Complementarity and Its Discontents: An Overview of Violent Women in American Film
Complementarity and Its Discontents: An Overview of Violent Women in American Film
Complementarity and Its Discontents: An Overview of Violent Women in American Film
Since the late 1980s, the violent woman has become a staple in con-
temporary American cinema. In looking at films from Thelma and
Louise (1991) to Strange Days (1995) to Tomorrow Never Dies (1997) to
Girlfight (2000), we quickly see that action and violence are no longer
the exclusive province of men. Rather than waiting for men to pro-
tect them, female characters have begun to protect themselves.
When we first look at the emergence of the violent woman in the
films of the late 1980s and early 1990s, we cannot but be startled by
the dramatic change that her emergence seems to indicate in cine-
matic representations. She seems, in short, to have sprung into exis-
tence as if shot out of a cannon, taking the cinema-going public
completely by surprise (as the very public debate about Thelma and
Louise seemed to suggest). Even though the current phenomenon is
unprecedented in the number of films that contain a violent woman,
this figure itself is not unique to contemporary cinema. The violent
woman has antecedents throughout the history of film and an in-
vestigation into the significance of the violent woman’s emergence
in the films of today must therefore begin with a brief look at the
history of the violent woman in American cinema. I aim in this
chapter not to provide a comprehensive history of the violent
woman but instead a survey of her various historical manifestations
in the cinema in order to highlight better the theoretical, cultural,
and aesthetic foundations of her origins.
15
and defending herself during fights with Hunter, Ruth appears far
more daring and independent than Pauline was just eight years ear-
lier. This heightened quality of independence is indicated in some
ways by her ability to be violent. Although not discussing violence
per se, Ben Singer echoes this thought when he points out that “the
depiction of female power self-consciously dissolves, sometimes
even completely reverses, traditional gender positions as the hero-
ine appropriates a variety of ‘masculine’ qualities, competencies,
and privileges.”4 One of those qualities is obviously the ability to
handle oneself in a fight, to be violent. Nevertheless, all these seri-
als had men who saved the heroines in the end, ostensibly because
they couldn’t save themselves. Likewise, even though these women
were capable of being violent, rebellious, independent, and adven-
turesome, the serials invariably depicted their heroines as com-
pletely virtuous and entirely bereft of any tendency toward
promiscuity. Clearly, having chastity and a male protector were two
commodities that allowed these women some latitude in the direc-
tion of adventure and freedom—and even violence. These com-
modities blunt the disruptive power of her adventurousness and
violence.
Since the period of the Serial Queen Melodramas, the violent
woman has continued to crop up in isolated instances in the history
of American cinema. She is never entirely absent from the American
cinematic landscape, but it is when depictions of the violent woman
appear in large numbers and in similar roles that they tell us about
the functioning of ideology. That is to say, insofar as she appears in
a historically related group of films, the violent woman is most
clearly related to social problems and contradictions—and to the
ideological response to these contradictions. The violent woman ap-
pears at moments of ideological crisis, when the antagonisms pre-
sent within the social order—antagonisms that ideology attempts to
elide—become manifest. Though antagonisms always exist within
the social order, they emerge most forcefully at moments of ideo-
logical crisis.
Such an ideological crisis occurs when strictly defined gender
roles—roles that give a logic and a sense to sexual difference—break
down. Ideology works to produce clear gender distinctions in order
to provide stable symbolic identities for both male and female sub-
jects. Without this kind of coherence, identity loses its guarantees:
male and female subjects begin to question, rather than invest them-
selves in, symbolic identities. This process destabilizes the social
order, and popular culture often responds by producing cultural
images that work through, contain, or expose, this destablization.
One powerful example—one that almost always acts as a nexus for
concerns about gender identity—is the violent woman in film. If
there is one characteristic that defines masculinity in the cultural
imagination, it is violence. The depiction of a violent woman upsets
this association of violence with masculinity. Yet, at each moment
when the violent woman emerges on a wide scale in film history,
the films in which she appears go to great lengths to frame her vio-
lence within the very symbolic system that her violence threatens to
undo. In this way, these films are an effort to ameliorate the social
antagonism at the same time as they are explorations of it.
