Where's the consent in the movies?

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • CONTENT WARNING: Discussion of dubious and hazy consent, and minor references to sexual assault (this is not the focus of the video but it does come up)
    Taking a look at the lack of movies that bother depicting consent. Because for all of the love scenes shown in films from the earliest days of the medium, very rare is the instance where the characters truly confirm that they're both ok with what's about to happen. Does this matter? And have any films done it right?
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Komentáře • 395

  • @carrot708
    @carrot708 Před 2 lety +191

    Writers: "Consent isn't sexy"
    If you can't make someone whispering "You want it? You want me to [ET CETERA]?" sexy, hire better actors

    • @BlueSparxLPs
      @BlueSparxLPs Před 2 lety +39

      Right??? I think anyone can agree that a sexual partner telling you what they want to do to you is incredibly arousing. Of course, it also carries the very important step of inviting the option to consent or refuse at the same time, and nothing is lost.

    • @samuelbarber6177
      @samuelbarber6177 Před 2 lety +12

      The problem is, I think, that Writers are always looking for ways to be clever, just firsthand experience, and that leads to cases like James Bond films, when he tries to seduce women in ways that kind of leave it open to interpretation whether or not it’s consensual.

    • @HedeccaTamer
      @HedeccaTamer Před 2 lety

      Anyone that says "consent isn't sexy" or "consent kills the mood" is also a straight up sex criminal
      They're just saying "I really hate knowing that my partner actually wants to fuck"

    • @aquabluerose7734
      @aquabluerose7734 Před rokem +1

      Exactly, imagining a sexy character whispering that is hot 🥵

    • @yuvalne
      @yuvalne Před 6 měsíci

      +++

  • @greasyhair5754
    @greasyhair5754 Před 2 lety +46

    Someone forgot to tell Morticia and Gomez that checking for consent isn't sexy

  • @carpelibrarium8522
    @carpelibrarium8522 Před 2 lety +161

    I remember a conversation I had with a masc partner about tickling, who wondered why "women say 'stop' a couple of times with a smile or a laugh but then the third time they say it real sharply." I had to explain that it's because the first 2 times they're giving the benefit of the doubt in a friendly way to let you save face and keep the mood light, but because you didn't listen to them and kept going, they had to put their foot down. If you'd backed off the first time, everything would have been golden.
    Thankfully I saw realisation dawn across their face.

    • @brittlebricks10
      @brittlebricks10 Před 2 lety +21

      And the necessity of 'keeping the mood light'....... 😞

    • @QueenCloveroftheice
      @QueenCloveroftheice Před 2 lety +9

      This was something my ex didn’t understand.

    • @radiationshepherd
      @radiationshepherd Před 2 lety +12

      I hate nonconsensual tickling as well as picking people up, it's such a weird violation of space and when I was younger it was super normalized for boys to do this to girls whenever they wanted. I would always stare blankly and not react when anyone tried to do that sht to me, only thing that worked since ignoring "no"s is the whole point of the game

  • @adetaku3145
    @adetaku3145 Před 2 lety +23

    "Asking kills the mood. It isn't romantic." Well do you know what absolutely kills the mood and its not romantic? Forcing someone.

  • @ninashewchuk8976
    @ninashewchuk8976 Před 2 lety +109

    Love Actually features many, many problematic elements, but the relationship it depicts between John and Judy very healthily models consent. Despite the fact that the two of them are doing sex scenes for a film production, John never assumes that he is entitled to Judy's body. He turns away when she's getting undressed, and even after he's told what to do to Judy by the production assistant, he's constantly checking in with her to make sure that she's okay with what's going on.

    • @bef9612
      @bef9612 Před 2 lety +14

      Thank you for putting that out there! I love their dynamic.

  • @FlyingShadow09
    @FlyingShadow09 Před 2 lety +37

    One of my favorite depictions of romance in a movie is the subplot in Hidden Figures:
    1) It starts with Jim accidentally insulting Katherine, he immediately realizes he's offended her and gives her some space, then it doesn't move forward until he has truly apologized for the way he spoke
    2) Every step of the relationship involves him asking her for permission. Sometimes playful, sometimes serious. Even holding hands he holds his hand out and lets her decide if she wants to reciprocate.
    The whole relationship is depicted as healthy and mutually respectful and still maintains its romantic qualities perfectly!

  • @simeya99
    @simeya99 Před 2 lety +23

    This is one of the reasons I love the shadow and bone series on Netflix, when the dark one and Alina are kissing, after she initiated, and they both seem to want to take the next step, he still just checks if it's okay, if she wants it before continuing. And he is the villain of the story. Consent should be the norm and not the exception.

  • @Rosemont104
    @Rosemont104 Před 2 lety +56

    Perhaps "consent" is handled so badly, if at all, is because it's liberated sex without liberating women.

  • @gracjanlekston134
    @gracjanlekston134 Před 2 lety +55

    There was a halirious consent scene in a anime I like called Re:Zero (specifically season 2). The male lead confesses his love, then tells her he's gonna kiss her, and then tells her to dodge if she doesn't want to (which made me roar with laughter). If he did it quickly before she could have time react, the scene could have been dubious, but he slowly moves his head towards her, giving her time and judging her reaction to his proposal and then he kisses her. Nicely done scene, and important, and important scene since Re:Zero is in a genre of media typically aimed at young men.

  • @carpelibrarium8522
    @carpelibrarium8522 Před 2 lety +33

    One of my favourite scenes that clearly removes ambiguity is on Sex Education.
    After a party Otis wakes up with Ruby and realises he's had sex but doesn't recall the event itself. Ruby tells him later, "You weren't great, but you weren't terrible, you kept asking me if I was okay." When Otis replies that it's "good to check-in," Ruby lets him know "it was every 10 seconds. Thank you for checking. A lot of guys don't."

  • @Shindai
    @Shindai Před 2 lety +302

    As a rape survivor, it's super refreshing to see something like Frozen where someone asks before going in for the kiss. I'll never understand people who think consent isn't sexy. For me, there's literally nothing hotter in a sexual or romantic context than having someone confirm "hell yeah, I'm into this" especially as someone who's insecure, but especially as someone whose consent wasn't sought (in multiple relationships, because being aceflux people assume if you say yes once, that always applies, which is deeply fucked) Consent is sexy, and if anyone disagrees they pretty much guarantee my consent is revoked :P

    • @pandemoniumeris
      @pandemoniumeris Před 2 lety +15

      One good example of consent being sexy or even romantic, is in Critical Role Campaign 2.
      Spoilers ahead:
      Fjord asked Jester if he could kiss her (two characters played by an irl married couple), and Yasha telling Beau she'd like to kiss her, to which Beau's enthusiastically wishes she would and I think just go in for the kiss. (While not a direct form of consent, still feel like it fits).

    • @MrThorfan64
      @MrThorfan64 Před 2 lety +2

      Maybe the people who wrote this are creeps.

    • @bleddynwolf8463
      @bleddynwolf8463 Před 2 lety +7

      @@pandemoniumeris agreed, i loved thse scenes

    • @brittlebricks10
      @brittlebricks10 Před 2 lety +2

      @kshamwhizzle I had a moment of extreme sadness the first time a sweet guy actually checked in with me about consent... IMO the sadness is more about realizing 'oh what happened previously was kinda fucked up' than the current, GOOD person doing something to break the mood. I mean I must say, I LOVE the Titanic example as 'what is GOOD CONSENT practice '!

