several lenses

    While I agree that there is a huge disparity between the way that men and women are represented in the media, I believe that this documentary raises the right concerns without attempting to find a resolution. The resolution is not easy, and will not happen overnight but there should be more that women, and young women can do to improve depictions of themselves in mass media. On the other hand, this video places high stress on shattering media's depiction of beauty, while presenting women who are very obviously wearing a large amount of make up and are all on the thinner side of the body spectrum. I am not insisting that the women featured in this documentary should be bare faced or at an unhealthy size, but I do think that there should be a larger variety of women represented in the film because in this way they are still conforming to ideals that they themselves are attempting to break from.

    From an educational perspective, it is important for young women aged 12+ to watch this film and understand that they have the power to change the portrayal of their gender in the media from "Politician Barbie" to politician by challenging criticism and taking it in stride. I am hoping to see a second part to this documentary in the coming years, perhaps with more testimonials from young women and media figures.
    9StevePulaski

    It's an American problem

    Some will see Miss Representation as a bunch of hack women complaining about a problem and are not willing to do anything about it. It's an understandable reaction. I've seen so many documentaries that bathe the viewer in paranoia and fear without providing valid solutions or ways that they could fix potential problems. Food, Inc. for example; a well-made, yet somewhat heavy-handed documentary on the exploitation of how our food is made.

    Miss Representation's goal is to inform people about the blatant sexism in Television, advertising, society, politics, and film. It does a very nice job at providing each of their subjects with material and substance, also giving them enough time to get their point across. I believe more than eight minutes is devoted to the political aspect, and several more to Television and film. For an eighty-eight minute documentary, it covers a lot of heavy territory, and even, gasp, includes efficient solutions during the end credits.

    The interviewees are Geena Davis, Condoleezza Rice, Lisa Ling, Nancy Pelosi, Katie Couric, Rosario Dawson, Jim Steyer, Dr. Jackson Katz, and Gloria Steinem, who all comment on the media's insidiously harmful portrayal of women. Comments are made on how advertising has evolved from genial snippets into racy, sexploitation spots begging to be noticed and controversial. It has been proved in the field of advertising that sex sells, and companies race their commercials and magazine advertisements to an invisible finish line to see who can be more daring and provocative.

    But what are the consequences for imposing such demeaning pictures of women? For one, there's the obligatory "striving for unsustainable beauty" argument. I don't think there is one person who believes that what they see on the front cover on a tabloid or a magazine has not been digitally altered or photoshopped in some way, shape, or form. Most likely, all three of those things have been changed on a picture of a woman, and it's not hard to find out. How many women do you know have pearly white skin and don't occupy a single blemish, mole, pimple, or scar? I remember on KISS FM's "DreX in the Morning" radio program they discussed how parental browbeating and mediocre, sometimes abusive relationships affect a woman's already fragile self-esteem and worth. They brought up how on a magazine cover, Brittney Spears' face was photoshopped onto the body she occupied in the nineties.

    Miss Representation doesn't break new ground or uncover anything that wasn't pretty much known before, but will likely be useful to teenage girls who are perhaps unaware of the media bias. I unfortunately missed a screening of this at my high school and a lengthy lecture following it. It would've been nice to see audiences reactions in the flesh. I can see some dismissing this as mock-feminist propaganda and I can see people being truly informed and moved by this documentary. Me, I stand where I usually am; in the middle. This is a well made documentary, but not without my personal quibbles and questions. For one, the film mentions that there are very few women directors, screenwriters, cinematographers, etc. Okay, but are women being forced out by the big, bad man, or are they just not showing a genuine interest in the behind the scenes aspects of the film industry? Another thing I must bring up; maybe it's not the studios' fault that women are portrayed so dimly in film. You can't tell me that actresses like Megan Fox and Jessica Simpson don't contract themselves to basically flaunt their stuff in films like The Dukes of Hazzard and Transformers. They know what they're getting into, and appear to have no problem showing what they have. I'm not saying it's right, but maybe the film is too quick to point figures at the provider rather than the person signing the contract and giving consent to be used as a basic caricature.

