Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts

Thursday, August 16, 2018

All The Things I Loved About Crazy Rich Asians



*An overwhelming sense of Asian American pride you'll get from watching the film if you're Asian American
*Seeing white people watch the film and actually caring about your story
*How badass the opening scene is
*Ronny Chieng from The Daily Show as Edison Cheng
*Henry Golding and Constance Wu in the wedding scene
*The feels
*All the hot Asian men
*Astrid Leong (my favorite character from the books) & Gemma Chan
*Again, the overwhelming sense of pride you'll get from watching it if you're Asian
*Just how beautiful the film is
*The last scene in the end credits and its hinting of a sequel
*Oh I forgot about Kina Grannis' surprise appearance as the wedding singer!

Saturday, April 22, 2017

The One Scene No One Is Talking About in Boyhood

Note: I haven't done a scene analysis in two years so I'm a little rusty. 

There’s a scene in Boyhood when the protagonist, Mason, is a teen and hanging out with a couple of kids from school in addition to some older boys, who provide them with alcohol. The topic of sex comes up, and it’s not a conversation about how to have fun, safe, and most importantly, consensual sex; it’s a conversation about how many girls they’ve “fucked.” It’s extremely degrading to women, yet no one is talking about it because it’s considered normal: “boys will be boys,” but this isn’t normal and shouldn’t be normal.

I felt so uncomfortable watching this scene because I’ve seen this kind of conversation among adult men (not that this makes it any better) in movies but never among eighth graders. Boys should have better examples of how to treat women, but in this scene, the message is to be man you have to sleep with a woman: “Man, if you’re too chicken shit to even have a beer, I know for a fact that you have never gotten any pussy.” This was after one of the kids, Tony, was ironically called a pussy for not accepting said beer. You’re not a chicken for not attempting to have sex with a girl: you’re a gentleman who respects women. After Tony admits to being a virgin, the rest of the boys proceed to brag about losing their virginity and making girls “howl into the night[.]” Nowhere is the girl’s feelings considered in this exchange.

Understandably, the movie is called Boyhood and told mainly through Mason’s point of view, but no one boy can navigate through life without the influence of a woman: women are just as important as men and should not be relegated to an object of sexual conquest on a man’s path to masculinity.

It doesn't matter if the boys were lying about their sexual experiences. The conversation still happened: they still had to say they had sex in order to appear "cool."