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Lizzie Borden (director)

Lizzie Borden (born 1950; some sources say 1958)[1][2] is an American filmmaker, best known for her early independent films Born in Flames (1983) and Working Girls (1986).[3][4][5][6]

Lizzie Borden
Lizzie Borden in 2019
Born
Linda Elizabeth Borden

February 3, 1958
Detroit, Michigan, United States[1]
OccupationFilm director
Years active1976–present

Early life

The daughter of a Detroit stockbroker, she was originally named Linda Elizabeth Borden. At the age of eleven she decided to take the name of the infamous accused double murderer Lizzie Borden, the inspiration for this children's rhyme:

Lizzie Borden took an axe
And gave her father forty whacks,
When she saw what she had done,
She gave her mother forty-one

Of her announcement to her parents that she was legally changing her name,[7] Borden says, "At the time, my name was the best rebellion I could make."[8]

Early career

Borden majored in fine arts at Wellesley College in Massachusetts before moving to New York City,[9] and began her career as a writer, art critic (with several articles and reviews for Artforum from 1972-1974[10]) and painter.[8] After attending a retrospective of the films of Jean-Luc Godard, she was inspired to become a filmmaker and to experiment with cinema, favoring a "naive" approach to film production.[8][11]

Borden made an experimental documentary film in 1976, Regrouping, which chronicled the fracturing of a women's collective. The film portrait of four women artists incorporated avant-garde techniques borrowed from performance art, including a meta-analysis of the role of film itself in the fracturing of the collective that the film portrayed. The documentary was shown along with her next film, Born in Flames (1983), at an Anthology Film Archives screening in 2016.[12]

Independent film career

Borden's films have been said to be united by an "iconoclastic depiction of sex" – notably, she controversially portrayed prostitution as an "economic choice" in her 1986 film Working Girls.[13][14] Her body of work also investigates race, class, power, capitalism, and the power that money bestows — all from a feminist viewpoint.[13]

Borden's first feature, Born in Flames, was shot and edited over five years with a budget of $30,000, and completed in 1983. Set in a near-future New York City, the film explores the role media plays in culture. What began as a project about white feminist responses to an oppressive government evolved into a story about women of color, lesbians, and white women of various classes mobilizing into collective action. The film concerned the racial, class, and political conflicts in a future United States socialist democracy.[7][15] The film is named for a song written by Mayo Thompson of the Red Krayola, a member of the artists' group Art & Language.[16] Borden used nonprofessional actors and the film was produced in a gritty, pseudo-documentary style. One reviewer noted that it pieces together a "disjunctive collage of women's individual and collective work."[7] Born in Flames premiered at the Berlin Film Festival and has won several awards. It was named one of "The Most Important 50 Independent Films" by Filmmaker magazine[citation needed] and has been the subject of extensive feminist analysis, including that of Teresa de Lauretis.

Borden's next film, Working Girls, depicted the lives of sex workers and maintains some of the stylistic and thematic features of her debut, but is more mainstream in its approach. The film was inspired by some of the women who participated in the making of Born in Flames, who coincidentally supported themselves through prostitution.[7] Although Working Girls addresses the subject of prostitution in great detail, Borden prefers the film to be discussed as a narrative fiction film rather than as a documentary.[13] The film was intended to be a "backstage" look at prostitution. In a New York Times review, Vincent Canby writes, "Working Girls, though a work of fiction, sounds as authentic as might a documentary about coal miners." The film portrays prostitution as an often tedious, sometimes depressing, occasionally interesting or funny job. The main character, Molly (portrayed by Louise Smith), claims to have a degree from Yale and is a lesbian in her private life.

Borden wrote, directed and produced the film, which premiered in May 1986 at the 39th Cannes Film Festival after being selected for the Directors' Fortnight. The following January, the film debuted at the 1987 Sundance Film Festival where it won a Special Jury Prize and was picked up for distribution by Miramax Films.

