The Strong Female Character Paradox

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  • čas přidán 2. 03. 2019
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Komentáře • 7K

  • @thorskywalker
    @thorskywalker  Před 5 lety +1350

    Now, I know some of you don’t enjoy these types of videos from me (and for others it’s the only reason you’re here) so going forward I’m going to try and have a type of set schedule for what days I release what type of videos so you can have an idea of what to expect out of me and when. Not saying I’ll always be able to hold to said schedule, or that I’ll get up a video of a particular type up every week, but I will try.
    For example, I’ve got some Marvel videos planned and in the works that I’d like to put up every Monday, turning it into “Marvel Mondays” (I know, cheesy name but you get the idea). Tuesdays, soon, will again be days for story videos… Saturdays will be the day for “Let’s Talk Some Star Wars”, and Sundays will likely be more commentary style videos like this one here.
    Other days are kind of “to be determined” but will likely be Star Wars in nature… such as theory videos, reviews, the continuation of my “exploring the dark side series” and others of that nature. I’ll also be doing more “quick take polls” when news of some kind drops, where I post a one day poll to get your reaction to some news before going over it in a video.
    Hopefully, you all like this idea, and it’ll lead to a more “organized” feel to the channel. Oh, and if there are certain types of videos, or certain topics you’d like to see from me, by all means suggest them.

    • @thenomad4606
      @thenomad4606 Před 5 lety +15

      Nice George Carlin reference.

    • @alienspacebat5218
      @alienspacebat5218 Před 5 lety +10

      This time you even started your comment with "Now...", not just your video.

    • @armoroftruth3166
      @armoroftruth3166 Před 5 lety +5

      To sjw *😡🤬☠💀#@"the line must be drawn here!"

    • @armoroftruth3166
      @armoroftruth3166 Před 5 lety

      I suggest you make a video to explained the sexuality in star wars(gay,lesbian...)after that backlash from making lando a pansexual or aftermath backlashs and gay characters like aphra.

    • @armoroftruth3166
      @armoroftruth3166 Před 5 lety +4

      I have no problem in fact if you weren't made this type of videos in the first place thought you were just a another pretender star wars fan like star wars explained👍

  • @charlesajones77
    @charlesajones77 Před 5 lety +11628

    Don't try to write "female" characters. Write good characters, who happen to be female.

    • @SageRuffin
      @SageRuffin Před 5 lety +896

      Finally, someone gets it.
      I'm a black dude and, of course, I'd like to see more black characters in fiction, right? Just going "Hey, see? Black folks!" and calling it a day isn't going to work (coughBlackPanthercough); you still need to make the character(s) interesting. At that point, gender, ethnicity, whatever-the-hell becomes a non-issue.

    • @kirbyhatesincels917
      @kirbyhatesincels917 Před 5 lety +422

      EXACTLY. Disregard genitalia for a minute and consider the fact that individuality outweighs everything.

    • @liamwalton4183
      @liamwalton4183 Před 5 lety +482

      Something I find interesting, related somewhat to OP, is the lgbt representation... Which believe it or not Deadpool 2 did amazingly.
      It wasnt a big plot point, it wasnt advertised to hell...
      It just had two girl who happened to be in a relationship. I think at one point deadpool said "You two are so cute together" before continuing onto a sarcastic joke.
      Then was never even mentioned again.
      It should be like that. Just something normal and not "OMG WE HAVE GAY CHARACTERS IN OUR MOVIE"
      Same goes with a female character or black or whatever.
      Just make the character who they are and dont push agendas. Just consider it normal... Because it is. Like a character having brown hair isnt made into a big deal, why would their skin colour, gender or sexuality be a big deal?

    • @litheran69
      @litheran69 Před 5 lety +21

      BURN THE WITCH!!!

    • @TheAurgelmir
      @TheAurgelmir Před 5 lety +185

      In my opinion you should write a character, and then think "what does either gender add to this character".
      In my mind a good female character is someone who wouldn't work as well if it was a male. And vice versa.
      Many characters, even the "doing male things" female characters work well when their gender enhance the role.
      Rey doesn't enhance the role of "powerful force user" bye being female. Heck you could gender swap Rey and Ren and I am sure the movies would be exactly the same. (Actually no. I think Kylo Rey would actually be an even more interesting character because it's an unusual role to see a woman in: angsty teen with rage issues. But then again those traits are more common in young boys, so Ren "feels right".)

  • @markchang2964
    @markchang2964 Před 5 lety +4138

    If I am to quote Judge Judy, "I am not a woman judge. I am a judge who happens to be a woman." The job or role should come first.

    • @sebaschan-uwu
      @sebaschan-uwu Před 5 lety +48

      Well when it comes to grammar, the word female should come first unless we are saying "SHE is a judge". But I agree that the female part doesn't effect how well she can do her job and in this case shouldn't be considered

    • @mikkel6183
      @mikkel6183 Před 5 lety +139

      @@sebaschan-uwu r/iamverysmart

    • @RickGrimes807
      @RickGrimes807 Před 5 lety +72

      @@sebaschan-uwu "but I agree that the female part doesn't effect..." It's "affect", not "effect". :)

    • @_wayward_494
      @_wayward_494 Před 5 lety +51

      @@RickGrimes807 instantly his entire paragraph has been rendered useless. Oh the hypocrisy

    • @neilbreen371
      @neilbreen371 Před 5 lety +21

      @@RickGrimes807 lol, got em

  • @Eleni1002
    @Eleni1002 Před 4 lety +1780

    As a female, I must say I related more to Captain America and his story than Captain Marvel. The idea that I need a female character in a movie so I can relate to someone is absurd. You relate to someone because of their experiences not because of their genitalia.

