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page 1, sidebar Ah, movie magic. Hollywood always manages to make difficult situations turn out well after two hours and nowhere is this more apparent than with cinematic treatments of unplanned pregnancy. Unexpected conceptions occur onscreen with surprising frequency, but filmmakers routinely play it safe, avoiding substantial discussions of a pregnancys pros and cons. They keep abortion out of plots and even out of dialogue, ensuring that movies end with a heartwarming birth. Female characters rarely feel any ambivalence about carrying unplanned pregnancies to term and why should they, when life always works out so perfectly? An unhappy and unwilling dad-to-be will convert to a pro-baby stance in time for a happily-ever-after ending. If mom isnt too crazy about dad and would prefer to parent by herself, shell soon find that single motherhood is a cinch. Although childrearing seems expensive in the real world, money isnt much of an obstacle for film parents (and made even less of one by the fact that most movies feature middle-class women with plenty of resources). This sentimental support for parenthood in movies matches our cultures strong pronatalist streak and its profound uneasiness with abortion. In spite of the facts 82 percent of Americans think abortion should stay legal, and 43 percent of American women will end at least one pregnancy by age 45 the issue remains highly controversial, with anti-choice groups garnering disproportionate visibility and wielding significant political influence. Against this backdrop, unplanned pregnancy on film plays out in an alarmingly oversimplified manner. Procreation becomes every womans destiny and every mans responsibility, regardless of circumstances. Abortion exists only as a faux option something to choose against. So unintentionally pregnant? Just watch some American films from the last decade, check your brain in the lobby, and learn how movie magic can make your problems (and your choices) disappear. Here are eight pointers. 1. If you have an unplanned pregnancy, birth is the only option. You should act oblivious to other possibilities, even if you or your partner is unhappy about the conception. 1A. You might complain about the pregnancy you have conceived, but in making these comments you wont actually be proposing abortion. Just as the gag rule prohibits staff in federally funded clinics from mentioning abortion, characters in movies cannot use the A word if they dont wish to continue a pregnancy. They can throw tantrums, make sarcastic comments, and whine, but they cant say, "I think abortion would be best," even if they obviously feel that way.
Parenthood (1989) actually does include a discussion of abortion but only in a slippery, backhanded way. When Gil (again, Steve Martin) and his wife, Karen (Mary Steenburgen), conceive, he gripes about the ill-timed pregnancy without actually proposing abortion. Karen then asks him to put his cards on the table: Karen: Why dont you just say what youre really thinking? No, he hasnt said that. Although abortion is clearly what he wants, he keeps sidestepping the issue just as a politician would: Gil: Thats a decision every woman has to make on her own. When she then says she wants the baby, all he can do is make biting jokes: "Well, great! Lets have a kid! Lets see how I can screw the fourth one up. Lets have five. Lets have six. Lets have a dozen and pretend theyre doughnuts. Im really happy about the way things are turning out, arent you?" The film is back in safe territory, clarifying that although Gil is angry about the pregnancy, neither he nor the filmmakers have committed the sin of suggesting abortion. 1B. You may talk about abortion only in a negative form. You can say, for instance, "Well, Im certainly not going to have an abortion!" Or, "I cant believe you would suggest abortion." Just make sure you use the word to bolster your own self-righteousness. In Look Whos Talking (1989), when Mollie (Kirstie Alley) tells her lover, Albert (George Segal), that shes pregnant, she indicates that she wants to carry to term and adds, for extra emphasis, "Im not getting an abortion." Albert croons, "Mollie, Mollie, I wasnt going to ask you to do that!" Whew theyre both off the hook.
In The Opposite of Sex (1998), after Dedee (Christina Ricci) reveals that shes expecting, Lucia (Lisa Kudrow) asks, "Do you want to get an abortion?" Dedees boyfriend, Matt (Ivan Sergei), answers for her with a horrified, "No! God!" Then the film distances itself further from the possibility of abortion, ignoring Lucias sensible critiques of the whimsy of unplanned parenthood. When Lucia later tells Dedee that "smoking is bad for the baby," Dedee makes a gratuitous dig at Lucias pro-choice stance: "Like you care! Or was it someone else who mentioned abortion?" Dedee implies that because Lucia raised the possibility of abortion, the babys health is unimportant to her. 2. If circumstances make the pregnancy problematic, dont worry everything will work out somehow. Just be happy. After all, a baby is on the way. In Nine Months (1995), Rebecca (Julianne Moore) has mastered the "dont worry, be happy" mindset. She states all the reasons not to continue her pregnancy: She and her boyfriend, Samuel (Hugh Grant), arent emotionally prepared for this accidental conception, a baby could damage their relationship, the apartment would require redecorating, and shed have to stop teaching dance classes while pregnant. Then comes the zinger: "Theres not one good reason that I should keep this baby. But I still want to."