After their appearance in the Serial Queen Melodramas, the next
filmic trend in which the violent woman emerged en masse was in
film noir (from the late 1930s through the 1940s); she reappeared in
horror and blaxploitation films in the 1970s and early 1980s; and she
has most recently appeared in full flower in a wide range of films
from the late 1980s through to the present. In these current films, the
violent woman has undergone a fundamental transformation from
her earlier incarnations: when she appeared in Serial Queen Melo-
dramas, film noir, blaxploitation films, or horror films, the violent
woman was strictly a generic figure, limited to a particular kind of
film. Beginning in the late 1980s, however, depictions of the violent
woman began to cross generic boundaries. She has appeared in
action films, neo-noirs, comedies, and dramas. This widening of the
violent woman’s berth suggests that the antagonism—the ideologi-
cal disruption that the appearance of the violent woman marks—
has become more dramatically exposed than in the earlier eras.
Because the violent woman in contemporary films has escaped the
confines of isolated (and often marginalized) types of film, her vio-
lence indicates that the antagonism of the sexual relationship has be-
come imagined to be increasingly precarious. But each of these
contemporary manifestations of the violent woman owes a debt to
the femme fatale and film noir.5
Masculinity and violence were intimately linked in Hollywood
during the time of the classic film noir. Westerns, gangster films,
and war films concentrated on masculinity, and they all connected
who directs the murder plans. Because he is the man, the film sug-
gests, he understands how to deal with violence and how to set up
plans that involve violence. Hence, the initial machinations of the
femme fatale leave the traditional relationship between the sexes
in place and do not make any antagonism between the sexes evi-
dent. The relationship between the femme fatale and her man usu-
ally begins with an image of sexual complementarity, as it does in
Double Indemnity.
In the second half of the film, as Walter begins to lose his nerve,
Phyllis reveals that she is actually calmer and more prepared for this
murder—and its aftereffects—than Walter. When the plan has gone
somewhat awry and Phyllis realizes that she is in trouble, she
calmly and quickly turns to violence—placing a gun under her seat
cushion in order to kill Walter and continue with her scam to get her
dead husband’s insurance money. It is at this point, when the
femme fatale becomes violent, that the antagonism between the
sexes manifests itself. The film presents a glimpse of the insur-
mountable stumbling block that exists in the sexual relationship, al-
lowing us to see that this relationship involves incompatible desire
and cannot work out. Any implicit complementarity that existed be-
tween Phyllis and Walter is shown to be pure fantasy. In other
words, the film uses the viewer’s assumptions about an innate com-
plementarity between masculinity and femininity to explain the
characters and their attraction to each other. It also provides the ten-
sion in the plot as the viewer realizes that this complementarity was
manufactured by the femme fatale. Phyllis has coldly calculated all
the options and, by hiding the gun, is taking the next step she deems
necessary in her plan. Because Phyllis is entirely selfish and cold-
hearted, the film emphasizes, she is able to behave violently in her
relationships with others. Ultimately, then, the film depicts her, as a
femme fatale, as so far from the “average” American woman that
she inevitably ends up turning to violence. This distancing of the
femme fatale from the average woman blurs the antagonism that
the femme fatale’s violence engenders. In other words, if we can dis-
sociate her from all other women, then we can protect ourselves
from the trauma that she represents.
In Joseph H. Lewis’ Gun Crazy (1949), Annie (Peggy Cummins)
is also far from an average woman. She is a sharpshooter in a circus.
When Bart (John Dall), a man obsessed with guns, sees her, he feels
he has found his perfect mate and joins her act. After running away
and getting married, Annie tells Bart: “I’ve never been much good at
least not up till now. You’re not getting a very good bargain.” The
film does not go into detail as to why she is “no good.” That she is in
a circus, that she likes and is good with guns, and that she sleeps
with her boss seems self-evident enough, according to the film, to
explain her “badness.” Soon after they are married, Annie tells Bart
that she wants more than they have, and she coldly demands that
they commit crimes to get more money. She doesn’t care whom she
hurts in the process, in this manner, her “badness” has been firmly
established before she is violent.
Importantly, female violence at this period in film history is al-
ways the exclusive province of the licentious femme fatale. These
women, of course, represent quite a shift from the virtuous heroines
in the Serial Queen Melodramas. In film noir, no other woman—
only the wayward woman who has already transgressed social
mores in her dress, behavior, and life style—is considered capable of
violence. Yet, even for this woman, violence is considered her last
action, a last resort (whether or not this action comes at the end of
the film). In this group of films, any woman depicted as violent
must first be securely identified as a femme fatale.
