To some, the old-fashioned word "suffragette" suggests captivity in a tight corset rather than women's rights. The phrase "Iron Jawed Angels," on the other hand, connotes an extreme-sports-like empowerment that speaks of youth, drive, and spiritual inner glow. And that's the goal of the new HBO movie "Iron Jawed Angels" -- to buff up history for younger viewers and liberate the early women's movement from its stodgy image.
To tell the story of the steel-willed college grads responsible for the 1920 amendment giving women the right to vote, the movie charges up Wilson-era America with a bag of speedy camera tricks, a vital young lead actress (Hilary Swank), a tad of sexual suggestion, and an unabashedly contemporary soundtrack. In the middle of "Iron Jawed Angels," for example, a parade of early-20th-century protesters in narrow skirts and lace-up boots marches down Main Street while we hear the hip-hop strains of Lauryn Hill's "Everything Is Everything."