Tag Archives: The Assignment

Michelle Rodriguez Says Role In Controversial Transgender Thriller Made Her Understand Her Own Femininity

Michelle Rodriguez says her role in a controversial film The Assignment (released in the UK as Tomboy) – a movie about a male assassin who is forcibly turned into a woman, with one of the most hashtag-problematic plots to emerge in recent times – allowed her to realise her own femininity.

The film was widely panned by the transgender community, but the film’s screenwriter Denis Hamill hit out at critics last week.

Rodriguez has spoken again of the film, after previously defending it.

She told Page Six:

I had to tape my breasts down, and I still looked like a hermaphrodite.”

Going on she said playing the character made her realise she had been more feminine than she thought:

All my life I felt alienated by women. They were into the lipstick, nails, and dressing up, and I always felt like a tomboy, like I didn’t fit in.

I felt like I had masculine qualities versus feminine qualities just because I am an alpha. I do what I want, and never let anybody tell me otherwise. I am kind of hardcore about that. But then when I go and actually play a man, I realized I am such a girl; there is nothing manly about me.”

I was so confused growing up, so it took playing a man to make me a woman.”

Rodriguez previously rejected criticism of the film because she is bisexual.

What is transgender? Is it a psychological thing or is it an operation, and does the LGBTQ community own the operation? Do they have a branding right over a sex change?

Are they mad that somebody decided to take their branded transgender operation and use it on heterosexual people? It’s a B-movie noir genre comic book take on something.

I’m bisexual. I do guys. I do girls. You can’t really argue with me because I’m you. So if I do a movie, I’d never do a movie with the intention of offending anybody in the LGBT community because I’m a part of it.”

 

The First Trailer For Michelle Rodriguez’s Controversial Gender Reassignment Action Film Is Out

The first trailer for The Assignment has arrived and it’s just as tasteless and cringe-worthy as the longline would lead you to believe.

From legendary genre director Walter Hill (The Warriors, The Driver and 48 Hours, among others), The Assignment stars Michelle Rodriguez as Frank Kitchen, an ace hitman who sets out a revenge spree after he is captured by a sadistic, amoral surgeon (Sigourney Weaver) and subject to a forced gender reassignment surgery.

The film was originally called Tomboy, then (Re)Assignment and finally the generic The Assignment, which seems destined to lure in a lot of people who have no idea what they’re getting into.

However, its sensationalistic plot has not gone down well with the trans community, who hit out at Rodriguez and dismissed the film as exploitation.

Rodriguez last year defended playing a transgender person in the film The Assignment because she is bisexual.

Speaking to Reuters, she said:

What is transgender? Is it a psychological thing or is it an operation, and does the LGBTQ community own the operation? Do they have a branding right over a sex change?

Are they mad that somebody decided to take their branded transgender operation and use it on heterosexual people?

It’s a B-movie noir genre comic book take on something.

I’m bisexual. I do guys. I do girls. You can’t really argue with me because I’m you.

So if I do a movie, I’d never do a movie with the intention of offending anybody in the LGBT community because I’m a part of it.”

But in 2015, a GLAAD spokesperson said of the film:

We haven’t read the script, but it’s disappointing to see filmmakers turning what is a life-saving medical procedure for transgender people into a sensationalistic plot device.”

Director Walter Hill insisted other films have dealt with similar plots in the past.

I don’t know why this one stirred up such interest in a way that those didn’t except that I think the transgender situation has been more in the headlines the last couple of years.

I don’t know. I’m a storyteller, it’s a crime story, it’s a noir vision, it’s comic book in a way and quite a few women have said to me that after seeing the movie, they feel empowered by it.”