By limiting female violence to the femme fatale character, film
noir makes a gesture toward dulling the trauma involved with fe-
male violence. If we know that only bad women become violent and
if we connect the violent woman to the social antagonism (the fail-
ure of complementarity), then we can deduce that the emergence of
antagonism in the social order—manifested by the loss of clear gen-
der definitions—is not the result of the inherent functioning of the
social order itself, but of a few bad women. In short, we can reduce
an ontological problem to an empirical one. What’s more, even in
the case of these women, violence is not something intrinsic to their
femininity; it is a last resort—the result, not the cause, of the failure
of their femininity. But this is not the only way that the film noir at-
tempts to situate and symbolize the femme fatale’s violence. It also
puts clear restrictions on the violence itself in order for the idea of
the feminine to be preserved.
The femme fatale hardly ever commits actual physical violence,
such as engaging in hand-to-hand combat, stabbing someone with a
knife, or choking someone with a wire. Instead, she almost always
uses a gun. One of the famous images from classic film noir is that of
the femme fatale with a smoking gun. This sleek, cold, phallic
weapon is the perfect accessory to the femme fatale; it both matches
her highly stylized representation and her insensitive demeanor.
The prevalence of the gun, however, also reveals that these films
could not conceive of women—even the coldhearted femme fatale—
as strong enough to do anything more than pull a trigger. This
weapon also allows the femme fatale to continue looking beautiful
when committing violence. She doesn’t need to sweat, grunt, move
into awkward positions, or even mess up her hair while killing
someone. Hence, her violence doesn’t completely disrupt the tradi-
tional gender categories; on the contrary, it leaves much of feminin-
ity intact. To continue with the example of Double Indemnity, we can
see how Phyllis retains her femininity even in her moment of lethal
violence. In the crucial scene, she does not hesitate to use her gun as
soon as possible when she realizes that Walter intends to kill her.
Again Wilder uses the dark shadows to highlight the deranged
depths of the femme fatale. Phyllis has drawn all the shades and
turned out the lights. When Phyllis shoots Walter, the camera re-
mains on Walter, who is giving a speech revealing that he knows
about her sordid past. As he talks, shrouded in the darkness of the
room, we see him being shot rather than Phyllis shooting him. The
next reverse shot is a long shot of Phyllis, backlit, standing in the
middle of the living room with the recently fired gun pointed at
Walter. She still looks elegant. Her long white dress flows down to
the floor, and her striking hair remains in perfect condition. She just
stands there—glamorous and silent—waiting to see what Walter
will do next. Oddly enough—after all her “badness”—Phyllis is
suddenly overcome with a love for Walter (a love she says she has
never felt for anyone before), and during this moment of “weak-
ness,” Walter shoots her twice and kills her. This ending to their re-
lationship, and to the femme fatale, is a dramatic example of the
horribly destructive nature of the relationship between the femme
fatale and the “detective” figure (an insurance agent in this film). By
not allowing the femme fatale and the detective to stay together
(and often even to live) film noir highlights social antagonism by
making clear that there is an insurmountable divide between men
and women. For in the end, what each does best is destroy the
other’s life.17
After the femme fatale in film noir, the violent woman appears
en masse again in the 1970s, concurrent with another widespread eli-
sion of sexual difference. It was during this decade that the feminist
movement reached its apogee, with the push for the Equal Rights
Amendment and the proliferation of consciousness-raising groups.
Second-wave feminism dramatically transformed the American so-
cial landscape. At the same time, women pushed further into the
public realm by joining the workforce. In The Employment Revolution,
Frank Mott states: “In 1960 only 15 percent of married women with
children under the age of 3 were in the workforce, but by 1970 this
percentage had grown to about 16 percent and by 1980 fully 41 per-
cent of women with preschool children were either on the job or
looking for one.”18 For all the importance of consciousness-raising
and challenges to masculine modes of discourse, it was perhaps this
movement of women into the workplace that had the greatest ideo-
logical impact. By going to work, women deprived men (and other
women) of one of the crucial markers of sexual difference. The 1970s
also saw women experimenting with appearance and sexuality.