    • @chia7794
      @chia7794 Před 2 lety +2

      Also adding to being ace, one can actually feel sexual attraction to someone, it's just on a rare basis or under specific circumstances. Asexuality is a spectrum and just because someone feels something for a person but for nothing while looking on people who are considered "sexy".
      I feel like aces who actually feel sexual attraction but on a low basis aren't taken seriously.
      Thank you for sharing your experience and I absolutely agree with your point with consent being attractive. This should be normalised instead of just a man forcingly kissing a woman.

  • @wordforger
    @wordforger Před 2 lety +17

    OMG, thank you for bringing up "playing hard to get." As an Aro-Ace woman I'm just genuinely not interested in being other than friends with people. But all too often I've found that the "I'm not interested" signals I send get misinterpreted by guys who think girls always play hard to get. It's infuriating that no matter how many I told some dudes I wasn't interested, they took it as "keep trying." Just, ugh... 1) I can't think of any girl I've ever met who actively played hard to get. 2) If guys respect boundaries, eventually they'll find a girl who doesn't play games with them like that. Because basic respect and decency count for a lot. And I don't mean the 'nice guy' interpretation of basic decency either.
    If the girl tells you she's not interested, then believe her. Either she'll learn to stop playing games or she'll be happy you respected her boundaries. Either way is a net win for you.

  • @jillpigott7959
    @jillpigott7959 Před 2 lety +54

    Another part of consent (which was in the Titanic scene) was people actually expressing what they wanted. There is the fantasy (which is easier to show in books) that your partner knows you so well that you don't have to say what you want, because they already know, and they care for you so much that you get what you want. However, on screen that looks like someone not knowing what they want, and the partner not caring enough to ask.

  • @CritterKeeper01
    @CritterKeeper01 Před 2 lety +41

    I think asking, "Do you want to (whatever)?" in a husky, low voice full of desire, is about the sexiest thing a person could do on-screen! Maybe the problem isn't so much lack of interest in depicting consent, as it is lack of acting and directing ability to convey that dialogue in a sexy way….

  • @Rosemont104
    @Rosemont104 Před 2 lety +56

    This lack of consent is also a really bad side effect of "pre-determining" the main character's love interest.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +23

      Yeah, I bring that up. It’s an easy mistake for creators to make when they already know it’ll all work out by the end.

  • @danielclayton6772
    @danielclayton6772 Před 2 lety +174

    It’s scary how often things that would not be ok in the real world are normalised in film and tv, and the message that sends to young people.

    • @princessmanitari4993
      @princessmanitari4993 Před 2 lety +17

      Very true. It's how i as a kid got the idea that i needed romantic relationships to survive. That did not go well!

    • @HotDogTimeMachine385
      @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +21

      And when people grow up on these shows and movies, then things that should not be okay become accepted. It's horrible how people don't accept the power media has on culture.

    • @cutecats532
      @cutecats532 Před 2 lety +7

      Yeah this can get someone raped and get someone thrown in jail for it for thinking it's ok or what people want. 🤦🏻‍♀️

  • @ghostbomASMR
    @ghostbomASMR Před 2 lety +61

    I know you mentioned it being present in a lot of smaller streaming service shows, but I 1000% want to mention ‘Heartstopper’ where the first kiss the two main characters share is preceded with a lot of clarifying and emotionally-charged dialogue that is something I would have really liked with my own introduction to intimacy. While I wouldn’t say it’s ‘sexy’ (they’re high school kids so it’s be very odd to describe it that way) it’s definitely romantic and taken very seriously.

    • @bleddynwolf8463
      @bleddynwolf8463 Před 2 lety +1

      i read those scenes the opposite way, i thought those kisses came out of nowhere

  • @Heffeth
    @Heffeth Před 2 lety +58

    As a freelance editor, I often point out toxic behaviour and lack of consent in scenes to my customers (of every gender). "That's practically r***, are you sure you want your love interest depict like that?" Most of them are shocked about themselves and their narrowed view of "romantic". "I didn't mean it that way!" It got worse after Twilight, in my experience, and I will not stand for it. There are some ethical standards I won't back off from even when I lose a customer over this. But most of them just don't think about it till the consequences is pointed out to them.

    • @christiegreenwood2642
      @christiegreenwood2642 Před 2 lety +11

      I once got pissy complaints from a client when I pointed out to him that his hero had forced himself on his significant other. They pay for the service, then complain when the editor has something to say.

    • @gh0st_b0yfriend
      @gh0st_b0yfriend Před 2 lety +7

      That's wild, I always wonder whether the writers could really be that clueless, but I guess yeah. Too bad all editors aren't like you, but thank you for your service 🙏

    • @christiegreenwood2642
      @christiegreenwood2642 Před 2 lety +6

      @@gh0st_b0yfriend It's an editor's job to be pedantic. I like it, but some authors are waaaay too close to their work and take criticism personally.

  • @skellington7d
    @skellington7d Před 2 lety +134

    The sad thing is I've seen the sex scene in Titanic described more than once as "Jack seduces Rose in the back seat of a car" and completely ignoring the agency it gave her. Which shows that a key problem here is people thinking of sex as something that men do to women and not even recognizing consent when they see it!

    • @christiegreenwood2642
      @christiegreenwood2642 Před 2 lety +27

      This is so odd, because especially in this movie, it's so obvious that Rose is the instigator.

  • @The482075
    @The482075 Před 2 lety +104

    Council of Geeks: I would like to send you on a strange journey.
    Me: You have my consent.

  • @michaelawiseman7320
    @michaelawiseman7320 Před 2 lety +41

    Over the past few years, I went out with a couple different guys. (And, to preface the rest of this, I'm on the Ace spectrum.) And at the end of the date, they leaned in, and I backed up a bit. And the response from them was, "That's perfectly fine. I'm okay waiting until you're comfortable."
    And I have to say, that made them so much more attractive.

  • @emcrolls
    @emcrolls Před 2 lety +107

    Consent is almost never discussed in public or media. “No means no “ is a lousy framework. All people starting in childhood should be taught bodily autonomy. No you don’t “owe “ ANYONE physical contact or affection. That goes for your Grandma your boss or your spouse/partners. Consent needs to be active & engaged every time. Long overdue that media should reflect it. And physiological reactions are NOT consent. Fight me

    • @Yickerd
      @Yickerd Před 2 lety +24

      It shouldn’t be “no means no,” it should be “only yes means yes.” Unless you’re given a specific “yes,” then don’t do anything.

    • @emcrolls
      @emcrolls Před 2 lety +12

      @@Yickerd right Consent needs to be active or it’s not real or effective

    • @Yickerd
      @Yickerd Před 2 lety +12

      @@emcrolls exactly. And even if the other person says yes, but doesn’t seem like they actually want, you shouldn’t do anything unless they start expressing enthusiasm.

    • @BlueSparxLPs
      @BlueSparxLPs Před 2 lety +15

      So much this. Most of my extended family taught all their kids that they *had* to walk around and hug everyone goodbye after a family gathering, and while I was never made to do so, it makes me really uncomfortable when the kids in my family come to me for one because I know they're not doing it because they want to. It's extra screwed because if I try to tell them they don't have to if they don't want to, they get in trouble with their parents for not doing it. One of those kids, when they became an adult, did actually end up in jail for molesting their younger sisters and it makes me concerned for the other children in my family.

    • @samuelbarber6177
      @samuelbarber6177 Před 2 lety +12

      In Britain we literally have a video of it being compared to tea. “If someone is unconscious, they don’t want tea, and they can’t answer the question ‘do you want tea’, because they are unconscious.”