Hollywood film career

Miramax gave Borden a budget of $6 million and a script for Love Crimes, her first Hollywood feature (and her first film based on another writer's script). It was intended as an erotic thriller, but Borden envisioned it as centered more on a woman's genuine sexual feelings. The original script by Allan Moyle was rewritten by Laurie Frank, a female screenwriter specifically requested by Borden.[7] The film starred Sean Young and Patrick Bergin.

Love Crimes was subjected to much studio interference and it fell victim to Hollywood attitudes regarding sex on screen in the 1990s; as a result, it lacked the taboo representations she had previously been able to show in her work.[13] Numerous scenes were removed and some never shot, in the studio's attempts to present what they termed an "acceptable" vision of the lead's sexuality to a mass audience. While Borden found herself in the position to direct a mainstream production, she said her power over the film's content was disrupted by (as she put it) "everyone else's psyches ... with their fetishes, and what they don't like."[17] The studio took away much of Borden's control over the final product and even went so far as to cut out the original ending that Borden had shot, substituting its own. "I went to movie jail after I did this awful movie, Love Crimes. I should have taken my name off it, but I was bullied into not taking my name off it. There are things in it that I didn't shoot. It's just not my movie, really."[18]

Love Crimes was released in theaters on January 24, 1992 and quickly tanked – it was pulled from release after three weeks due to poor box office. It recouped less than half of its budget. For its VHS release, Borden negotiated the restoration of several scenes originally cut from the theatrical release. As a result, two versions of the film were released on video in July 1992: the original 84-minute theatrical version and a second, "unrated" version at 91 minutes.[17] "The problems really came down to sex," Borden said. "My vision of what I wanted, of how I wanted to explore the character (played by Sean Young) and her sexual needs and desires just wasn't acceptable or accepted. The sadomasochistic element of the film as I envisioned it was too scary for the people writing the checks. And then I didn't get the final cut." The VHS release of the film's unrated version became a fast seller and it remains a cult favorite and highly collectible.[19] In 2018, Borden disowned the "director's cut" label as a misnomer, and a marketing ploy by the studio and Harvey Weinstein, who she later said "threatened to destroy my career."[20]

After the critical and box office failure of Love Crimes, Borden suspected that Weinstein branded her as "difficult."[21] As a result, she ran into difficulty setting up further film projects. She ventured into television with mixed results, and worked with such cult stars as Mary Woronov, Alexis Arquette and Joe Dallesandro in a series Propaganda Films had created for Playboy TV (other directors in the series included Bernard Rose and Alexander Payne.) She subsequently directed episodes of Red Shoe Diaries, The Secret World of Alex Mack and other television productions, as well as directing local theater in Hollywood with the Grace Players, a theater troupe led by Natalija Nogulich.

Borden was one of four directors involved in the 1995 sex-vignette anthology film Erotique; and she cast a not-yet-famous Bryan Cranston for her segment. "Besides Louise Smith, he was the most game, daring actor I've ever worked with," she said.[This quote needs a citation]

In 1999, Borden was able to pitch to investors a filmed version of August Strindberg's 1888 play Miss Julie and was in pre-production when director Mike Figgis announced his own version in the trades, and her bank financing collapsed.

In 2001, Borden flew to New York City for final script discussions with actress Susan Sarandon for her next film project, Rialto. She and her partners arrived on the morning of 9/11, just in time to witness the World Trade Center collapse. Sarandon immediately joined the relief effort at Ground Zero and the project was put on hold.[13]

Since the mid-2000s, Borden has been working as a script doctor in Los Angeles, writing scripts for other directors including one about reggae singer Bob Marley's relationship with mobster Danny Sims (based on Rita Marley's autobiography No Woman No Cry). That project was called Rebels and was announced in 2015 as part of slate of projects by Golden Island Filmworks to begin shooting in 2016.[22] She has worked on some pilots for Fox Television, wrote a play about singer Nina Simone, and continues to solicit financing for her independent projects.

