Movies I Loved Before My Feminism Made Me Love Them Less
If I saw any of these today I’d be like “lol nope.”
posted on Sept. 26, 2015, at 1:31 p.m.
1. Almost Famous
DreamWorks Pictures
When I saw it then:
A guy who loves music gets to go with his favorite band on tour AND be their friend AND write a Rolling Stone
cover story about them? What a dream. I adored the Tiny Dancer scene. Philip Seymour Hoffman and his speech about being uncool
is all of us. What a beautiful story about music, pursuit of passion, and human connection.
If I first saw it now:
Kate Hudson’s character is a classic manic pixie dream girl
slash tragic love interest. Why do all these men get to have all these lofty thoughts about Truth and Art and Purpose and all the women exist just to be their groupies? KATE HUDSON’S LOVE INTEREST TRADED HER FOR A SIX PACK OF BEER????????
DreamWorks Pictures
2. Fight Club
20th Century Fox
When I saw it then:
Were you allowed to be a teenager in the 2000s and not be completely in love with this movie? It’s soooo angsty.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Brad Pitt, Edward Norton & Co. are a bunch of whiney white boys upset that the world hasn’t given them every single thing they deserve. Men being Men doing Man Things (fighting!). Is there a woman in this movie? Oh yeah, Helena Bonham Carter, who’s basically a dark muse/sex object. Nice.
*plays world’s tiniest violin*
3. Love Actually
Universal Pictures
When I saw it then:
Emma Thompson crying in her bedroom to Joni Mitchell
is SO SWEET AND SAD. The Hugh grant dancing scene
is iconic. This is a moving, funny movie about love and Christmas. I love love and I love Christmas.
If I saw it for the first time now:
It’s really gross that everyone keeps calling Hugh Grant’s love interest “the fat one.” You can love your brother AND love that hot guy, Laura Linney, come on, live a little. And the plot line I always thought was romantic – when that guy treats Keira Knightley like shit but is secretly in love with her and ruins her wedding video by filming only her face, then comes to her house with all the poster boards — is actually SUPER GROSS AND CREEPY.
If my husband’s best friend ever did this to me I’d be like bye. (Also, who was the costume designer for this mess??? Keira’s wedding look was r o u g h.)
4. The Breakfast Club
Universal Pictures
When I saw it then:
I mean, John Hughes, the Brat Pack, high school, 1985? Nothing not to love.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Yes, it’s a classic, and yes, it perfectly hits on all the terrible shit we all felt in high school, but for the love of God, WHY does Ally Sheedy need a makeover at the end to prove how conventionally pretty she can be? Oh, that’s right, so she can safely become Emilio Estevez’s romantic interest. And Molly Ringwald has to become Judd Nelson’s, of course, because his fist pump moment
wouldn’t be believable unless he Got The Girl!
Universal Pictures
Universal Pictures
You were fine the way you were before, Ally Sheedy. Stay weird.
5. The Notebook
New Line Cinema
When I saw it then:
Ryan Gosling built Rachel McAdams a beautiful HOUSE and a ROOM where she could PAINT. He wrote her letters every day for a YEAR. There’s the fight scene
that I definitely quoted in my AIM profile, let’s be honest here.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Neither of these characters really have any personality traits, tbh. What does “if you’re a bird, I’m a bird”
even mean? And that scene where Ryan Gosling hangs off the ferris wheel and basically threatens to kill himself unless Rachel McAdams goes out with him isn’t cute, it’s just really freaking manipulative.
6. Armageddon
Buena Vista Pictures
When I saw it then:
I loved this movie. I. Loved. It. I don’t really know why. It was in space? And the whole planet was in mortal peril? I probably liked it because lots of stuff blew up.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Liv Tyler’s character — Bruce Willis’ daughter and Ben Affleck’s girlfriend — is literally a prop they pass between each other. While all the men are in space, saving the world, Liv Tyler is hovering around NASA, biting her nails nervously and crying a lot.
Buena Vista Pictures
Buena Vista Pictures
Why couldn’t Liv Tyler be an astronaut, too?? YOU DESERVED BETTER, LIV TYLER.
7. Elizabethtown
Paramount Pictures
When I saw it then:
It was soooooo cute of Kirsten Dunst to make Orlando Bloom a mega scrapbook/playlist/map/thing for his big car trip to get over the loss of his dad.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Ah, yes, the original MPDG. No actual living woman would make such a huge, intimate project for a guy she still doesn’t know that well, just so that he can learn to live a more fun, carefree life. Seriously, nobody. Sorry straight dudes.
Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures
You’re saved, Orlando.
8. Pretty In Pink
Paramount Pictures
When I saw it then:
Another John Hughes classic. I identified hardcore with Molly Ringwald’s character as the ~edgy outcast~ and of course loved Jon Cryer as Duckie, especially for the Try A Little Tenderness scene.
If I saw it for the first time now:
The film’s narrative leads you to sympathize with Duckie — almost to the extent that you want him to “win” Molly Ringwald in the end — when it’s actually extremely uncool
of him to bemoan being friend-zoned the entire movie. Just let Molly do her thing, man, she doesn’t owe you anything! And maybe you could just appreciate her friendship without having to get in her pants?
Back off and calm yourself.
9. Big Fish
Columbia Pictures
When I saw it then:
This is a gorgeous movie about storytelling and the meaning of truth and a life well lived. The ending hits that sweet spot of sad and uplifting.
If I saw it for the first time now:
Ewan McGregor pursuing the woman who will eventually be his wife — whom he sees across the room ONE time and then decides he HAS to have her — is creepy af.
He works for months just to learn little details about her, which he later uses to get her to marry him, even though they are COMPLETE STRANGERS. (Another thing — the talents of Jessica Lange and Marion Cotillard are wasted on boooooring wife roles.)
Columbia Pictures
Columbia Pictures
“If she doesn’t want to marry
me,
though, OH WELL! Who cares what she wants?”
10. Basically every 90s Disney princess movie
Walt Disney Pictures
When I saw them then:
Hallmarks of my childhood.
If I saw them for the first time now:
Womp.
Walt Disney Pictures
Walt Disney Pictures
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