  • @adrenalynn1015
    @adrenalynn1015 Před 2 lety +27

    Thank you for another great video! It’s a problem on several different levels if people don’t realize that they can talk, joke, and flirt during sex, and that asking for consent throughout can be worked into this dynamic. It can be both fun & sexy and it seems like it really wouldn’t be hard for writers to write these kinds of scenes. They’re just choosing not to.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +22

      I do wonder sometimes if the Hollywood habit of no dialogue in love scenes (and most exceptions being for the sake of humor) has instilled an idea that people aren’t meant to talk or that talking is inherently dirty (since it usually happens most in porn).

  • @michellefields3351
    @michellefields3351 Před 2 lety +35

    The example that springs to mind for me is the scene in Jaws, when Brody's wife asks, "Do you wanna get drunk and fool around?" I think that's a great scene in that it establishes the boundaries of what happens later after they are intoxicated; it's the wife asking; and it shows asking for consent in an established marital relationship...also it's very sexy and he quickly says yes.

    • @stephennootens916
      @stephennootens916 Před 2 lety +1

      Really? I always thought it was more like a scene like he has nothing better to do or something along that line.

  • @Moshenka
    @Moshenka Před 2 lety +52

    Dub-con is one of my favorite theoretical kinks, and I adore when non-con is done well (i.e. treated seriously and the impact and consequences are dealt with the weight they necessitate), but hollywood romcoms genuinely disgust me for this reason. I agree with all your points and would like to add that making it the standard is actively harmful and perpetrates unhealthy relationships. Impressionable teenagers get ideas - boys basically bully girls into dating them, and girls think it's how it's supposed to be. The saddest part is that the est and sexiest kink negotiations and consent depictions I can cite from fanfiction. Which, you know, is historically by large written by marginalized women who know what they want although the whole world is keen on telling them they're wrong. But that's a completely different can of worms.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +24

      Yeah, most of the works that delve the most into these things properly are fan works… because the original works don’t do it well.

  • @shrinkingviolet1953
    @shrinkingviolet1953 Před 2 lety +20

    Thank you so much for bringing up Titanic! Jack Dawson was really ahead of his time in terms of male leads vs. toxic masculinity. I also love that after she initially rejects him to stay with Cal he accepts that, even though he knows it won't make her happy, it's still her decision and he respects it. She's the one who later comes back to him and says she's changed her mind.

  • @androstempest
    @androstempest Před 2 lety +45

    I think the area of consent that I find problematic is the notion “males” are always ready for sex. You saw it a lot in British comedies from the 60’s and 70’s but it still comes up today, that a young man (usually legal age or implied to be) is seduced by an older person and just goes with it because young men are always horny in media. The implication that he was just assaulted is treated as a joke. It can’t be rape, because he’s clearly enjoying it, it doesn’t need to be consent because “that’s what all men want”. I even remember hearing the phrase “all his christmas came at once” to describe these scenes.
    We hear a lot about how rape and non consensual sex is initiated by men against women, but it happens in real life and in media, where males are also not given the opportunity to consent. The assumption being, they don’t need to.
    Now sometimes these scenes are intentionally meant to be depicted as “the man getting his own medicine”. I’ve seen numerous examples of revenge rapes against abusive males. But there are lots of other incidences where guys clearly aren’t into it, yet in the very next scene it cuts to them seeming to have “enjoyed” it, or being “comically” traumatised.
    That always felt misjudged to me.

    • @CristalianaIvor
      @CristalianaIvor Před 2 lety +1

      just think of desperate housewives :)

    • @radiationshepherd
      @radiationshepherd Před 2 lety +4

      I agree, they will literally show a boy child being preyed on and molested by an older woman and expect the audience to cheer for him. They did this at the end of Booksmart 2020, I was shocked then that even in 2020 people still don't see it as horrific

    • @radiationshepherd
      @radiationshepherd Před 2 lety +4

      And yes, the revenge rape scenes are also extremely off putting. There was one in the Lovecraft Country TV show, yet another fcked up think they expect audiences to cheer for when they see

    • @carpevinum8645
      @carpevinum8645 Před 2 lety +3

      Another issue with this is the definition of rape as a legal term in a lot of places. Basically words to the effect of "penis penetrates vagina" or at least contains a variation of the word "penetrate". Which discounts a lot of types of sexual assault as being rape. Especially for men. I know there have been pushes to change legislation that contains this phrasing over the years.

  • @Yamp44
    @Yamp44 Před 2 lety +29

    I really like the song "Body Talks" from The Struts for their inclusion of consent in their lyrics. So at first, it seems like your typical : "I see that you want me" song. And there is a bit of this "I read the signs from your head to your toes" in there, but first off, there is concern for the pleasure of the potential partner as the singer demands : "Say what you want, say what you like", and "I need to know what you need". And then the singer says : "If its my imagination, stop me if I'm wrong", clearly saying that if he is misreading the signs and their potential partner isn't into it, he's gonna stop. And I really like that I can see the scene playing in my head. At this party or at this bar or whatever, this first person approaches another person they find attractive and they think it is reciprocated. They start flirting and then, to make sure the other person is really into it too, they tell them they'll stop if they're not. And that's great! And it's still a great song about flirting and physical attraction, but it is implied that the song would stop if it wasn't ok, and that's even better.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +6

      I’m quite fond of that song. The Green Mountain Cabaret has a great burlesque number to it.

  • @requiscat0in0pace48
    @requiscat0in0pace48 Před 2 lety +43

    You know, after watching this, I'd love to hear more analysis on how media has made a staple of boys/men pestering their love interest until she gives, and even framing it as romantic. I don't remember right now if a video on the topic has already been made, but it's such a prominent thing in almost all genres, and such a classic thing too, going as far as centuries ago with all those heroic tales of men risking their lives to gain the favor/love of a woman.

    • @katkameneva4925
      @katkameneva4925 Před 2 lety +20

      I have a feeling that this topic was raised in one of the Pop Culture Detective videos, but I'm not sure if I remember correctly. Anyway, you can check out his vides, he presents good analysis of harmful tropes in movies

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +18

      I kind of lost my cool a bit dealing with this issue when I did a revisit of Dead Poet’s Society a while back. czcams.com/video/3lNh3guA9fY/video.html

    • @HotDogTimeMachine385
      @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +1

      Kat pointed out Pop Culture Detective, they have made some really amazing videos on masculinity in media
      czcams.com/users/PopCultureDetectivevideos

    • @itisALWAYSR.A.
      @itisALWAYSR.A. Před 2 lety +9

      whilst I'm not claiming expertise in this (nor any vested interest in women for that matter) - a lot of it is surely due to media higher-ups being such male-dominated professions. There's absolutely a culture there, and it does run deep, tying into the whole 'women as trophies' which, yeah, sadly is a whole thing even now.
      Fun subversion coming to mind at the moment - the second Suicide Squad film. The boys in the crew all make a big plan to rescue Harley from a villain, but by the time they get to the location, she's already shot him dead and made her own way out. She's all "aw that was kinda sweet I guess but yah no I'm good"

    • @carpelibrarium8522
      @carpelibrarium8522 Před 2 lety +9

      @@katkameneva4925 Yes! I was coming here to recommend Pop Culture Detective.

  • @davetheauthor9885
    @davetheauthor9885 Před 2 lety +18

    Honestly, this is why romantic comedies are way more problematic and harmful to society than the goriest horror or most violent action movie. Most movies are filled with unrealistic things, but for (hopefully) most of us, we'll never be a real life scenario from a horror or action movie. But romantic relationships are something that we WILL experience and try to navigate. And romantic movies that feature these tropes reinforce people's perceptions of how romance works. It's sort of like how people can watch porn and get an unrealistic perspective of sex, romantic comedies do the same thing about relationships.

