T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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393.1 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Nov 30 1989 11:48 | 8 |
| I haven't seen the film, and don't have plans to (the reviews I have seen
don't entice me), but I think this is an interesting topic for discussion.
In other forums, some women have objected to the treatment of women in
certain male-centered films as a form of "male pornography". Might this
film have been designed to appeal to women's egos? (Certainly there aren't
many films of this nature, as compared to those aimed at men.)
Steve
|
393.2 | | CONURE::AMARTIN | U-Q36-Explosive-Space-Modulator | Thu Nov 30 1989 12:29 | 16 |
| If the film was spacifically made to entice the female of the species,
I see no problem. I mean, making movies IS about making money, no?
Most movie goers go for a spacific reason, be them rambo types or gore
types. This spacific ave has not been touched much. The producers saw
another movie going crowd that needs to have thier egos stroked and
went for it. I think its good mathmatics.
Show me a guy that doesnt want to see a good macho ass type rambo movie
to stroke their egos, and Ill show you a wimp! :-)
aknowledging a spacific sect of movie goers makes money, at least from
that sect or people. And even by some that arent into that sort of
flick. Go, you might learn something. I might. yea right....:-)
|
393.3 | | REGENT::FARRELL | The Permanent Alien Hacker. | Thu Nov 30 1989 14:22 | 15 |
|
Before everyone jumps off the deep end about how this movie may (or
may not) be catering to women, bear in mind it was written by
a man and based on what happened to his sister.
I saw the stage version and there (because there are only the
central 6 female characters) how men are treated rarely enters
into it. I haven't seen the movie yet, but thought to myself that
it wouldn't transfer 100% because they would need to take it out
of the beauty parlor.
Anyway, FWIW, I liked the play and will probably enjoy the movie
almost as much.
Bernard.
|
393.4 | New Dad = Moron?!?!?!? | DECXPS::CEANES | | Thu Nov 30 1989 16:24 | 11 |
|
I haven't seen the movie yet, friends have told me it was pretty
good though...In a slightly different vein, does it bother anyone
else when fathers are portrayed as incompetent idiots when it comes
to childcare or housework? Don't get me wrong, I laughed at "Mr.
Mom" as much as the next guy but for once I'd like to see a father
who isn't portrayed as a complete screw-up when it comes to the
typically "female oriented" roles in life. This is the eighties
isn't it? Just something that's been a thorn in my side...
Chris
|
393.5 | | RUTLND::KUPTON | Baby Lou | Thu Nov 30 1989 17:02 | 9 |
|
Hi Al...
Personally, I think it's pretty sickening. Women bitch and moan when
women are potrayed as sex objects in anything. Then along comes the
reverse roles and they say it's time men got theirs. The old double
standard, cold revenge, it's ok if it's not me crap.
Ken
|
393.6 | Now, if he was dusting in the *nude*... | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Thu Nov 30 1989 20:05 | 21 |
| re .5-
Ah, Ken, jumping to generalizations again I see.
> Women bitch and moan when women are potrayed as sex objects in anything.
Not '*women* bitch and moan', Ken, but *feminists*. Including me.
Try to get it right next time, please. Some men count themselves
among the numbers of people who oppose objectification. Saying
that only women mind it shows us you haven't been paying attention.
And since when does a movie showing a man as inept at housecleaning
and cooking portray that man as a 'sex object'? Looks like you
weren't paying attention to Al, either, even when you tried to agree
with him.
And a final question...if they made a movie about your housecleaning
skills, Ken, would anybody pay to see it? {Thats a trick question,
btw- all you're supposed to do is think about it, both sides.}
DougO
|
393.7 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Dec 01 1989 06:15 | 11 |
| This may be a cultural difference, but I thought almost everyone
was a sex object. Admittedly there are some who are only growing to be
sex objects, and there is a rumour that I don't believe that you can be
too old to be a sex object.
As a derivation of Darwinian theory, even in a small population
most people in sex(1) must lust for and/or be attractive to someone in
sex(2), otherwise they would become genetically extinct.
I hope that I am a sex object and more for my wife. I wouldn't like
to be *less* than a sex object.
|
393.8 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | Shoot it, stuff it, or marry it | Fri Dec 01 1989 08:11 | 21 |
| I would not have noticed, even though I did see the film, you have 5
big name woman actors in the film. However, a week prior, I was at the
cinema, and was reading the movie book they give out free, and an
article was written about the movie.
If the base noter had read the article, he would have never of entered
the base note. The males were the supporting role. The movie is about
5 females and their life that centers around a beauty parlor. When the
male actors read for the part, they were told they would be in the
background, and they were chosen for that role. Notice you didn't see a
big name (ie Jack Nicholsen [sp?]), because the movie was about the
females, and they didn't want a big name drawing from what the film was
all about.
I probably haven't given the article justice. But, there is a reason
for it, get a hold of the magazine (its free) and read the article...
its great...
Gale
(By the way, my personal name is from that movie, its what one of the
males said that women are good for :-)...)
|
393.9 | | RUTLND::KUPTON | Baby Lou | Fri Dec 01 1989 08:41 | 5 |
| re:DougO
Apparently you didn't read my reply......
