Some directors are pushing against rape as a plot device. But movies like “Elle” handle the sensitive topic with care.
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Warning: this post contains spoilers for the movie “Elle.”

When sexual assault is depicted on-screen, the horror of the situation is too often misdirected. Yes, a woman was violated. But the real atrocity? Some dude’s stuff was tarnished. Now, the story’s real hero ― the gunslinging guardian ― has motivation to fight.

It’s a narrative strategy that may make for a fast-paced, domino effect of a story arc, but which also undermines the perspectives of those who have suffered from assault. And it’s been exploited in a slew of popular movies and shows, including, recently, “Game of Thrones.”

This issue was addressed in a reported piece by Variety TV critic Maureen Ryan, who spoke with the executive producers of “The Exorcist,” “Lost Girl,” “American Gods,” and others who cared to weigh in on how rape is depicted on-screen.

The consensus: sexual violence is easily reduced to a flashy plot point, but an array of writers and showrunners ― most of them women ― have found a way to make the topic powerful, even altruistic. Among the shows getting it right, Ryan cites “Jessica Jones,” “Queen Sugar” and “Orange Is the New Black.” Being woman-led or woman-wrought seems to be part of the solution, and indeed, the lack of gender parity among showrunners and directors is among the many equity issues production companies must face.

But when it comes to how rape is handled in fictional stories, the gender of the writer shouldn’t be the only factor that allows for, or disallows for, an honest depiction. What’s needed, regardless of who’s at the helm, is empathy for the survivor, rather than a denial of the survivor’s personhood. When rape serves as a catalyst for action on the part of the (usually male) protagonist ― the hero ― it serves the same function for a story that murder might. The victim is robbed of her agency, and her loss must be avenged for, by someone else.

One should not have to be a survivor to understand that this is reductive, and belittling. And one should not have to be a woman to imagine the pervasive fear that might result from surviving such a crime. One virtue of storytelling is that it allows us to feel how we may never otherwise feel, due to privilege or luck. So, stories about rape can help generate empathy, so long as they grant their subjects agency, and treat their subjects with respect.

There’s a movie out this year that does just that, and it comes from an unexpected place. Paul Verhoeven ― director of “RoboCop,” “Total Recall,” and “Starship Troopers” ― adapted the novel Oh... into what is essentially a rape comedy, starring Isabelle Huppert.

“Elle” begins with an uncomfortably vivid rape scene; the movie, then, is about what the victim, Michelle, does afterward to cope. The head of a company that develops violent video games, and the daughter of a convicted murderer who implicated her in his crime when she was only 1, Michelle isn’t a stranger to physical threats. Her response to the attack is unemotional, pragmatic. She changes the locks, visits a doctor for an STD check. Immediately after the attack, she puts a fallen vase back in its place. She treats the men in her life ― her ex-husband, her employees, her son, her neighbor ― with apprehension. As the viewer, we’re forced to question their motives, just as Michelle is. Her fear is palpable. But, she’s not helpless. She continues to assert herself at work, continues to pursue romantic relationships.

From Verhoeven, audiences are primed for satirized violence, and “Elle” fits with the rest of his filmography in that regard. Beyond that, though, the director manages to also tell a fresh, earnest story, one where the victim is not immediately relegated to the role of damsel. She’s real, and flawed. Her existence is bigger than what happened to her.

“Elle” is not a perfect movie, and certainly not a tribune of morality. In some ways, it raises more questions than it answers. Is Michelle really doing herself a service by taking matters into her own hands? By opening a window for the violence that encroaches on her world, is she diluting it or simply giving up on fighting back?

But, the fact that the movie even considers the complexities of sex and violence makes it more worthy of attention than most others than grapple with the same themes. At the very least, Verhoeven, along with Huppert, succeed in creating an almost surreal environment that mirrors the real fears felt by women who are regularly faced with the possibility of assault. In the world of “Elle,” trust in men is scarce. The fact that directors like Verhoeven get that is a good thing, and a step towards regaining it.

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Follow Maddie Crum on Twitter: @maddiecrum