  • @robinknight2251
    @robinknight2251 Před 2 lety +12

    One of the sexiest moments ever, was with a former boyfriend who while we were talking, inches away from one another he breathed out "can I kiss you" and every other act after that, he would look me deep in my eyes for confirmation that he could proceed. He established a trust with me so deep that he could have done ANYTHING to me. It's the "As you wish" of the Princess Bride. Trust and respect can bring kink to a whole other level.

  • @enchantedlight
    @enchantedlight Před 2 lety +43

    Great video! I also loved the example of Titanic, because, you're right I never even clocked that until you mentioned it. Circling around back to the "aggressive male", I think that depiction can trace some of its origins back to the idea that women don't like sex, that sex is a duty for them to perform within marriages, and as such a man must be aggressive because he is the only one with needs that have to be met. 🙄 It kinda amazing how much stuff we just take for granted in our media (and therefore society) that has some pretty shady origins or were basically just propaganda (looking at the Hays code here) to push a specific set of morals on the on the greater population.

    • @adrenalynn1015
      @adrenalynn1015 Před 2 lety +4

      Yes and there is still this pervasive idea that women don’t like sex, as evidenced by a few years ago when celebrities (I think Alyssa Milano was one) were encouraging women to withhold sex in their relationships as a protest. Lots of women pushed back against this, like why would we punish ourselves??

  • @Parker8752
    @Parker8752 Před 2 lety +110

    As my partner just said, "if you don't have time in your film to show consent, you don't have time for a sex scene". If you can't have one person say hornily "make love to me?" and the other respond in the affirmative without killing the mood, then you're a shit writer.

  • @SquirrelRave20
    @SquirrelRave20 Před 2 lety +48

    Not a movie, but Monica and Chandler were great at consent. It's really odd to me that the same writers who got Ross and Rachel so horribly wrong could also write the Monica and Chandler romance.
    ETA: A bit off topic, but the other romcom trope that bugs TF out of me is the whole men and women can't be friends thing. As a woman who works in a male dominated industry I have a lot of guy friends. And a long history of losing said guy friends when their girlfriends can't handle them being friends with a women because they've watched too many of these damn romcoms

    • @gRinchY-op5vr
      @gRinchY-op5vr Před rokem +4

      Not entirely off topic, as Phoebe and Joey were the pairing that proved men and women can just be friends even if they admit the other person is attractive. It's weird when I hear or read people saying they should have got together as a couple when really I took the group to be Monica and Chandler as the healthy well adjusted couple (had their flaws sure but they worked on them), Ross and Rachel being the "toxic on and off will they or won't they" couple while Joey and Phoebe were men and women being best friends goals.

  • @spmcdill
    @spmcdill Před 2 lety +15

    I was over the moon with that even at the end of frozen.
    As for Titanic, anybody who doesn't understand how much hotter those scenes are because of the anticipation created by the consent conversations, doesn't have a brain.

  • @unmanlymanticore3582
    @unmanlymanticore3582 Před 2 lety +12

    I think a good video game example is Life is Strange 2, where you can choose for the player character (Sean) to be romantic with a girl (Cassidy) and she asks if you're okay to continue every step along the way and you can always back out. It goes something like:
    "Want to go swimming in the lake with me?"
    "We'll have to take off our clothes, is that okay?"
    "Do you want to kiss me?"
    "Do you want to go back to my tent?"
    "Do you want to come inside?"
    "Are you okay with taking this further?"
    Another medium where proper consent is actually pretty common in my experience is romantic and erotic webcomics.

  • @Donnagata1409
    @Donnagata1409 Před 2 lety +17

    "Many men used to argue that using a condom isn't romantic".
    Many men stil think like that!!!
    Very good video, Vera. 😘😘😘😘

  • @rajanogray9088
    @rajanogray9088 Před 2 lety +27

    I was a child when Revenge of the Nerds originally came out. When I saw it again as an adult I was shocked. I know exactly what scene you are talking about. I agree it is a serious problem.

    • @calebmarmon1310
      @calebmarmon1310 Před 2 lety +5

      I was already disinclined to watch it because movies about “the college experience” had me terrified of being hazed or pranked, which is its own consent issue. So finding out how the movie treats women hasn’t sold me on giving it a chance.

    • @SquirrelRave20
      @SquirrelRave20 Před 2 lety +4

      I thought a lot of that stuff was gross even as a child, but I never liked the movie to begin with. The one that changed for me as an adult was the whole Jake giving his drunk girlfriend to Farmer Ted at the end of 16 Candles.

    • @SquirrelRave20
      @SquirrelRave20 Před 2 lety +4

      @@christopherb501 Revenge of the Nerds: the first Incel movie

  • @livjones2917
    @livjones2917 Před 2 lety +24

    "I would like... if I may..."
    My Rocky Horror loving self instantly: "You may!"
    I am all for seeing better consent in media! Give us more cute instances of Kristoff asking Anna in Frozen if he can kiss her! We love to see it!

  • @bekkers29
    @bekkers29 Před 2 lety +4

    "I would like... if I may..."
    I immediately shouted, "You may!" and then realized what a perfect opening that was for a video about consent.

  • @lilithcal
    @lilithcal Před 2 lety +15

    What I hate about movie franchises where romance is concerned is where in the sequel the romance has fallen apart so there can be sexual tension in the new story. It happens way too often.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +14

      Oh my goodness I HATE that. Because so many writers don’t know how to write healthy relationships so they have to break up a couple off screen to do it all again.

    • @nekusakura6748
      @nekusakura6748 Před 2 lety +10

      @@CouncilofGeeks Thank Goodness for Gomez and Morticia

  • @idab9958
    @idab9958 Před 2 lety +16

    There's a scene in season 3 of Mad Men that depicted safe sex pretty well, especially for something set before the sexual revolution. Peggy hooks up with a stranger and stops making out to ask if the guy has any condoms. He doesn't, and he's willing to stop then and there; *she* is the one who suggests "there are other things we could do." It is depicted as an overall positive experience, showing that it's okay if things get a little awkward when asking about consent and/or protection, because it doesn't stop them from happily hooking up once they've established they're not going to do anything that requires a condom. It's especially great because the notion that things that require condoms aren't the be-all-end-all of physical intimacy needs to be depicted more. It was great to see this in a show that otherwise depicted a lot of dubious consent as part of the reality of its time period.

  • @zok6064
    @zok6064 Před 2 lety +18

    I read Axiom's End and Truth of the Divine not long ago and the sentence "Do you consent?" appears in a few scenes. None of those scenes are sexual, but taking the time to show that the characters ask for permission before touching each other only improves the story imo. It lets us see how their relationship evolves. They also ask it less and less as they learn what the other likes and tolerates, but it doesn't completely stop.
    Also gonna take me and my partner as an example: we've been together for 11 years and we still ask each other for consent every time we are intimate, even in the middle of it. It's just part of our habits now, it would feel less sexy to just jump into action without making sure that we're both in the mood.
    In short, if someone thinks that asking for consent is unsexy, they're just not used to seeing and/or doing it. With the right persons/examples it's very easy to learn.

  • @oliverwolfe8225
    @oliverwolfe8225 Před 2 lety +39

    So recently the auction scene from the Addams Family movie was brought to my attention. Being in the middle of an auction aside (which, obviously, hopefully), Gomez and Morticia do a great job of checking in with each other as they get hot and bothered with each other by...bidding for charity.
    Yes, it is just as hot and hilarious as it sounds.
    Not only is it a great scene, but also it does an excellent job of combatting the notion that asking for consent grinds things to a halt and isn't sexy!