K
|
393.12 | | CADSE::KHER | | Fri Dec 01 1989 13:04 | 4 |
| I have seen the movie and I didn't think that the men were portrayed
as weak or useless. The movie just didn't focus on them. It was a
story about those women and their friendship/relationship with each
other. One theme at a time as .0 (Ger ?) said.
|
393.13 | Background is okay, but what type of background? | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Fri Dec 01 1989 14:47 | 38 |
|
> If the base noter had read the article, he would have never of entered
> the base note. The males were the supporting role. The movie is about
> 5 females and their life that centers around a beauty parlor. When the
> male actors read for the part, they were told they would be in the
> background, and they were chosen for that role. Notice you didn't see a
> big name (ie Jack Nicholsen [sp?]), because the movie was about the
> females, and they didn't want a big name drawing from what the film was
> all about.
Now, Gale. It's not fair to try to predict what I "would" or "would
not" have felt or thought or done. Neither one of us can accurately
predict that.
As I already mentioned in .0, I fully realize that the movie was not
supposed to be about men. That's wicked cool with me. I don't have
an objection to the fact that the men were background. I don't even
have an objection as to how they were portrayed in the background.
All I was doing was reporting what I observed (all the background
male characters were emotionally weak) and how I felt in response to
it (a bit depressed).
I also ask myself the question, "Is it possible to make a movie about
women without making the background male characters 'weak' or 'useless
in an emotional crisis'?" I'd like to think that it is possible. Alan
Bates character in "An Unmarried Woman" comes to mind. Alan Bate's
character was not deeply explored in this "women's" movie, but he was
a strong, sympathetic male character. Could they have had such a
character in Magnolias? Maybe...
> (By the way, my personal name is from that movie, its what one of the
> males said that women are good for :-)...)
Umm, no. This is what one of the women said that a man said that
women were good for. A nit to some, but the distinction is important
to me.
--Ger
|
393.14 | sorry, the horse reference is a cheap shot. | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Fri Dec 01 1989 15:03 | 42 |
| re .10, Mike-
> But there are times when women ARE sex objects. Men too.
>
> What's so bad about art imitating life?
How many people you know look like Daryl Hannah, Mike? How many
people do you know that qualify as movie-star-level sex objects?
What I find bad about the way Hollywood glamorizes sex objects is
that it sets the standard so high that 98% of the population feels
inadequate, and ever striving to meet the role. Sets us up to be
manipulated by the fitness craze, the makeup and cosmetics industries,
and all the rest of the marketing that pushes us to make ourselves
physically more attractive, because we don't yet look like sex objects.
And just suppose you *do* get there. Just suppose you're now dynamite,
physically perfact, adored by casual passers-by in the street. Are
you ready for a relationship? Well, if you've been putting a whole
lot of energy solely into perfecting your physical appearance, I'm
not so sure. Seems to me that mental and verbal skills, and the
ability to make someone else feel valued, to appreciate what's good
about them, would be better skills to have developed.
And suppose you're a woman, adored by casual passers-by. Over-adored,
probably...every creep who undresses you with his eyes, every crowd
of men that catcalls you might perhaps give you the impression that
"art imitating life" set a real bad example for such cretins, teaching
them that all women "want" to receive come-ons from bozos.
And finally, "art imitating life" has been Hollywood's excuse for
more than 50 years. That isn't what's really going on. What's
going on is catering to fantasies, because sex sells. The biggest
problem is that these crummy movies condition us...they manipulate
us, they affect the culture we have to live in by operating on the
minds of millions of people that see them. And I'm not crazy about
this culture which is so sex-crazy that it even leads people to
joke about car accidents by comparing horse-vs-auto transportation
as a choice between places to "make out". Sorry, Mike- it isn't
"art imitating life". Its sleazy movies scumming the culture.
DougO
|
393.15 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | passion of your aching soul | Fri Dec 01 1989 16:32 | 28 |
|
I saw this movie on wednesday and I loved it (Steve please
reconsider, the ad for the movie doesn't do it justice at
all). (And I don't like Dolly Parton, and I don't like Sally
Fields, so, it was amazing that I liked the movie at all)
It appealed to every emotion and I felt like I was part of
the cast......................
The movie is not about the story-line, but about the
relationships among the women.
I wouldn't say the men were "emotionally weak" besides
Sam Shepard. There just isn't enough content in the movie
regarding the men to make any decision about what kind of
character they were portraying...it was almost like watching
extras with bit parts.
To focus on the aspect of the relationship among these woman
was so facinating because the story line of the movie was
so insignificant to the movie itself.
Very fascinating indeed..............
kath
|
393.17 | With respect, Doug... | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Sun Dec 03 1989 15:17 | 18 |
| re. .14
I think you may have it a bit backwards, Doug. Like Mike says
celluloid world is a smoked over and glitzy reflection of the real
world, not the other way around. Sure, there are people out there who
have a tough time drawing the line between drama and reality; like the
people who went out and had their hair styled like Bo Derek's in "10"
thinking it was actually attractive or that, like Michael Douglas
in "Wall Street", you had to have slick hair and be a sleaze to
be respected.
If you want to take them seriously that, of course, is your perogative,
but you strike me as being too intelligent to do that.
In the mean time, you're blaming the low reading on the thermometer for
the cold weather.
Kris
|
393.18 | Its a bigger thesis than that, guys. | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Mon Dec 04 1989 01:57 | 26 |
| Hmmm....not me, guys.
Mike, you say they can only manipulate me "if I let them".
