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One for the ladies

Kathryn Bigelow is well positioned to become the first female Oscar winner for directing. Take that, "Avatar."

Kathryn Bigelow made history Saturday when the director of The Hurt Locker, a tale of risk junkies defusing improvised explosive devices in Iraq, became the first woman to receive top honors from the Directors Guild of America (DGA).

Prospects are good that she'll make history once again on March 7 at the Oscars. In a battle-of-the-exes twist, Bigelow could take the prize over former spouse James Cameron, whose Avatar is the top-grossing movie of all time.

She's a lock for an Academy Award nomination (which will be announced this morning). Because it's so rare that the DGA winner doesn't go on to win an Academy Award - only six times in 61 years - odds are Bigelow could be the first woman director in the Academy's 82-year history to crash the celluloid ceiling. It's a feat that the three prior nominees - Lina Wertmuller (Seven Beauties), Jane Campion (The Piano), and Sofia Coppola (Lost in Translation) - failed to accomplish.

"This is Sally Ride, first woman in space big," declared Melissa Silverstein on her Women & Hollywood blog on Sunday (http://womenandhollywood.com). "This is Sandra Day O'Connor, first female on the Supreme Court big. This is Billie Jean King beating Bobby Riggs big."

OK, definitely a watershed moment. But I'm skeptical that Bigelow's probable nomination and possible win will represent any substantive change for women in Hollywood. When Hattie McDaniel became the first African American to win an Oscar (for 1939's Gone With the Wind), it did not immediately open the door for other black actors. After Wertmuller became the first female director nominated, 17 years passed before Campion became the second.

Yes, Bigelow's movie about how warriors get addicted to the rush of war is truly great. But 2009 was by most measures only a good year for women filmmakers, who are consigned mostly to romantic comedies and biopics.

According to Martha Lauzen, a communications professor at San Diego State, the percentage of movies directed by women was 9 percent in 2008. By my math, 17 of the top 250 box-office movies in 2009 were directed by women, a jot under 7 percent.

Since 1998 the number of women filmmakers has held between 7 percent and 10 percent, said Lauzen, who for nearly 20 years has tracked employment of women in the film industry.

"We have to celebrate Bigelow's achievement," said Jeanine Basinger, professor of film history at Wesleyan University.

"If Bigelow wins, it's a breakthrough," she said. "Still, as a film historian, when I contemplate the minuscule numbers of women directors today as compared to the more equal numbers of women and men during the silent era, I am always surprised.

"There used to be no gender bias in filmmaking, nor was there the gender specificity we see today," she said.

What Basinger refers to is that, notwithstanding The Hurt Locker, most of the films from women in 2009 are romantic comedies (see Anne Fletcher's The Proposal or Nancy Meyers' It's Complicated) or biopics about founding mothers of 20th-century culture (Anne Fontaine's Coco Before Chanel and Mira Nair's Amelia, about aviatrix Amelia Earhart).

Unless you're Woody Allen, rom-coms aren't taken seriously by the Academy. And unless you're a foreigner - like Dutch director Marleen Gorris, who won best foreign film in 1995 for Antonia's Line, or German filmmaker Caroline Link, who won the foreign prize in 2002 for Nowhere in Africa - the Academy doesn't honor biopics seen from a female perspective. Gandhi is Oscar-worthy, not Coco.

The cause lies not in women's lack of talent, but in the Academy's general bias against movies about the female experience. Bigelow, who specializes in genre movies about men addicted to danger (see Point Break), is more in the Academy's traditional mold.

As Basinger said, the greatest thing about a prospective Bigelow win would be "that it says that a good film is not defined by the gender of the filmmaker."

Female Directors, 2009

Here are the top-grossing movies in North America last year from women directors.

Alvin and the Chipmunks: The Squeakquel

Betty Thomas   $209 million   Rank: 9

The Proposal

Anne Fletcher   $163 million   Rank: 16

It's Complicated

Nancy Meyers   $104 million   Rank: 31

Julie & Julia

Nora Ephron   $94 million   Rank: 34

Jennifer's Body

Karyn Kusama   $16 million   Rank: 116

Amelia

Mira Nair   $14 million   Rank: 126

Whip It

Drew Barrymore   $13 million   Rank: 129

The Hurt Locker

Kathryn Bigelow   $13 million   Rank: 130

Sunshine Cleaning

Christine Jeffs   $12 million   Rank: 132

An Education

Lone Scherfig   $9 million   Rank: 144

Post Grad

Vicky Jenson   $6 million   Rank: 152

Coco Before Chanel

Anne Fontaine   $6 million   Rank: 154

Bright Star

Jane Campion   $4 million   Rank: 161

Yoo-Hoo, Mrs. Goldberg

Aviva Kempner   $1 million   Rank: 193

Amreeka

Cherien Dabis   $621,000   Rank: 225

The Girl From Monaco

Anne Fontaine   $602,000   Rank: 227

Humpday

Lynn Shelton   $407,000   Rank: 243

Source: Box Office Mojo. EndText

Read about this morning's nominations for the Academy Awards at www.philly.com.

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