Man drives fast! Woman is kidnapped, so man must drive fast some more!
Seriously?
This bullshit narrative trope that imperils a woman to motivate a man has got to stop. It’s lazy, cheap, and offensive.
share and enjoy
If you haven’t commented here before, your first comment will be held for MaryAnn’s approval. This is an anti-spam, anti-troll, anti-abuse measure. If your comment is not spam, trollish, or abusive, it will be approved, and all your future comments will post immediately. (Further comments may still be deleted if spammy, trollish, or abusive, and continued such behavior will get your account deleted and banned.)
If you’re logged in here to comment via Facebook and you’re having problems, please see this post.
PLEASE NOTE: The many many Disqus comments that were missing have mostly been restored! I continue to work with Disqus to resolve the lingering issues and will update you asap.
I agree to the creation of an account at FlickFilosopher.com.
When you log in for the first time via a social-media account, this site collects your email address to automatically create an account for you here. Once your account is created, you’ll be logged in to this account.
disagreeagree
connect with
I agree to the creation of an account at FlickFilosopher.com.
When you log in for the first time via a social-media account, this site collects your email address to automatically create an account for you here. Once your account is created, you’ll be logged in to this account.
I only just saw it yesterday, but yes, I plan to review.
RogerBW
Fri, Aug 23, 2013 8:38am
Bozhe moi, she doesn’t even get a name. It’s just “your wife”/”my wife”. And two separate people point out that she’s beautiful, because goodness, she wouldn’t be worth fighting for otherwise.
And when did street robbers start using the services of professional hairstylists?
I think I can see the thought process that leads to films like this, though. Basic concept: someone going up against the world, including the cops. He (of course it’s he, female protagonists are Weird and Different so if we had one of those it wouldn’t be a generic actioner any more) has got to be a sympathetic character, and having a protagonist who’s a criminal is a bit hit and miss, so he needs to be a good guy with a motivation that’s stronger than his fondness for law and order. So we’ll kidnap his wife. Yup, this is what comes of always making the easiest creative choice.
please help keep truly independent film criticism alive!
Pledge your support now at Patreon or Substack.
FREE regular streaming recommendations via Substack and Patreon.
Or make a one-time or recurring donation via PayPal. (PayPal account not required; debit/credit card payment available.)
shop to support
When you purchase or rent almost anything from Amazon US, Amazon Canada, Amazon UK, and Apple TV, Books, and Music (globally), I get a small affiliate fee that helps support my work. Please use my links if you can! (Affiliate fees do not increase your cost.) Thank you!
Yet another movie to avoid.
Speaking of the portrayal of women in movies, are you planning on reviewing Elysium?
I only just saw it yesterday, but yes, I plan to review.
Bozhe moi, she doesn’t even get a name. It’s just “your wife”/”my wife”. And two separate people point out that she’s beautiful, because goodness, she wouldn’t be worth fighting for otherwise.
And when did street robbers start using the services of professional hairstylists?
I think I can see the thought process that leads to films like this, though. Basic concept: someone going up against the world, including the cops. He (of course it’s he, female protagonists are Weird and Different so if we had one of those it wouldn’t be a generic actioner any more) has got to be a sympathetic character, and having a protagonist who’s a criminal is a bit hit and miss, so he needs to be a good guy with a motivation that’s stronger than his fondness for law and order. So we’ll kidnap his wife. Yup, this is what comes of always making the easiest creative choice.