Well, ok, with my overboard-attitude I think I've shown I'm at least
aware enough of the problem that you may believe my claim that I've
tried to armor myself against such manipulation.
But my real argument wasn't about the effect of this sleazy
manipulation on me; I consider myself as protected as anybody
I know (by my attitude). My argument, though, was the effect upon
"the culture that we all have to live in". That is, I assert that
sleazy manipulation *is* mindlessly accepted and effective upon
far too many schmoes out there. Hell, *I* don't watch tv, but somebody
must be...and among those somebodies, can you deny that the culture
has been affected? 20 years of lousy cop shows and sleazy sitcoms
has affected this society.
> In the mean time, you're blaming the low reading on the thermometer for
> the cold weather.
Kris, the argument is more subtle than that. I'm saying that our
mass media has been pumping drivel at several hundred millions of
us over the last many years, and the effects are not plausibly
deniable.
DougO
|
393.19 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | As you merged, power surged- together | Mon Dec 04 1989 08:47 | 9 |
| >I'm saying that our
> mass media has been pumping drivel at several hundred millions of
> us over the last many years, and the effects are not plausibly
> deniable.
I'll buy that. You only have to look at youth to see the effects. And they
often carry the effects well into adulthood.
The Doctah
|
393.21 | it cuts many ways... | AV8OR::TATISTCHEFF | Lee T | Mon Dec 04 1989 20:40 | 20 |
| re .0 Ger
many people (men) had similar complaints about "the color purple",
though i see no reason for alice walker to be real balanced or generous
about male characters.
but you know, very few people (men) saw my point when i gagged at "the
princess bride" - yeah, yeah, the male characters are wonderful, cute,
hysterical, funny, daring, bright, etc.
the most powerful thing the woman did in that film of derring-do was
threaten to kill herself (then chicken out), and say "wait 'til my
prince gets you".
now granted, i *do* prefer *tough*broads* (and hope to be one someday)
to porcelain dolls, but still!!
it's interesting to hear the play was by a man.
lt
|
393.22 | Perhaps I've flogged this enough. | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Mon Dec 04 1989 22:28 | 15 |
| re .20, Mike-
> To portray visual media, like film and TV, as an evil, manipulative
> industry strikes me as unfair, and farfetched.
Well, since its me portraying them that way, I obviously disagree,
and I'll tell you why- that's how they make money. You earlier
granted this point, when I made it; "sex sells". And the picture
of society that they present with their 'sex' is one that I consider
to be doing damage to the culture. I consider it more irresponsible
than "evil", that's your word, I didn't use it. But "manipulative"
it certainly is and on an industry-wide basis, too. That claim
is not farfetched at all.
DougO
|
393.24 | herewith accepted ;-) | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Mon Dec 04 1989 23:24 | 4 |
| ok, Mike...I don't think you've quite summarized me accurately,
but I agree we've taken the rathole far enough, and will drop it.
DougO
|
393.25 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Evening Star- I can see the light | Tue Dec 05 1989 09:07 | 12 |
| > but you know, very few people (men) saw my point when i gagged at "the
> princess bride"
Well, I missed your original gagging, but I think I can understand your
point now. I would probably have said something like "Yeah, but it was
only a movie" to your complaints, and secretly thought "Why is she bent
out of shape about that?" But seeing how men react to the same
phenomenon really provides great insight into WHY people react to what
they consider to be unfair characterizations of members of their group.
And for this insight, I am thankful.
The Doctah
|
393.26 | My cut at it... | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:21 | 44 |
|
> To portray visual media, like film and TV, as an evil, manipulative
> industry strikes me as unfair, and farfetched.
I can see where this would be true from your perspective, Mike.
Maybe this is because the visual media might not appear to be nasty
towards things that are important or close to your life.
For instance, things change when seen from other points of view. For
instance, ask some members of minority groups and women's groups about
visual media, and you'll probably get another perspective. How many
white cops arrest black drug dealers in movies? How often is the
reverse true? How often are gay male characters portrayed who are
remotely resembling what gay men see in their communities? For that
matter, how many lesbians are portrayed at all? How many Asian actors
are portrayed in roles that have nothing to do with the martial arts?
How many people in wheel chairs are portrayed in films that are not
talking about the "issue" of being handicapped? How often, in films
about the richness of women's friendships, are men portrayed to be
ineffectual or wimpy around emotional issues, as I felt the men in
"Steel Magnolias" were portrayed?
When I go on speaking engagements to talk about being gay, a lot of
the comments and questions that I hear are directly related to the
portrayal of gay people in the visual media ("I know this because most
people say "I don't know of any gay people myself, but..."). We are a
very visually oriented society; the only other way they could have
gotten it was from other people or from books.
It is a very bizarre thing to watch TV and most movies with semi
"realistic" themes and not recognize the people they claim to be
portraying. I think this is hammered home more with minorities and
with women than it is with other groups whose range of characters are
more realistically portrayed. This consistent "slant" in portrayal of
certain types of people may not be "evil," but I certainly feel that
it is fair to call it manipulative, especially since these shows and
films cause very real effects in my day-to-day life, as I can tell
when I have to answer to adults who regurgitate the gay stereotypes
that are spoon fed to them in the visual media.
I think you underestimate the power of film and you overestimate an
adult's ability to screen out the stuff that isn't true.