Feminists made clear that femininity was a construct that they no
longer believed in and intended to destroy.
In response to this new crisis of the elision of gender difference,
a different kind of violent woman made her appearance in film.
Even though the feminist movement was very public in the 1970s,
violent women on film during this time can be found more toward
the margins of cinema, in horror and Blaxploitation films.19 Though
some were very successful and popular, these films were not en-
tirely mainstream. This marginalization allowed for a certain
amount of experimenting that wasn’t possible in mainstream cin-
ema, which depended so much more on appealing to a wide audi-
ence. Oftentimes, films at the margins of cinema are able to
experiment with fears and desires that would be too controversial
for mainstream cinema. And this is certainly the case with both
Blaxploitation and horror films in their depictions of the violent
woman.
Typically, Blaxploitation films are characterized by black-cen-
tered low-budget action films that featured ultramasculine men who
inspired cult-like followings, in films such as Gordon Parks’ Shaft
(1971), Gordon Parks, Jr.’s Superfly (1972), and Melvin Van Peebles
Sweet Sweetback’s Baad Asssss Song (1971).20 But there was also another
their own justice), they do not try to stop her, and in the end the film
suggests that the criminal mastermind will get her comeuppance in
court, as well as in life, once Foxy has finished with her. In Jack
Starrett’s Cleopatra Jones (1973), Cleopatra Jones (Tamara Dobson) is
more literally on the side of the law. She is a special agent working
for the United States government and has the police on her side (al-
though she still looks more toward neighborhood friends to help
her get things done than to the police, who were known and de-
picted as the primary violent servant of white patriarchal power).
In many ways, these heroines are forced into situations where
they must use violence. They are violent—and have learned how to
be violent—because of the extreme circumstances in which they
live. In other words, the criminals and racists that surround her
provoke the Blaxploitation heroine to learn violence and to use it.
Her violence is much more physical and bloody than that of the
femme fatale. She does use a gun on occasion, but the gun is by no
means her only available weapon. She often fights in hand-to-hand
combat and gives out more punishment than she receives. Cleopa-
tra Jones, for example, is a martial arts expert, and she deftly uses
any available object in her battles. Foxy Brown, to choose another
example, at one point makes use of a bunch of hangers, which she
fashions into a weapon. And unlike any of the femme fatales, the
Blaxploitation heroine always survives and almost always triumphs
in her quest for justice.
Importantly, male heroes from Blaxploitation films never ap-
pear simultaneously with these violent heroines. Each has their own
film, and it seems impossible to imagine them being able to share
the screen. Indeed, most of the men with whom the Blaxploitation
heroine is linked romantically die violently, disappear early in the
film, or play a very small role. This clearly allows the heroine not
only to be sexual with more men throughout the story, but it also
eliminates the problems or conflicts that would arise if the male
partner were around. The insinuation in each of these films is that if
her male partner were still alive or still present, the violent heroine
wouldn’t have to do all that she does. For example, Foxy Brown,
while she is clearly a tough woman, learns to shoot a gun only be-
cause her boyfriend gave it to her and implored her to learn to use
it in case she needed to protect herself while he was gone. In the
1970s, then, strong, violent women could appear in films, but only if
they lacked male protection and their violence arose from absolute
need. In fact, Foxy’s most gruesome violence arises only after she
has been horribly raped and abused by two white redneck racists. In
retaliation, Foxy brutally wounds one of the men with the hangers,
and then she incinerates them along with their house. The extreme
circumstances that surround this eruption of female violence in-
stantly make it more comprehensible within the structure of con-
temporary ideology, thereby limiting its disruptive power.27
The violent woman in the 1970s was not confined solely to Blax-
ploitation. Many of the same themes and violent acts appear in hor-
ror films, though it is usually white adolescent girls who are violent
in these films, not black women. In horror films, as in Blaxploitation
films, the woman’s violence most often arises only after much abuse.
