MovieChat Forums > Slap Shot (1977) Discussion > Sneaky Feminist Flick

Sneaky Feminist Flick


Slapshot was written by a woman; Nancy Dowd. At almost every turn, women have the upper hand, especially wen it comes to Reg.

First, Reg's wife is leaving him. She looks classy and smart, moving out of shoddy and failing Charleston, for upwardly mobile Long Island. The final scene of the film illustrates just how pathetic Reg is. Francine, his ex, is portrayed more as an adult than Reg pursuing the prolonged dreams of his long faded adolescence. She shoots him a glance at the end that is part pity, part condesencion.

The Chiefs mystery owner is also a woman--a rich woman at that. She's amused by Reg and his antics, and she even gives him a bit of a sexy look. But he is clearly out of her league and it becomes obvious when she states, that she can sell the team, but won't because she can make more off of the depreciation of the team on her taxes. Again, a woman in a superior position and one that thwarts his dream of saving the team and his lost boys has power over Reg.

Hanrahan's wife, played by Melinda Dillion confides to Reg in bed that she had a lesbian affair while drunk, but then she did it sober and she kissed a girl and liked it. Reg uses the news against her goalie husband and here is yet another example of a man being humiliated by woman, this time it's not Reg, but he's an accomplice.

At the end of the film while the two teams are mauling each other on the ice, the one "guy" that comes off looking halfway human is "Ned" played by Michael Ontkean. Instead of brawling and mauling, he decides to do a striptease on ice, which in many ways is incredibly emasculating, given the context of the film and the times. Ontkean is the most "feminine" man in the film and is the one that Dowd rewards. At the end, it's Ned skating off the ice with the trophy cup, not Reg. Even in wining, Reg is trumped by a "girlie-man."

The men on the team are all caricatures. Moe is a gloating and disgusting horn dog. Killer is a lost boy and Reg is his Captain Hook. Even the beloved Hanson Brothers are portrayed as a case of arrested development with their race cars in the locker room and brainless violence.

Lastly, even Strother Martin, the team's publicist gets outed by Reg for being a bra-wearing "fag" according to Reg.

Nancy Dowd took a slap shot at men in this film and I think that was her goal.

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[deleted]

Really?

Answer me this.

Does the film portray most of the men in the movie in a puerile light?

Does the film portray most of the female figures as being more mature and financially powerful?

Is this not a feminist broadside against sports culture and men in general?

However, I would say that Slap Shot is more Camille Paglia than Gloria Steinheim, as evidenced by the final game where Ned's wife is transformed from a butch tomboy, to a fur wearing trophy, courtesy of Francine.



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I enjoyed reading your posts. Been a huge fan of this movie for like 20 years and never thought of it like that.

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OP - interesting take on the movie. You neglected another important scene that supports your thesis. After Reg drops Lily off to get her hair done by his ex wife Francine, the two ladies have a conversation about leaving their husbands. Francine says it's awful at first, but then it's great and you become a new woman. Talk about a ringing endorsement for women dumping their husbands! Of course, it's a lot easier becoming a new person with your ex-husband's alimony paying the way...

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But she didn't dump him, that was the point. She kept showing up and in the final conversation with him in the car during the pagent, the implication was that the on/off relationship would ultimately continue unabated. He is Paul newman after all!

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Gary-161 wrote:
"But she didn't dump him, that was the point. She kept showing up and in the final conversation with him in the car during the pagent, the implication was that the on/off relationship would ultimately continue unabated."
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Really? I couldn't disagree with you more. When Reg is crowing about Minnesota showing interest in him, Francine gives him the usual "That's nice, but you're pathetic" look. She gave him that same look throughout the entire movie. She's still going to Long Island, maybe to hook up with Redford.

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He was apparently not so pathetic that she was unwilling to follow him around. She gave the other wife a makeover but that wife ends the film with her husband and I don't doubt the dysfunctional Newman relationship would have continued in some form or other.

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But wasn't it the case that Francine accidentally ran into Reggie while driving through the Main Street parade? Through most of the movie their interactions seemed to be either Reg coming to her (as with Lilly at the hair salon) or else randomly bumping into each other. If anything Reg was probably purposefully roaming around the places he knew she was most likely to be.

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I completely agree with the other poster-unfortunately you mis-read the scene. Francine was moving out of town the day of the parade and taking a job in a hair salon on Long Island. It was ridiculous they would meet during the parade - so it's understandable why you might be confused.

Watch the film again. She definitely did not follow him. This film was a classic in my home growing up-we would quote from it - she did not follow him to Minnesota.

"Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it." Norman Maclean

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What a terrible generalization. There are tons of heterosexual men who write women roles and do so impeccably and wonderfully. What you wrote is utterly ridiculous as you are nit-picking this film because a female was involved. You must dislike Nancy for some reason and as this is a free board, you are free to do that. But this movie really has nothing to do with that.

Happy Holidays and have a wonderful 2012!

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I don't think so. I've lined up plenty of examples in the film and all you've done is serve up generalizations.

Go back to my original two posts and dispute each one of my examples.

No, in fact, I'll list them again for you;

1) Reg as slick talking puer who is willing to sell other men out.

2) Ned Braden as the reluctant goon--the new male celebrated by Dowd for not just his refusal to participate in macho athletic rituals, but his out and out mockery of them by parading around the ice as a preening stripper on blades, snatching the cup (grail/idealized vulva) from Reg.

3) Dave "Killer" Carson as faux male, aping Reg, looking for approval from him, the older male.

4) The utter lasciviousness of Mo, who treats women as objects.

5) The arrested development of "The Hansons."

6) Hanrahan, Reg's rival, who has his wife sleep with a woman and she likes it. Reg uses this against Hanrahan.

7) Joe McGrath (Strother Martin) who is a closet homosexual.

Real great portrayal of men there.

Now let's look at the female characters.

1) Francine, who obviously has her *beep* together more than Reg and looks upon him with pity and condescension for most of the film, on to a better way of life.

2) Anita Mc Cambridge (team owner). Again a woman in a position of power, who could sell or save the team but chooses not to. Another woman with power over Reg. Reg's only and pathetic attempt at saving his dignity is to slight her son as being a "queer."

3) Hanrahan's Wife. Already mentioned. The cheating bi-sexual wife.

4) Lili Braden. Pathetic at first, but magically transformed by Francine, initiated into the ranks of pretty and powerful women in the film.

Most man laugh at this movie and think its a hoot. Dowd is laughing as well. At them.

Now take your virtual popcorn and stick it up your virtual arse. With hot butter flavor of course.

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I was going to post just a small comment that you make some good insights but I think the reality is a bit more balanced; the script was originally written as a documentary - if I remember correctly Dowd's brother or some other relative was a player for a team in an impoverished area where the local industry was shutting down and practically everyone would be out of work. She thought a documentary about the subject would be good to show how hard the situation is, but somewhere along the way with the director coming on board they decided to write a straight forward comedy.

I agree she was well aware that she wrote all the women in a positive light; it would pass the feminist rule that not every woman in it is only there to think about the main male character, help him, talk about him or pine after him. The wife is a wonderful character since clearly she spends most of her time doing things that have nothing to do with her ex husband, a whole work and social schedule he knows nothing about. But I think it was probably more of a logical step - a 'I'm writing women in this for basic plot functions, it doesn't matter how I write them so I'll write them strong and indepenant as long as they still perform their narrative functions' kinda thing. The film is generally a satire about the hockey world so in all directions there is satire, hence there are some jokes about how few Americans wanted careers in hockey, how unusual it is when an intelligent well to do man chooses hockey as a career, some jokes about unhappy fans, some jokes about the machoism of the culture and some about stereotypical women - like the other wives discussing how much they drink, seen only talking like hens about their husbands, sitting together at the games, in the car. Clearly Dowd wanted the main female characters to be enjoyable for women, but she didn't ignore the opportunity for satire with women if it made the film better.

And since she started out planning a documentary sympathetic to the players and the culture to me the portrayal of the teams is also friendly and affectionate. Yeah, its intentional that a whole rash of them are pretty laughable, but in a nice way, more about the culture and the type of men that end up in hockey than a nasty portrayal ridiculing them for being what they are. I speak as a woman - I like all the characters, thats why I love the movie! Its perfectly written as it doesn't objectify anyone in a mean way, its just a fun film weaved around a factual event that was quite common in the sport...

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Hels dunleavy pretty much nails it there.

Definately some intereting avenues explored by the OP but leaning a little hard on the pen (keyboard) pushing the feminist notions. Machismo and gender identity perhaps, is definately lampooned but quite affectionately.

It doesnt really ring true to push the feminist stance so hard, but quite frankly it lends a warmth and humanity that for comparison sake is compleately missing in the sequels.

To back my point i would direct attention to Newman's character being quite liberal with his views on sexuality, and even the relationship of lesser character who flashes the audience at the fashion show. I could go on but the point has already been made better than i would.

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Most man laugh at this movie and think its a hoot. Dowd is laughing as well. At them.
Well, I'm a dude and she's free to laugh at my laughing at this film. Though I doubt she is or would be.

A few points.

