Quentin Tarantino’s new film “The Hateful Eight” had its detractors before it was even released. Many filmgoers and critics took issue with his commitment to the copious use of the N-word in his screenplay (which was leaked early) and police unions around the country planned to boycott the film because of the director’s recent controversial comments on alleged acts of brutality at the hands of law enforcement.
Now that audiences are finally getting to watch the director’s roughly three-hour epic western, critics are leveling a new charge at the provocative auteur — sexism.
In “The Hateful Eight,” a considerable amount of grisly violence is inflicted upon the film’s lone lead female character, Daisy Domergue, an accused murderer bound for execution played by Jennifer Jason Leigh. And that hasn’t sat well with some viewers. “At a certain point, the N-word gives way to the B-word as the dominant hateful epithet, and ‘The Hateful Eight’ mutates from an exploration of racial animus into an orgy of elaborately justified misogyny,” wrote The New York Times‘ AO Scott in his review of the film.
RELATED: Viggo Mortensen defends Quentin Tarantino
“Daisy doesn’t get a voice in any story told about her, and the one time she has a small, personal moment, it’s wrenched away from her in an angry outburst by a man. It’s like she’s trapped in a cabin full of Internet commenters,” added Vox‘s Todd VanDerWerff. And TIME‘s critic describes abuse of Daisy as the “movie’s defining running joke.”
The backlash has been swift and pronounced enough to draw a defense from longtime Tarantino producer Harvey Weinstein, whose company is distributing “The Hateful Eight.” “This guy is the most pro-woman ever,” Weinstein told Variety. “[Look at] Uma Thurman [in ‘Kill Bill’], Pam Grier [in ‘Jackie Brown’], Melanie Laurent and Diane Kruger [in ‘Inglourious Basterds’]. If there are cries of misogyny, we will sit down and make them watch ‘Jackie Brown,’ and at the end of the ‘Jackie Brown’ seminar, they will have to say, ‘Hey, we’re just fishing for stupidity.’”