    • @Superkid33
      @Superkid33 Před 4 lety +93

      I totally agree. It seems like a lot of people in Hollywood doesn’t understand the main idea of actually telling decent stories. It feels like if the story gets in the way of their propaganda they remove a good story.

    • @gothambillionaire
      @gothambillionaire Před 4 lety +30

      Sophia Will THANK YOU!!!!

    • @rachelcarter9455
      @rachelcarter9455 Před 4 lety +54

      Preeaaccchhhh I feel like people are shocked when I say I dont like a certain hero because I'm "supposed to" relate to heros that match my genitalia. Just cuz our genitalia match doesnt mean I will like or relate to you. If I dont relate to you then it's your story not your genitalia that attracts me

    • @youtubeuser4943
      @youtubeuser4943 Před 4 lety +20

      @@Superkid33 that's what happens after years of nepotism and undeserving people getting hired instead of the most talented people when it comes to Hollywood. It's not about talent...just who you know and can you make money making something as bland as possible to try and be good to as many different people as possible

    • @oomsou5018
      @oomsou5018 Před 4 lety +24

      I agree with you on this. You don’t need to be the same gender of the character to relate to them. Hell there’s this one character from a game I love who is a female and get this is practically the first (or second I can’t remember) character in fiction I could actually relate to on a deep level.

  • @yasseradel4234
    @yasseradel4234 Před 5 lety +1155

    Create a powerful FEMALE character ❎
    Create a powerful female CHARACTER✔️

    • @ertymexx
      @ertymexx Před 4 lety +25

      This!

    • @ertymexx
      @ertymexx Před 4 lety +46

      I mean, yeah. Powerful means overcoming obstacles, dealing with hardship, actually facing loss, hard choices and dealing with the consequences, not surfing over all of it on hurricane Mary-Sue.

    • @Elder74
      @Elder74 Před 4 lety +3

      Inferno Dragon your comment is spot on.

    • @Legba85
      @Legba85 Před 4 lety +2

      Inferno Dragon I’m taking this comment to heart. It needs to be heard everywhere!!!!

    • @OXY187
      @OXY187 Před 4 lety +3

      Both Ripleys from the Alien franchise
      is my favorite female characters. That's how you make a female character. She doesn't born strong, she becomes a strong person.

  • @Infamous1892
    @Infamous1892 Před 5 lety +5178

    Just write women like actual human beings instead of Superman with plot armor.

    • @ursaber
      @ursaber Před 5 lety +242

      Superman on top of plot armor, that is seriously OP considering base superman is godlike

    • @jeggsonvohees2201
      @jeggsonvohees2201 Před 5 lety +289

      Femto Unless he's fighting batman, then he's reset back to level 1.

    • @ursaber
      @ursaber Před 5 lety +62

      @@jeggsonvohees2201 right on the money

    • @thenomad4606
      @thenomad4606 Před 5 lety +158

      Just keep the identity politics out of it.
      Politics can be fine, provided it's executed well, but identity politics? That panders to the basest instincts of human beings. It should be rejected.

    • @G360LIVE
      @G360LIVE Před 5 lety +146

      I think it would be more fitting not to use Superman as an example since Superman has struggles too (when he's written well, anyway). The point is to write female characters who face challenges and work to overcome those challenges. If Rey can just close her eyes and summon the Force, without training, to beat Kylo in a fight, there's no way for us ordinary folk to connect with her. That's really what matters: the ability to develop a connection. A person can connect to Superman as long as his struggle is framed in a way that an average person can recognize. For example, someone can connect with Superman struggling to fit into society. Whether a person has superpowers or not, that's a real struggle.

  • @sabretooth7691
    @sabretooth7691 Před 5 lety +2773

    Call me crazy but I just don't think gender should be a character's primary trait.

    • @dreamingblue3939
      @dreamingblue3939 Před 5 lety +109

      Nope, not crazy at all. I agree.
      I think a problem with some characters in movies/books or any medium is that writers focus WAY too much on what their characters are rather than who their character are. Race, gender, sexuality- that's all just "what" a character is. Personality, beliefs, motives, flaws, and strengths are "who" a character is. I believe the "who" is much more important than the "what".

    • @laxcifer
      @laxcifer Před 5 lety +26

      @@dreamingblue3939 Well said! The "who" is what creates a compelling character, which I think is what some people mean when they say a "strong character." They don't mean physically strong, like Wonder Woman and Rey, but that the character is interesting and that you want to hear more of their ideas and see their mannerisms. They pull you in and keep you wanting more. Nadia in Russian Doll is a great example of a "strong" character. She's quirky, clever, and funny, and the way she reacts to the weird situations she encounters is unique. Rey, on the other hand, was just kind of... blah.

    • @pequenoperezoso3743
      @pequenoperezoso3743 Před 5 lety +1

      sabretooth7691 my dic is a pckckfk oh yeah sub to my channeeeeeeel

    • @georgesikorski9891
      @georgesikorski9891 Před 5 lety +5

      No. You are completely correct

    • @emrysgeibhendach7572
      @emrysgeibhendach7572 Před 5 lety +2

      yes

  • @TROOPERfarcry
    @TROOPERfarcry Před 5 lety +2106

    "Having" strong female characters isn't a problem.
    "PUSHING" strong female characters is the problem.

    • @trevorboyer2731
      @trevorboyer2731 Před 5 lety +43

      I would amend that by saying that having strong female characters isnt the problem. Pushing strong female characters is A problem. Having well written character regardless of gender or race is THE problem.

    • @RubberyCat
      @RubberyCat Před 4 lety +75

      @@trevorboyer2731
      You mean " _The lack of_ well-written characters regardless of gender or race is THE problem."