And if she ends up going it alone? Also not a problem Rebecca knows that single motherhood is a snap. Although she has never reared children, she asserts that she can handle the responsibilities alone, as if parenting would be no more difficult or demanding than her current life: "Im prepared for that. You know, I can do that." Advanced age might be another disincentive to giving birth. In Father, Nina and George conceive at the combined age of nearly 100. As Nina points out, her cohorts are doing Geritol and Fixodent commercials. But hey what does age have to do with pregnancy? Nothing! When George grouses about reproducing at their age, she retorts, "I know how old I am, George. Ive already been the mother of the bride. But here I am at the age I am and Im pregnant." What a persuasive reason to proceed. Even their doctor presents the news of Ninas pregnancy as if its problem-free. When George says hes too old to become a father again, the doctor tries to talk him into it: "Cmon! Picasso had children well into his 70s." Way to go coercing people to parent.
3. You will glow with pride and femininity as you proceed with the noble mission of carrying to term. Even if you didnt plan or especially want a baby a little while ago, you will spring into maternity mode as soon as you learn of the pregnancy. Life will be a stream of baby showers (Father), trips to the toy store (Nine Months, Look Whos Talking), and nursery renovations (Father, Look Whos Talking). In addition to those terribly original shopping-set-to-music montages, viewers are treated to sentimentalizing like the scene in Father after Nina and George learn that they have conceived. As they drive through town, George comments in a voice-over on how "glowing" and "peaceful" Nina looks. Indeed, she gazes beatifically out of her window and sees happy images of maternity, including a mother and a daughter who skip down the sidewalk in flowing skirts. Viewers hear the song "On the Sunny Side of the Street" with its sappy "Can you hear the pitterpat?" lyrics. 4. When you deliver the child, there will again be irrepressible joy and widespread celebration. Itll be glaringly obvious that birth was the only valid decision. If you arent up to the task of parenthood (which is doubtful, because everyone takes to it naturally), scores of people will sub in for you. The Opposite of Sexs Dedee isnt the "mommy type," but it doesnt matter because every gay man in town wants to take care of her baby. And why not? Babies are "miracles" and "magic" (according to a character in Nine Months). They glow under a soft-focus lens. They dont cry much. If they do, some dancing will quiet them down (again, Nine Months). In the womb or even as mere sperm they think amusing thoughts and feel physical sensations (Look Whos Talking). Given that babies, fetuses, and even sperm are so darn personable, how can anyone not feel swept away by the prospect of birth? Even Parenthood, which focuses on parenting failures and the resultant emotional pain, concludes with a peculiar pronatalist frenzy: Every woman under 55 conceives, and the characters blindly embrace hopes that future parenting attempts will turn out better. Were supposed to forget the struggles weve just witnessed and join in the euphoria. After all, a birth represents a joyful new beginning and, conveniently, a happy ending. 5. If youre a man, you may feel unready or unwilling to have a baby, in which case youre just a party pooper. You should rise to the occasion and improve yourself if necessary. Fathers George needs to work on himself until he can see things clearly (that is, less realistically and more sentimentally). The film shows his journey from a sour antinatalist viewpoint (he initially complains about his daughters and his wifes pregnancies) to a profound appreciation of babies (at the end he holds both kids and says that life doesnt get any better). As he prepares for renewed parenthood, he acts as if hes training for an athletic event. He wonders whether hell have the "stamina" for a baby. He says he and Nina will be "the oldest parents ever at the starting gate." And he shoots a basket while saying, "Ill be able to do it again. Im sure I can. All right, if it swishes, no problem father of the year." The ball drops in perfectly, of course, implying that parenthood is as easy as a jump shot. Georges preparations are mild compared with what Samuel endures in Nine Months. To "grow up" and prepare for the pregnancy, he must get rid of his cat and his convertible. Then he must stop believing that children grow up to hate their parents (as he has seen in his child-psychology practice). He learns to worship his developing child by reading What to Expect When Youre Expecting, attending a Lamaze class, and becoming teary while watching an ultrasound video. Although Rebecca has left him, he never once moons over her only over the fetus. Samuel later tells her, "Im in love with my child . And Im completely in love with you for having it." (In other words, he values her as an incubator, not as a person in her own right.) He repudiates his earlier feelings about the pregnancy and redeems himself for his sin an unwillingness to parent by effectively erasing himself: "Now I dont care what I think or dont think anymore. I dont give a damn about me." Thats some self-improvement program it got rid of his self altogether. See also 1a, 2, and 8. 