--Ger
|
393.27 | More clarification... | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Tue Dec 05 1989 13:33 | 30 |
|
> many people (men) had similar complaints about "the color purple",
> though i see no reason for alice walker to be real balanced or generous
> about male characters.
I see your point. I remember the complaints about that movie.
However, I didn't have any objection to the male characters in that
movie (is it because I could distance myself because I'm not an
African-American man?).
I also am not asking that the (male) writer of "Steel Magnolias"
rewrite his story; as I've already mentioned a few times, I've seen a
lot of families like that, with strong women and ineffectual men
(around emotional issues).
All I wanted to point out was my feeling of disappointment and
sadness. (My feelings are nobody's "fault"; I am responsible for
them; I am not asking any other human being to do anything different,
just to listen to me for a little while without judging me and without
trying to prove my feelings to be "wrong.") I feel very strongly that
it is possible to have a movie about strong women that contains
strong, likeable male characters in the background (like Alan Bates in
"An Unmarried Woman"). I don't believe it is necessary to portray men
as ineffectual in order to showcase the strength of women; it doesn't
have to be an either/or situation.
I guess I'll have to wait a little while longer for such a movie to be
made.
--Ger
|
393.29 | Wasteland, thy name is television. | BRADOR::HATASHITA | | Tue Dec 05 1989 17:09 | 23 |
| I find it difficult, if not impossible, to be offended by any portrayal
I've ever seen in the entertainment media, with the exception of
offence taken by my sense of intelligence. But I don't take that
personally. Being offended by something crafted for the expressed
purpose of entertainment is like being offended by an insult from
a 6 year-old; it speaks more of the "insultee" than the "insulter".
I'm an Oriental who can break a 2 X 4 with my bare hands only if my
bare hands are holding a big axe. I'm taller that 4'-11 and have
straight teeth, speak English real good (or is that, "I talk bitchin'
English real narley"?) and don't have 2" thick glasses.
If the image a person has of me is derived from portrayals of Orientals
in the movies, I certainly don't mind because, quite frankly, it's
difficult for me to find the time to care.
If a person's grip on reality is plastic enough to have their views
molded by the entertainment industry it's certainly plastic enough
for me to change their view if it's important enough. But it rarely
is.
Kris
|
393.30 | rather lengthy for my 1st reply here | VENICE::SKELLY | | Wed Dec 06 1989 00:03 | 78 |
| Initially, I had no reaction at all to the men in this movie. They
seemed quite obviously intended as props and had no more significance
to the plot than the eggs in the trunk. There was a point where I did
pay attention to their, shall we say, symbolic presence. Let me discuss
that behind a form feed though, just in case somebody's reading who
hasn't seen the movie and considers this a spoiler.
At the grave scene, the Sally Fields character actually comments,
something to the effect, that men are weak and women strong. Even in
her grief, she's proud of the fact that she stayed with her daughter to
the very end. The men "couldn't deal with it", but she could.
My reaction was, "What's she talking about? The men dealt with it. They
just dealt with it differently. I think I probably would have dealt
with it just like they did." That got me thinking. Reading more into
the scene than was probably intended, and ignoring Sally's judgement of
it, the fact remains, she held her daughter's hand and in doing so,
seem to reach out to the experience of her daughter's death and
participate it in completely. The men disconnected themselves from it
almost as soon as the machines were disconnected. They left the room.
She remained and risked the full emotional impact.
The scene appeared perfectly normal to me. I expected it to work that
way.
In themselves, neither the scene, nor Sally's subsequent comment would
have really stuck with me if not for the reality around me. I went to
the movie with four women and they spent the last part of the movie
crying. I noticed that as we exited the theater that practically every
women I saw looked like she had spent the last two hours lying on her
face.
I remember thinking in the movie, "Here comes the sad part. Watch out
or you'll end up crying" and at most, my eyes got a little moist and I
only had to bite my tongue once. I disconnected myself from the
emotions the movie was designed to provoke, just like the men in it
disconnected themselves from their emotions.
I think "I can do that. I've been trained to do that." Is this a talent
or a flaw? Yes, being able to avoid strong emotional reactions has
prevented me from suffering a lot of grief, but maybe it's also kept me
at arm's length from a lot of experiences I might have enjoyed more
thoroughly. I can't see it as a talent, because I really have no
control over it. If I can predict a strong, emotional situation is
coming, I automatically disconnect. Maybe that's not a male thing, just
me.
I certainly don't feel depressed at the way men are represented in this
movie. Rather I feel enlighted by the way women are represented. I
liked the way the women behaved. It offered me a different way to
behave. I feel the movie wanted to communicate that message and did.
Movies like this, even though they put men in a subordinate role, teach
me something about the richness of women's lives. How many movies that
put women in a subordinate role, teach us about the richness of men's
lives? Some, yes, but many more are merely stereotypical.
Speaking of movie messages about men, I'd rather see a movie about
weak, ineffectual, harmless men, then the usual stuff about strong,
violent ones. Did you ever notice that strong male characters in movies
generally seem to have a cause and that more often than not, their
strength is demonstrated by a violent act? Look at a perfectly
innocuous film like " Dirty Dancing". The lead male is portrayed as
unable to articulate his emotions and indeed, to feel anything but
righteous anger. Righteous anger seems to be a popular emotion among
men in films.
