To Lose My Mind And Find My Soul.1 The Masculine and Feminine in Films Set in the Forest

  • Josef Steiff
Keywords: Masculine ; Feminine ; Forest ; Transformation ; Heroine ; Hero

Abstract

In the past few years, there has been a proliferation of films and television series around the world that are set in forests. These stories’ structures often differ depending on the gender of the protagonist: If the protagonists are men, the forest is usually a site of horror, but when the protagonists are women, the forests become sites of transformation. Looking at Maureen Murdock’s The Heroine’s Journey, Joseph Campbell’s The Hero’s Journey, and Catherine Addison’s model for how the forest is represented in classical literature, this paper considers how the internal journey of female characters is reflected in or resonates with the woods. Films discussed range across multiple genres (drama, survival, crime, horror, science fiction) and include Leave No Trace, Deliverance, The Grey, Destroyer, Zone Blanche, The Ritual, The Hallow, Without Name, Dans la foret, The Blair Witch Project, The Forest, Mad Max: Fury Road, Annihilation, and Aeon Flux. The temptation to talk about these films in dichotomies, such as Hero/Heroine, Masculine/Feminine, illustrates our need for new terminology to reflect even newer ways of thinking about the complexity of gendered protagonists in stories.

References

Aeon Flux (USA 2005, Karyn Kusama)

Alien (UK/USA 1979, Ridley Scott)

Annihilation (UK/USA 2018, Alex Garland)

The Blair Witch Project (USA 1999, Daniel Myrick & Eduardo Sánchez)

Dans la foret (France/Sweden 2016, Gilles Marchand)

Deliverance (USA 1972, John Boorman)

Destroyer (USA 2018, Karyn Kusama)

Fahrenheit 451 (UK 1966, François Truffaut)

The Forest (USA 2016, Jason Zada)

The Grey (USA 2012, Joe Carnahan)

The Hallow (UK/USA/Ireland 2015, Corin Hardy)

Leave No Trace (USA/Canada 2018, Debra Granik)

Mad Max: Fury Road (Australia/USA 2015, George Miller)

The Other Side of Sleep (Ireland/Netherlands/Hungary 2011, Rebecca Daly)

Picnic at Hanging Rock (Australia 1975, Peter Weir)

The Ritual (UK/Canada 2017, David Bruckner)

Without Name (Ireland 2016, Lorcan Finnegan)

Zone Blanche (France/Belgium 2017/2019, Mathieu Missoffe)

Published
2020-08-31
How to Cite
Steiff , J. (2020). To Lose My Mind And Find My Soul.1 The Masculine and Feminine in Films Set in the Forest. Cuadernos Del Centro De Estudios De Diseño Y Comunicación, (91). https://doi.org/10.18682/cdc.vi91.3844