Unlike male-centered movies, which are frequently shot outdoors, most woman's films are set in the
domestic sphere, which defines the lives and roles of the female protagonist. Whereas the events in woman's films – weddings, proms, births – are
socially defined by nature and society, the action in male films – chasing criminals, participating in a fight – is story-driven. 's
Stella Dallas (1937), Barbara Stanwyck plays a
working-class mother who sacrifices her connection to her daughter in order to help her become part of an
upper-class world. The themes in woman's and male-oriented films are often diametrically opposed: fear of separation from loved ones, emphasis on emotions, and human attachment in women's films, as opposed to fear of intimacy, repressed emotionality, and individuality in male-oriented movies. The plot conventions of woman's films revolve around several basic themes: love triangles, unwed motherhood, illicit affairs, the rise to power, and mother-daughter relationships. The narrative pattern depends on the activity engaged in by the heroine and commonly includes sacrifice, affliction, choice, and competition. The maternal melodrama, the career woman comedy, and the paranoid woman's film, a subgenre based on suspicion and distrust, are the most frequent subgenres. Female madness,
depression,
hysteria, and
amnesia were frequent plot elements in Hollywood's woman's films of the 1940s. This trend took place when Hollywood tried to incorporate aspects of
psychoanalysis. In the medical discourse in films like
Now, Voyager (1942),
Possessed (1947) and
Johnny Belinda (1948), mental health is visually represented by beauty and mental illness by an unkept appearance; health was restored if the female protagonist improved her appearance.
Friendship among women was fairly common, although the treatment was superficial and focused more on women's dedication to men and female-male relationships than on their friendships with each other. The woman's films that were produced in the 1930s during the
Great Depression have a strong thematic focus on
class issues and questions of economic survival whereas the 1940s woman's film places its protagonists in a middle- or upper-middle-class world and is more concerned with the characters' emotional, sexual, and psychological experiences. The female protagonist is portrayed as either good or bad. Haskell distinguishes three types of women that are particularly common to woman's films: the extraordinary, ordinary and the "ordinary woman who becomes extraordinary". The extraordinary women are characters like
Scarlett O'Hara and
Jezebel who are played by equally extraordinary actresses like
Vivien Leigh and Bette Davis. They are independent and emancipated "aristocrats of their sex" who transcend the limitations of their sexual identities. The ordinary women, in contrast, are characters like
Lara Antipova, who are bound by the rules of their respective societies because their range of options is too limited to break free of their limitations. The ordinary woman who becomes extraordinary is a character (like, for an example more recent than Haskell's classification,
Katniss Everdeen) who "begins as a victim of discriminatory or economic circumstances and rises, through pain, obsession, or defiance, to become mistress of her fate." Depending on the type of heroine a film champions, a film can be either socially conservative or progressive. Certain archetypal characters appear in many woman's films: unreliable husbands, the other man, a female competitor, the reliable friend, usually an older woman, and the sexless male, frequently depicted as an older man who offers the protagonist security and luxury but makes no sexual demands on her. A common motif in Hollywood's woman's films is that of the
doppelgänger sisters (often played by the same actress), one good and one bad who vie for one man as
Bette Davis in her double role in
A Stolen Life (1946) and
Olivia de Havilland in
The Dark Mirror (1946). The good woman is portrayed as passive, sweet, emotional, and asexual whereas the bad woman is assertive, intelligent, and erotic. The conflict between them is resolved with the defeat of the bad woman. A central element of the 1980s British woman's film is the motif of escape. Woman's films allow their respective female protagonists to escape their everyday lives and their socially and sexually prescribed roles. The escape can take the form of a journey to another place such as the
USSR in
Letter to Brezhnev (1985) and
Greece in
Shirley Valentine (1989) or education as in
Educating Rita (1983) and sexual initiation as in
Wish You Were Here (1987). In recent years elements of "Woman's films" appear in many 4-quad blockbuster movies such as
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003) in which the character
Elizabeth Swann decides her own fate throughout much of the film. ==History==