I was totally offended by the scene where, without a single scene in
which he verbally expresses his concerns, he explodes and beats the
other guy to a pulp. He returns to his girl friend, who, clearly not
quite understanding why men must do what they must do, accepts, indeed
admires and loves him more for his action. I thought, "Sweetheart, get
real! The man is an animal, not a human being!" Oddly, I was angry with
women for days for supporting, loving, this kind of behavior in men.
Then I was angry with the filmmakers. Then I was angry with us,
society, because this is the way we are and the film merely reflected
it.
|
393.31 | it's OK to make money, if no laws are broken | DEC25::BERRY | Back to the Future... | Wed Dec 06 1989 01:10 | 11 |
| re: .22
>>> Well, since its me portraying them that way, I obviously disagree,
and I'll tell you why- that's how they make money. You earlier
That's part of the free enterprise system. If there is a demand,
someone will fill it, and make money in the process. Therefore, two
sides are satisified. Nothing wrong there. It's legal. It's
business.
Dwight
|
393.32 | economics is *not* the sole factor in this | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Wed Dec 06 1989 03:43 | 10 |
| > -< it's OK to make money, if no laws are broken >-
"OK" in your book, "sleazy, manipulative, irresponsible, detrimental
to the culture" in mine. I think we understand each other, and
I already promised Mike I wouldn't keep beating the horse.
I happen to think they could make plenty of money without being
so irresponsible and sleazy, thats all.
DougO
|
393.33 | don't point at me | DEC25::BERRY | Back to the Future... | Wed Dec 06 1989 06:13 | 7 |
| -1
Not "my book" DougO. It's a question of laws. If you don't like
the laws, then fight to change them. There are many people with
opinions, ready to state what's right... then there is the law.
DB
|
393.34 | | DEC25::BERRY | Back to the Future... | Wed Dec 06 1989 06:30 | 26 |
| re: .14 Olson_do
>>> What I find bad about the way Hollywood glamorizes sex objects is
that it sets the standard so high that 98% of the population feels
inadequate, and ever striving to meet the role. Sets us up to be
I must be in the 2%! :^) Nice poll though!
>>> Seems to me that mental and verbal skills, and the ability to
make someone else feel valued, to appreciate what's good about them,
would be better skills to have developed.
There are many lonely people with many or all of the skills you
mention too. Ever read SINGLES?
>>> The biggest problem is that these crummy movies condition
us...they manipulate us, they affect the culture we have to live in by
operating on the minds of millions of people that see them.
Not if we're smart enough to separate the two. I love Star Trek, and I
believe that one day we'll get to a similar place in time.... but I
know it's a movie, or a show. I know it's entertainment. I pay money
to go see it and I'm always satisified, even with Star Trek V! :^)
DB
|
393.35 | | DEC25::BERRY | Back to the Future... | Wed Dec 06 1989 06:36 | 5 |
| OK... I see that after reading all of Mike's replies, that my last one
was on his same thought line.... oh well, perhaps it was worth saying
again?
DB
|
393.36 | ...nevermind | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Wed Dec 06 1989 09:30 | 12 |
|
>.26>Maybe this is because the visual media might not appear to be nasty
>.26>towards things that are important or close to your life.
>
> That's just not true.
>
> They take cheap shots at many things that I consider important.
Okay, so I was wrong.
--Ger
|
393.38 | I guess it really bothered me; oh well! | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Wed Dec 06 1989 10:08 | 114 |
| RE .30
Maybe I should spell out my biggest objection to the males in this
movie:
<SPOILER>
> At the grave scene, the Sally Fields character actually comments,
> something to the effect, that men are weak and women strong.
Yes! It was the grave scene that bothered me the most. The fact that
the men checked out on the Julia Roberts and Sally Field during the
hospital stay didn't bother me as much; that seemed more like a
statement on mother/daughter bonding then it did on male/female
reactions to emotional crisis.
...but it was the grave scene that made me want to scream. The camera
shows a solitary Sally Field standing by her daughter's coffin and
grave, about to break down. Then, the camera pans to each of the
adult characters. Every man sees their wife/girlfriend "in need," and
every man walks away from his partner (check it out; there was a
camera pan to all three males, and all three, after hesitating, turn
away from their partners). I found that _excrutiatingly_ painful.
Also, to pound the message in, every woman character who sees Sally
standing by the grave goes to her side to "be with her."
To wrap up any loose ends, Sally lets loose with the reinforcement of
the stereotype: "Men are weak and women are strong" (though I don't
remember her exact words).
Maybe I'm coming at this whole situation from a whackball position,
but I don't think so. First, one of the reasons why I want a life
partner very badly is so that he will be with me when things get
tough, help me through the tough times (there are lots of other
reasons, too); if my partner left me crying at a grave site without
even checking to see if I needed to be alone or if I needed company, I
think that divorce would be in the works. I won't stand for a partner
checking out on me in times of emotional crisis; I might as well be
single for all that gives me. Second, I really, really resent the
implication that the movie made that "Oh well, that's just the way men
are and the way women are." Bullshit. That's the way we're trained
(in my opinion), and it's movies like this that reinforce the male
stereotype, just as surely as "Rambo" reinforces the macho, violent
part of the same stereotype; they are the flipside of the same coin.
It gets real tired after a while.
Finally, I understand what people are saying when they say, "Movies
and TV aren't real, and any moron would know not to take them
seriously; I'm not going to worry about cheap shots they've taken." I
understand that celluloid is not something that one should base a core
belief or value on. That all makes perfect logical sense to me.
