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MOVIE REVIEW

On the Basis of Sex

also known as “Az egyenjogú nem,” “Cuestión de género,” “Die Berufung - Ihr Kampf für Gerechtigkeit,” “En kvinna bland män,” “Esitlik Savasçisi,” “Nes ji yra moteris,” “Suprema,” “Uma Luta Desigual,” “Una cuestión de género,” “Une femme d'exception,” «По половому признаку»
MPA Rating: PG-13-Rating (MPA) for some language and suggestive content.

Reviewed by: Charity Bishop
CONTRIBUTOR

Moral Rating: Average
Moviemaking Quality:
Primary Audience: • Adults • Young-Adults
Genre: Political Biography Drama
Length: 2 hr.
Year of Release: 2018
USA Release: December 25, 2018 (limited—33 theaters)
January 11, 2019 (wide—1,923 theaters)
DVD: April 9, 2019
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Relevant Issues

Is the Feminist movement the right answer to the mistreatment that some women endure in this sinful world? Answer

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Abortion

Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s repeatedly struck down abortion restrictions. She is “perhaps the nation’s foremost public judicial figure embracing an unqualified constitutional right to human abortion—literally, a right to kill living human embryos and fetuses, right up to the point of birth.”

“Passover, Abortion, and Rabbi Ruth Bader Ginsburg” (off-site article)

Life Before Birth
Have questions about life before birth, or a woman’s choice about pregnancy and abortion? Discover reliable answers.
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“The Beatification of Ruth Bader Ginsburg” (off-site article)

“Why We Should Worry About the Cult of RBG” (off-site article)

List of Ginsburg’s views (off-site)

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More information
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s career began at Harvard University and Columbia Law School.
  • She was an ACLU lawyer and was appointed to the Supreme Court by President Bill Clinton, taking the oath of office in 1993.
  • She is currently the Supreme Court’s most liberal judge and much loved by Progressive Liberals for consistently opposing conservative viewpoints. For the period of 1937-2006, her votes rank her as the 2nd most liberal Supreme Court judge.
  • In 2012, she advised Egyptians not to use the U.S. Constitution as a model, but rather the Leftist Progressive South African constitution.
  • She is 85 years old and currently the oldest Supreme Court justice.
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Featuring Felicity JonesRuth Bader Ginsburg
Armie HammerMartin Ginsburg
Justin TherouxMel Wulf
Sam WaterstonErwin Griswold
Kathy BatesDorothy Kenyon
Cailee Spaeny … Jane Ginsburg
Jack ReynorJim Bozarth
Stephen RootProfessor Brown
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Director Mimi Leder — “Deep Impact” (1998)
Producer Amblin Partners
Participant Media
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Distributor
Distributor: Focus Features. Trademark logo.
Focus Features
, a subsidiary of Universal Pictures, a division of NBCUniversal/Comcast

A fan film dramatizing Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s origin story

Sometimes, the laws need to change to reflect the times. That’s the belief Ruth Bader Ginsburg (Felicity Jones) forms in her first year at Harvard. One of only seven women admitted to the prestigious legal institution, after the Dean humiliates the female students at a dinner by demanding to know why they attend Harvard (instead of allowing men to take their place), she becomes even more determined to prove herself. A wife, mother, “bad” cook, and law student, Ruth impresses all her professors with her quick wit and tenacity.

But when her husband, Martin (Armie Hammer), falls ill with cancer, her life changes forever. While he endures surgeries, radiation therapy, and the long road to recovery, she attends his classes for him, reads him his notes, and types up his papers—all while maintaining a high grade average herself. Ruth champions his future career and pursues her own, but enters a professorship when she realizes no law firm will hire a female attorney.

Years later, still battling for equality of the sexes, she discovers a case of male discrimination—a plaintiff denied tax breaks despite being the primary caregiver to his aged mother.

Ruth sees this as a way to crack into laws that discriminate ‘on the basis of sex’—and sets out, against all odds, to change the American legal system forever.

I don’t know how to approach reviewing this film without touching on some things people might assume about it or find offensive because of their personal, political, or religious beliefs. One suggestion is, it’s a propaganda piece intended to humanize and increase fondness for one of the most polarizing Supreme Court Justices in recent history. It also makes anyone arguing against her into sexists (whether they were, I do not know). Then there’s gender equality. She believes and fights for equality “beneath the law,” and denies there is any “difference” between the sexes.

A judge points out she’s wrong, since “men can grow beards, and women can lactate.” It’s a funny moment, but Christians believe men and women are different and have different roles to fulfill (the Creation story in Genesis; the script paints these views as outdated and sexist). Since this film focuses on civil rights, however, her insistence on gender equality beneath the law isn’t misplaced. She is right—we can admit to differences between the sexes, but the law should treat them as equals.

