U.S. director Tanya Wexler says her comedy "Hysteria," about the Victorian-era invention of the vibrator, is all about empowering women — and having fun.In the film screened Friday at the Rome Film Festival, one woman complains she's always hungry, another is anxious, a third has bouts of crying. They pour their problems out to Dr. Joseph Mortimer Granville, a doctor in 1880s London who along with a hysteria specialist and an inventor friend develop the cure for what ails them.Wexler told reporters Friday that the point of the romantic comedy, starring Maggie Gyllenhaal, Hugh Dancy and Rupert Everett, was to have a bit of fun."I think in many ways the point of the movie is to say, 'don't take yourself so seriously. It doesn't have to be a medical condition,'" she said. Wexler said she wanted to empower women, though not in the "worthy, self-serious way.""We are supposed to be able to enjoy the enjoyable parts of life," she said.Gyllenhaal, who plays Charlotte, the love interest in the film, said she got a kick out of being in a movie that made her audiences flush."It is true that we are way more embarrassed and shy and stuck in this sort of Victorian way of thinking than we like to admit," she said.
Two determined mothers with children who are failing in an inner city school in Pittsburgh join forces to take back the school, and turn it into a place of learning. But before they can change the school for the better, they must first battle the parents, the school board, and the teachers union. Because this is for their children, they won’t back down from this enormous challenge.