However, that thinking is flawed (in my opinion), because it doesn't
match up with what I see going on around me. If movies and TV were
something that were seen in moderation, then I would agree with you;
however, it is the mind-numbing repetition with which most Americans
use these mediums that turns them into dangerous "policy makers." If
you are told something often enough--whether in the movies or by your
parents or on TV--you're going to begin to believe it, no?
What _I_ see going on around me is that, after being exposed to the
values on the tube and screen almost from birth to adulthood
(remember, we are just now seeing the first generations of adults who
were weened on the tube), people (especially children) suck up the
values spoon fed to them through these two mediums (from other
sources, too, but the visual medium is probably the most influential
aside from "parents" in our society today, and even then I wonder if
it's not more so). People are also told what is "beautiful," "sexy,"
and they are told what to want (I find it hard to believe that Nature
instills in us a desire to possess Nintendo and Reebock Pumps, know
what I mean?).
If you see something often enough, _especially_ in a lighhearted,
joking, entertaining forum when your "defenses" are down, it sinks in
without you even questioning it. (I'm going back to a gay example,
because I know those examples best.) I can't tell you what it was
like to watch "St. Elmo's Fire" with a bunch of straight, male college
students sitting in front of me. When it was suggested that the
"sensitive" character was gay, they all went "ewwwwwww" in unison.
When the gay interior decorator (don't get me started on that
character!) appeared on the screen, they all went "ewwwww," and some
called out "faggot!" When the sensitive one proved his
heterosexuality by jumping (literally) his best friend's girlfriend,
they stood up and cheered. Nice family values, eh?
And it wasn't just that movie. I saw the same thing in "Making Love,"
and I've seen it in other movies. It's as if all the movie goers had
little strings that were being yanked on cue. And I don't believe
that the movie goers and TV watchers "leave it in the theater/living
room" when the show is done, because I have seen people regurgitate
the same tired lines when I talk to them in person, all this in
_spite_ of the fact that they claim that they don't know any gay
people or that the subject isn't talked about at home that much.
Movies count. (Everything counts.) Stalin once said that if he owned
Hollywood, the whole world would have been communist by then. I think
it is a mistake to underestimate that power.
I guess all I am advocating is for the range of characters to be shown
in some (not all) films. "Steel Magnolias" was a good film; I'm not
saying there is anything wrong with it. I _am_ saying that there is
something wrong with a powerful and influential industry that seems to
refuse to depict a father at the deathbed of his daughter or that
refuses to depict a husband going to be by his wife's side during an
emotional crisis for both of them. Again, not all the time (because
it doesn't happen all the time in life), just some of the time, in some
movies.
No more mindless repetition of stale roles, please.
("Gerry, get off your soapbox!")
--Gerry
|
393.39 | Should support be forced on someone? | SMAUG::DESMOND | | Wed Dec 06 1989 11:33 | 16 |
| You might not want to read this if you haven't seen the movie.
Does the fault for the men's behavior lie just with the men? The
character played by Sally Field did not seem to allow her husband much
chance to be supportive. I recall one scene in the hospital where he
offers to sit down with his daughter and let his wife go get some rest.
Now maybe a mother does not want to leave her daughter at a time like
this and try and rest but she could certainly have asked her husband to
join her. Instead, she pushed him away. I was somewhat bothered by
her behavior because it struck me as saying that only a mother could
feel hurt by a daughter dying. I don't think she gave her husband a
chance to feel the pain and I don't think it would have been right for
him to force his support on her.
John
|
393.40 | makes one speculate about denial mechanisms | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Wed Dec 06 1989 11:38 | 5 |
| It's ok, Gerry- Mike and Dwight are immune to that sort of
manipulation (they tell me so), and so must be everybody else
in the culture, right? "It's just entertainment."
DougO
|
393.42 | although I'll grant my exasperation shows too much | WR2FOR::OLSON_DO | | Wed Dec 06 1989 15:21 | 5 |
| Ease up, Mike- I told you before that you'd summarized *me*
incorrectly, too, but I didn't throw in any cracks about handicaps,
now, did I?
DougO
|
393.43 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the urge to splurge | Wed Dec 06 1989 18:54 | 21 |
| > <<< Note 393.34 by DEC25::BERRY "Back to the Future..." >>>
> There are many lonely people with many or all of the skills you
> mention too. Ever read SINGLES?
Oh come now, Dwight, not EVERYONE in SINGLES is lonely....in
fact, very few are out of the ones that I've met.
Yes, sex sells....and there is nothing wrong with that. Sex
is the "forbidden fruit" sort of thing, and we can't deny it.
i just wish the media would quit glamorizing sex and be a
lot more realistic about it (ie, they just hop into bed
without any sort of protection, and VOILA! for some funky
reason the women NEVER get pregnant.)
kath
|
393.44 | | SSDEVO::GALLUP | the urge to splurge | Wed Dec 06 1989 19:01 | 44 |
| > <<< Note 393.38 by TLE::FISHER "Work that dream and love your life" >>>
<SPOILER>
>...but it was the grave scene that made me want to scream. The camera
>shows a solitary Sally Field standing by her daughter's coffin and
>grave, about to break down. Then, the camera pans to each of the
>adult characters. Every man sees their wife/girlfriend "in need," and
>every man walks away from his partner (check it out; there was a
>camera pan to all three males, and all three, after hesitating, turn
>away from their partners). I found that _excrutiatingly_ painful.
