Thursday, May 15, 2008

Why I Love "Baby Face"

Baby Face stars Barbara Stanwick as an ambitious, clear minded, leader who is delt a bit of cumbersome circumstances. We find her working as a hostess in her own home for her father's makeshift speak easy. It is heavily implied that her father prostitutes her out and that there is some incest going on. At no point in the opening sequence is she a passive victim waiting to be saved or redeemed. We find her instead gravitating toward the intellectual customer of her fathers and being given sound advice. She takes the information and capitalizes on it. There is no waiting for someone to put her in a livable situation, instead we find someone who is constantly scanning all possibilities until she finds one that she can take action on.

The score by Leo Forbstien is playful and smart. My favorite theme is the corporate ladder climbing motif that is accompanied by the visual of the outside of the New York skyscraper where Baby Face is working. The motif is usually begins as Baby Face is securing another upward promotion. She smiles at a handsome successful man, the door closes behind them, the theme starts, we see the outside window of the department she is currently in, and when we ascend to the next level of the building or department, she appears in a better outfit and a better job.

What I like about these images of sexual power is not the use of sex to obtain power, but rather the dramatization of how a woman understands her given circumstances and is not conflicted by false morality imposed by those in control. She needs work, she is smart, she is capable
and ambitious. She is detached from sex emotionally at this point in the movie, so she has no
need for it other that to serve her practically.

Baby Face is a person who we are not supposed to like, but like her anyway. She is an anti hero which is such a fantastic and rare character for women to be portrayed as. She's tough, funny, smart, sexy and in front of every situation.

1 comment:

Rubyma said...

Precode movies like Baby Face open a window into womens' lives. For those of us who grew up in the '50s, the stories of the Depression that our mothers told us never fit with our post war understanding of how women lived in the '50s. I remember occassional discussions on TV about the Decency League and the requirement of double beds. I love "Baby Face" because it makes women people...nuanced people.