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Before You Go

25 Black TV and Film Firsts
Hattie McDaniel, 1940, Oscar For Best Supporting Actress(01 of17)
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McDaniel won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in the 1939 film "Gone With The Wind," making her the first black actor, male or female, to win an Academy Award. Five other black actresses have won this Oscar since McDaniel's landmark achievement: Whoopi Goldberg in 1991 for "Ghost," Jennifer Hudson in 2007 for "Dreamgirls," Monique in 2010 for "Precious," Octavia Spencer in 2012 for "The Help," and Lupita Nyongo in 2014 for "12 Years A Slave." (credit:John Kobal Foundation via Getty Images)
Dorothy Dandridge, 1955, Oscar Nomination For Best Actress In A Leading Role(02 of17)
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Fifteen years after McDaniel's Supporting Actress win, Dorothy Dandridge became the first black actress nominated for an Academy Award in the Best Actress in a Leading Role category for her titular performance in the musical "Carmen Jones" in 1955. (credit:Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Images)
Diahann Carroll, 1963, Emmy Nomination(03 of17)
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Diahann Carroll played a single mother and nurse in "Julia," which was the first primetime series with a black female lead. Although Carroll did not win an Emmy for her performance in "Julia," she was the first black person, male or female, to ever be nominated for an Emmy for her guest role on "Naked City" in 1963. Carroll's career pioneered opportunities for other shows to feature black actors in non-stereotypical roles but as lead characters. (credit:NBC via Getty Images)
Isaac Hayes, 1972, Oscar For Best Original Song(04 of17)
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"Theme from Shaft" composer Isaac Hayes was the first black person to win a non-acting Academy Award for his work on the 1972 film "Shaft," as well as the first winner in the Best Original Song category. (credit:Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Images)
"Live And Let Die," 1973, Black Bond Girl(05 of17)
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American actress Gloria Hendry played Rosie Carver, the first black Bond Girl, alongside British actor Roger Moore as secret agent James Bond in 1973's "Live and Let Die." Since then there have been other black Bond Girls such as Grace Jones as May Day in 1985's "A View To A Kill" and Halle Berry as Jinx Johnson in 2002's "Die Another Day." (credit:Mondadori via Getty Images)
Suzanne de Passe, 1972, Oscar Nominee For Best Writing (Original Screenplay)(06 of17)
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In 1972 de Passe received her historic nomination for "Lady Sings The Blues" starring Diana Ross as Billie Holiday. de Passe is one of three other black writers to be nominated the others are Spike Lee for 1989's "Do The Right Thing" and John Singleton for 1991's "Boyz N The Hood." (credit:RB via Getty Images)
Cicely Tyson, 1974, Primetime Emmy Award(07 of17)
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Cicely Tyson was the first black actress to win a primetime Emmy her role in "The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman" for Actress of The Year, Special. Her second Emmy, for the same role, was Best Lead Actress in a Television Drama for a Special Program. (credit:Michael Ochs Archives via Getty Images)
BET, 1979, First Black Owned TV Network(08 of17)
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In 1979 Robert L. Johnson started Black Entertainment Television (BET), the first black owned TV network and media empire. Although Viacom bought BET, in 2000 for more than $2 billion, Johnson still remained as chairman and chief executive of BET until 2005 when he gave the position to Debra Lee. (credit:Bennett Raglin/BET via Getty Images)
Louis Gossett Jr., 1983, Academy Award For Best Actor In A Supporting Role(09 of17)
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Gossett received the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor Award for his acting talents in "Officer and a Gentleman," which made him the first black actor to do so. He's spoken about the lack of acting opportunities he's had as a black actor even after his historic win. In 2013 he told The Root, "I never got a million dollars for any movie I did in 60 years." Since his win there have been three other black actors to win an Oscar in this category, Denzel Washington in 1990 for Glory, Cuba Gooding Jr. in 1997 for Jerry Maguire, and Morgan Freeman in 2005 for Million Dollar Baby. (credit:Ron Galella via Getty Images)
Prince, 1985, Oscar For Best Original Score(10 of17)
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Prince took home an Oscar for Best Original Score, an award that requires writing five songs or more for a film, at the 57th Academy Awards in 1985 for the movie "Purple Rain." (credit:ABC Photo Archives via Getty Images)
John Singleton, 1992, Oscar Nomination For Best Director(11 of17)
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At the age of 24 in 1992, John Singleton became the youngest person and first black director to be nominated for an Oscar for Best Director for "Boyz N The Hood." There has never been a black director to receive an Academy award in this category, and thus far only two other people have been nominated: Lee Daniels in 2009 for "Precious" and Steve McQueen in 2013 for "12 Years a Slave." (credit:Frazer Harrison via Getty Images)
Anika Noni Rose, 2009, Disney's Princess Tiana(12 of17)
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Anika Noni Rose is the proud voice behind Princess Tiana who is the first, and thus far only, black member of the highly successful Disney Princess franchise. Rose's landmark performance in "The Princess and the Frog" was an important representation of a black woman in a lead role in an iconic children's movie. (credit:Jon Furniss via Getty Images)
Geoffrey Fletcher, 2010, Oscar For Best Adapted Screenplay(13 of17)
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In 2010, Geoffrey Fletcher was the first black writer to win an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for "Precious," based on the novel "Push" by Sapphire. Four years later, John Ridley became the second black writer to receive this award for his adaptation of "12 Years A Slave" by Solomon Northup. (credit:MARK RALSTON via Getty Images)
TJ Martin, 2012, Oscar For Best Documentary(14 of17)
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At the 84th Academy Awards, TJ Martin became the first black documentarian to win an Oscar for his film with fellow collaborators, Rich Middlemas and Daniel Lindsay, for their work on the football feature "Undefeated" in 2012. (credit:Dan MacMedan via Getty Images)
Cheryl Boone Isaacs, 2013, First Black President Of The Academy Of Motion Picture Arts And Sciences(15 of17)
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Boone Isaacs was elected the first black president of "The Academy" in 2013 and re-elected in August of 2015. (credit:Jason Merritt via Getty Images)
Ava DuVernay, 2014, Golden Globe Nomination For Best Director(16 of17)
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DuVernay was the first black director to receive a Golden Globe nomination for Best Director for the 2014 film "Selma," about Martin Luther King's historic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. (credit:Vincent Sandoval via Getty Images)
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CANADA - AUGUST 15: Dorothy Dandridge. Never quite reached the top. (Photo by Norman James/Toronto Star via Getty Images) (credit:Norman James via Getty Images)