Hollywood acting superstar actress Jodie Foster won many awards including the 1988 Oscar for starring in the film. Since then, he has entered the peak of his personal romance career.
In 1988, Judy instinctively played a scoundrel; ruffian; gangster; an evildoer; an outlaw; a bandit; a gangster; a hoodlum Gang in the movie "The Accused" . This rape scene lasted 3 times. Minutes, a total of 262 shots, creating the record of the longest rape scene in the history of American cinema. Judy had to bear a lot of mental pressure, and the successful performance caused great sympathy and anger in the audience. Judy spent four full years fighting for this role.
It doesn't make sense to talk about whether Jodie Foster is a beautiful actress or not. In the beautiful Hollywood, she can have today's status without relying on these things. This woman, who looks like a lamb, is using her mind and independent spirit as tools to leave her voice and brand on the Hollywood movie map.
Perhaps after a woman takes power, it will always arouse criticism and worry from men. When Jodie Foster begins to unstoppably become one of the most powerful people in Hollywood, corresponding attention will follow. In fact, when a person faces a system, the smallness of individual independence relative to the whole can only make people desperate. But for our society, the possibility of being independent by a woman alone is enough to make those who make social order feel anxious and agitated. In this sense, the independence and autonomy represented by Jodie Foster is quite valuable.
Why is Jodie Foster the representative? This question is as unanswered as we ask each other why we did not meet and love each other in the subway. The time that has passed is destiny, and looking back, everything seems to be destined. Maybe when Foster was in ""(Taxi Driver, 1976) played a 12-year-old prostitute and won the Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress that year, she did not think that she would become a representative of independence or feminism. For Foster, who was only 14 years old at the time, she would never have thought that someone named John Hinckley Jr. would bring her a life-changing problem.
The film is a courtroom film with a feminist taste . Based on real cases, the position on the rape issue is fair and objective. Jodie Foster's lifelike performance of that frivolous, vulgar and brutally tortured little character, convincingly won the 61st Oscar.Laurel wreath.