Stop Saying That the Future of Female Superheroes is Tied to Agent Carter’s Success

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Since Marvel’s Agent Carter was announced, everyone has acted as though the world was on its shoulders. Well, the world of female superheroes anyway. There was the idea that if Agent Carter succeeded then we would finally have proof audiences want to watch women in leading roles. The problem with this idea is that it assumes there is something to prove when there isn’t. The proof is already there. People WILL pay to see women in leading roles. That is a fact. Anyone that says any different is wrong or lying. The reason they’re not making more female-led media is because THEY DON’T WANT TO, and we’ve got to stop buying into the excuses for what is quite simply the result of sexism.

Every year, hundreds of articles are posted decreeing the end of the idea that female-led movies don’t make money. What they’re saying is true, but it’s also completely unnecessary. We know female-led movies make money. Do you know how we know this? Because they told us last year. And the year before that. In fact, they tell us every single time something starring women is successful. Yet they continue to think that this constitutes news, time and time again. And they continue to pin the hopes of all future female-led projects on whatever female protagonist has managed to exist despite the systematic sexism in her way.

Need proof that women-led blockbusters are successful? Here’s just a sample of the many articles that have been posted over the last few years.

  • How Women Led Disney to Its Most Successful Year Ever – Glamour: “What’s made 2014 so special, you ask? A winning group of lovable lady characters, talented women actresses, and breakthrough female writers combining for a trifecta of unprecedented success.”
  • Women Are the Successes of the Summer Box Office – Forbes: “The Fault in Our Stars is the latest example of the female audience’s — especially the young female audience’s — ability to make a movie a success. Women made up 82% of the opening-weekend audience, and 80% of those women were under 25.  As of now, it has grossed $286 million worldwide — and it only cost $12 million to make. And don’t forget that Woodley had another box-office hit this year with Divergent to the tune of $274 million worldwide. She is a box-office force to be reckoned with.”
  • Movies With Strong Female Roles Make More Money – Time: “2013 movies that passed the Bechdel test did better at the box office those movies that did pass the test had significantly higher domestic box office numbers than the movies that didn’t pass. Featuring strong female characters in a film earned studios billions of extra dollars.”
  • Scarlett Johansson, Lucy and the Future of the Female Action Star – Time: “The film scored $2.7 million at the Thursday box office, beating outHercules, which stars a traditionally macho hero, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.”

Then there’s the fact that The Hunger Games sequels have been the highest grossing films in the domestic box office for the last two years. Need more? io9 has a long list of female-lead action movies that were financially successful, including basically every action flick Angelina Jolie has ever starred in, as well as classics like Aliens and Terminator 2: Judgement Day. More? Bridesmaids, The Heat, Gravity, Kill Bill – Parts 1 & 2, G.I. Jane, Charlie’s Angels, and of course fracking Frozen. If you had to ask a child what they wanted for Christmas last year, you’ll understand Frozen’s popularity.

A recent study by the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University showed that there were fewer roles for women in 2014.  So the fact that there were so many female-led films that shone despite the lack of opportunities suggests that statistically movies about women are probably more likely to succeed financially. It’s more of a gamble to make movies about male characters really – do you know how many of those flop? A LOT. I mean every subsequent Spider-Man movie makes less money and they keep making those. Rebooting Spider-Man, that’s a financial and critical risk. Making a movie with a female protagonist is not.

Let’s just accept the fact that female-led movies are not a risk. It should go without saying, so don’t say it. That way we can focus on the real reason the big companies aren’t making more movies about women. Agent Carter’s ratings should only really effect one thing: whether or not they make more Agent Carter.

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Don’t get me wrong, you should definitely watch Agent Carter. It’s brilliant. And you should definitely support media that is about women, for women, and/or by women because it’s at a serious disadvantage and it needs our help. But the future of female superheroes does not hinge on Agent Carter’s success and we need to stop letting everyone say that it does. As long as we keep getting articles like Entertainment Weekly’s “’Agent Carter‘ ratings drop again: Does this hurt female Marvel heroes?” people are going to keep buying into the myth that there is actual evidence to suggest that audiences don’t want to see female protagonists.

This whole ridiculous mess places the blame on the audience because we have to prove to the folks in charge that we will watch EVERY SINGLE TIME they make something new (it’s essentially victim blaming). It means we have to support every single female-led project no matter what it’s like. We are forced to support shows like Agent Carter just because they have female leads, even if it lets us down in other ways. There are legitimate reasons not to watch Agent Carter, none of which have anything to do with her gender. Pressuring audiences into watching something they might not be interested in just so they can see more female protagonists is totally absurd. It’s also completely unnecessary because as explained above THERE IS NOTHING TO PROVE!

Stop letting the people in charge off the hook. Make them answer for their sexism because, make no mistake, that is what’s happening here. It might not even be conscious but it’s happening. So instead of trying to bargain by pinning all our hopes on every poor female protagonist that comes along, we need to start calling it what it is: sexism. Remember, the only reason they are not making more female-led media is because they don’t want to.

Author: Undie Girl

Undie Girl (aka Von) has a BA (Hons) Major in Cultural Studies. The title of her honours thesis was “It’s just gay and porn”: Power, Identity and the Fangirl’s Gaze. She’s currently pursuing a Masters of Media Practice at University of Sydney. Von’s a former contributor The Backlot’s column The Shipping News and a current co-host of The Geekiary’s monthly webcast FEELINGS… with The Geekiary.


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2 thoughts on “Stop Saying That the Future of Female Superheroes is Tied to Agent Carter’s Success

  1. How can anyone keep believing well-developed female characters don’t work is beyond my brain’s ability. That, and how a lot of people seems convinced that female audience doesn’t matter? Our voices never chase to raise! We talk, write, comment, create incessantly. And box offices are proof of our presence and how much we truly matter. And yeah, guess what, producer? We don’t want only chick-lits or, on the other side, badass leather-cladded women who play at being men to get men’s respect. We like our fictional girls in pink hat too. We want complex, well-rounded, respected female characters – but males too, to be honest. And yes, we matter. How does a majority of press and business can’t see that yet is quite frankly hilarious.

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