Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Yes, unapologetically feminist

      • That problem aside, “Into the Forest” is an undeniably interesting, oftentimes affecting and, yes, unapologetically feminist take on the post-apocalyptic narrative.
      www.rogerebert.com › reviews › into-the-forest-2016
  1. People also ask

  2. Jul 29, 2016 · That problem aside, “Into the Forest” is an undeniably interesting, oftentimes affecting and, yes, unapologetically feminist take on the post-apocalyptic narrative. Unfortunately, by coming out in the middle of the summer opposite blockbuster banalities like “ Jason Bourne ,” there is a good chance it will come and go from theaters.

  3. Jul 28, 2016 · Into The Forest’ Review: This Post-Apocalyptic Feminist Drama Gets Lost In The Woods. Despite strong performances by Ellen Page and Evan Rachel Wood, this sci-fi sister story never reaches its...

  4. Sep 17, 2016 · The haunting, pitch-perfect performances of the two leads in Into the Forest will be seared into your imagination forever, even, quite possibly, until the end of the world. When it comes to stark, post-apocalyptic dramas, female characters tend to have a pretty rough go of it, with most of them being raped, killed early o...

  5. Jul 1, 1996 · INTO THE FOREST. by Jean Alma Hegland ‧ RELEASE DATE: July 1, 1996. Brisk, feminist, contemplative first novel about the end of contemporary civilization and the survival of two sisters. Hegland is vague about civilization's downfall.

    • Kirkus Reviews
  6. Into the Forest. $10,000. $37,418. [2] Into the Forest is a 2015 Canadian apocalyptic independent drama film, written and directed by Patricia Rozema, based on the 1996 Jean Hegland book and starring Elliot Page and Evan Rachel Wood as orphaned survivalist sisters in a forest without electrical power.

    • $10,000.
  7. Apr 5, 2016 · So this film, while not ostensibly a feminist statement, doesn’t need to be. In existing as a piece that empowers women, that exalts the female body as an extension of the soul (such as in Eva’s dancing) rather than a sexual object, where men take on background roles yet are not vilified, it ends up feminist anyways.

  8. Dec 15, 2016 · Based on a novel by Jean Hegland and set approximately two weeks after President Trump’s energy reforms kick in, this feminist science fiction pivots around Nell (Ellen Page) and Eva (Evan Rachel...

  1. People also search for