Writing

Her other works in progress have included editing a book of stories by strippers, Honey On A Razor, and collaborating on a series about strippers with Antonia Crane, author of the memoir Spent. On December 6, 2022, Seven Stories Press published an anthology of stories by strippers Borden edited over a period of twenty years, Whorephobia, reviewed in Publishers Weekly as "a humane, multidimensional portrait of an industry typically shrouded in artifice and shame."[23]

Legacy

In February 2016, Anthology Film Archives hosted a week-long revival run of Born in Flames to premiere Anthology's new 35mm restoration of the work, funded by The Film Foundation and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association. The restoration was part of a larger multi-year project, "Re-Visions: American Experimental Film 1975–1990," supported by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.[24] To commemorate the re-release, The New Yorker remarked, "the free, ardent, spontaneous creativity of 'Born in Flames' emerges as an indispensable mode of radical change — one that many contemporary filmmakers with political intentions have yet to assimilate."[19]

The restored and remastered 35mm print of Born In Flames that debuted at the Anthology Film Archives in February 2016 enjoyed something of a second life, traveling to the Walker Art Center, the Toronto Film Festival, the 2017 London Film Festival, the Edinburgh Film Festival and the Seoul International Women's Film Festival,; as well as screening in Brussels, Barcelona, Madrid, and San Sebastian; and in many US cities including Detroit, Rochester, San Francisco and New Orleans. Her first film, Regrouping, was also shown at the screenings in Spain and in Brussels, and at the Edinburgh Film Festival, where it first played.[19]

Born In Flames was featured at the fourth annual Final Girls Berlin film festival in 2019; the festival features horror by women directors and presented Borden's dystopian film as part of a sci-fi showcase.[25] The film was also broadcast on Turner Classic Movies on the night of November 3, 2020, along with Borden's commentary on her film and on several other films featured in Mark Cousins' documentary, Women Make Film.[26] The Bronx Museum of the Arts featured Born in Flames as the title piece of an exhibition about feminism and futurity from April to September 2021.[21]

Borden's early films continue to be shown singly and in retrospectives at film festivals, repertory cinemas and art venues worldwide.[21] Regrouping was restored by The Anthology Film Archives for a 2021 release and is part of Borden's early catalog acquired by Criterion. The Criterion Channel has shown Born In Flames and an interview with Borden; and The Criterion Collection restored and released Working Girls on DVD and Blu-Ray in 2021.[27]

On the fate of her Hollywood films, Borden has said, "Born in Flames and Working Girls are the only two films I consider my own. The others – especially Love Crimes and Erotique – were so radically re-cut and interfered with by producers, they're not 'mine', in any sense of the word."[17] (Flashbacks by L.M. "Kit" Carson were added to Love Crimes, and Borden was threatened against taking her name off the film. The producer of Erotique re-edited the film and laid on a music track, among other changes.) "I would like to make films the way I used to in New York, if that is possible. If I am able to make Rialto in ten years – or twenty – I hope it will still be relevant. I don't need to make a lot of films, I just need to believe in the ones I make. I would prefer to remain silent in the sense of the Susan Sontag essay ("The Aesthetics of Silence") until I am able to make something I believe in. And the issues I believe in – social issues, feminist issues, radical issues – are difficult to finance, even independently."[17]

In 2021, Borden was invited to become a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[28]

Personal life

Borden has stated she is bisexual.[29]

Filmography

Film

Television

Awards and nominations

Year Film Award / Nomination Result
1983 Born in Flames Berlin International Film Festival Reader Jury of the "Zitty" Won
Créteil International Women's Film Festival Grand Prix Won
1987 Working Girls Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize Won
Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize Nominated