    Director Jennifer Siebel Newsom has done a bold and admirable thing releasing Miss Representation, not only letting it glide its way around the country in screenings, but by giving the distribution rights to The Oprah Winfrey Network. This is an informative and amusing documentary showing us that our biggest source of information also serves as our biggest influence on people, good and bad. I'll leave off with a quote from Jim Steyer, one of my favorite speakers in the film; "It's not a Liberal or Conservative issue; it's an American issue and an American problem." Starring: Geena Davis, Condoleezza Rice, Lisa Ling, Nancy Pelosi, Katie Couric, Rosario Dawson, Jim Steyer, Dr. Jackson Katz, and Gloria Steinem. Directed by: Jennifer Siebel Newsom.
    8alewarn

    No

    Miss representation is a film that does not say anything that people who were interested in feminism did not already know before but yet still sends a powerful message. Just the other day I was asked why the media should change when they are making so much money off of the objectification and stereotypes of women and this film shows viewers exactly why. This movie highlights what an extremely powerful and dangerous tool the media is in how young women come to view themselves and their standing in the world. This documentary shows multiple examples of how women are portrayed in extremely sexual ways almost to be viewed as objects, and when they are not being treated like sexual objects they are being treated with extreme violence in the media. This documentary not only highlights how fictional female characters are being portrayed but also how some of the most powerful and respected women today, such as Hillary Clinton, are completely ignored for what they have accomplished and instead just ridiculed for how they look. Some of you may be wondering what the big deal is that the media portrays women this way and this documentary will serve you well because it shows that the media's representation of women directly effects not only how other people treat women, but also how young women come to look at themselves, and also feeds directly into what women are taught to value about themselves, looks over brains. The media may not be the only thing that feeds into the constant degradation of women but this movie illustrates to the viewer that changing the way that women are represented could be an important first step in the fight for equality.
    6tvtiguy

    Worth watching, but not stellar execution

    First off - I'm a guy. Albeit a guy who had graduate level feminist media theory classes 20 years ago - I'm a guy none-the-less. And I think people who know me would probably consider me "a guy's guy" overall.

    The film is filled with much of what we studied in graduate school in the early 90s. So I guess there was a lot of "no duh" moments for me in it. But if it opens some people's eyes then it's worth it. The messages are essential to the health of our daughters, sons and country as a whole. Many of what I thought were the most important parts of the film were "glossed over," but that may be my view/perspective. For example, to me THE MOST important point in the film is that TV shows are essentially "made for men 18-34." Why - because that demographic doesn't really watch TV unless they're driven to the set somehow. TV show creators don't worry about women - because women watch TV anyway.

    Think about that - most of us can agree that most of what's on TV is crap. And yet, the people who make TV don't worry about losing the female audience at all. Until women turn off the crap on TV, I doubt that will change.

    Hit or miss (no pun intended) outing for a first time director. Great messages, important content, mediocre execution. Probably too much "sexual imagery" for me to let my 12 year old daughter watch it - but soon. And everyone over 15 should be aware of the subject matter. This is as good a way as any.

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    Related interests

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    Documentary

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Herself - Associate Professor of Political Science, Occidental College: Women who are high self-objectifiers have lower political efficacy. Political efficacy is the idea that your voice matters in politics and that you can bring about change in politics. So if we have a whole generation of young people being raised where women's objectification is just par for the course, it's normal, it's okay, we have a whole generation of women who are less likely to run for office and less likely to vote.

    • Connections
      Features Baby Face (1933)
    • Soundtracks
      Help, I'm Alive
      Written by Emily Haines and James Shaw

      Performed by Metric

      Courtesy of Metric Music International

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    FAQ17

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 15, 2014 (Netherlands)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Miss Escaparate
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Girls' Club Entertainment
      • Pacific Gas and Electric
      • The Brin Wojcicki Foundation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $750,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 25m(85 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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