6. Babies only strengthen romances. Couples may worry that new babies could stress out their relationship. But no babies keep families together. Although the couple might separate during the pregnancy or after the birth, fatherhood will appeal to a man so much that hell soon return to the woman and his child. It happens in Nine Months. Why shouldnt it happen for you? 7. What this world needs is babies, babies, babies. Bring them on by the caseload. Dont stop to think about the population explosion. Nobody in movieland thinks about urban sprawl, crowded classrooms, and congested freeways. Why, those ideas could put a wet blanket on all the giddy baby showers! Only sarcastic, recalcitrant jokers (see 1a) and misanthropes (see 8) would be so low as to point out that three or four children might be more than enough for one couple. 8. A childless life is worthless, and anyone who doesnt want kids must be bitter and selfish and morally deficient. If you postpone or eschew parenthood, youll face a future of unhappiness and regret. When Nine Monthss Sean (Jeff Goldblum) states his opposition to parenthood, he comes off as an unpleasant, self-important woman-hater. He has this to say about an ex-girlfriend who wanted children: "She was hungry for seed. So I closed the iron door. Denied her my essence. Im not ready to be biologically extraneous. She would have devoured me from the head down. Chewed up my manhood, swallowed my youth, and gobbled me up like some praying mantis." Hes an unfeeling killjoy; when his sister announces the impending birth of her fourth child, he notes that "the world is overpopulated" and "has too many starving children." (See 7.) Clearly, his child-free life will end terribly. "You keep this up, youll die alone like a dog, like a bum," scolds his sister. And just a few scenes later, Sean inexplicably comes to agree with her: "Look at me. Look what Ive become . My lifes a pile of shit . Its empty and pointless . If I continue this way, Im facing a lifetime alone without a family . Its terrifying." Oversentimentality and an utter lack of realism are staples in Hollywood, so maybe we shouldnt be surprised at Seans swift and absurd transformation or at the about-faces of Samuel, Gil, and George. But the fact that all these men end up relishing the notion of fatherhood and that even Opposites pragmatic Lucia has an unplanned pregnancy of her own and simply assumes shell carry to term, whimsical though that is demonstrates more than just a cinematic penchant for a happy ending. Such plotlines naturalize the choice to parent, making abortion seem incomprehensible. What better way to handle one of the most heated contemporary sociopolitical dilemmas than to present streams of couples who conceive by accident and routinely ignore their reproductive choices? Hollywood can then have its plots completely risk-free. What with talking fetuses, soft-focus lenses, and abortion as a theoretical possibility only, anti-choice propagandists could hardly do it better. July 2000 | Issue 29 Eve Kushner is the author of Experiencing Abortion: A Weaving of Womens Words (Haworth). She is also a film fanatic. This article originally appeared in the always provocative magazine Bitch: Feminist Response to Pop Culture, number 11. Thanks to Bitch and the author for permission to reprint it. For more info, see their Web site at www.bitchmagazine.com. ACCESS: All the films discussed in this article are available on video, obviously. ALSO: Eve Kushner on Dis-Orientation: Japan from a Western Viewpoint in Topsy-Turvy and The Mikado If "Asian face" isn’t bad enough, how about names like Nanki-Poo and Yum Yum? page 1, sidebar |
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New book from the
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Action! Interviews with Directors
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Robert Bresson
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Barbara Kopple
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François Truffaut
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on Orson Welles