    • @sjoerdkalischnig1877
      @sjoerdkalischnig1877 Před 4 lety +15

      they are not pushing strong female caracter but Disney is pushing Mary Sues without an good story so they can complain that we hate it and that will get more attention so free advertisement

    • @PartPrincr
      @PartPrincr Před 4 lety +5

      @Johanna Freethinker What about a fat man?

    • @pw6002
      @pw6002 Před 4 lety +28

      Having strong female characters isn’t a problem.
      Having poorly written characters (female or male) is a problem.

  • @Holics94
    @Holics94 Před 4 lety +865

    As a female myself, the tropes of “women are stronger than you lowely men” really annoys me.

    • @martinkb
      @martinkb Před 4 lety +4

      Lowely Men? Huh!

    • @thewolfcatbeast3567
      @thewolfcatbeast3567 Před 4 lety +43

      that is refreshing to hear

    • @mr.mister2833
      @mr.mister2833 Před 4 lety +74

      Same same, i really dont like it when the main characteristic of a character is their gender

    • @anxivty
      @anxivty Před 4 lety +56

      Umbuko DaJuko because it tries hard to show that women are superior instead of women are equal

    • @yasmin-lx4kb
      @yasmin-lx4kb Před 4 lety +13

      Poniesofdoom i know. gender isn't a personality trait.

  • @hongvan0922
    @hongvan0922 Před 5 lety +2323

    Scarlett Johansson did amazing job as Black Widow, a strong female character, and no one seemed to have a problem with it.

    • @danielpreciado3112
      @danielpreciado3112 Před 5 lety +306

      I'm still waiting for a Black Widow movie.

    • @TheftTone6
      @TheftTone6 Před 5 lety +81

      @@danielpreciado3112 hell I'd watch it.

    • @theoneandonlytony
      @theoneandonlytony Před 5 lety +113

      because she wasn't the lead

    • @theanonymouscommenter976
      @theanonymouscommenter976 Před 5 lety +370

      Because she wasn't written like walking propaganda.

    • @reuteratwork8983
      @reuteratwork8983 Před 5 lety +152

      @Van Dinh
      - ...& yet, she does not have her own film, does not get to be a lead -- yeah, nobody seems to have a problem w/ female characters who "know their place" & stay in the background, supporting the mighty, manly male lead -- it isn't until a strong female is made the main character that the pre-release bad reviews flood RottenTomatoes & the "anti-SJWs" start cranking out their hit-piece videos...

  • @cybersketcher1130
    @cybersketcher1130 Před 5 lety +2950

    Katara, and Toph from The Last Airbender are amazing female characters. Why doesn't anyone mention those.
    Edit: This is the most likes I've gotten on a CZcams comment.

    • @thenomad4606
      @thenomad4606 Před 5 lety +273

      Doesn't fit their agenda.

    • @TetsuRiken
      @TetsuRiken Před 5 lety +338

      Because avatar was a good well written show with charicters on all frounts shatter the sjw nartive

    • @TheStraightestWhitest
      @TheStraightestWhitest Před 5 lety +240

      Because they are deeply flawed. Nevermind that that's just what makes them so great, because it doesn't fit the narrative.

    • @dragon-tamer7956
      @dragon-tamer7956 Před 5 lety +17

      I love them.

    • @Julian-pw5mv
      @Julian-pw5mv Před 5 lety +3

      @dflowers30 i havent even heard of that...

  • @redrum6051
    @redrum6051 Před 5 lety +947

    Gamora/Nebula>Captain Marvel whos with me

    • @chenryan3030
      @chenryan3030 Před 5 lety +103

      The daughters of Thanos are quite good if not amazing characters in the MCU.

    • @sugaryheaven4089
      @sugaryheaven4089 Před 4 lety +96

      and also Scarlet Witch and Black Widow

    • @spider-maaz1871
      @spider-maaz1871 Před 4 lety +14

      Facts

    • @ddomenicoeeziommancini
      @ddomenicoeeziommancini Před 4 lety +7

      Everyone

    • @DiaboTatuado
      @DiaboTatuado Před 4 lety +13

      @World Wide Weeb Well at least Scarlet Witch will have a Series, WandaVision. Her character have so much interesting things to show and explore

  • @DJPrimeAmvs
    @DJPrimeAmvs Před 4 lety +541

    Im late but imma say this.
    We werent told that Alita and Diana were strong female characters, we were shown.

    • @ayrtonauman9435
      @ayrtonauman9435 Před 4 lety +52

      DJ Prime note Wonder Woman was like “oh actually my son really enjoyed this movie!” And captain marvel was like “you men didnt like the movie because it was meant for girls!”

    • @michaeljames6737
      @michaeljames6737 Před 4 lety +17

      wonder woman is my favorite female super hero movie was dope and people say
      MaRvEl Is ThE bEsT

    • @bethanybrookes8479
      @bethanybrookes8479 Před 3 lety +30

      Alita was directed by a male who was a fan of the original manga/anime (it's a masterpiece, I can understand why) and wanted to share the story and alita's character with more people. He just changed it a bit to fit as much of it into the time frame. It was one of the good live action anime adaptions. Idk about wonder woman, but I get the feeling that the original mindset might have been pretty similar. Captain marvel, mulan 2020 and the new star wars trilogy were wrote with SJW PC feminism as the primary intention. And that is why they are bad.

    • @CRAZYFLARE123
      @CRAZYFLARE123 Před 3 lety +1

      @@michaeljames6737 i mean marvel is the best

    • @michaeljames6737
      @michaeljames6737 Před 3 lety +2

      @@CRAZYFLARE123 yeah but some movies for marvel are questionable

  • @char5285
    @char5285 Před 5 lety +2176

    The key to a strong female character isn’t the female part, it’s the character part

    • @VioletDeathRei
      @VioletDeathRei Před 5 lety +40

      The issue is a good strong female character will have you not thinking about the fact that they are female.
      And that's what they don't like, they want the female part first and foremost and keep ruining my female characters...

