clearspira wrote: ↑Sun Aug 16, 2020 5:34 pm
Like it or not, society expects different things from men as they do from women. For a man to be an action hero all he needs to do is grab a gun. For a man to be a slapstick star all he needs to do is get kicked in the nuts.
That is not true of women. Female heroes who act like men rarely work. I am not saying that is a good thing, but it is true. Which is why the majority of female action heroes who make it big are also sexy. And before CrypticMirror accuses me of needing to see a therapist again, let me pose this simple test: promotional material. I guarantee you that 99% of the promotional material you will find for successful female heroes will have her tits, butt or legs emphasised in some way. We're not in some great age of female liberation where kick ass women have taken media by force, we're in the same old one where looks are just as important as being a badass.
I suppose I grew up with different expectations of these things. When I was a little Phipps, my favorite characters on G.I. Joe were Lady Jaye and Scarlet. Action stars like Sigorney Weaver's Ripley , Princess Leia, and Sarah Connor in Terminator 2 were people that I watched as any other. Yes, fanservice is something that tends to dominate a lot of fictional characters. I was also a massive fan of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
You're correct that the sexism tends to emphasize sex for female characters far more than for men. It sometimes gets changed like with Steve Amell's Green Arrow (that show absolutely loved showing off his body at every point) but it's only now that men are getting the same level of treatment for female audiences.
We have even seen this put to the test twice this year.
1) The Birds of Prey movie. The thing that most men remember about Suicide Squad is Margot Robbie's ass in short shorts. The thing those same men remember about Birds of Prey is Margot Robbie wanting to cover up and calling them perverts for disagreeing with her decision.
2) The Last of Us 2 with Abby's biceps which is now so infamous a discussion it has overshadowed all criticism.
1. What I remember most of that is the wacky zanny humor. Also, how I was glad they toned it down from Suicide Squad (albeit, unlike all but 1% of the audience, I recognized Harley's Suicide Squad outfit as Deborah Harry from Blondie's stage attire).
2. Abby got an enormous pile of shit on her that's just plain strange. It's also a bad example as while people utterly shit on Abby, I think a large part of that was just that she killed Joel. Becauae Ellie is the co-star and murders just as many people.
And BTW, shall I tell you the BIG DIFFERENCE between Jadzia and Rey? Jadzia is a trained professional who has 7 lifetimes worth of experience inside her head. Such a woman has every reason to be good at everything. Rey on the other hand is a junk dealer from a desert planet in the ass end of space. She has no formal education, no formal combat training, no formal piloting training, and has never been in any other environment other than the desert. She didn't even know what the Force and the Jedi were until Han told her and yet within what is apparently a couple of days she was able to match anything we have ever seen Luke or Anakin do. Her skills do not match the backstory we are given.
Yes, Rey is missing a backstory that would have made her character more interesting I think. Luke didn't start as a person able to fight Vader. However, this applies to male characters as well. In the excretable PERCY JACKSON movies, the main character defeats the female co-star in their first battle together despite having no experience with a sword because he is the CHOSEN ONE.
Imagine inserting a few lines on the Millennium Falcon:
Han: Where did you learn to fight, kid?
Rey: I learned to fight from Lor San Tekka, who raised me until I was old enough to take care of myself. He was a former Imperial Royal Guard.
And suddenly the character makes sense.
It's called good writing.