These aren't randomly selected dudes representing all dudekind. These are minor league hockey players in the '70s, and the subject came to her by way of her brother, a minor league hockey player.

Generally, I'm straining to think of many wives or girlfriends of sportsmen on screen portrayed in a negative light, except for those who hook up with them when they're on the up, gold diggers etc.. They are almost always more sensitive, thoughtful and so on, if not always smarter. Men write most of these films.

Anita McCambridge, while strong, isn't sympathetic. She's callous.

Being feminist or making feminist art isn't sneaky, and I don't think she's really trying to pull the wool over anyone's eyes here. Is there some way the male characters could be more overtly ridiculous? If she was trying to be sneaky, she failed miserably. It's rather a straightforward feminist perspective. Nobody would call Coming Home a sneaky humanist flick. Well, some might but not many.

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lambiepie-2 wrote:
"What you wrote is utterly ridiculous as you are nit-picking this film because a female was involved."
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Nonsense. While I don't agree with the OP's disparaging tone toward Dowd, as I think the script is absolutely brilliant, he's correct that there is a very strong undercurrent highlighting the idiocy of men, their condescending treatment of the women in their lives, and how for many women having men in their lives at all is destructive. If you can't see that in the hair salon scene, where Francine basically advocates that women leave their husbands, then you weren't paying attention.

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I like the OP's take on this. You have to remember that in the '70s in the U.S., the feminist movement was just starting to crank up and get some long overdue equality for women. It would appear that Dowd did find ways to subtly insert some of that message into a movie about a macho sport like hockey, especially the low-brow version that was minor league hockey in the '70s.

Fortunately, Dowd doesn't beat us over the head with it. She makes it subtle and humorous. If she had done otherwise, I doubt the movie would have enjoyed the long-lasting affection that it has.

Also, kudos to the producers and George Roy Hill for keeping these feminist sub-plots in the movie.

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Agreed completely. Sure it has some feminist undertones, but great, what's the harm in that? Is it really so terrible to see a sports movie with strong female characters?

Anyway, those elements are definitely not as pervasive or "anti-men" as others have tried to make them out to be. Some of the "evidence" of her "men-hating agenda" used earlier in this topic is pretty hypocritical. One of the posters above claims that the female owner of the team is supposed to be evidence of this pro-women agenda. But the only thing "pro-woman" about her character is the fact that she has power and money, and if a male character were the owner of a sports team with power and money, nobody would blink twice, or call it "pro-men". If anything, this just highlights the biases that audience members have (and thus the need for feminist writing like this), where a female character with power is thought to exist because of a hidden agenda, while a male character with power is just expected.

And if the team owner was truly meant to be used for this purpose, why was she written to be such an unsympathetic character, one who doesn't care about causing the hockey team to all lose their jobs?

Likewise, a male character who is gay, and a female character who is gay, are both evidence of this feminist agenda? That doesn't make sense.

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You obviously don't know what a feminist even is.

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Oh c'mon rpm, didja at least laugh? Even a little? Nice job, sucking the fun out of funny.

Ok, let's try to take a couple of your points seriously...

1. You say Ned was shown in an emasculating light due to his performance in the championship final - false! You must be that guy with the token participation ribbon who never actually played a team sport. There's no feminist undercurrent here. If anything, Lily's change is the complete opposite of the feminist cliche. When she's a tomboy earlier on in the film, angry at scapegoat Ned as well as all men (ie, following the feminist doctrine), she and Ned can't stand each other and seem destined for breakup and misery. As soon as she gets herself all dolled up and pretty - truly embracing her womanhood, if you must put it in terms (gagonacock) a women's studies student would understand - he's transformed and lightens up finally (to great comedic effect), and thereafter harmony ensues between them.

2. So you think Francine's really over and done with pathetic ole' Reg? Kicked him to the curb and moved on up to the big time in a shining halo of glowing feminine might? Buddy, for your own sake detach yourself from Mother's primly supported teat and go have a real live relationship with a real live (non-brainwashed) girl. For the entire history of human existence, women have bitched about their men (and vice versa) just like Francine did about Reg in this movie. The only thing that's new is that in recent history, so-called academics decreed that we must all take 'em seriously, and the utter travesty known as Feminism was henceforth born.
You know what's really gonna happen with Francine? She'll likely go to Long Island. She'll circulate. She'll get with a guy who seems really together, civilized and driven, on his way up the corporate ladder... let's call him douchebag #1. Sooner or later she'll figure out the reality of the situation and sever ties, smart girl that she is. On to another relationship with someone she hopes is different, but it's only a matter of time before she realizes she's found douchebag #2... What happens next, who knows? Maybe she'll come back to Reg, maybe she'll end up with some other guy kinda like him, or maybe she'll decide to hold her nose and stick it out with douchebag #5. One thing's for sure though - she'll realize she was chasing a fantasy crafted by the so-called female empowerment movement. Good thing it's just a movie eh?