    • @IncredibleMet
      @IncredibleMet Před 5 lety +5

      And the strong the part.

    • @kaptinbarfbeerd1317
      @kaptinbarfbeerd1317 Před 5 lety +30

      @@IncredibleMet Unfortunately, these agenda driven movies conflate "strong" with "bitchy and arrogant", two traits which no sane person of either gender would approve of.

    • @RubberyCat
      @RubberyCat Před 5 lety +3

      No, it is all three parts.
      I mean, she can't be male ... unless she's trans, i guess, or possibly a crossdresser.
      She can't be weak ... at least not as a character.
      But yes, she must indeed also be a character.
      The criticism against Carol Danvers, as well as the disliked-or-worse female characters in the Star Wars movies ... and several Marvel Comics ... is not they aren't CHARACTERS, because they are.
      I mean, they are not chairs or mere concepts, right?
      No, the criticism is that they are not fleshed out, they are not well made.
      In a way, they are WEAK.

    • @RubberyCat
      @RubberyCat Před 5 lety +2

      @@kaptinbarfbeerd1317
      Well, in that case, Carol should be ok, as she were neither?

  • @fayjune3008
    @fayjune3008 Před 5 lety +1473

    I think a mistake is being made by calling these characters strong. Strength comes from work, overcoming adversity and striving to better yourself. You aren't strong when you can already do everything and just shrug everything off. Being a woman, myself, I appreciate seeing actually strong female characters who actually have to work through something, like Ripley, having to fight, having to face that queen despite the fact you know she's terrified of these aliens, as you see when she's having nightmares at the beginning of the movie. Having female characters who start out being "strong" and then they have no faults, make no actual mistakes and don't have to work for what they get is a disservice to women everywhere and I believe it does more harm than good, telling us we need to be that perfect to be considered strong. No. Strength can only come by conquering your own weakness just like courage only comes when you're afraid. These characters aren't strong, they're poorly written examples of wish fulfillment. I'll take a female character who starts out weak, or who has even stereotypical female weaknesses they have to overcome over these characters any day of the weak! Give me a character who whines about cramps, takes a Pamprin and then forces herself to move on. Might sound silly, but it's far more realistic.

    • @shreyamukherjee4784
      @shreyamukherjee4784 Před 5 lety +65

      Thank you for that comment, appreciate it and relate to it. Thank you.

    • @DbladeMedic
      @DbladeMedic Před 5 lety +28

      Very well said. Bravo

    • @wheresdlambsauce6286
      @wheresdlambsauce6286 Před 5 lety +23

      I give Fay June A+

    • @xyzpdg1313
      @xyzpdg1313 Před 5 lety +58

      I agree, these are not strong characters. They are not even characters at all - they're caricatures.

    • @fuuhoji648
      @fuuhoji648 Před 5 lety +47

      strong woman means nowadays: a physically strong women that can fight and is stronger than men. For normal people like us a strong woman has a strong charakter even though she is physically weaker than men, she stands her ground.

  • @ivanjoshuacaragdag4423
    @ivanjoshuacaragdag4423 Před 5 lety +1069

    I consider Margaery Tyrell to be one of the best examples of a properly written strong female character. She may not be a warrior, but her resiliency, cunning and willpower showcased that a clever mind is sometimes more valuable than brute strength.

    • @ryanarment5393
      @ryanarment5393 Před 5 lety +168

      Same thing with Olenna Tyrell. She was a political player on par with or even better at it than most of the other characters.

    • @codyallison8093
      @codyallison8093 Před 5 lety +54

      Yeah, I was gonna say that Olenna was even more awesome.

    • @ShanghaiRooster
      @ShanghaiRooster Před 5 lety +78

      Agreed. George R.R. Martin writes a diverse range of female characters very well, and perhaps some others should study his works to find out how he does it.

    • @shellyscreation3339
      @shellyscreation3339 Před 5 lety +65

      Ivan Joshua Caragdag Yes, that’s because GRRM doesn’t believe in giving special treatment to one gender: if we have crazy female dictators like Cersei and Dany, we have craziER rulers like Joff and Ramsay. If a female character faces physical violence, a male character faces the same, sometimes, worse! And that’s why it angers me when some websites try to use Dany or Cersei losing it as some sort of ‘trope’ which equates to writers “Demonising the women and perpetuating the myth that they’re emotionally unstable and therefore, nor worthy of ruling.” I mean, REALLY? Where were all these idiots when Ramsay was made Lord of WF? Why didn’t they talk about Jon making decisions based on emotions? They only see what they want to see, i.e *Women* who’ve been *wronged* by the writers because they’re not...female writers? 🙄🤦🏻‍♀️

    • @lidarren343
      @lidarren343 Před 5 lety +56

      Yess!! Even Sansa herself by overcoming what life threw at her and learning to adapt and survive, playing to her strengths, has always made me consider her a strong female character. Really all GRRM'S female characters had dimension and an actual strength to them that wasn't just "look at me I can throw a punch"

  • @Katarax
    @Katarax Před 4 lety +489

    Men: Love Black Widow...
    Also Men: Love Wonder Woman
    Also Men: Love Mariah Hill
    Also Men: Love Peggy Carter
    Also Men: Love Princess Laia
    Marvel PR: Men hated captain feminism cuz she a wahmen...
    Men: No the character was badly written and she is being shoehorned into a very developed story line at the very end with a prequel movie dating 20 years ago with no cannon mention and heaps of inconsistencies with her existence and relationship with nick fury.... not to mention the film was just garbage to begin with... its like someone saw the other marvel movies once and was keeping cannon consultancies from what they could remember...
    Marvel PR: see, misogynists... they just hate women...
    Men: I wonder if the actress playing the strong female characters might have anything to do with it...
    Marvel PR: nope they just hate women

    • @Shou_22
      @Shou_22 Před 4 lety +48

      Also Men: love Ahsoka
      She may not be in the movies yet but she and Laia are beloved strong female characters...