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Andrea LeVasseur (2015). . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Archived from the original on July 21, 2015. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  2. ^ Foster, Gwendolyn Audrey (1995). Women Film Directors: An International Bio-critical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 46. ISBN 9780313289729.
  3. ^ "BORDEN, Lizzie", Film reference.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Retrieved November 4, 2007.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on June 19, 2017. Retrieved July 20, 2015.
  6. ^ Women Directors and Their Films, p. 59, at Google Books
  7. ^ a b c d e Lane, Christina. Feminist Hollywood: From Born in Flames to Point Break. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2000.
  8. ^ a b c Mills, Nancy. "Cemeos: Lizzie Borden". Premiere, May 1991, 47–48, cited in Lane, Christina. Feminist Hollywood: From Born in Flames to Point Break. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2000.
  9. ^ Lizzie Borden on glbtq October 14, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Contributors: Lizzie Borden". Artforum. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  11. ^ Gustainis, Justin. "Borden, Lizzie." International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers, edited by Sara Pendergast and Tom Pendergast, 4th ed., vol. 2: Directors, St. James Press, 2000, pp. 113-114.
  12. ^ "Regrouping, again: Lizzie Borden's "diabolical hour" comes around | Sight & Sound". British Film Institute. Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d e Redding, Judith M., and Victoria A. Brownworth. Film Fatales: Independent Women Directors. Seattle: Seal Press, 1997.
  14. ^ Sherwood, Glynis (1987). "An Interview with Lizzie Borden". Kick it Over [Print] – via Interference Archive.
  15. ^ Maslin, Janet (November 10, 1983). "Film: 'Born in Flames,' Radical Feminist Ideas. [Review]". The New York Times. p. 1.
  16. ^ Baise, Greg. "Lizzie Borden talks about her scrappy, feminist magnum opus, 'Born in Flames'". Detroit Metro Times. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  17. ^ a b c d Lucia, Cynthia. "Redefining Female Sexuality in the Cinema: An Interview with Lizzie Borden". Cineaste 19.2–3 (February 1993): 6–10.
  18. ^ "Harvey Weinstein threatened to destroy my career if I took my name off the film". Flavorwire. February 18, 2016.
  19. ^ a b c Brody, Richard (February 19, 2016). "The Political Science Fiction of 'Born in Flames'". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  20. ^ INTERVIEW: Lizzie Borden on Love Crimes, retrieved January 12, 2019
  21. ^ a b c "'This 1983 Feminist Film Was Set In The Dystopian Future, So Basically Right Now'". NPR. July 3, 2021. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  22. ^ de la Fuente, Anna Marie (September 14, 2015). "Toronto: Antigua Launches Film Financing Program". Variety. Retrieved January 12, 2019.
  23. ^ "Whorephobia: Strippers on Art, Work, and Life by Lizzie Borden". Publishers Weekly. August 26, 2022. Retrieved June 22, 2023.
  24. ^ "Fire Starter: Lizzie Borden's First Films Still Light Up (and Burn Down) the Left". Retrieved March 18, 2018.
  25. ^ "The Bend Podcast, Episode 25, Aug. 3, 2020".
  26. ^ "Turner Classic Movies filmmaker page".
  27. ^ da Costa, Cassie (July 15, 2021). "Lizzie Borden Is Finally Getting Her Due". Vanity Fair. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  28. ^ Davis, Clayton Marie (July 1, 2021). "Academy Invites 395 New Members for 2021, Including Robert Pattinson, Andra Day, Steven Yeun". Variety. Retrieved July 12, 2021.
  29. ^ MacDonald, Scott; Borden, Lizzie (Summer 1989). "Interview with Lizzie Borden". Feminist Studies. 15 (2): 338 – via JSTOR.

Further reading

  • Adams, Sam. "Kathleen Hanna on the Film that's Inspired Her for Decades." The Dissolve. December 3, 2013.
  • Baise, Greg. "Lizzie Borden talks about her scrappy, feminist magnum opus, 'Born in Flames'." Detroit Metro Times. March 1, 2017.
  • Brody, Richard. "The Political Science Fiction of 'Born in Flames'." The New Yorker. February 19, 2016.
  • Filetti, Jean S. "From Lizzie Borden to Lorena Bobbitt: Violent Women and Gendered Justice". Journal of American Studies. 35 (3): 471–484.
  • Fusco, Coco. 1986. "Working girls: an interview with Lizzie Bordon". Afterimage. 14: 6–7.
  • Jaehne, Karen. 1987. "Hooker". Film Comment. 23: 25–32.
  • MacDonald, Scott. 1989. "Interview with Lizzie Borden". Feminist Studies. 15:
  • Nastasi, Alison. "'Choice is Paramount': Filmmaker Lizzie Borden on the Radical Feminism of 'Born in Flames'." Flavorwise. February 18, 2016.
  • Sussler, Betsy. "Lizzie Borden." BOMB Magazine. October 1, 1983.
  • Willse, Craig, and Dean Spade. "We are Born in Flames." Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory 23.1 (2013): 1–5.
  • Lassinaro, Kaisa. "Born in Flames." Occasional Papers, 2011.

