This is a non-fiction movie on the sufferage movement in the early 20th century. It's pretty cool because the acting is topnotch and it gives me a much needed insight into this period of American History.
It stars Hillary Swank as Alice Paul who breaks from the ranks of the mainstream sufferage movement. Eventually she is thrown into prison and goes on a hunger strike. She was ordered to be force fed by none other than the president himself.
Quote:
IRON JAWED ANGELS recounts for a contemporary audience a key chapter in U.S. history: in this case, the struggle of suffragists who fought for the passage of the 19th Amendment. Focusing on the two defiant women, Alice Paul (Hilary Swank) and Lucy Burns (Frances O'Connor), the film shows how these activists broke from the mainstream women's-rights movement and created a more radical wing, daring to push the boundaries of political protest to secure women's voting rights in 1920. Breathing life into the relationships between Paul, Burns and others, the movie makes the women feel like complete characters instead of one-dimensional figures from a distant past.
Although the protagonists have different personalities and backgrounds - Alice is a Quaker and Lucy an Irish Brooklynite - they are united in their fierce devotion to women's suffrage. In a country dominated by chauvinism, this is no easy fight, as the women and their volunteers clash with older, conservative activists, particularly Carrie Chapman Catt (Angelica Huston). They also battle public opinion in a tumultuous time of war, not to mention the most powerful men in the country, including President Woodrow Wilson (Bob Gunton). Along the way, sacrifices are made: Alice gives up a chance for love, and colleague Inez Mulholland (Julia Ormond) gives up her life.
The women are thrown in jail, with an ensuing hunger strike making headline news. The women's resistance to being force-fed earns them the nickname "The Iron Jawed Angels." However, it is truly their wills that are made of iron, and their courage inspires a nation and changes it forever.
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Oh yeah, there is a bit of romance in the movie between Alice Paul and a newspaper editor/political cartoonist Ben Weisman.... Funny that HBO's synapsis says nothing of this. [edit] Maybe because it's fictionalized?




I don't know perhaps its just because I love historical dramas but this movie gets two big thumbs up from me.
More photos and a video trailer here:
http://www.hbo.com/films/ironjawedangels/video/