    • @LearnedSophistry
      @LearnedSophistry Před 4 lety +20

      Katarax NGL I laughed really hard at “Captain Feminism “

    • @LearnedSophistry
      @LearnedSophistry Před 4 lety +4

      Katarax also I can’t forget the Men: love black widow. Well not if you include cinemasins who hates her unless she’s looking pretty or being sexualized.

    • @skar8009
      @skar8009 Před 4 lety +1

      Maria Hill barely did shit in all her appearances tho.

    • @evanm225
      @evanm225 Před 4 lety

      Skar800 but we all fucking love Cobie Smulders after watching How I Met Your Mother.

  • @monicabellu9566
    @monicabellu9566 Před 5 lety +680

    I'm a woman and I agree with you. Rey is not anoying, just poorly writting and uninteresting, and it's ok to look things with a critic eye, yes, even women. I'm personally tired of being offered this mold of "strong independent female character" where in most cases she is just a man with boobs, hates femenine things (yet keeps on doing them herself), ends up looking nonsensical and a mess because of her efforts on rejecting men's help/good actions. Women can be heroes, villains, sidekicks, strong, weak, cowards, clever, femenine... They just have to be well written.

    • @AndreNitroX
      @AndreNitroX Před 5 lety +43

      I have 3 sisters who love Star Wars and even they agreed that Rey is the most boring and overrated character in the movies.

    • @PungiFungi
      @PungiFungi Před 5 lety +31

      It is telling , if not ironic that most well written female characters are found in Hollywood movies during the old studio days.

    • @quibily
      @quibily Před 5 lety +30

      AndreNitro X1000 There are a lot of us girls and women who didn't like Rey. We may not be as loud as the infants who cry SEXISM, but we are definitely rolling our eyes at Hollywood and their insulting "trend."

    • @wernergansert6377
      @wernergansert6377 Před 5 lety +3

      Spot on!

    • @theflyingkaramazovbrothers6
      @theflyingkaramazovbrothers6 Před 5 lety +21

      Thank you. Men with boobs, that's the problem with it. And, in fairness to woke feminists, these characters are often the creation (or adored) by nerdy, weak men who have issues with their own identities and thus project what they wish to be ONTO these men with boobs. It's pure fantasy and always has been.

  • @siloPIRATE
    @siloPIRATE Před 5 lety +1219

    Did Marvel forget they had Peggy Carter and then went and cancelled it. That was an example of doing it right

    • @JayVal90
      @JayVal90 Před 5 lety +70

      That show was really cool I thought. Definitely upper tier Marvel Netflix show.

    • @cosmicremix311
      @cosmicremix311 Před 5 lety +55

      And Karen Page, and Agent Madani, and Misty from Luke Cage, Black Widow, Quake, should I go on?

    • @Jenkkimie
      @Jenkkimie Před 5 lety +43

      It is a shame that the lead actress refused to work further but I can socially understand that on principle she did not want to work with someone who was accused of sexual assault.

    • @JayVal90
      @JayVal90 Před 5 lety +12

      @@Jenkkimie I never heard that story. Was Harvey Weinstein the producer?
      I guess it's one thing if it's proven, but in todays insane #MeToo era, I'd wait for proof before applying such principles. If it's a matter of risk, sure. But not on principle.

    • @Jenkkimie
      @Jenkkimie Před 5 lety +17

      @@JayVal90 I don't know who the accused person was but yeah that is the reason there wasn't Season 3. She did say that she would be happy to work on the series again if the accused person was fired, so basically either her or whoever that accused person was.

  • @tvb5509
    @tvb5509 Před 5 lety +204

    "Anytime someone calls attention to the breaking of gender roles, it ultimately undermines the concept of gender equality by implying that this is an exception and not the status quo."
    ~Knuckles the Echidna

    • @craigkuhlman6869
      @craigkuhlman6869 Před 4 lety +42

      That kinda just makes me ask this:
      Why can a children's cartoon about a super-fast blue hedgehog, a fox ultra-mechanist with two tails, a dumb lug of an echidna that punches things, a lovesick pink hedgehog with a sledgehammer, and a badger with a boomerang doing battle against a mad scientist with robots have a better grasp on gender equality than the rest of Hollywood and other media industries in whole?!
      Probably money...

    • @lucjanssen3567
      @lucjanssen3567 Před 4 lety +6

      @@craigkuhlman6869 because they are japanese and they are a lot better in those things then hollywood

    • @insert_edgyname8848
      @insert_edgyname8848 Před 3 lety +4

      @@lucjanssen3567 sonic boom is an american division of sonic the hedgehog

  • @DarkLight6Tv
    @DarkLight6Tv Před 4 lety +267

    Padme, Leia, and Ashoka are 3 of my top favorite characters..I'm a 31 year old black man..

    • @Wmei64
      @Wmei64 Před 4 lety +5

      DarkLight6Tv mine too😁

    • @theguywhoisaustralian1465
      @theguywhoisaustralian1465 Před 4 lety +1

      Padme????

    • @user-vu1zu9iy5z
      @user-vu1zu9iy5z Před 4 lety

      Looool

    • @brent9355
      @brent9355 Před 4 lety +9

      You're also clearly a sexist.