>Also, to pound the message in, every woman character who sees Sally
>standing by the grave goes to her side to "be with her."
Of course they go to Sally's side to be with her. That is
the POINT of the movie.
Perhaps I saw it differently than you, I saw a "honey, I'll
be there in a minute, she needs me" look given to each of the
men, and I saw a "knowing" look in the men's eyes saying
"yes, I understand, your friendship is very important and she
needs you."
>To wrap up any loose ends, Sally lets loose with the reinforcement of
>the stereotype: "Men are weak and women are strong" (though I don't
>remember her exact words).
I don't remember this one......
>reasons, too); if my partner left me crying at a grave site without
>even checking to see if I needed to be alone or if I needed company, I
>think that divorce would be in the works. I won't stand for a partner
>checking out on me in times of emotional crisis;
Perhaps I missed something, but I believe the father was with
the boys and comforting the boys.........I don't believe I
saw the scene where he just "walks away." When I saw this I
just assumed that she "wanted to be alone with her daughter"
sort of thing, not that he just "walked away."
kath
|
393.45 | did you ever work for the National Enquirer? | DEC25::BERRY | Back to the Future... | Thu Dec 07 1989 04:32 | 10 |
| re: .40 Olson_do
>>> It's ok, Gerry- Mike and Dwight are immune to that sort of
manipulation (they tell me so), and so must be everybody else
in the culture, right? "It's just entertainment."
Example of another mis-quote.
Dwight
|
393.46 | | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | Part of the A-team! | Thu Dec 07 1989 08:35 | 27 |
| Re: .44,.38
<more comments about specific scenes...>
.44> Perhaps I saw it differently than you, I saw a "honey, I'll
.44> be there in a minute, she needs me" look given to each of the
.44> men, and I saw a "knowing" look in the men's eyes saying
.44> "yes, I understand, your friendship is very important and she
.44> needs you."
Yes, Kath, I saw it the same way you did.
.38>reasons, too); if my partner left me crying at a grave site without
.38>even checking to see if I needed to be alone or if I needed company, I
.38>think that divorce would be in the works. I won't stand for a partner
.38>checking out on me in times of emotional crisis;
In addition, there was a specific scene before the funeral
where Truvy's (Dolly Parton) husband tells her he wants to go to
the funeral with her. He also tells her that he didn't know how
he'd cope if he lost her (something to that effect, anyway). Here
was a man who didn't go to 'functions' with his wife, seemed
wrapped up in his work, etc., yet when it came to this emotional
crisis, he was there for her.
amy
|
393.47 | | REGENT::FARRELL | The Permanent Alien Hacker. | Thu Dec 07 1989 12:46 | 34 |
|
Yet more on that scene....
I think everyone ought to bear in mind that the film was based on
a very strong stage paly (in my opinion). Unfortunately the
stage play was set in one scene, the beauty parlor, and had ONLY
the 6 women characters in it.
When I heard it was being released as a film I commented to the
woman I saw the play with that I thought it would be difficult
to transfer it well. She has subsequently seen the movie, with
a group of women friends, and specifically mentioned that the
graveyard scene seemed 'contrived'. One of that group of women,
whom I discussed the movie with, did not feel the same way about it.
Bear in mind that in the play all 5 remaining women hold this
discussion in the beauty parlor. Frankly,for me, that was one
of the strongest scenes in the play. The mothers anger at losing
her daughter sent chills up my spine, and I'm sure I wasn't the
only person moved to tears by what had happened.
The way the men were removed from the scene was probably fairly
contrived, but was also necessary, I'm sure, to have this final
scene work properly.
I guess what I'm saying, again, is don't blame the movie makers,
blame (if you feel you must) the author for writing his play
that way.
Bernard.
|
393.49 | films are not without themes | MKODEV::OSBORNE | Blade Walker | Fri Dec 08 1989 18:55 | 29 |
| > 1) movies in the USA are made to make money. Plain and simple.
> 2) Movies were made to convey a theme or point (at one time).
This is a wild overgeneralization! Motion pictures, wherever and whenever
made, have had themes. TV shows have themes. Documentaries have themes,
and non-narrative films have themes. In a free-market environment, there
can be relatively few, and a limited exposure for, unprofitable products.
So, of course, films made in USA (and England, and France, and...) must
make money, unless they are supported by government (say, BBC, or the
Canadian Film Board) or by not-for-profit organizations or grants. PBS
falls in this area.
Certainly, commercializm has impacted films, and often negatively, but
I cannot accept that artistic merit has been obliterated by pursuit of
the almighty buck. Even films which are very successful commercially have
themes. Sometimes those themes are buried in sensationalizm, or so poorly
written/acted that they fail artisticly, but the themes are still there.
"Jaws", for instance, is not about "sharks eat people": it's about
the relation of fear to courage. "E.T." is about friendship, and so on.
The examples you give are more of symbolizm than themes. I doubt many
Russian films are about "trains": I suspect that the films are about
"change" (industrializm, social movements, political changes) and use
trains as a symbol for these themes.
