JESSICA JONES Star, Krysten Ritter On Season 2 Being Exclusively Directed By Women And The Importance Of That

JESSICA JONES Star, Krysten Ritter On Season 2 Being Exclusively Directed By Women And The Importance Of That

In a recent interview with Collider, Jessica Jones lead, Krysten Ritter discussed the importance and effect of the second season's all-female direction.

By Nebula - Mar 05, 2018 07:03 PM EST
Filed Under: Jessica Jones
Source: Collider
The second season of Jessica Jones is just two days away, being released on March 8th. Something notable about the upcoming season is that every single episode has been directed by a woman. Collider recently discussed this with Krysten Ritter, the show's lead.
Here's what she said:
It was really great. Our show is already so female. Season 1 was so female. It’s already in our DNA. But having all women this season was exciting because it’s never been done before, which is stupid. The content that we cover and the dark subject matter and the sexual stuff, to be honest, having those conversations with a woman is a lot easier for me. I feel much more at ease and safe, and able to be vulnerable and raw, when you’re planning this stuff out with a woman. It just takes something away from a conversation, when you can’t be really real and raw. I love it!

Ritter continued to discuss the difference having all-female direction makes in the industry:
Within the industry now, there’s a lot of mandates to hire women and for diversity, which is amazing because that wasn’t there ten years ago. They went into this season with an eye to hire as many women as possible and to represent diversity, and then they started interviewing people and wound up with more than half, and then more than three-quarters, and then decided to do it all. Those women ended up being the best people for the job. I can’t wait for it to be totally commonplace and not that crazy.

And on the profound impact the show has had in regards to represenation of abuse survivors:
I think that hit me in such a profound way, that Jessica Jones was so much more than a great acting part. I was like, ‘Oh my God, this is the first character like this we’ve seen, especially in the form of a superhero, especially in the form of a leading lady, who looks like this, who acts like this, who doesn’t really give a shit about how she looks.

What do you think about Jessica Jones Season 2 being solely directed by women?
RUMOR: We May Finally Know When And Where Krysten Ritter Will Return To The MCU As JESSICA JONES
Related:

RUMOR: We May Finally Know When And Where Krysten Ritter Will Return To The MCU As JESSICA JONES

JESSICA JONES Star Krysten Ritter Addresses MCU Return Speculation Created By Recent Instagram Post
Recommended For You:

JESSICA JONES Star Krysten Ritter Addresses MCU Return Speculation Created By Recent Instagram Post

DISCLAIMER: As a user generated site and platform, ComicBookMovie.com is protected under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act) and "Safe Harbor" provisions.

This post was submitted by a user who has agreed to our Terms of Service and Community Guidelines. ComicBookMovie.com will disable users who knowingly commit plagiarism, piracy, trademark or copyright infringement. Please CONTACT US for expeditious removal of copyrighted/trademarked content. CLICK HERE to learn more about our copyright and trademark policies.

Note that ComicBookMovie.com, and/or the user who contributed this post, may earn commissions or revenue through clicks or purchases made through any third-party links contained within the content above.

Ha1frican
Ha1frican - 3/5/2018, 8:41 PM
As long as no one was turned away that was more capable then yeah I’m all for it. Encouraging more women and minorities in general to take up film and TV by adding opportunity is great and hopefully this contributes to that but hopefully we don’t end up with a goofgle situation where it’s rumored that diversity is actually held in higher regard than ability for the sake of perception. Also I couldn’t really care less who the directors of a show are they don’t really matter it’s the writing staff that’s important when it comes to TV
HeavyMetal4Life
HeavyMetal4Life - 3/5/2018, 9:13 PM
Honestly, the gender of the director should not matter. The best person should be selected for the job, regardless of the gender (or race). At the end of the day, give us a great episode.

The one quote/scene from the Oscars last night that bothered me a little was when Emma Stone went up to present best director and she made a remark that it was 1 woman and the rest were men. And I think that mindset is wrong and dangerous. A person should be worthy of a nomination based on their work, not whether they are male or female. If all the best directors were men, then so be it. If all but 1 were men, then so be it. If all are female, then so be it. You reward the people that should be rewarded.
Doomsday8888
Doomsday8888 - 3/6/2018, 1:38 AM
Meh...
BlackPhillip
BlackPhillip - 3/6/2018, 5:18 AM
All female directors, yet this season won't be as good as the first.
Juggernaut
Juggernaut - 3/6/2018, 6:14 AM
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzz......huh......what?..........Who the hell cares!!

Take your politics and shove them squarely up your ass!!!
ThouBear8
ThouBear8 - 3/6/2018, 7:14 AM
You guys need to quit the bitching. Seriously. We have had countless shows with all male directors & have you ever once thought "they better be the best people for the job, not just hired cus they're male"? It's about representation, & diversity across the board. I agree they should find the best people possible. My assumption is that they felt these women were the best people for this story, just as the other people they hire are the best for other stories. I agree there's no need to drag down others in order to prop women (or people of color) up, but there's no need to be so suspicious of this kind of thing. The overwhelming majority of directors are still white men. It's not like they're being shut out of the industry. Hopefully this season will be great.
ThouBear8
ThouBear8 - 3/6/2018, 7:20 AM
I mean Ritter flat out said they were originally just looking to hire some women (as they should) but that the number just kinda ended up growing. They didn't even set out to hire only women.
View Recorder