    • @ohifonlyx33
      @ohifonlyx33 Před 4 lety +2

      I'm a girl, and I'm curious what makes Leia such a great character just from the original trilogy... Granted, I'm not a big Star Wars Fan (MCU and LOTR is more my speed), but I never thought she was more than a supporting role? Not that I hate her, but I'm also genuinely curious why so many people love her.

  • @BangMaster96
    @BangMaster96 Před 5 lety +1935

    We don't need a strong FEMALE character,
    we just need a strong CHARACTER

    • @sicarius6501
      @sicarius6501 Před 5 lety +9

      So,gender neutral?

    • @viksaggu9085
      @viksaggu9085 Před 5 lety +137

      No he means bad ass characters like Ridley from Aliens, Kill Bill, Wonder Woman. Those are great characters who happened to be female

    • @Spartan322
      @Spartan322 Před 5 lety +27

      eh, we need good female characters, but barring that we do better with good characters that are female. But a better story would definitely be able to use naturalized femininity.

    • @jonnyp1340
      @jonnyp1340 Před 5 lety +4

      Never before has a single youtube comment reflected my thoughts more exactly

    • @jonnyp1340
      @jonnyp1340 Před 5 lety +35

      We don't need to make them strong becuase they are female. We need to make them whatever they are and they can also be female

  • @justnothing32
    @justnothing32 Před 5 lety +1268

    All the great female characters in the MCU are being under toned by Captain Marvel. Everyone would be delighted if there was a Scarlet Witch movie, or a Black Widow movie, people would have no problems with those movies.

    • @abbyritt7237
      @abbyritt7237 Před 5 lety +69

      Wanda's my fav

    • @ther0ach28
      @ther0ach28 Před 5 lety +80

      I heard about a rumor where the actor who plays scarlett witch said that she was being treated worse and pushed towards the back since captain marvel was announced. Take it with a grain of salt though, might not be true.

    • @ther0ach28
      @ther0ach28 Před 5 lety +93

      However, literally one, if not the strongest character in the MCU, is being pushed back to a TV show so captain feminist can be the star.

    • @SandeepSinghMango
      @SandeepSinghMango Před 5 lety +6

      @@ther0ach28 Which one is being pushed back? Gonna have to check out that tv show

    • @WorlockX
      @WorlockX Před 5 lety +16

      Addison Allen I believe we will be getting a Scarlet Witch and Vision show on Disney +

  • @uncledarren4262
    @uncledarren4262 Před 5 lety +1027

    Alita, long established character with a following. Well written, well cast. Wonder Woman, same! Captain Marvel, unpopular character, with a an actress cast who is a narsasitic misandrist. Rey from star wars, great actress but just a poorly written character in a series of poorly written new stories. Simple to explain

    • @kingambrosius9125
      @kingambrosius9125 Před 5 lety +5

      How good is Alita’s manga

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +12

      No, Alita and WW are acceptable because they're naive women-children who need to be led around be men for most things and have generic girly stuff in their plots. Rey and Carol don't need to be led around like children and don't waste their time on girly girl stuff and that's what the Incels hate. That Rey and Carol aren't made to be pathetic damsels that need to be saved and led around all the time.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +5

      @@youareallbots7536 1) So like Superman or Captain America then? Who no one hates? And Carol had training.
      2) So like Luke in ANH, Wonder Woman and Captain America, again.
      3) They were not. They just happen to be women. Not everything is some secret conspiracy.
      And BTW, Gal Gadot said that if you weren't a feminist then you were a sexist.
      4) Villains being interesting characters happens all the time. Folks find the Joker more interesting than Batman in every movie they have together.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +6

      @@youareallbots7536 1) Whatever flaws Steve had, they developed more over time and weren't there in his first movie. So we give Carol the same benefit of the doubt.
      2) Luke didn't have much of a personality beyond "Naive Farmboy" in ANH. He's considered the blandest character in the OT for a reason. And Steve's more human personality emerged over several movies. He was pretty archetypal in the first movie.
      3) No, that's just the typical response from people who don't like that what was traditionally a sausagefest now has leading women in it. And feminism doesn't mean automatically being against men, that's just propaganda.
      There's no agenda, none at all. They're no more overpowered than most male heroes. Rey has only ever fought people who aren't trained that much (Ren) or at all (Snoke's Guards, who are more for show than anything else).
      Carol is no more overpowered than Wanda was in her first movie and her personality is supposed to be that of a military hardass type. It's like complaining Robocop has no personality.
      Those line in her flashback are no different that Steve being rejected again and again by the army and being told by men he'll never be anything. It's a humanist message, not a feminist one. If it was feminist they wouldn't have had the Supreme Intelligence be played by a woman.
      4) It sounds more like you have some personal issues with Larson herself than anything in the movies.

    • @-Ryu
      @-Ryu Před 4 lety +71

      @@ShadowSonic2 captain america has an incredible personality... And superman is an alien who tries to fit in with the humans. Much more Character than captain marvel.

  • @nellfromhell7192
    @nellfromhell7192 Před 5 lety +75

    "A strong female character is a fully fleshed out and interesting woman, not a woman who punches and shoots stuff"
    Edit: grammar woops

  • @kam3l749
    @kam3l749 Před 5 lety +490

    R2d2, an actual robot is more human and likeable than Rey or Rose

    • @SamnissArandeen
      @SamnissArandeen Před 5 lety +25

      To be fair, Artoo and Threepio were the most human characters of the series from its very inception.

    • @colleenross8752
      @colleenross8752 Před 5 lety +7

      @@SamnissArandeen so was Chewie!

    • @colleenross8752
      @colleenross8752 Před 5 lety +5

      The droids are hilarious

    • @user-et8vm9cc3t
      @user-et8vm9cc3t Před 5 lety +1

      Even though we could not understand his language.

