- Joined
- May 31, 2019
It didn't used to be that bad with the mantra of "you can't hurt female characters!" until fairly recently.
Look at "The Long Kiss Goodnight", that character gets shot, stabbed, blown up, and at one points even screams for help. Does it depower her? Fuck no. Samuel L. Jackson being Samuel L. Jackson doesn't diminish the female protagonist at all. (Come on, that scene where he's half-frozen in the car, she's screaming for help, and he opens his eyes and looks up is completely badass and we both know it)
Leia was: tortured, shot at, hell, she got shot in RotJ, and that didn't diminish her character. Hell, the majority of women I knew at the time of that movie thought it was badass.
But something changed, both in story-telling and in audience attitudes.
To be honest, I blame Twilight.
Now wait, hear me out. Twilight Bella got everything she wanted, and because her blood tasted so delicious, it was a reason that she couldn't be injured in the series because even a paper cut put her life at risk from hordes of vampires. We all know the fact that it was a Mary Sue insert, that she could have been replaced by a Pecan Pie and the story would be the same.
The Hunger Games, the protagonist got hurt, physically, mentally, emotionally, but the movies really blunted it down to "Really cool chick with a bow" and ignored all the messy "hide in the closet under blankets because it's warm and safe and nobody can judge me or see me or hurt me" aspects of the series.
Then suddenly if a female protagonist got injured, critics and smooth brained Twitterati screamed "TORTURE PORN!" and mistook normal anxiety for disgust and trauma.
Weirdly, it follows a conversation I had a few months back with some friends.
Movies and literature have women in male roles, in traditionally male activities, but they (the audience, the character, the real person) strangely enough still carry forward the "you can't hit/hurt me, I'm a girl!!!" that you see in every fucking Worldstar video where some chick is beating on a guy and he gets sick of it and throws a single punch after she's punched him, spit on him, kicked him, clawed him, bitten him, and suddenly HE'S the bad guy.
If you had a movie where women charged the beach on D-Day instead of men, I will lay you dollars to donuts that every critic would freak out and you'd see article after article about how if you like this movie you secretly hate women.
Look at Black Widow's introduction scene in Avengers. She's tied to a chair supposedly exposed to enhanced interrogation (Slapping at the time) and yet her hair is perfectly in place. They couldn't even give her a black eye or a split lip because they knew that audiences would react badly.
Compare that to say, Stark's treatment by the hadji's in Iron Man.
(Don't get me wrong, I think Black Widow is one of the better female characters in film nowadays because she isn't perfect and she isn't the strongest/fastest/toughest/deadliest character in the Avenger films)
If you were to do a war film with a main female lead, it's doubtful they'd injure her at all. Do you think she'd take a beating ala Desmond Doss in Hacksaw Ridge? Hell, do you think she'd take a bullet to the gut like that movie in the 90's about the chopper pilot during Desert Storm?
Shit, do you think they'd beat on her like they did during GI Jane?
It's all about getting the cool powers, the cool abilities, the "respect", the privileges of a male role without all the responsibilities and hardship, even while the critics and Twitterati go on and on about "women's pain" or "women's burden" or whatever.
Female characters have to reflect these Twitterati and upper-execs and Hollywood weirdos who haven't really had any hardship and think that being told "No" is the worst thing in the universe.
Like the meme says:
Death Star Destroys Alderan, Women Most Affected.
Which REALLY REALLY sucks, because they've set back story-telling by decades. Even Grandpappy Tolkien's female characters underwent struggle and hardship.
"The Little Matchgirl" could never be accepted today.
The sexy, sexual, and badass Grace Jones characters from Octopussy and Conan couldn't be done today.
Vasquez from Aliens couldn't be done today.
Soy Wars is just the state of modern storytelling.
A perfect female character who gets no development, growth, training, has no reason for powers and abilities aside from "Yay! Woman!", who treats getting dusty like being gutshot while everyone carries her around talking about how strong and brave she is.
What pisses me off, is not only did Star Wars fans deserve better, but movie-goers, and yes, women, deserve better.
The tale of John Henry is diminished if he doesn't die.
Hacksaw Ridge is lessened if Desmond Doss just wanders around with his uniform perfect and uninjured.
Halloween is ruined if Lorie Strode is in no danger the entire time.
That's the crux of the Soy Wars debate and argument, when you get right down to it.
The audience deserves a real story, not a 3-movie commercial for merchandise.
Compare today's wokeness with this episode of the 1998 version of Fantasy Island. A woman comes to the island to fulfill her desire to become a combat soldier, only to get sent to an alternative version of WW2, where the soldiers were all women. And she sees firsthand that war is all suffering and sacrifice. I highly doubt this episode could be made today without turning the main character into a superwoman who mows down white male Nazis by the hundreds.