On the Basis of Sex (2018)
Young lawyer Ruth Bader Ginsburg teams with her husband Marty to bring a groundbreaking case before the U.S. Court of Appeals and overturn a century of sex discrimination.
- Mimi Leder
- Nathalie Paquette
- Daniel Stiepleman
Rating: 7.386/10 by 1022 users
Alternative Title:
온 더 베이시스 오브 섹스 - KR
Suprema - BR
法律女王 - TW
La voz de la igualdad - AR
Una cuestión de género - MX
La Voz de la Igualdad - CO
Country:
United States of America
Language:
English
Runtime: 02 hour 00 minutes
Budget: $20,000,000
Revenue: $38,700,000
Plot Keyword: 1970s, biography, based on true story, supreme court, lawyer, justice, harvard law school, woman director, 1960s, courtroom drama, supreme court justice, inspirational, instructive
Well, it's so inaccurate that you can tell from the start that it is going for statement over biopic. And it almost seems like it should be titled "The Unstoppable RBG" as she comes across as right all the time, faultless, stronger, smarter and more capable than anyone to the point where she can argue a case, preform brain surgery, and create the rocket that got us to the moon, in a single night without breaking a sweat. She's more perfect here than Mary Poppins and it makes the film sort of unbelievable. Ginsburg is human, I'm sure she had to struggle to over come more than just the evil White Male patriarchy, but even that she effortlessly dismantles. Halfway through the movie you expect her to wear a cape and fly away, just to prove she can out super Superman as well. In a Biopic you kind of expect to get to know the character, to see their ups and downs. Instead, however, what you get is a golden god with history rewritten to add a healthy polish.
A great opportunity to assess the remarkable achievements of Ruth Bader Ginsberg - but one that misses more than it hits. Felicity Jones and Armie Hammer just don't have the gravitas to pull this off - they deliver none of the feistiness, grit and determination that must have featured substantially in her struggle for equality and success within her profession. It isn't anywhere near as bad as a traditional TV movie, but it blurs the lines between autobiography and fiction in a way that serves to diminish the overall story and that's a real shame. I'd have loved to see Katharine Hepburn play her!