    • @thighguy4534
      @thighguy4534 Před 4 lety +2

      I like Daisy Ridley, but her character is too overpowered (thanks to pc plot armour). Lets not discuss that piece of shit called Rose.

  • @b4ne56
    @b4ne56 Před 5 lety +369

    The problem with a mery sue:
    If you give the character EVERYTHING
    takes EVERYTHING away from a character.

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 4 lety

      But at the same time they have everything.

    • @sugaryheaven4089
      @sugaryheaven4089 Před 4 lety

      Yeah, for example: Bella Swan

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 4 lety +2

      @World Wide Weeb Mark Hamil?

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 4 lety +1

      @World Wide Weeb Oh.😅😅😂

    • @trafficcone7344
      @trafficcone7344 Před 4 lety +1

      World Wide Weeb lol I didn’t know it did that, I’m definitely trying that later 🤣

  • @skycendre257
    @skycendre257 Před 5 lety +266

    It's true that Hollywood often doesn't do a good job portraying women. There are SO MANY movies where women are basically accessories,. and this is also true for a lot of novels, a lot of videogames, a lot of comic books.
    Many producers realized this, and they also realized that they wanted those sweet SJW cookies, so what they did was making "strong female characters" to appeal to that specific part of the audience. But their idea of a strong female character is Rey, which feels like she came straight out of a bad fanfiction, or Captain Marvel, which is a bully with the emotional range of a broomstick.
    So what did the producers think of doing, when they realized that their characters kinda sucked? They blamed the audience for not liking them, a lot of the times even being backed up by the actors (like Brie Larson), and basically labelled "manbabies" those who criticize their shitty products. They even said that "toxic masculinity prevents men to enjoy the Captain Marvel movie", as if seeing Brie Larson hurting and robbing a random guy should be considered something to cheer for, and not to call out as an act a villain would do.
    Now the thing is, I am a woman. I don't like when a character gets criticism solely because she's a woman, and this happens from time to time. But when I criticize Rey, Holdo or Carol Denvers I get called a "manbaby", or to hear that my problem is toxic masculinity, and in my opinion, this shows how much of a problem this whole thing has become. I, a woman, cannot criticize the bad writing of a character because apparently, I am a misogynist if I do. And I am truly, deeply sorry for all the men who love Ripley, Leia, Trinity - but also Furiosa, Wonder Woman, Scarlet Witch - who get to hear that they're misogynist just because they realize that Rey and Captain Marvel are horrible characters.
    When I get called a manbaby I can laugh it off. It probably hurts a lot more when a man gets called that.

    • @Austin-vp6qq
      @Austin-vp6qq Před 5 lety +28

      Same honestly. Personally, it's like "whatever, I know a bad character from a good one." I feel like there's a lack of humility among producers. Instead of thinking of the character first or simply being self aware of their mistake, they call out others for "being man babies."
      You know, they could turn captain marvel around considering what happens in Engame. There could be an interesting character arc for her in her next movie, in which she questions her abilities to be a hero and learns humility. But again, if the producers are saying "no, you just don't like female characters" then I'm afraid we're not going to see that much character development, which is a shame.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Austin-vp6qq You mean like how Iron Man learned humility and it stuck?
      Oh wait...

    • @skycendre257
      @skycendre257 Před 4 lety +24

      @@ShadowSonic2 He probably means that Iron Man often does fail, is very criticized and called out for being an egotist, and commits huge mistakes because of his personality and god complex (such as creating Ultron). From which yes, he grows up.
      To sum it up, Iron Man - or better Tony Stark - is a flawed human being, and his growth occurs both in single movies and in multiple entries in the MCU universe.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +5

      @@skycendre257 But even by the end, he's still arrogant and stuck up. Not as bad as before, but still.

    • @skycendre257
      @skycendre257 Před 4 lety +22

      @@ShadowSonic2 But still he grew quite a lot. Maybe not in a way you like, maybe you don't appreciate his personality, still it's a well rounded character with well developed pros and cons, which went through trial and error to get to the point where he ended. He didn't start as perfect to become even more perfect with the absolute impossibility to make mistakes.

  • @tomalphonso
    @tomalphonso Před 5 lety +140

    How about Trinity in the matrix? She was an awesome character! Carrie Ann moss was also really good as Natalie in memento

    • @mrmr4622
      @mrmr4622 Před 5 lety +7

      Yeah, Trinity was badass, yet people in hollywood treat those new movies as if there were never any strong female characters before

    • @tomalphonso
      @tomalphonso Před 5 lety +13

      @@mrmr4622 Or how about the characters who happened to be female in kill bill. They were all badass and well realized characters. It also didn't feel like they were pushing some sort of agenda. Except to make a good movie

    • @mrmr4622
      @mrmr4622 Před 5 lety +4

      @@tomalphonso Exactly, there are a lot of good female characters that everyone loves because they are interesting, well written etc, not because of their gender

  • @tramrant
    @tramrant Před 5 lety +672

    Your analogy with Mary Poppins actually reminded me that Mary Poppins herself is very much beloved strong female character)

    • @DogratDavis
      @DogratDavis Před 5 lety +37

      She's now considered racist because of the scene where she gets covered in soot from the chimney lol

    • @TankHunter678
      @TankHunter678 Před 5 lety +52

      I got into a discussion with a friend of mine about Mary Poppins and her various traits. Initially (since I have not seen much of Mary Poppins) the listing of traits common to the work she appears in kinda listed her as a Mary Sue, however my friend pointed out that every situation she was put into was used to show new facets of her character and personality. She may have always come to the (eventual) right answer for a given situation, but that was because she was willing to put in the work to turn her answer into the one that worked adjusting as need be. Showcasing that her character was not skin deep unlike Mary Sue characters.

