Comment on Why Did ‘Barbie’ Bomb in South Korea?
GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca 1 year agoExactly my takeaway from this. Alright, so you’re not for equality, you just want the inequality to favor you. It was the most disappointing part of the movie for me.
Cylusthevirus@kbin.social 1 year ago
How did you miss the point of that line as hard as you did?
GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Which point is that? That the writers are incapable of subtlety or that the writers believe the viewers are incapable of noticing it? Or is the point that they’re saying things that they absolutely don’t believe and not that a reversal of roles doesn’t constitute an improvement?
mrpants@midwest.social 1 year ago
Bro it’s that the inequality that the Kens are supposed to accept is just how it is.
I think we both get that and I think it’s a great illustration. It actually hurt to hear that line as a guy.
But that’s the whole point of it. If it hurts to hear that as a man about a fictional character in a movie how much does it hurt to hear that in your real life?
The movie is not advocating for switching to matriarchy. When Barbie gets liberated she doesn’t leave Ken behind and tries to help him in his own liberation. Unfortunately other Barbies don’t understand this and are happy to have their power back while doing minor feel good policy changes for the Kens. This is how the world actually works in a lot of instances. The movie is demonstrating quite pointedly how the world is so that we can see and feel it.
GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Um yes, I saw the movie. That was a point they raised throughout, showing the inequality in both Barbie world and the real world. If you didn’t get it before the finale, I don’t think one more quip was going to turn the lights on for anyone. So what was the excuse for having the narrator condoning treating the Kens as poorly as women have been treated in the real world?