PlanetOut
 Recent Articles
 Trivia Addict
 Superfan
 Movies
 Browse
 Search
 Film Festivals
 Frameline
 Out on DVD
 Inside the Indies
 Big Screen
 Short Movie Awards
 Television
 Music
 Sundance
 Tonys
 Out on DVD
 

Girlfight: A Conversation With Karyn Kusama

by Loren King



Girlfight
Interact
  • PopcornQ What's Out Now

  • Also on PlanetOut
  • Back to PopcornQ
  • Back to Entertainment
  • PopcornQ review of Girlfight


  • From Body and Soul to Raging Bull, the boxing film is such a cinematic staple that it has become a hallowed genre of its own. With their primal clash of warriors, smoke-filled rooms, musty gyms, and crusty coaches, boxing movies have for decades been the arena of men, with women -- the boxer's mother, wife, girlfriend, or mistress -- safely protected outside the ring.

    Girlfight is a boxing movie for the new millennium. The film follows the genre's tradition of boxing as personal catharsis, of a nobody-who-becomes-a-somebody with all the attendant romantic complications. But this time there's a major twist: It's a scrappy, intense young woman -- Diana Guzman (Michelle Rodriguez) -- inside the ring of fire.

    Girlfight is also grittier than most Hollywood boxing movies because it is a story about amateur boxers, not the prizefighters audiences have been accustomed to seeing from Gentleman Jim to Rocky. In Girlfight, the young men and women are beginners, both physically and metaphorically. They clumsily do battle on the ropes of passion and maturity as they navigate their way into adulthood.

    Writer/director Karyn Kusama's first feature shared the Grand Jury Prize at the 2000 Sundance Film Festival. Kusama drew on her own experiences in the early '90s, when she boxed at Gleason's Gym in Brooklyn, NY, for her script about a female boxer's personal and professional journey.

    "If I was going to tell a boxing story, I knew it had to be about a young woman," says Kusama, a St. Louis native who graduated from the film program at New York University and worked as an assistant to filmmaker John Sayles, who eventually helped produce Girlfight.

    "There's such a tradition of boxing films, so if I was going to do anything interesting with that tradition, I was going to have to subvert it a little bit. Boxing, in general, is sort of the last of the great contact sports -- a true, dramatic face-off between two people. And you see that war so clearly that it becomes cinematically interesting," she says. "I felt I was telling a classical narrative with a trajectory that was linear ... the problem with storytelling, at this point, is we are just used to seeing men occupy that role, that hero's journey. It was important to me to see a young woman go through that. Not even in a political way -- I'm just bored by the lack of questions that I feel from a lot of those other stories."

    In Girlfight, troubled high school student Diana Guzman lives in a housing project in Brooklyn with her dismissive father and her younger brother. Her discovery of boxing at the local gym, under the tutelage of tough but compassionate trainer Hector (Jaime Tirelli), opens a new world of self-discipline and a way to channel her anger. When she finally competes against another featherweight, Adrian (Santiago Douglas), simply because there are no other women to fight, sexual and romantic complications ensue. It's the battle of the sexes in microcosm. Kusama says she was intrigued by the emotional possibilities for her characters that grew out of seeing men and women spar with each other in the gym.

    "When I started boxing in 1993, there were not a lot of women, and there was no institutional competition. That came later, in '95 or '96, with the Golden Gloves," she notes. "I think more and more women from the same backgrounds and neighborhoods as men are attracted to boxing. But change will be slow. Boxing is not a sport for everyone; it should not be a national pastime. But it is something more girls are going to be finding."

    One of the most intriguing aspects of Girlfight is its redefinition of femininity. Diana, who dresses in the defiant style of most urban teens, becomes more comfortable with her body and her sensuality when she is at her most powerful and self-assured -- working a punching bag, or sparring in the ring. The message of the film is that boxing makes her more, not less, sexy and appealing. "I wanted to see the character soften up as she became more entrenched in the sport," Kusama says. "That idea grew from Michelle's performance, because she brought so many human qualities that I don't think I could have anticipated."