But unlike the Blaxploitation heroine, the violent woman in horror
films seldom transcends the position of victim and only becomes
more violent with the slow progression of the genre throughout the
decade of the 1970s. By consigning the violent woman to the position
of victim, horror films leave her in a traditional female role. But hor-
ror films also produced many different types of violent women. In
her Men, Women, and Chainsaws, Carol Clover points out that women
in horror films of the 1970s and early 1980s exist in three categories:
“not only figures like Carrie, whose power somehow derives from
their female insides, [but also] the boyish knife-wielding victim-
heroes of slasher films and the grim avengers of their own rapes in
films like Ms. 45 and I Spit on Your Grave.”28 Slasher films, such as
Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974), John Carpenter’s
Halloween (1978), Tom DeSemone’s Hell Night (1981), Amy Jones’
Slumber Party Massacre (1982), and Wes Craven’s A Nightmare on
Elm Street (1984), represent their violent women as more boyish. In
her extensive study of horror films, Carol Clover calls the women in
slasher films “victim/heroes” and “final girls.” This “final girl” is
usually the only person to escape a murderous criminal who has
killed all her friends. The killer hunts her down, but in the end she
defends herself enough to escape or even kill the attacker. She is a
combination of the investigator, the rescuer, and the female victim—
clever and determined to live, but also young and innocent. As
Clover explains: “She alone looks death in the face, but she alone also
finds the strength either to stay the killer long enough to be rescued
(ending A) or to kill him herself (ending B). But in either case, from
1974 on, the survivor figure has been female.”29 This young woman
is almost always beautiful and usually of middle or lower class.30 Her
youth, beauty, and innocence tend to deflect the trauma of her vio-
lence by highlighting her victim status and in this way, justifying any
means she uses to save herself.
Like the Blaxploitation heroines, all of the disparate horror film
heroines deal with violence in a way significantly different than the
femme fatale. In general, their violence is far more gruesome, phys-
ical, and bloody than that of the femme fatale, and it is usually based
on physical strength (rather than the act of firing a gun). These
women tend to rely on weapons besides guns (knives, chainsaws,
and knitting needles—really anything handy, including their own
hands). In fact, women’s violence in horror takes on a physical di-
mension that would have been unthinkable in the 1930s and 1940s.
But these films can only imagine a woman as capable of violence if
she is entirely enraged, and this anger can only occur when she is
tortured, violated, and pushed into a state of total fright. It is the
mise-en-scène itself that provides much of the terror in horror films.
The final girl in slasher films is most often trapped and terrorized by
her surroundings. And it is the mise-en-scène that illustrates her vi-
olence and the violence done to her through bright red blood and
gruesome attackers. It is these half-psychotic, half-monster men
who push the women to such extremes. Any normal men in these
films either die early or prove feckless in protecting the female vic-
tim. The men who do try to protect the woman in danger often end
up dead before the end of the film; if they survive, they do not have
much of an overall presence, appearing only in the last two minutes
to save the final girl. This marginalization of the “normal” man al-
lows us to see the violent woman without immediately thinking
about her implications for gender roles.
In many of the earlier horror films, the young woman—although
at points violent—does not kill the male monster in the end. In Hal-
loween, she survives, but the monster’s psychiatrist arrives in the end
and shoots him. In Texas Chain Saw Massacre, she makes it through a
night of torture, escapes to the highway, and gets away in a pickup
truck that happened to be driving down the road. But the late 1970s
slasher films and rape revenge films depict the woman triumphantly
killing her torturer in the end. The violence that these women commit
(a final response after enduring torture from men) is a direct result of
You hear feminists talk, and the last ten, twenty years you hear
women talking about fucking men rather than being fucked, to
be crass about it. It’s kind of unattractive, however liberated
and emancipated it is. It kind of fights the whole wife role, the
whole childbearing role. Sure you got your career and your
success, but you are not fulfilled as a woman.34
and noir than to an incipient filmic trend. By the end of the early
1990s, however, the theme of the monstrous career woman had run
its course (after also spawning films such as Basic Instinct and The
Hand That Rocks the Cradle), as had the rape revenge film, and violent
women characters began to appear in many forms. From quirky
leading ladies (To Die For, Fargo), to straightforward action heroines
(Strange Days, The Long Kiss Goodnight, Broken Arrow, Charlie’s An-
gels), to dramatic heroines (Set It Off, G.I. Jane, Girlfight), today it is
rarer to see a woman who can’t fight for herself or help out in a fight
than one who can. Thelma and Louise signaled the beginning of this
transition, and allowed us to recognize a trend that had been build-
ing. That is to say, by the time we recognized this cultural transfor-
mation, it had already occurred. In other words, even though we
were noticing it for the first time, the underlying transformation had
already fully flowered, making it impossible to stop. Reviewers,
critics, and the public at large recognized Thelma and Louise as repre-
sentative of a new trend (including the films, like Fatal Attraction
and Blue Steel, which had previously only been thought of singu-
larly). In reaction to this burgeoning trend—and trauma—of violent
women in cinema, Thelma and Louise provoked a frenzy of symbol-
ization. Whether the media represented this female violence as an-
tifeminist, unladylike, feminist, or liberating, all these descriptions
dealt directly with the representation of the violent woman as such.