    • @Naa45702
      @Naa45702 Před 2 lety +19

      Mortica and Gomez are couple goals! Completely in love and devoted but also whole people. He has his train hobbies and she has her magic

    • @tuxedojunction9422
      @tuxedojunction9422 Před 2 lety +4

      Here's a link to the scene: czcams.com/video/LyXbfGyM2IE/video.html

  • @Norikosama562
    @Norikosama562 Před 2 lety +18

    One of the best consent scenes I've seen in a video game would be FemShep x Garrus from Mass Effect 2. In a cutscreen they're discussing sleeping together and Garrus seems a little too nervous. Shepard recognizes this and gives him an out. Absolutely loved to see this in a major franchise.

  • @CoraMaria
    @CoraMaria Před 2 lety +13

    The point you made about how consent should be the standard and dubcon and noncon should be the exception is something I agree with whole heartedly. If people want to read/watch dubcon and noncon scenes then that should be something that they have to actively seek out. We should create a culture where you can only consume that kind of content while fully knowing and understanding that it is not conducive to real life kissing and sex etiquette, because the current state of media is far too blurred and it frustrates me to no end.
    And then the writers of GoT and 50 Shades and so much more will have to either change their stories or be fully aware of the noncon/dubcon elements in their work and openly acknowledge them, rather than package those scenes up as how kissing/sexual acts actually work. If dubcon or noncon is your kink, that's fine, but your kink is not everyone's kink and thus it should not be forced onto everyone else with zero warning.

  • @AlexirLife
    @AlexirLife Před 2 lety +10

    There is new affirmative consent law & an ad campaign to go with it in NSW, Australia.
    The ad campaign is called "That's How You Do it" & it uses real scenarios to show how easy affirmative consent is to do. I think we need affirmative consent laws everywhere & the NSW law can be the model

  • @tariqthomas9090
    @tariqthomas9090 Před 2 lety +85

    I feel like children’s media has this problem as well with kissing.
    Avatar/LOK are literally my two favorite shows but characters kiss other characters without their consent multiple times. I didn’t really have a problem with it until I got older.
    While this may not seem like a big deal at first glance-and consent regarding kissing is a bit complicated to discuss, it does give off the implication that you should “just go for it” when you want to kiss someone.
    Kissing is often a person’s (particularly a child’s) first real image of romantic intimacy and should be treated with a lot more care than it actually is.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +53

      Yeah many “first kisses” are basically one person (usually a boy) lunging their face at somebody else, and it’s depicted as endearing.

    • @HotDogTimeMachine385
      @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +9

      I honestly don't even remember any other kiss except for Aang&Katara before the invasion and in Ember Island Players where Aang kisses her and she pushes him back and tells him that's not okay. Also the time where Sokka tries to save Suki and almost kisses her and she puts him in a headlock. And Makorrasami is just deleted from my memory. I think Bolin kisses Opal when her parents are imprisoned and she freaks out at him.

    • @carpevinum8645
      @carpevinum8645 Před 2 lety +9

      I really liked how Heartstopper approached consent for a young audience.

    • @ajaxwillis3962
      @ajaxwillis3962 Před 2 lety +3

      @@carpevinum8645 me too

    • @HotDogTimeMachine385
      @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +5

      @@ChantelCarter-cc7cu If a kid grows up with these types of movies and nobody tells him it's wrong, how is he supposed to know it's wrong. If nobody tells you what you're doing is wrong you can't know that.

  • @The482075
    @The482075 Před 2 lety +18

    I am a bit iffy with the whole main character was okay with it because we hear her thoughts. Consent needs to be explicitly communicated. What we (the reader) have is the man assuming that she was willing and he just so happened to be right.

    • @requiscat0in0pace48
      @requiscat0in0pace48 Před 2 lety +7

      I have to agree with this. While I totally understand that it does help to know how she is perceiving the situation and her thought process on the matter, that leaves the attacking man off the hook. He's forcing himself onto someone who may be into it later on, but that's not something he actively cared about. He could be doing it thinking/hoping she will like it, but that's a secondary concern to his own desires, and no amount of exploration of the woman's mind that moment is going to change that.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +10

      I don’t disagree, but I was using that to illustrate how things can play differently in other mediums on the issue overall.

  • @novae756
    @novae756 Před 2 lety +17

    It's a really important topic, thank you for talking about it. Although I would like to say, that describing situations as being "grey area" is often a way to avoid saying that what happened (irl or in media) was a r*pe / sexual assault, etc. Because we think that as long as somebody don't actively say no and go away, then it's fine, or ""ambiguous"". But it doesn't work like that. If the person didn't explicitely and enthousiastically consented, then it's not okay ! And sure, sometimes, it turns out the other person wanted it too, but how can you be sure of that if there's no explicit consent ? What if they didn't want to and you misinterpreted ? And that's in the best case scenarios, because often times it's not a question of misunderstanding "signs", it's knowing it's not ok and carrying on or not caring about the other person's feelings at all. And that concept of "grey area" is what's used against r*pe survivors in actual trials. Arguments like "they didn't say no" or "they could have gone away" (even if they couldn't) or things like that, take away the responsability of the agressor and put it on the victim.

  • @ami.13.
    @ami.13. Před rokem +3

    Appreciate this. It’s part of my consent awareness playlist lineup. One suggestion to consider for expounding upon is “coercive” consent. Great work!

  • @pastlesandfish
    @pastlesandfish Před 2 lety +11

    I had a feeling you'd talk about Titanic when referencing good depictions of consent. I always thought the line "put your hands on me, Jack" was very romantic because it depicted Rose's longing for him. And I always loved the drawing scene. It managed to be sensual and sexy without being tawdry.

  • @CLDJ227
    @CLDJ227 Před 2 lety +17

    22:22 I was not aware that people used to argue that using a condom isn't romantic, good info to know. I also agree that we don't depict safe sex enough in media or show the potential consequences of not practicing safe sex unless it's important for the plot or something.

    • @ScientificallyStupid
      @ScientificallyStupid Před 2 lety +5

      People talk a lot about the problems of the original US Queer as Folk (since we're getting a reboot soon), but one thing that they showed consistently in a positive way was safe sex and how to incorporate it into intimacy- making the act of protecting yourself and your partner a sexy thing (and how the characters negatively viewed NOT wearing a condom)- it's one of the first shows I can recall making it an important part of the conversation and foreplay. I hope we get to a point where consent is treated the same way.

    • @aquabluerose7734
      @aquabluerose7734 Před rokem

      Yeah the only instance I've seen of unsafe sex in a show/film etc having potential bad consequences was in Daria Cohen's Vampair series in the episode based on Voltaire's Zombie Prostitute song (the vampire Duke has s3x with a zombie and gets an undead STD)

  • @Yan_Alkovic
    @Yan_Alkovic Před 2 lety +9

    Didn't expect Titanic to be the positive example. It's especially amazing how the phrase became a meme and is referenced so frequently!

    • @fightingfaerie
      @fightingfaerie Před 2 lety +2

      To be fair, the only James Cameron movies I know are Titanic and Avatar (and I’m not sure if I’ve ever actually really seen Titanic, at least remember it), but just off those it seems he knows how to write consent. In Avatar Jake says “But this woman must choose me also.”

    • @Yan_Alkovic
      @Yan_Alkovic Před 2 lety +1

      @@fightingfaerie Oh, that's nice, didn't realise that either!

  • @nikoteardrop4904
    @nikoteardrop4904 Před 2 lety +16

    I mean, as a kinkster, we frequently literally sit down and outline exactly what's expected to happen and one another's boundaries. The vanillas are problematic.

    • @emcrolls
      @emcrolls Před 2 lety +4

      Exactly Define boundaries & intent. Then do the things (scene) . Then you debrief. It’s not as complex as it’s made to seem.

