From the men who wrote the
book (literally!) on the developing impact of the
next generation…
Two
Oscar favorites this year focus on the
role of strong, young Millennial Generation
daughters trying to heal the wounds of their
Boomer parents’ marriages in two widely
separated, very different cultures. Both
films use the relationship of father and
daughter — not mother and daughter — to
bring a contemporary sensibility to the
challenges of marriage.
A
Separation
shows the difficulties of family life in
urban Iran, while the other,
The
Descendants,
takes place in the idyllic setting of
suburban Hawaii. Despite these differences
in settings, by resting their dramatic
tension on this often unexplored family
relationship, both movies signal the coming
of age of the Millennial Generation and the

increasing centrality of its attitudes and
beliefs in American life.
Boomers (born 1946-1964)
brought the nation’s divorce rate to a
historic high of one out of every two
marriages. Most of their children have grown
up living in single-parent home or at least
are friends with someone who has. As a
result, 50% of Millennials (born 1982-2003)
say that “being a good parent” is their
single highest priority in life. Couple that
attitude with the relative dominance of
females within the generation and you have
the perfect recipe for the plot of The
Descendants.
In the film, one of George
Clooney’s two daughters, is played by
Shailene Woodley, the star of ABC Family’s
“The Secret Life of the American Teenager,”
a program whose popularity among Millennials
has resulted in an unprecedented five-year
run on the channel.
The
Descendants begins in earnest when
Woodley informs Clooney of his wife’s — her
mother’s — infidelity, and then, using all
of her generation’s philosophy on “how to
handle stuff,” helps guide her father’s
ultimate reconciliation with his life’s
decisions and with those of the people
around him.
While generational birth
years and characteristics don’t readily
translate across the boundaries of culture
and religion, the importance of children in
Iran, a country in which 70% of the
population is under 30, comes across very
clearly in A Separation, the
odds-on favorite for best foreign film at
this year’s Academy Awards. Eleven-year-old
Termeh is the one thing that is holding her
parent’s dysfunctional family together. Both
of Termeh’s parents demonstrate the personal
stubbornness and unwillingness to compromise
that Americans recognize in our own Boomer
Generation’s behavior and attitudes. Even
when her parents give up all hope of saving
their marriage, they still leave it up to
Termeh, the only person in the film with any
wisdom, to determine her own custodial
rights.
Two other Oscar contenders,
Martin Scorcese’s masterpiece, Hugo
and Incredibly
Close and Extremely Loud, featuring Tom Hanks, also have
strong performances by Millennial-aged
actors. But the very similar plot lines of
these two movies do not have a Millennial
Generation point of view about families and
the role of women. Even though
Hugo is set in a Depression-era Paris
train station, and
Incredibly Close in post 9/11 New York, in each
film a son tries to figure out a mystery his
dead father has left behind.

A son
attempting to understand his father and live
up to his father’s expectations, however, is
a time-worn plot, more typical of an earlier
era. Despite the technical brilliance of
Hugo, neither film is
expected to garner top honors from the
Academy. Instead, just as “Modern Family”
and its diverse ensemble cast has recently
dominated the Emmys for TV sitcoms, the
Oscars are much more likely to look with
favor on this year’s two films that have
Millennial daughters and Boomer dads at the
core of their story lines and casts.
In so doing,
Hollywood will take a major step toward
recognizing an emerging generation whose
size and unity of belief is likely to
dominate American society and culture for
decades to come. By 2020, more than one of
three American adults will be a Millennial,
a cohort in which two-thirds agree on the
answers to almost every question in most
surveys. Now if the industry could only
figure out a way of attracting Millennials
to movie theaters as well as including them
in its scripts, Hollywood would have an even
brighter story to tell about its own future.