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Feminists: What Were They Thinking? is a 2018 documentary film directed by Johanna Demetrakas and starring Laurie Anderson, Phyllis Chesler and Judy Chicago among others. Women of different ages and backgrounds are interviewed by Demetrakas and a team of assistants on the subject of feminism, anchored in the book 'Emergence' with ...
- Kristy Tully
- Johanna Demetrakas
- Lisa Remington
Watch Feminists: What Were They Thinking? | Netflix Official Site. Revisiting 1970s photos of women that captured a feminist awakening, this film explores those women's lives and examines the continued need for change. Watch trailers & learn more.
- Johanna Demetrakas
- 86 min
12 ott 2018 · Feminists: What Were They Thinking?: Directed by Johanna Demetrakas. With Bella Abzug, Laurie Anderson, Phyllis Chesler, Judy Chicago. Feminists: What Were They Thinking? takes aim at our current culture revealing all too vividly the urgent need for continued change.
- (2,4K)
- Documentary
- Johanna Demetrakas
- 2018-10-12
3 ott 2018 · Feminists: What Were They Thinking? | Official Trailer [HD] | Netflix - YouTube. Netflix. 27.8M subscribers. Subscribed. 5.6K. 274K views 5 years ago. The stories of their past paved the...
- 2 min
- 277K
- Netflix
13 ott 2018 · Feminists: What Were They Thinking? serves as a retrospective not only for MacAdams’ work but for the women she captured, many of whom are interviewed here 40 years after the book’s...
- 2 min
Women involved in the Second Wave Feminist movement in the USA reflect on their experiences as self-identified feminists. The documentary is centered around a 1977 photobook containing photographs of each woman as a young adult and is crosscut with candid interviews with the same women four decades later. The women highlight the impact their ...
Synopsis. In 1977, a book of photographs captured an awakening — women shedding the cultural restrictions of their childhoods and embracing their full humanity. Feminists: What Were They Thinking? revisits those photos, those women and those times — and takes aim at our current culture revealing all too vividly the urgent need for continued change.