  • @karabearcomics
    @karabearcomics Před 2 lety +5

    One scene where consent is important is in the first Austin Powers. Vanessa is drunk and comes on to Austin. Though he's been unambiguously trying to get her to sleep with him the whole time before this, he turns her down, precisely because she's drunk. Even the James Bond/Adam Adamant parody plucked from the swinging 60s knows that it wouldn't be right if her judgment is impaired.

    • @dylanshadowstar9779
      @dylanshadowstar9779 Před 2 lety +1

      Especially impressive since it was made in the nineties and sex with someone whose drunk wasn't taken as seriously back then.

  • @bardlover6
    @bardlover6 Před 2 lety +6

    As I always say, nothing is sexier than consent.
    Rewatching some romcoms, my husband and I have wondered how things were ever okay. Like Daniel fondling Bridget in the elevator? Farmer Ted and Caroline in 16 candles? 😡

  • @AlatheD
    @AlatheD Před 2 lety +6

    Oh, Vera, you might never know how that opening affected me.

  • @mandipandi303
    @mandipandi303 Před 2 lety +9

    I keep saying this! I can't think of virtually any visual media that handled consent really well. I was initially pleased when watching Marvel's Runaways when someone asked for consent before kissing someone, but the show destroyed all my goodwill seconds later. The kissing continued and the guy asked if he could touch the girl. She responded, "You really want to make this awkward, huh?" It infuriated me. Why is media so adverse to doing the bare minimum to establish consent.

    • @gh0st_b0yfriend
      @gh0st_b0yfriend Před 2 lety +2

      Omg it drives me insane when one character literally tells another not to ask first and mocks them for it or starts laying out their general rules to the audience for why no one should ever ask for consent. Sometimes I think it's really sinister mass grooming from the predators at the top of the media world. For literally what other reason would you stop the flow of your scene and have one character completely break the romantic mood by chastising the other, except for just really wanting there to be less consent in our society? It's so extra creepy that that example particularly came from something aimed at teenagers.

    • @mandipandi303
      @mandipandi303 Před 2 lety +1

      @@gh0st_b0yfriend A-fucking-men! I couldn't agree more!

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln Před 2 lety +2

      @@gh0st_b0yfriend it's really upsetting how plausible that theory is 🤢

  • @kurathchibicrystalkitty5146

    Also, love the Steven Universe mention! It's my favourite show, and one of my favourite stories ever.

  • @m0o0oeh
    @m0o0oeh Před 2 lety +7

    Having watch the show you pulled your cold open from live very recently, I’m sat there going “you may!”
    In all seriousness, consent is so important. I help out a lot in the cosplay space, and my favourite event to go to every year is my local con, because they have a *huge* banner that says “Cosplay does not equal consent!”
    My boyfriend and I have both been damaged by a disregard of consent in the past, so we are both very careful about it around each other. “Can we cwtch on the couch?” “May I spoon with you?” “Is it ok if I kiss you?” “Can we hold hands while we walk?”
    Amazing video as always my dear.
    Love from Wales. Xxx.

  • @kaiwharton724
    @kaiwharton724 Před 2 lety +5

    One of the most recent examples of consent i've seen and was really seemless was in Heartstopper! Even in the scene where Tara and Darcy kiss for the first time, there's no dialogue, its in the middle of a dance floor, its from another character's perspective, but they still take the time to show both of them looking at the other and nodding in consent before kissing and it just makes the whole scene even cuter. And then after that with Nick and Charlie's first kiss they perfectly play out consent, with Charlie making it clear that he wants to kiss Nick, but directly asking and waiting for verbal consent from Nick. It was so refreshing to see and made everything just feel so much more real and sweet.

  • @NekoChanSenpai
    @NekoChanSenpai Před 2 lety +4

    There are infinite ways to make consent sexy. One of my favorites is threatening to stop (in a playful way). Even constant check-ins can be sexy, I've written that with no issue at all. Even a simple "yeah?" "yeah" can be hot. Another important thing I think should be featured more is a character saying no and having that be respected by the other. More of that, please!

  • @michaelreindel6975
    @michaelreindel6975 Před 2 lety +5

    I’ve been working with kids (girls, mostly. They’re figure skaters. Not a lotta guys in figure skating) for over a decade now, and I find their perspectives on the movies and shows that I grew-up on to be… interesting? Enlightening? 🧐
    Like, *Ghostbusters* for example? Their only real comment was, “Why is *everyone* smoking?” 😝
    But their attitude towards Harrison Ford, in particular, was reeaalllly eye-opening. Simply put, they find Ford “creepy” because so many of his characters (Solo… Jones… Deckard…) are all, to use their phrase, “very rape-y.” 😬
    And, honestly, I now can’t *unsee* that… 😳

  • @IsaacMyers1
    @IsaacMyers1 Před 2 lety +4

    I hate how linked sex and romance are. Sometimes it feels like they are used synonymously. One explicit place this has bothered me is Star Trek, they say “romantic relations”, or whatever, when they mean sexual. I remember when one of Dr Phlox’s wives was on the show. All that was happening was that she was trying to “bone-down” but they kept bringing up the word romance. And it feels kinda the same here. We are not talking about romance, although consent is important there also, we are talking about sex. I don’t have more elegant words for it. I really believe that this is one of the reasons “the youth”, as they are depicted in media, seem to think they are owed sex or that sex is just gonna happen before at least the fourth date. Although I have no experience, I know for a fact it would take multiple dates for me to start kissing, let alone have sex.

  • @cutecats532
    @cutecats532 Před 2 lety +3

    The consent scene I keep thinking of was the one in Divergent, when she doesn't want to take it too far and he doesn't, but later it goes on to show an imaginary version of him taking it too far later in the exam with that being her worst fear she has to overcome.

  • @agosgregor
    @agosgregor Před 2 lety +4

    I think Heartstopper does consent very well, specially in the last two novels where Nick and Charlie are starting to get more intimate. Every time they do, they are constantly checking if the other is OK with the advances, and if there are not ready, they stop. That is consent and I'm actually pretty excited to see it portrayed on the TV show because of how mainstream it has became.

  • @framemygaze
    @framemygaze Před rokem +2

    Such a great video essay! Love all the points you make, you cover so many important things. I'm glad that people like you and Pop Culture Detective are discussing it

  • @Polycomical
    @Polycomical Před 2 lety +7

    A surprising example (I realise this is not across the board with these films but hear me out) is in the original Austin Powers, where he declines sex with Vanessa as it's not right because she's drunk.

    • @dylanshadowstar9779
      @dylanshadowstar9779 Před 2 lety +3

      I love that moment. It's impressive because 1; he's from the sixties
      2: it's made in the nineties when sex with a drunk person wasn't taken as serious and 3: he's a character shown to put sex above everything

  • @supremeoverlorde2109
    @supremeoverlorde2109 Před rokem +1

    Consent is something that as a society, I think we tend to over-complicate, when it's really quite simple. It's just about being respectful of another person's feelings and wants. And this can extend to all types of relationships. I had a friend in high school who didn't like being touched without warning, so the last time I saw him during senior year, I asked if I could hug him, and he said yes. But if he'd said no, I would have respected that because... well, that's just the right thing to do. It really isn't difficult.

