clearspira wrote: ↑Thu Nov 03, 2022 11:24 am
Were Ripley, Sarah Connor and Buffy lucky mistakes or what?
I don't think they were lucky at all - I just think modern Hollywood has no idea how to approach women - and, often, all sorts of other things.
It would be impossible to overstate the influence that the television and film of the mid 80s-mid 90s had on my worldview. Growing up in that era, TV and movies taught me that women could do the same things as men, that racism was wrong, that racism/sexism is still a problem today, that those with power had to stand up for those without, and all sorts of other things. I didn't get this from my family. I got a little of it from school, but honestly I wouldn't even say that much. The vast, vast majority of it came from films and, especially, from television.
The thing is, while these were themes that were absolutely featured here and there in the programming of the day, they weren't exactly in your face. They weren't ubiquitous, ever-present, etc. They were noticeable at times, and you could tell the people working on the shows thought these things were important, but they weren't all encompassing in the way that these themes often can be today.
Today these ideas are a
major point of emphasis for the entire industry. They're featured in media to a degree they never were back then, but today's stuff just isn't nearly, nearly as compelling. I think in some ways it even pushes some people in the opposite direction. The bottom line is that stuff was done better back then in general so that, for instance, I grew to feel anger at racial prejudice far, far more from one or two episodes of Family Matters even though the rest of the series treated it like it didn't exist, than I ever do a with modern series where they are trying to teach morals about prejudice every episode.
I could speculate on the reasons why, but I think for now I'll just leave it at that.
As far as the "strong woman" thing goes, I will say that it seems to me that over the past decade or so there has been a trend whereby the entertainment industry only knows how to try to make a woman strong by giving her all the worst characteristics of what some might call toxic masculinity. I'd argue that it actually betrays a real sexism on the part of a lot of the very people who superficially push for better representation of women. It's like the only thing they think of when they think of strength is a traditional male archetype and they can't conceive of other ways that a person (female or male) can be strong. Without intending to get too dramatic, it's like they don't see strength women who exhibit it in the ways that Sarah Connor did, or Edith Bunker, or Hermione Granger or Claire Huxtable or Mon Mothma or any number of other characters over the years who were all different but all strong characters in multiple senses of the word. Heck, look at Mulan, who showed great inner strength in a whole lot of ways despite not being - at least initially - gifted in any martial sense, but who in the modern version is just this great warrior of unparalleled ability. That's all the industry can even
think about anymore.