I certainly will agree that the majority of films are not of any great
artistic merit, but at no time in history has the majority of ANY art form
been of superior quality- time has simply allowed "the cream to rise".
|
393.51 | If Steel Magnolia's was not reality what is? | PENUTS::JLAMOTTE | days of whisper and pretend | Sun Dec 10 1989 19:40 | 22 |
| I read an article the other day about the actual family that was
depicted in the play Steel Magnolia's. The plot was derived from
actual experiences. I believe the author of the play was the young
woman's brother. He stated that he was very impressed with the
strength of the southern women and how supportive they were in this
crisis. He also stated that the men did not seem to know what to do or
how to behave.
This can mean many things...and it doesn't necessarily mean anything
negative about the men. The fact that women cope with death better
then men could be because our roles are clearly defined. We know we
can cry, and we also know that there are things we need to do, like
feed the other mourners.
The Pennsylvania Dutch men know what to do when a neighbor's barn
burns. They are strong and supportive.
Maybe this film is about reality. But there are other realities out
there. Let's not neutralize society by negating a positive portrayal
of a human situation.
|
393.52 | Funny Essay about Film's Effects on Kids | TLE::FISHER | Work that dream and love your life | Tue Dec 12 1989 16:46 | 109 |
| [Reprinted without permission from American Film, September, 1989.]
Kid Stuff: Our Panel of Young Experts Rate the Summer Movies
By Lynda Barry
[There is a cartoon of three boys eating burgers. One says, "I liked
the 'Last Crusade' the best." Another says, "It shows Indianna Jones
when he was little." The third says, "Yeah...when he was still River
Phoenix."]
I didn't know a soul who could explain the baffling success of the
summer movies, movies I thought were bombs in every way, until I met
Tom, age 12, and his brothers, Tim, age nine, and David, age six. I
interviewed them by shouting into the backseat of an old black
Cadillac driven by their aunt, tearing down a Chicago expressway the
hot afternoon we saw "Batman."
Tom: "I thought Batman was going to swear a lot more. He was so big,
and he kicked people around. I thought he was going to say a lot of
swears."
Tim: "Not me. I didn't think he was going to swear because he didn't
hardly talk. The Joker looked like a swearer."
This leads to a heated discussion over which summer movie had the most
swearing, "Batman" coming out on top, and to an argument over whether
swearing was the reason for "Batman's" PG-13 rating. They talk about
the rating system with the same outrage on usually reserves for a $65
parking ticket.
Tim: "It's bogus! How come 'Indianna Jones' was PG-13?"
David, the six-year-old, replies wearily, "The violence, the
violence."
Tom: "What violence? There wasn't hardly any violence! A guy got his
head cut off! You saw one head roll down! Big deal!"
Tim: "And it was rolling so fast, you couldn't even see it."
Tom: "Same thing for the 'Temple of Doom!' PG and there's not even
swearing in it."
David: "'Temple of Doom' was bogus! They ate snakes and monkey
brains, and a guy ate spiders and he burped and he didn't even say
excuse me!"
Their aunt calls to him over her shoulder: "That's why it got PG.
Because the guy didn't say excuse me."
Although they know that violence is supposed to be bad, it's what they
respond to in the most animated way. In "Batman," the Joker killed a
guy by doing a wild sort of flamenco dance, punctuated by about 15
gunshots. They sat up in their seats and laughed. Later, all three
repeated the dance in their living room, aiming their fingers straight
at their mother to show her what the coolest, funniest part of the
movie was.
It would be easy to assume that these kids have an inappropriate
response to violence. But they are guided by directors who
consciously build gags into fight scenes, sexual threats and murders.
The best coming timing in these movies happens right when someone's
about to bite it.
Another thing I realized from talking to these brothers is that if
these movies had interesting characters and a compelling plot, that
would be great, but without them, no problem. As manufacturers have
known for years, it's easy to sell bad candy to kids. As long as
there is a fast regular rhythm of loud noises, special effects and
outrageous death and near-death experiences, the films still work.
For kids, these movies are like a wild ride at Disneyland, only with
music, blood, swearing and screaming ladies in their underwear.
They're not experiencing a story, they are experiencing sensory
thrills. Tim's favorite part of Star Trek V was when "this guy"
falls from the side of a mountain---that it was Captain Kirk is
something his brother has to remind him of. David's favorite scene is
one that neither of his brothers remembers. "That part where these
rocks open up---there was a circles like ribs, and then Satan came up
and he was pretending like he was God." His brother's response is a
protective, quietly spoken, "What are you _talking_ about, man?"
Women rarely appear and barely figure in the plots of the summer
movies. Tim explains this by using the only evidence given him by the
filmmakers. "Girls are no good," he says. "They never do anything."
David adds, "All's they talk about is love, all's they want to do is
kiss." When I explain to them that women act that way in films
because the writers don't give them anything interesting to do, they
look at me blankly.
This attitude toward women has devastating consequences when we pull
into a Wendy's for lunch. They are giving away Jetson's toys, and
David is crushed when he gets Judy, the worst of the Jetson's because
she's a girl.
As we're walking out, their aunt hands me the abandoned Judy. Tim
asks me, "Ever see a movie called 'Crud'?"
"No," I say.
His older brother sucks his last hit of Mountain Dew and calmly says,
"That's because there is no movie called 'Crud.' He just wanted to
see if you would lie."
Their aunt and I crack up, and they tell me to be sure and write down
that their favorite summer movie was "Crud."
|