Helen O'Hara has been working as a film journalist for over fifteen years, after qualifying as a barrister and immediately getting bored. She started her film writing career on the staff of Empire, the world's biggest film magazine, and remains their editor-at-large and co-host of the Empire podcast, where she can be found weekly singing the praises of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and complaining about La La Land. She is also an author and freelance writer. Northern Irish born, O'Hara now lives in London, splitting her time between cinemas, libraries and coffee shops.
A fascinating polemic
*Sunday Times*
A page-turning read, peppered with humour
*Sight & Sound*
Women vs Hollywood is encyclopaedic, illuminating and passionate
all at once, and O'Hara's erudition and love of film shine
throughout
*Sunday Independent*
A must read
*Edgar Wright*
Women vs Hollywood is fascinating and righteous. The research is
incredible, as is the storytelling. It'll be a game changer for how
the history of women in film is considered and told. The history is
rich and deep and robust, but O'Hara also has such a precise point
of view. An incredible piece of work that is as inspiring as it is
informative
*Terri White, editor-in-chief of Empire and author of
Coming Undone*
I will be quoting this liberally on Girls On Film - it's an
enlightening page-turner, stacked with stories and stats that will
have your jaw on the floor. Thanks to O'Hara's thorough research
and sparkling writing, it works as an engaging alternative history
of Hollywood as well as an important feminist film text and a call
to action. I'd recommend it to any open-minded film lover, whether
or not they identify as feminist - and who knows, they might do by
the end
*Anna Smith, film critic, broadcaster and host of the Girls On Film
podcast*
Helen O'Hara exposes Hollywood's dirty secrets and double standards
in a fascinating-slash-infuriating story of the women who wanted to
make movies and the men who held them back. This is the film
history we need: one that gives leading roles to people who usually
only get to be background players
*Pamela Hutchinson, film historian and critic*
The book is so well-written and researched - a fantastic read that
beautifully celebrates women in Hollywood
*Edith Bowman, broadcaster*
Women have long been pushed to one side in Hollywood. This
essential book puts them back where they belong: firmly in the
spotlight. A celebration of their triumphs and clear-eyed
recounting of their travails, it's an incisive, eye-opening and
riveting read. More than that, it'll leave you itching with
indignation and wanting to see a change to the status quo. A vital
call to arms for a fairer, brighter future
*Nick de Semlyen, film critic and author of Wild and Crazy
Guys*
Essential reading for all serious film fans
*James King, film critic and author of Fast Times and Excellent
Adventures and Be More Keanu*
Women Vs Hollywood is a powerful, sobering and vital work.
Essential reading for anyone interested in the film business
*The Mail on Sunday*
This call to arms puts the spotlight back where it belongs: on the
women who helped make Hollywood
*Radio Times*
The stories of these pioneering women directors are well-researched
and enthusiastically told here through archives,
scholarship, and where possible, interviews with the women whose
experiences are at the heart of this book . . . Women vs Hollywood
is a great introduction to the fight women have on their hands if
they want to work in the movies
*BBC History Magazine*
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