Skip to main content

With Call Jane, abortion once again takes center stage in independent cinema

When Call Jane premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January, few could predict the film would take on greater significance when it was released in late October. With the abolishment of Roe v. Wade in the summer, the movie, about a woman (Spider-Man‘s Elizabeth Banks) in 1960s America seeking an abortion with help of an underground collective called the Janes, suddenly became all too topical in a dynamically changing cultural and political landscape.

Digital Trends talked with Call Jane‘s director Phyllis Nagy and British actress Wunmi Mosaku about why they wanted to make the movie, the challenges involved in tackling a hot-button issue with a bare-bones budget and tight shooting schedule, and what audiences will get out of the film post-Roe.

Digital Trends: What drew you both to Call Jane?

Phyllis Nagy (director): I was so interested in the chance to make a film about a collective, about a group of women who got together to solve a problem rather than be defeated by a problem or unduly traumatized by it. That was key, as was the opportunity to make a film that had a lightness of touch about a very serious subject. Those are the two things that really fascinated me.

Elizabeth Banks sits in a car in Call Jane.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Wunmi Mosaku (actress, Gwen): The incredible real-life women who are in the movie. I had no idea about them or the pre-Roe world. I was lucky enough to grow up in the U.K., where abortion was never a topic. It was incredible reading about these women, who took their own autonomy, health, and dignity into their own hands and helped a community of struggling women.

Call Jane is not just a story, it’s real. It’s not a tale. It’s real. I just couldn’t believe that it was possible that you could take something like abortion into your own hands.

What were some of the challenges for you in making this project?

Nagy: The usual for an indie movie: we had very little money to make a period piece and no time to produce it. We shot it on film in 23 days with a single camera. We had to be quite regimented and planned everything while also leaving room for the usual things that happen all the time on set. So that was very challenging. The schedule was challenging.

Wunmi, you’ve been in a lot of great things recently, from Lovecraft Country to Loki to His House. What was it about your character, Gwen, that appealed to you?

Mosaku: I really admired her strength. She acts like a mirror to the Janes. She’s not complacent. She’s very much someone who faces things head-on. And so she’s not afraid to say, “We’re not doing enough. We aren’t helping everyone who needs help. We’re helping the people who can afford it, which tend to be white women.”

I just love that she was bold and brave enough to stand up as the only Black woman in the room and call them out. They are amazing and wonderful but they are still flawed too.

Phyllis, how does this experience differ from your first directorial outing with Mrs. Harris and then your time as a writer for the Cate Blanchett film Carol?

Nagy: Well, Mrs. Harris had twice the budget that Call Jane had. With Mrs. Harris, I had to navigate a cast of well-known actors like Annette Bening, Ben Kingsley, and Ellen Burstyn. Call Jane has a lot of well-known actors as well like Elizabeth Banks and Sigourney Weaver, but they act as more of an ensemble. We had 35 or 38 days of production time on Mrs. Harris, so we were shooting two to two and a half pages a day as opposed to five or six pages a day for Call Jane.

Elizabeth Banks and Sigourney Weaver smile in Call Jane.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Carol was different because we had more money than we had for Call Jane. It was a bigger production and I witnessed it as a writer instead of as a director. I had the luxury of, sitting around watching everything and, of course, having to do the usual rewrites because we lost a location. But it’s a very different experience, being a writer on a film versus directing it. You’re not responsible for making any of the decisions.

What do you want viewers to take away from Call Jane after they’ve watched it?

Mosaku: I want people to vote first and foremost. I want people to support abortion care networks like Planned Parenthood and grassroots charities and institutions that help women and girls gain and reclaim their dignity, autonomy, hopes, and dreams. I want people to not judge but instead to feel and empathize with women and girls who need abortion care.

Nagy: I’d be happy if viewers had a slight shift in perspective. I’d love it if the film showed them something they hadn’t thought about before and engendered empathy for what the women who have abortions go through.

Call Jane is currently playing in theaters nationwide.

Editors' Recommendations

Topics
Jason Struss
Section Editor, Entertainment
Jason is a writer, editor, and pop culture enthusiast whose love for cinema, television, and cheap comic books has led him to…
Watch Kentucky Oaks 2024 live stream: Can you watch for free?
Let it ride with these tasty Kentucky Derby drinks

The 2024 Kentucky Oaks is set to run today at Churchill Downs. Though it may not be quite as popular as Saturday's main event, the Oaks is a Grade-1 race and undoubtedly one of the biggest races of the year for the top three-year-old fillies.

You're just in time, as coverage of all the Oaks Day races is about to start, at 1:00 p.m. ET, and in the United States it will be televised on USA Network. The Kentucky Oaks is set to post at 5:51 p.m. ET.

Read more
The best movies on Amazon Prime Video (May 2024)
Nicholas Galitzine and Anne Hathaway in The Idea of You.

Amazon Prime Video is starting off strong in May with several new additions to its library of movies, including the premiere of the original romantic drama The Idea of You. Last year's underrated Christmas drama The Holdovers is also now streaming on Prime Video. And as far as we're concerned, a good drama is never out of season.

Prime Video lost a handful of movies at the end of April, and Paul Thomas Anderson's Licorice Pizza is only sticking around through the end of the weekend. But everything else on our list of the best movies on Amazon Prime Video right now is still available. Just keep reading, and you can make plans to watch any of the films that you want to see this month.

Read more
The 50 best movies on Netflix right now (May 2024)
Jenna Ortega in Miller's Girl.

It should come as no surprise that this year's hit rom-com Anyone But You has a stranglehold on the top slot of the list of the most popular movies on Netflix. But it is somewhat surprising to see Zack Snyder's Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver completely disappear from the list. That's going to make Rebel Moon – Part Three very unlikely to happen, and it may even discourage Netflix from committing extremely high budgets to its original sci-fi movies.

More tellingly, two of this week's new additions are modestly budget dramas: Miller's Girl and The Judge. The former features Wednesday's Jenna Ortega, while the latter has great lead performances by Robert Downey Jr. and Robert Duvall. So it's not a mystery as to why both of those films are two of the top performers of the week.

Read more