‘The Assistant’ aims to go behind the headlines of #MeToo
PARK CITY, Utah — “The Assistant” is one of the first narrative films to come out of the #MeToo movement and the Harvey Weinstein scandal. The film, written and directed by Kitty Green, features a predatory studio executive modeled after Weinstein, but he is unseen throughout the movie. “The Assistant” focuses instead on the toxic work environment around him, detailing a day in the life of a low-level assistant.
Green, an Australian filmmaker, has previously made documentaries that attempt to peel away the superficial sheen of media sensationalism. Her debut, “Ukraine Is Not a Brothel,” profiled a Ukrainian feminist group famous for its topless protests. Her 2017 documentary, “Casting JonBenet,” used local Colorado actors to get beyond the rumours and tabloid headlines of the child pageant queen’s unsolved murder.
In 2017, Green was working on a film about sexual abuse on college campuses when the Weinstein case broke. She quickly pivoted.
“I’ve always been interested in the way these events, especially involving women, are covered in the press,” Green said in an interview. “I was a little concerned that the media seemed to be focusing on these evil men and not on the system that surrounds them and the structures that keeps them in power. I wanted to look at it from a different angle rather than looking at it from the top down. I wanted to look at it from the bottom up.”