  • @bryangillis1362
    @bryangillis1362 Před 2 lety +5

    Since you asked for video game examples, one of my favorites in this regard is Trails in the Sky (First Chapter and Second Chapter spoilers follow).
    It starts off at the end of First Chapter, where deuteragonist Joshua kisses protagonist Estelle without asking for permission first. She had made her feelings for him quite clear at that point, so it would normally fall into the standard trope of not asking for consent. Except, in this case, it actually is made clear this is a violation of her consent, in more ways than one: He'd applied a poison to his lips which resulted in the kiss knocking her unconscious. He was using the kiss to betray her, and the lack of consent fits in with it.
    The first two-thirds of the next game is spent dealing with the aftermath of this. Long story short, Joshua had his reasons for the betrayal, thinking it would keep Estelle safe. Estelle disagreed with this approach and manages to bring him around in an epic scene, after which he accepts blame and fault. By the end of the game, they're ready to proceed again, and with the threat of imminent death, Estelle fumblingly tries to ask Joshua to kiss her, but can't quite get out the words. Joshua figures out what she wants to ask, but instead of just doing it, he asks her instead, to which she agrees. And just after they kiss, they're miraculously rescued from death.
    A great contrast is shown here between the kisses at the ends of these two games, with the nonconsensual kiss (albeit in a situation that in other media most wouldn't have batted an eye at) being part of a betrayal, and the consensual kiss happening just before they're both rescued from death. I honestly don't know if they were trying for the metaphor here, but if so, it was brilliantly done.

  • @larablis
    @larablis Před rokem

    I didn't know your channel and I absolutely LOVED this video. Not only how clear you were with the concepts (and Im not even a native English speaker and had no subtitles on) but also your sweetness! Thank you so much

  • @CrazyGoth631
    @CrazyGoth631 Před 2 lety +14

    People have some pretty messed up ideas about consent. I’ve heard women say they won’t date a guy that asks if it’s ok to kiss them. Because a man respecting you isn’t sexy but forcing himself on you is real turn on. So gross. 🤦‍♀️

  • @slashandbones13
    @slashandbones13 Před 2 lety +3

    18:25 which is a trope I like a lot when done well. I like watching two people challenge each other, throw intelligent insults and wit back and forth, etc. then slowly over time relize that they have a lot in common. However, 90% of the time, they start liking each other for no real reason.

  • @HotDogTimeMachine385
    @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +23

    "Not quite force himself" no no, Bladerunner is rape in every sense of the word, he is being violent with her, violently slams the door when she wants to ESCAPE HIM, holds her forcefully and demands her to say she wants to kiss. It's disgusting, this is rape.
    The Harrison Ford threesome of Bladerunner, Star Wars and Indiana Jones all show him as a predator and are deeeeply problematic. Han kisses Leia when she tells him no, Indiana same. Even WORSE with Indy as he sleeps with Marion when she's underage and he is her father's assistant. And when they meet again as adults he GASLIGHTS HER by saying "you knew what you were doing" after she tells him she was a child. Indy is a literal statutory rapist
    I was almost WORSE as Lucas and Spielberg wanted to make her 15, as (and I quote) "Fifteen is right on the edge. I know it's an outrageous idea, but it is interesting. Once she's sixteen or seventeen it's not interesting anymore" ("not interesting any more" wtf)
    And somehow Bladerunner is even worse.
    It sucks how these three movies represent what generations of men strive to be and believe how they should act. The nostalgia blinds everyone.
    I have real trouble with star wars, cyberpunk and adventure movies because of Harrison Ford. And apparently he wasn't much better irl. He was 15 years older than Carrie Fisher during their affair and she is on record saying he abused this power over her.
    Apologies for the rant, this movie is quite triggering. You have done a much better job at pointing out how it's problematic than most people but I feel you still underrepresented how bad it is.

    • @livjones2917
      @livjones2917 Před 2 lety +7

      There's a great video by Pop Culture Detective looking specifically at these three Harrison Ford films and how the romance in them is predatory.
      Agreed that Bladerunner is absolutely rape, and also I've never seen any of the Indiana Jones movies but that's a massive yikes.

    • @HotDogTimeMachine385
      @HotDogTimeMachine385 Před 2 lety +5

      @@livjones2917 EVERYONE should be shown that video. Watching it was like a cultural train slammed into me. It made me realize how deep toxic masculinity goes. Yes, it's a great video that more people need to watch. And the rest of their videos too, they really focus on masculinity in media which is something people ignore. Like the rape of men for laughs video. It's unnerving when you realize it's not just a few movies, it's a pattern in our society.

    • @arwenspicer
      @arwenspicer Před 2 lety +3

      That scene from Empire Strikes Back deeply disturbed me as a kid. Horribly, my cultural training taught me to read it "Leia's weak" rather than "Han is a dick." It took me many years to mentally get that sorted out. However, my hat goes off to Carrie Fisher that that scene didn't assassinate the character of Leia. In the scenes following that scene, her every subtle movement, every delivery of every line is such a pitch perfect depiction of a person quietly processing the shaming and humiliation (and her own feelings for Han, which are real) until she works it through and rapidly builds herself back up to badass by Cloud City. And I do think Fisher gets all the credit. The script allows that reading but certainly doesn't push it. The writer, the director may not have seen what was going on, but Fisher saw it perfectly. That's my take.

  • @christiegreenwood2642
    @christiegreenwood2642 Před 2 lety +4

    Personally, I have never felt attracted to a person I dislike. This is such a weird trope.

  • @tokublwhovian
    @tokublwhovian Před 2 lety +7

    A good example I can think of is Lovely Writer (a 2021 Thai BL), between the two main characters called Gene and Nubsib (nickname “Sib”) I can’t remember the exact scene and dialogue but I 100% know it was consent. A bad example I can think of is Love By Chance (a 2018 Thai BL) between two side characters called Kengla and Techno which is straight up r*pe and it’s played off as comedic/romantic in the next scene. In the second season, it gets retconned as Techno “enjoying” it, despite him being drunk and passing out.

  • @PogieJoe
    @PogieJoe Před 2 lety +1

    Love the example of movie consent you gave at the end! Thank you for this really crucial conversation.

  • @brookejohnson9914
    @brookejohnson9914 Před 2 lety +2

    I don't know how common this is but it feels like all the time in movies or tv shows when one character initiates a kiss i tense up a little until i see whether the other person wants it. I wish they would just be clearer about it

  • @nannasbraindump6343
    @nannasbraindump6343 Před 2 lety +1

    Titanic has also a great example on not giving concent, when Rose pulls her arm out of her fiancés grab, and tell him to not touch her.

  • @jacklawrence2212
    @jacklawrence2212 Před 2 lety +14

    Spot on breakdown and analysis of a problematic topic. Enjoyed this a lot.

  • @joywearing2527
    @joywearing2527 Před 2 lety

    Thankyou so much for talking about this topic, it is so rarely talked about. I remember when i had my first kiss with a previous boyfriend where he asked if he could kiss me and waited for my answer before doing anything. I left that date with a massive smile on my face very much in part due to the fact that he asked first, especially because unknown to him I had been sexually assaulted and harassed in the past by multiple men where my NO was completely ignored and had to push them off me multiple times. Consent makes sure both parties feel safe in that situation. Again, thank you for this video!

  • @carpelibrarium8522
    @carpelibrarium8522 Před 2 lety +4

    A great consent scene in The Good Place is between Chidi and Simone in Season 3
    CHIDI: Also, I wanted to kiss you last night, but I chickened out, so I'm going to kiss you now.
    SIMONE: Good, yes. I want that, please.
    :kiss happens:

  • @tuxedojunction9422
    @tuxedojunction9422 Před 2 lety +3

    I liked the way Sex Education handled Otis losing his virginity with Ruby. We didn't see it in real time for story reasons. They were at a party and Otis was very drunk and they cut to the morning after with Otis in bed with Ruby unable to remember doing the deed. He worries that he might have taken advantage of Ruby, but she assures him that he asked for consent at EVERY step along the way (which she seemed to have found slightly annoying but considerate compared to her previous partners). The storyline continues with them being unsure whether they used a condom and unable to find a discarded condom, so Otis accompanies Ruby to the pharmacy so she can get the morning after pill. The story manages to convey important messages about sex while drunk, consent, and birth control, all while being highly entertaining.