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The owner inherited the team from her dead husband.

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The owner is not portrayed in a positive light. She *beep* over the well being of the team members for her own selfish reasons. *beep* rich scum

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I don't know, don't the majority of sports films feature the smart, stabilizing, hard to impress heroine that the freewheeling rebel hero is trying to impress? Talia Shire's character in Rocky. Rene Russo's character in Major League. If the heroine just went along with everything the hero did it would be a pretty boring flick.

The team owner was not a positive character in any way. And if anything I kind of cringed when the gal underwent a makeover and gave up her edge to impress her man. To me there were really only two scenes that revealed the gender or beliefs of the writer: 1. The scene in which Paul Newman's lover discussed her lesbianism and sad history of domestic violence. 2. The hunky hockey player's strip scene at the end. That was totally hawt!:)

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Characters do not exist as inert entities. They are defined against one another in space and as such, I have one word for you; "Francine." Reg is defined as sophmoric, delayed and even to some extent, delusional.

Francine has her life together and looks at Reg almost with pity and it is Francine, not Reg who gets out of the podunk town and it's charming, yet unrefined provincialism.

It's Francine who is ultimately the hero, not Reg. And while you might be dismissive when it comes to the upgrade that Lily gets (since of course most current feminists would recoil at such a representation of empowerment--it was the 70's) it puts her on a more equal playing surface with her rebellious, 70's, sensitive male.

The owner of the hockey team is, "The Ice Queen" both literally, since she owns a team that plays on ice and metaphorically. But, at the end of the day, she still owns Reg and has power over him. And if you think she's horrible, I'd be willing to bet my considerable reputation as a writer here on IMDB (just kidding) that she's no more despicable than women like Hilary Clinton or Carly Fiorina, who have to be as tough and mercenary as any man in positions of power. Like her or not, she's a representation of a particular type.

Lastly, of course you would like the Ned Braden scene. "Sensitive" men are rewarded, not for their striptease on blades, but for the entire package and rejection of traditional male portrayals and thus in true, 17th century fashion ala Sheridan, the other characters are caricatures in contrast to him.

I'm not alone in my view. Reviewer Frank Stricker mostly echos my take; "It appears that what brought this film to life was the following: through her brother, a minor league hockey player, Nancy Dowd found out that athletes talk dirty. Fascinated, she taped their every word, and, with a vaguely feminist impulse, she concocted a script that would at once play to the sports crowd while making a statement about male violence and sexism." And as a result, feminism, in my perception.

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"...it is Francine, not Reg who gets out of the podunk town and it's charming, yet unrefined provincialism."



"...she owns a team that plays on ice and metaphorically. But, at the end of the day, she still owns Reg and has power over him."


Nope.

Perhaps you've forgotten - Reg gets a job with the Minnesota Night Hawks, and so he (a) gets out of "the podunk town," and (b) is no longer "owned" (and therefore is not under the power of) "The"Ice Queen."
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"Leave the gun. Take the cannoli."

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Misogynist nonsense by someone who has no clue what the word "feminism" means.

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I didn't see anywhere that I hated women. Just made some observations and the best that you can do is go all ad hominem up in my grizzle.

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Funny how we NEVER EVER see men like the OP complaining that male oriented films directed by men or written by men that objectify women or show women in a bad light. They only come on IMDB and whine about how certain films make THEM look bad. What a riot this guy is. I guess other men are supposed to join in on his circle jerk fantasy. The net has become a cess pool of incessant misogynistic whinging by males despite the fact it's a man's world.

That was all rather thrilling. Anything more cinematographic could scarcely be imagined.

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From a NY Times review in 1977.

The OP was onto something.

"Miss Dowd, who considers herself a feminist, seemed annoyed when it was suggested that “Slap Shot” has strong sexist overtones. especially in the hockey players’ attitudes and comments about women, and in a seemingly gratuitous scene about an unhappy hockey wife who has experimented with lesbianism.

“The only scene I thought twice about writing was making the team's rich, uncaring owner (played by Kathryn Walker) woman.” Miss Dowd said. “I worried about people saying I had made a sexist statement. But I've seen that woman's attitude so many times: ‘I never let my children see a hockey game.’”

https://www.nytimes.com/1977/03/03/archives/author-says-her-slap-shot-talk-is-realistic.html

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nope , thats just more hate against women for making a movie and not being in the kitchen

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