External links

lizzie, borden, director, other, people, with, same, name, lizzie, borden, disambiguation, lizzie, borden, born, 1950, some, sources, 1958, american, filmmaker, best, known, early, independent, films, born, flames, 1983, working, girls, 1986, lizzie, bordenliz. For other people with the same name see Lizzie Borden disambiguation Lizzie Borden born 1950 some sources say 1958 1 2 is an American filmmaker best known for her early independent films Born in Flames 1983 and Working Girls 1986 3 4 5 6 Lizzie BordenLizzie Borden in 2019BornLinda Elizabeth BordenFebruary 3 1958Detroit Michigan United States 1 OccupationFilm directorYears active1976 present Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Independent film career 4 Hollywood film career 5 Writing 6 Legacy 7 Personal life 8 Filmography 8 1 Film 8 2 Television 9 Awards and nominations 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life EditThe daughter of a Detroit stockbroker she was originally named Linda Elizabeth Borden At the age of eleven she decided to take the name of the infamous accused double murderer Lizzie Borden the inspiration for this children s rhyme Lizzie Borden took an axe And gave her father forty whacks When she saw what she had done She gave her mother forty oneOf her announcement to her parents that she was legally changing her name 7 Borden says At the time my name was the best rebellion I could make 8 Early career EditBorden majored in fine arts at Wellesley College in Massachusetts before moving to New York City 9 and began her career as a writer art critic with several articles and reviews for Artforum from 1972 1974 10 and painter 8 After attending a retrospective of the films of Jean Luc Godard she was inspired to become a filmmaker and to experiment with cinema favoring a naive approach to film production 8 11 Borden made an experimental documentary film in 1976 Regrouping which chronicled the fracturing of a women s collective The film portrait of four women artists incorporated avant garde techniques borrowed from performance art including a meta analysis of the role of film itself in the fracturing of the collective that the film portrayed The documentary was shown along with her next film Born in Flames 1983 at an Anthology Film Archives screening in 2016 12 Independent film career EditBorden s films have been said to be united by an iconoclastic depiction of sex notably she controversially portrayed prostitution as an economic choice in her 1986 film Working Girls 13 14 Her body of work also investigates race class power capitalism and the power that money bestows all from a feminist viewpoint 13 Borden s first feature Born in Flames was shot and edited over five years with a budget of 30 000 and completed in 1983 Set in a near future New York City the film explores the role media plays in culture What began as a project about white feminist responses to an oppressive government evolved into a story about women of color lesbians and white women of various classes mobilizing into collective action The film concerned the racial class and political conflicts in a future United States socialist democracy 7 15 The film is named for a song written by Mayo Thompson of the Red Krayola a member of the artists group Art amp Language 16 Borden used nonprofessional actors and the film was produced in a gritty pseudo documentary style One reviewer noted that it pieces together a disjunctive collage of women s individual and collective work 7 Born in Flames premiered at the Berlin Film Festival and has won several awards It was named one of The Most Important 50 Independent Films by Filmmaker magazine citation needed and has been the subject of extensive feminist analysis including that of Teresa de Lauretis Borden s next film Working Girls depicted the lives of sex workers and maintains some of the stylistic and thematic features of her debut but is more mainstream in its approach The film was inspired by some of the women who participated in the making of Born in Flames who coincidentally supported themselves through prostitution 7 Although Working Girls addresses the subject of prostitution in great detail Borden prefers the film to be discussed as a narrative fiction film rather than as a documentary 13 The film was intended to be a backstage look at prostitution In a New York Times review Vincent Canby writes Working Girls though a work of fiction sounds as authentic as might a documentary about coal miners The film portrays prostitution as an often tedious sometimes depressing occasionally interesting or funny job The main character Molly portrayed by Louise Smith claims to have a degree from Yale