Despite what you may think of Judge Ginsburg and her policies, her tireless work advocating for gender equality set precedents for equal tax benefits and privileges under the law that both sexes benefit from today. This film only follows the first case. What struck me the most was how much “times have changed.” It’s inarguable that Ginsburg caused that change. A hundred years ago, she could not have stood up and addressed this court; now, female law students can attend universities based on their grade average, without being interrogated as to “why” men should give up their spot for them. Being exposed, through this film, to some sexist attitudes in the 1960s and 1970s shows us how much our social beliefs have shifted into equality.

The film celebrates her as a strong, hardworking woman who devoted her life to the cause of equality. It paints her as a loving wife and mother, who puts as much effort into furthering her husband’s career and supporting him as in pursuing her own goals. Ginsburg challenges her children to help them learn to question everything and make smart decisions.

She’s a likable heroine, but not without her mistakes, fumbles, and flaws. Overall, it’s a solid movie, but not the best biographical work I’ve ever seen. About thirty minutes goes into establishing her as a working mother and law student, then it transitions many years later to her successful career as a professor. The legal arguments can be dry, but there are many powerful moments.

The rating comes from the salty language—including one f-word and a dozen s-words. We also hear crude names for parts of the anatomy (d**k and pr**k). Ginsburg changes her brief into “gender” discrimination because her secretary points out that so many uses of the word “sex” in one document sounds tawdry. Characters misuse God’s name twice, and Jesus’ once.

The Ginsburgs are a loving couple; we see them undressing one another and falling onto a bed (Ruth in her slip). Men catcall women, one of whom tells them off (“Would you kiss your mother with that mouth?”). The girls wear short skirts. There’s smoking and drinking.

Though the film avoids the more controversial elements of Ginsburg’s later years, it shows a world struggling to embrace something Jesus knew all along–men and women are equal in His eyes in being worthy of love and forgiveness. He did not discriminate. He spoke to the Jews the same as the Romans, he welcomed children into His presence as often as scholars, He even said of Mary that she chose a better way to spend her time (listening to Him) than her sister, Martha (who was in the kitchen, making lunch). Both genders deserve equal value, in our respect… and under the law.

  • Violence: None
  • Profane language: Moderately Heavy
  • Vulgar/Crude language: Heavy
  • Nudity: None
  • Sex: Minor
  • Occult: None

See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.


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Secular Movie Critics
…Jones…carries this picture, delivers thrilling arguments thrillingly and puts a warm, human face on a legal figure who has become liberalism’s Obi Wan Kenobi, “our only hope.” …
Roger Moore, Movie Nation
…Little more than inspirational cliches… It has a serviceable, conventional approach that summarizes the extraordinary achievements of a remarkable woman but offers little more than predictable and inspirational Pinterest-quote fare that would have been better suited for an HBO TV movie. …[3/5]
Garrett Mitchell, Arizona Republic
…Well-paced and directed with gusto, “On the Basis of Sex” finds an accessible, near-perfect tone, balancing serious courtroom drama and frequent legal jargon with tastefully Hollywood-ized emotional embellishments. …
Tomris Laffly, Time Out
…Here, Ginsburg is just an idea, a symbol—a meme. …
Johnny Oleksinski, New York Post
…While the structure occasionally feels a bit awkward, “On the Basis of Sex” has the kind of crowd-pleasing story that skims over any minor shortcomings; by its end, you’re ready to cheer. …
Moira Macdonald, The Seattle Times
…The dramatic approach here is clear, efficient and entirely on-the-nose, with little time for anything that might distract from the hagiographic effort in play. Its sole purpose is to ennoble and proclaim a hero, which its subject almost certainly is. But it makes for notably simplified drama. …
Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter
…a solid, often impassioned film, but too often its worst instincts take over, and cliches stack up faster than legal documents. …
Benjamin Lee, The Guardian [UK]
…We’re typically never trusted to accept the reality of an icon’s life for what it is rather than what media consultants want it to exemplify. What the film’s real failing amounts to is any lack of interest in Ginsburg’s true superpower: Her inhuman, sleepless drive to do the work. …[3.9]
Dom Sinacola, Paste magazine
…Is the film worthy of her? Not really. It’s informative, in a didactic way, but basically an exercise in hagiography, a skin-deep celebration of someone who has never settled for superficiality in her life’s work. …
Joe Morgenstern, The Wall Street Journal
…its pace is a little slack, and sometimes it feels too predictably prepackaged. But Jones and Hammer keep the picture moving even through its shakier phases. …
Stephanie Zacharek, Time