    Actress Michelle Rodriguez, who won the role of Diana at an open casting call in New York City, had never boxed or acted before Girlfight. She trained for four-and-a-half months before the cameras started rolling for the grueling, 24-day shooting schedule. Her freshness and natural athleticism made Rodriguez a natural in the role. "She has an athletic grace. She's very gifted; if there's any quality in Michelle that mirrors the character, it is that she's full of potential and raw talent," observes Kusama. "I was lucky to have that to work with because it is a lot easier to work with raw talent than to work with polished no-talent. For me, anyway."

    Diana was written as a Latina in Kusama's script because, says Kusama, "being a Latina was authentic to boxing in New York and New York City life, and I wanted to pay homage to some of my favorite fighters. In the lower weight divisions, Latinos dominate the sport, so I felt it was honest." Kusama says her influences for Girlfight came from Hollywood melodrama, and from the naturalistic style found in Elia Kazan's classic On the Waterfront and John Huston's boxing film Fat City.

    Since the world she was depicting was that of novice boxers training in decrepit gyms, Kusama and director of photography Patrick Cady created a style far removed from, say, the balletic violence of Raging Bull, Martin Scorsese's masterpiece that redefined the boxing film. In Girlfight, the boxing sequences, though carefully choreographed, are deliberately clumsy, hard-nosed, and scrappy.

    "My hope -- and I can't say I completely succeeded -- was to create a more naturalistic experience of the activity in the ring, with less overt choreography, less theatrics," says Kusama. "It was interesting to me to think these characters are eventually going to become more emotionally open and vulnerable and maybe even a little theatrical with their feelings outside the ring, but we could keep what was going on inside the ring quite honest and plain. It has to be choreographed, for safety; we don't want black eyes for next day's shooting. But I think a lot of boxing movies miss the sport itself: they miss the fear and the emotional giving that goes on between two opponents. And at the amateur level, I knew I had a different mission because of working with characters whose experience level wasn't so high. So I wanted to do something about the struggle to find form, as opposed to being these perfectly formed fighters."

    Kusama, now working on her next script, which she calls a sci-fi/horror film that she hopes to shoot next year, says Girlfight doesn't glamorize violence, but acknowledges that boxing is a natural and viable outlet for disadvantaged urban youths, both male and female.

    "The film promotes the concept of sport, and I think boxing is the answer for a lot of young people. It's hard to accept, but I think, better boxing than a host of other after school activities. ... We forget how hard this world really is, how difficult it is to navigate through it when you are young and haven't been given the tools or resources you should have gotten," she says. "In a culture as violent as ours, we have to accept that people integrate violence into their life, and for this character [Diana], violence is a primary energy for her. Her anger and rage is definitely a creative energy, if it could be controlled and focused into something, directed into something. I liked the concept that the character needed to box not because she needed to get out of her neighborhood or win a lot of money but because she just needed to box, she needed to move, she needed to express herself in this visceral, sensory way to feel alive. On the simplest terms, that's what makes boxing so compelling.

    "I wanted to glamorize the concept of regimen, routine, and discipline because I think there is something compelling about working through things and committing to things," Kusama continues. "It's really important to find what it is in your life that you love to do, and then do it. That's the inspirational part of Diana's journey. She finds what she's good at."

    * Read the PopcornQ review of Girlfight


     
    Company Info | Advertise on PNO | Frequently Asked Questions
    Privacy Policy | User Agreement | Community Guidelines
    PNO Affiliate Program | Letter to the Editor
    © 1995-2008 PlanetOut Inc | Legal Notice


    Login Now
    Member Name:
    Password:
    Save name and password
    Forgot login/password?
    Free Entertainment
    The PlanetOut.com Entertainment Newsletter delivers fresh entertainment news, reviews, gossip and more to your desktop every Friday.