and is a lesbian in her private life Borden wrote directed and produced the film which premiered in May 1986 at the 39th Cannes Film Festival after being selected for the Directors Fortnight The following January the film debuted at the 1987 Sundance Film Festival where it won a Special Jury Prize and was picked up for distribution by Miramax Films Hollywood film career EditMiramax gave Borden a budget of 6 million and a script for Love Crimes her first Hollywood feature and her first film based on another writer s script It was intended as an erotic thriller but Borden envisioned it as centered more on a woman s genuine sexual feelings The original script by Allan Moyle was rewritten by Laurie Frank a female screenwriter specifically requested by Borden 7 The film starred Sean Young and Patrick Bergin Love Crimes was subjected to much studio interference and it fell victim to Hollywood attitudes regarding sex on screen in the 1990s as a result it lacked the taboo representations she had previously been able to show in her work 13 Numerous scenes were removed and some never shot in the studio s attempts to present what they termed an acceptable vision of the lead s sexuality to a mass audience While Borden found herself in the position to direct a mainstream production she said her power over the film s content was disrupted by as she put it everyone else s psyches with their fetishes and what they don t like 17 The studio took away much of Borden s control over the final product and even went so far as to cut out the original ending that Borden had shot substituting its own I went to movie jail after I did this awful movie Love Crimes I should have taken my name off it but I was bullied into not taking my name off it There are things in it that I didn t shoot It s just not my movie really 18 Love Crimes was released in theaters on January 24 1992 and quickly tanked it was pulled from release after three weeks due to poor box office It recouped less than half of its budget For its VHS release Borden negotiated the restoration of several scenes originally cut from the theatrical release As a result two versions of the film were released on video in July 1992 the original 84 minute theatrical version and a second unrated version at 91 minutes 17 The problems really came down to sex Borden said My vision of what I wanted of how I wanted to explore the character played by Sean Young and her sexual needs and desires just wasn t acceptable or accepted The sadomasochistic element of the film as I envisioned it was too scary for the people writing the checks And then I didn t get the final cut The VHS release of the film s unrated version became a fast seller and it remains a cult favorite and highly collectible 19 In 2018 Borden disowned the director s cut label as a misnomer and a marketing ploy by the studio and Harvey Weinstein who she later said threatened to destroy my career 20 After the critical and box office failure of Love Crimes Borden suspected that Weinstein branded her as difficult 21 As a result she ran into difficulty setting up further film projects She ventured into television with mixed results and worked with such cult stars as Mary Woronov Alexis Arquette and Joe Dallesandro in a series Propaganda Films had created for Playboy TV other directors in the series included Bernard Rose and Alexander Payne She subsequently directed episodes of Red Shoe Diaries The Secret World of Alex Mack and other television productions as well as directing local theater in Hollywood with the Grace Players a theater troupe led by Natalija Nogulich Borden was one of four directors involved in the 1995 sex vignette anthology film Erotique and she cast a not yet famous Bryan Cranston for her segment Besides Louise Smith he was the most game daring actor I ve ever worked with she said This quote needs a citation In 1999 Borden was able to pitch to investors a filmed version of August Strindberg s 1888 play Miss Julie and was in pre production when director Mike Figgis announced his own version in the trades and her bank financing collapsed In 2001 Borden flew to New York City for final script discussions with actress Susan Sarandon for her next film project Rialto She and her partners arrived on the morning of 9 11 just in time to witness the World Trade Center collapse Sarandon immediately joined the relief effort at Ground Zero and the project was put on hold 13 Since the mid 2000s Borden has been working as a script doctor in Los Angeles writing scripts for other directors including one about reggae singer Bob Marley s relationship with mobster Danny Sims based on Rita Marley s autobiography No Woman No Cry