  • @Estarfigam
    @Estarfigam Před 2 lety +3

    There are some good scenes of consent near the end of Moon Knight, between Steven and Marc in sharing a body, but also Layla and Taweret with Layla setting boundaries. (I wish she was a full-time avatar because it's cool)

  • @lunarocks2228
    @lunarocks2228 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember one show, that terrible heathers reboot, they did acknowledge consent…but made it seem like a cringey thing that the main character low key scoffs at. So at one part veronica is hooking up with this one guy, as he’s going down on her she’s checking stuff on her phone, something she sees as she’s scrolling on her phone shocks & upsets her and is like “NO WAY!!!” the guy immediately stops and is like “hey, i stopped as soon as i heard a no” and she just kind of gives him a dirty look, says a sarcastic “good for you” and leaves the car. it’s a small moment but it just rlly stuck with me in the worst way

  • @carpevinum8645
    @carpevinum8645 Před 2 lety +3

    I liked how they modelled consent in Heartstopper.
    *Spoilers*
    Especially the bit at the end where they make up at sports day. In other media nick would have run up and kissed Charlie in front of everyone. Instead they go somewhere private, clear the air, establish that they are on the same page and then kiss.

  • @SapphWolf
    @SapphWolf Před 2 lety +1

    *Two people have had a really romantic evening. Now finding themselves alone they lean in. Their noses almost touching.*
    P1: "I really want to kiss you right now."
    P2: "I've been waiting all night for you say that to me!"
    *The couple kiss passionately.*
    This really isn't hard to do and doesn't need to slow down the pace of the "action", or detract from mood. More often than not enthusiastic consent enhances those kinds of scenes.

  • @Rmlohner
    @Rmlohner Před 2 lety +4

    One that I noticed on a recent rewatch is in the first Rocky film, where he acts like Adrian owes him a date for just giving her some friendly conversation, then doesn’t raise any objection to Paulie throwing her turkey in the alley to force her to go on it, and finally invites her up to his apartment and absolutely refuses to take no for an answer. Luckily, it gets better from then on.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před 2 lety +2

      Been a while since I watched that one. One could make the argument that it’s Rocky being soaked in toxic masculinity (something that the series does a good job at combatting at later points including the end of the same movie.)

  • @claudiaroyc9911
    @claudiaroyc9911 Před 2 lety +2

    I think Titanic is an especially good example because it contrasts the guy who cares about what Rose wants and lets her set the pace (Jack) and the guy who regards Rose as property who doesn't have the right to give or withdraw consent (Cal). And Rose actually gets to choose the guy who acknowledges that she's a person who can decide for herself what she wants.

  • @stargirl2477
    @stargirl2477 Před 2 lety +4

    I agree with the whole enemies to lovers sounding good on paper, not on film. I think that is because we can see how the characters change and grow out of their hatred and start to see things from a different view. One of my favorite examples is Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth from Pride and Prejudice. Their whole romance feels like it's a series of steps as both characters come to realize more about the other and start to change their view. It's made clear in the book, but I think it is done wonderfully on film, to some extent. (Although I think it's done a bit better in her other work Sense and Sensibility, but the opposite direction.) We are shown Cornel Brandon (played wonderfully by the legendary Alan Rickman) has feelings for Mary Ann on the spot and acts like a true gentleman around her, but she has to realize that for herself. I also agree about bringing up consent in movies, a staple I think needs to be shown as a good thing and a basis for couples to feel comfortable with. I was introduced to a film called Love Actually and in that there is one couple who explicitly ask for the other's consent.

  • @keitadarkwolf2591
    @keitadarkwolf2591 Před 2 lety +1

    One of my favourites? When the Night Comes. A queer visual novel by Lunaris Games. Not only does it handle consent in a very good, very sexy way, it's also (in my opinion) the gold standard for giving the player complete control of their character's sexuality and gender expression, without leaving one in doubt about the characters you're interacting with. I loved how they handled consent, from a strong male lead 'taking charge' of the pc (beautifully and very hotly with complete consent) to the other way around, and a lot of things inbetween. Bonus points for just showing queer culture so well. One can just tell it was made by the queer community for the queer community.

  • @kinocrone7275
    @kinocrone7275 Před 2 lety +1

    "can I tie you up, love? If you tell me yes" single hotest line in a song from a movie musical

  • @Wurmze
    @Wurmze Před 2 lety +4

    Similar to how you said about dubcon with books and getting the perspective, I feel like enemies to lovers is something that can only really work in tv shows or books because they have to go through the stages of hating each other/being on complete opposite sides of their conflict, to something happening that shows them in a new light, through bonding to lovers. Movies just don’t have the time to pull that off although if anyone has a good rec hmu. Because done well enemies to lovers is one of my favourite tropes but examples like the clips you showed make me cringe

    • @CoraMaria
      @CoraMaria Před 2 lety +3

      Yeeessss and enemies to lovers is usually one of those scenarios that can only exist in fiction. I actually really like it because in order for two characters to be enemies, they need to see each other as equal adversaries, and then it becomes about getting to know the worst of someone first and the best of them later.

  • @kevinedie4119
    @kevinedie4119 Před 2 lety +4

    I've never disagreed with you more than in one point in this film "....and Kate Winslet was Gorgeous in the late 90s" was Gorgeous? WAS? She's still Gorgeous. Agree with you on the other 99% of this video though so still thumbs up

  • @SpedeVesku
    @SpedeVesku Před 2 lety +2

    Rocky is my all-time favorite movie and Rocky/Andrian is IMO one of the best fictional couples, but I always feel uncomfortable when Rocky kisses her after their first date, despite her body language being pretty clear on her not wanting that.

  • @slashandbones13
    @slashandbones13 Před 2 lety +2

    In terms of a couple's first kiss, they are trying to create this feeling of unspoken feelings flooding out for the first time.

  • @carolinefiorentini3233
    @carolinefiorentini3233 Před rokem +1

    The scene in Raiders of the lost ark when Marion asks Indy where it doesn't hurt and she kisses where he's pointing.

    • @CouncilofGeeks
      @CouncilofGeeks  Před rokem +1

      That is a good scene. Just don't run the math on their ages when they reference their earlier relationship.

  • @thesilentstar6378
    @thesilentstar6378 Před 2 lety +1

    An example of consent that I like is Femshep and Garrus's romance from the Mass Effect series.
    Part of it is due to the understandable awkwardness between them, as they're each from different species, but the fact that they're friends first helps. While it's rather forward of Femshep to outright proposition Garrus in-game after he relates a story of a past sexual encounter he'd had, the way it is handled later is better. Femshep continuously checks in on him in the events leading up to and including their night together, asking if he still feels up to having sex (it's also left ambiguous whether did so due to the fade to black, with them instead doing an on-screen mutual touching of foreheads). This is followed up in the third game, with Garrus asking her after reuniting whether they should shake hands, and later asking what he should do during their date on the Citadel, after Femshep confirms that she wants to remain in a committed relationship with him.

  • @neonjinn
    @neonjinn Před 2 lety

    There are a variety of ways to get consent: "Do you want more?" "I want you, do you feel the same?" "Are you ready?" & variations on those are just a few ways my husband & I speak to each other. And it's super easy to ask without disrupting "the mood"; so anyone who thinks it's not sexy is doing something wrong. That's all I'll say on the matter.