This frenzy of symbolization should then be recognized as not only
a marker that points to the importance of the violent woman, but
also as a way to contain her. The symbolization anchored her image
into a more specified universe of meaning so that films with violent
women that came after Thelma and Louise would make sense.
To put it in another way, Thelma and Louise tapped into uncon-
scious anxiety—both because of the time in which it was produced
and the content of the film—and this eruption of the unconscious
manifested itself in an onslaught of film analyses, proclamations
about womanhood, and heated arguments about gender roles—all
of which ended up solidifying some meaning for what seemed
traumatic about Thelma and Louise. This intense public response in-
dicates the importance of Thelma and Louise, revealing a break from
the way that the public had previously interacted with films featur-
ing violent women.40 After Thelma and Louise, the violent woman
herself became a figure in the landscape of contemporary film. And
because of Thelma and Louise, and public reaction to it, society had
an opportunity to symbolize the violent woman as such. Once sym-
bolized, the appearance of the violent woman in film ceased to be
traumatic. Now she existed within a symbolic universe of meaning,
one which worked to obviate the underlying antagonisms that the
violent woman had the potential to reveal. I say this to explain why
Thelma and Louise was the only film with violent women to provoke
the kind of reaction that it did, but this does not mean that after
Thelma and Louise the violent woman’s radicality completely disap-
pears and that she no longer represents an attempt to grapple with
the trauma of the elision of sexual difference. In fact, as I will argue
in detail in the following chapters, I believe that the trauma exists
instead—in the rest of the films in the 1990s and 2000s featuring vi-
olent women—in the cinematic manner in which the violent female
is represented and the disruptive effect that the violent woman has
on the narrative. In other words, the trauma of the violent woman
manifests itself in the defense mechanisms that films must utilize in
order to depict this figure.41
In this chapter, I have illustrated the most important episodes in
filmic history for the emergence of the violent woman as a filmic ele-
ment, and described the historical circumstances (including espe-
cially the conflicts and antagonisms of these moments) behind these
emergences. Here, however, we must again consult Ernesto Laclau
and Chantal Mouffe’s understanding of such cultural eruptions, as
they articulate it in Hegemony and Socialist Strategy. They suggest,
“The usual descriptions of antagonisms in the sociological and his-
torical literature [ . . . ] explain the conditions which made antago-
nisms possible, but not the antagonism as such.”42 Laclau and
Mouffe go on to say that theorists often describe these conditions by
saying that this or that “provoked a reaction.” In other words, we can
see what provoked the reaction and we can see what the reaction is,
but this does not necessarily explain or describe the antagonism it-
self. For example, I have explained how large numbers of women
had jobs during World War II, which unsettled and provoked fear
among society at large. This was accompanied by a huge push on the
part of the United States government to reconstitute the traditional
roles of masculinity and femininity. These feelings of anxiety, at this
particular time, also manifested themselves in a spate of films featur-
ing violent women. The violent woman is, then, a way to displace
this anxiety into an aesthetic realm, but she also provokes more anx-
iety and very complex defense mechanisms within the film in which
she appears. Regardless of this outcome, her place in history seems
particularly tied to moments of crisis in male and female gender
roles. But all this still does not get to the “antagonism itself.” I have
given an overview of the historical context and the cultural product
but not yet theoretically elaborated on antagonism itself. The violent
woman in American cinema reveals that there is an antagonism
between masculinity and femininity that is both essential to the
working of society and also its potential undoing. In order to ap-
proach this antagonism and to grasp its relationship to female vio-
lence, we must look at masculinity and the central role that violence
plays in its construction.