That project was called Rebels and was announced in 2015 as part of slate of projects by Golden Island Filmworks to begin shooting in 2016 22 She has worked on some pilots for Fox Television wrote a play about singer Nina Simone and continues to solicit financing for her independent projects Writing EditHer other works in progress have included editing a book of stories by strippers Honey On A Razor and collaborating on a series about strippers with Antonia Crane author of the memoir Spent On December 6 2022 Seven Stories Press published an anthology of stories by strippers Borden edited over a period of twenty years Whorephobia reviewed in Publishers Weekly as a humane multidimensional portrait of an industry typically shrouded in artifice and shame 23 Legacy EditIn February 2016 Anthology Film Archives hosted a week long revival run of Born in Flames to premiere Anthology s new 35mm restoration of the work funded by The Film Foundation and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association The restoration was part of a larger multi year project Re Visions American Experimental Film 1975 1990 supported by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts 24 To commemorate the re release The New Yorker remarked the free ardent spontaneous creativity of Born in Flames emerges as an indispensable mode of radical change one that many contemporary filmmakers with political intentions have yet to assimilate 19 The restored and remastered 35mm print of Born In Flames that debuted at the Anthology Film Archives in February 2016 enjoyed something of a second life traveling to the Walker Art Center the Toronto Film Festival the 2017 London Film Festival the Edinburgh Film Festival and the Seoul International Women s Film Festival as well as screening in Brussels Barcelona Madrid and San Sebastian and in many US cities including Detroit Rochester San Francisco and New Orleans Her first film Regrouping was also shown at the screenings in Spain and in Brussels and at the Edinburgh Film Festival where it first played 19 Born In Flames was featured at the fourth annual Final Girls Berlin film festival in 2019 the festival features horror by women directors and presented Borden s dystopian film as part of a sci fi showcase 25 The film was also broadcast on Turner Classic Movies on the night of November 3 2020 along with Borden s commentary on her film and on several other films featured in Mark Cousins documentary Women Make Film 26 The Bronx Museum of the Arts featured Born in Flames as the title piece of an exhibition about feminism and futurity from April to September 2021 21 Borden s early films continue to be shown singly and in retrospectives at film festivals repertory cinemas and art venues worldwide 21 Regrouping was restored by The Anthology Film Archives for a 2021 release and is part of Borden s early catalog acquired by Criterion The Criterion Channel has shown Born In Flames and an interview with Borden and The Criterion Collection restored and released Working Girls on DVD and Blu Ray in 2021 27 On the fate of her Hollywood films Borden has said Born in Flames and Working Girls are the only two films I consider my own The others especially Love Crimes and Erotique were so radically re cut and interfered with by producers they re not mine in any sense of the word 17 Flashbacks by L M Kit Carson were added to Love Crimes and Borden was threatened against taking her name off the film The producer of Erotique re edited the film and laid on a music track among other changes I would like to make films the way I used to in New York if that is possible If I am able to make Rialto in ten years or twenty I hope it will still be relevant I don t need to make a lot of films I just need to believe in the ones I make I would prefer to remain silent in the sense of the Susan Sontag essay The Aesthetics of Silence until I am able to make something I believe in And the issues I believe in social issues feminist issues radical issues are difficult to finance even independently 17 In 2021 Borden was invited to become a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 28 Personal life EditBorden has stated she is bisexual 29 Filmography EditFilm Edit Regrouping 1976 Born in Flames 1983 Working Girls 1986 Inside Out 1991 Love Crimes 1992 Erotique 1994 Television Edit Monsters 1989 Silk Stalkings 1996 Red Shoe Diaries 1996 Awards and nominations EditYear Film Award Nomination Result1983 Born in Flames Berlin International Film Festival Reader Jury of the Zitty WonCreteil International Women s Film Festival Grand Prix Won1987 Working Girls Sundance Film Festival Special Jury Prize WonSundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize NominatedSee also EditList of female film and television directors List of LGBT related films directed by womenReferences Edit a b Andrea LeVasseur 2015 Lizzie Borden Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Archived from the original on July 21 2015 Retrieved February 9 2023 Foster Gwendolyn Audrey 1995 Women Film Directors An International Bio critical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 46 ISBN 9780313289729 BORDEN Lizzie Film reference GLBTQ gt gt arts gt gt Borden Lizzie Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Retrieved November 4 2007 Occasional Papers Born in Flames Archived from the original on June 19 2017 Retrieved July 20 2015 Women Directors and Their Films p 59 at Google Books a b c d e Lane Christina Feminist Hollywood From Born in Flames to Point Break Detroit Wayne State University Press 2000 a b c Mills Nancy Cemeos Lizzie Borden Premiere May 1991 47 48 cited in Lane Christina Feminist Hollywood From Born in Flames to Point Break Detroit Wayne State University Press 2000 Lizzie Borden on glbtq Archived October 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine Contributors Lizzie Borden Artforum Retrieved February 9 2023 Gustainis Justin Borden Lizzie International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers edited by Sara Pendergast and Tom Pendergast 4th ed vol 2 Directors St James Press 2000 pp 113 114 Regrouping again Lizzie Borden s diabolical hour comes around Sight amp Sound British Film Institute Retrieved March 18 2018 a b c d e Redding Judith M and Victoria A Brownworth Film Fatales Independent Women Directors Seattle Seal Press 1997 Sherwood Glynis 1987 An Interview with Lizzie Borden Kick it Over Print via Interference Archive Maslin Janet November 10 1983 Film Born in Flames Radical Feminist Ideas Review The New York Times p 1 Baise Greg Lizzie Borden talks about her scrappy feminist magnum opus Born in Flames Detroit Metro Times Retrieved August 21 2017 a b c d Lucia Cynthia Redefining Female Sexuality in the Cinema An Interview with Lizzie Borden Cineaste 19 2 3 February 1993 6 10 Harvey Weinstein threatened to destroy my career if I took my name off the film Flavorwire February 18 2016 a b c Brody Richard February 19 2016 The Political Science Fiction of Born in Flames The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved March 5 2016 INTERVIEW Lizzie Borden on Love Crimes retrieved January 12 2019 a b c This 1983 Feminist Film Was Set In The Dystopian Future So Basically Right Now NPR July 3 2021 Retrieved February 9 2023 de la Fuente Anna Marie September 14 2015 Toronto Antigua Launches Film Financing Program Variety Retrieved January 12 2019 Whorephobia Strippers on Art Work and Life by Lizzie Borden Publishers Weekly August 26 2022 Retrieved June 22 2023 Fire Starter Lizzie Borden s First Films Still Light Up and Burn Down the Left Retrieved March 18 2018 The Bend Podcast Episode 25 Aug 3 2020 Turner Classic Movies filmmaker page da Costa Cassie July 15 2021 Lizzie Borden Is Finally Getting Her Due Vanity Fair Retrieved February 9 2023 Davis Clayton Marie July 1 2021 Academy Invites 395 New Members for 2021 Including Robert Pattinson Andra Day Steven Yeun Variety Retrieved July 12 2021 MacDonald Scott Borden Lizzie Summer 1989 Interview with Lizzie Borden Feminist Studies 15 2 338 via JSTOR Further reading EditAdams Sam Kathleen Hanna on the Film that s Inspired Her for Decades The Dissolve December 3 2013 Baise Greg Lizzie Borden talks about her scrappy feminist magnum opus Born in Flames Detroit Metro Times March 1 2017 Brody Richard The Political Science Fiction of Born in Flames The New Yorker February 19 2016 Filetti Jean S From Lizzie Borden to Lorena Bobbitt Violent Women and Gendered Justice Journal of American Studies 35 3 471 484 Fusco Coco 1986 Working girls an interview with Lizzie Bordon Afterimage 14 6 7 Jaehne Karen 1987 Hooker Film Comment 23 25 32 MacDonald Scott 1989 Interview with Lizzie Borden Feminist Studies 15 Nastasi Alison Choice is Paramount Filmmaker Lizzie Borden on the Radical Feminism of Born in Flames Flavorwise February 18 2016 Sussler Betsy Lizzie Borden BOMB Magazine October 1 1983 Willse Craig and Dean Spade We are Born in Flames Women amp Performance a journal of feminist theory 23 1 2013 1 5 Lassinaro Kaisa Born in Flames Occasional Papers 2011 External links EditLizzie Borden on glbtq com Lizzie Borden at IMDb Occasional Papers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lizzie Borden director amp oldid 1170555075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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