    • @citlalicervantes6498
      @citlalicervantes6498 Před 5 lety +29

      I agree!!! She was a strong female character, and it wasn't the fact that she was a warrior or a sazzy rude person that made her strong, it was her kind personality and her radiat joy that made her strong. That's what I call a role model female character!

    • @Willowy13
      @Willowy13 Před 5 lety +7

      So much that before her new movie came out she was remembeed in the MCU and Star Wars. I still like Yandu's better.

    • @Deuteromis
      @Deuteromis Před 5 lety +2

      Actually now, she is considered a shitty nanny and person. I mean she did probably kill all those nannies...

  • @nolanscripture
    @nolanscripture Před 5 lety +483

    "Strong female character" effectively just means female written like a male without flaws. Script writers take all the positive traits strong male characters generally have and attribute them to a single female character while omitting any drawbacks those male characters also have -- hence the pejorative denotation of "Mary Sue." It isn't sexist to point this out. A poorly written character is a poorly written character, gender be damned.

    • @Seele2015au
      @Seele2015au Před 5 lety +40

      Nolan Don't forget they never need to go through hell to become the heroes that they are. We empathize with Luke Skywalker because he was not born with full mastery of the Force, unlike Rey. We also cheer Alita on for her hero's journey to reclaim and redeem her past. Gender is not an issue: the "strong female character" paradox was invented by those to spite themselves, and then use it as a weapon against normality.

    • @mrknarf4438
      @mrknarf4438 Před 5 lety +26

      This also prevents them from writing actual feminine characters. Being a badass in combat, resolving things by fighting, flexing your muscles are all masculine traits. It's encoded in us, through dna and testosterone, and it's just generally how men tend to act, so a "SuperMan" is the guy who punches the hardest. Females are more caring, better at strategies, at uniting people, at supporting all around, at deflating fights and hitting with their tongues and wits instead of punches. A "SuperWoman" shouldn't just be a genderbent Superman, she should be very different, just as badass, but with a different set of skills.

    • @Seele2015au
      @Seele2015au Před 5 lety +13

      @@mrknarf4438 Indeed: that is why the "sex change" movies such as "Ocean's 8", "Ghostbusters" (2016), etc, do not work.

    • @Aethuviel
      @Aethuviel Před 5 lety +35

      Yeah, I barf a bit in my mouth every time I hear that phrase. I think it originates from the time when we were used to the majority of female characters being fainting damsels, "Oh save me, big hunky brave man!" with absolutely no personality, goals, or purpose beyond being a plot device.
      So, post-feminism, they had to counter that with STRONG women, who are so STRONG that a 16 year old girl with next to no training can beat down a bunch of highly trained men twice her size, she doesn't need to man to save her because she's STRONG and she can be beaten and raped and tortured but she doesn't ever cry or get traumatized because she's STRONG and she masters everything instantly because she's STRONG and... yeah. Enter the Mary Sue. Who has absolutely no personality, goals, or purpose beyond being a political mouthpiece.
      We shouldn't write "strong" characters. We should write REALISTIC and THREE-DIMENSIONAL characters.
      Characters we can relate to, that feel like real people.
      I'm actually quite sick of the narrative in later years, that if a female character likes to wear feminine clothes or doesn't know how to use weapons, she's "nothing". I heard people complaning about Daenerys in GoT years ago that she sucks because she doesn't wield a sword herself. Having three dragons and commanding an army... nah. She wears dresses, and doesn't get into battles herself, so she's not "strong" enough. That Sansa sucks because she's girly and cries (she's a teenage girl who has suffered great trauma, what did you expect?), et cetera.
      Write "strong" characters (whatever that means), if it makes sense and it's who they are.
      Write "weak" characters (if you mean physical or mental abilities), if it makes sense and it's who they are.
      And don't care what's PC.

    • @bigorange2082
      @bigorange2082 Před 5 lety +12

      Nolan but then they make the male characters around them stupid and incompetent.

  • @sergeantarchdornan3013
    @sergeantarchdornan3013 Před 4 lety +305

    Random sjw: “You hate the last Jedi Because they have strong female characters”
    Me using the same logic: “your a Nazi because you support animal rights and hitler did also”

    • @IgorSalaj3578
      @IgorSalaj3578 Před 4 lety +26

      Me: Strong female characters MY ASS!!! Your pathetic attempts to push strong female characters only sully the already existing strong characters who happen to be female

    • @thealrighty3534
      @thealrighty3534 Před 4 lety +31

      Do you like water? Well Hitler also drank water. You are a nazi because you drink water and also breathe air. GUESS WHAT ELSE! Hitler was born. So if you were born too, you are Hitler.

    • @donjoe7529
      @donjoe7529 Před 4 lety +1

      sooo annoying, one similarly happened to me recently... 'wait, you LIKE this? dont you know SOYmilk is one of the ingredients? you must be a liberal... you support socialism! i bet you want to vote for bernie and aoc'

    • @theexplodingdiamonddominic9124
      @theexplodingdiamonddominic9124 Před 4 lety +1

      Are you the club penguin is kil guy

    • @OXY187
      @OXY187 Před 4 lety

      WHERE IS YOUR POWER ARMOR? MORONNN!!!!

  • @jjmiles7173
    @jjmiles7173 Před 4 lety +64

    There is one thing to blame...
    "Ego".
    When a writer(Of any gender) with an Ego develops a main character, they will make the character how they want to be.
    Mary Sue.
    Gary Stu.

    • @2ndairborneguy790
      @2ndairborneguy790 Před 4 lety +4

      These people act like we don't dissect Gary Stus. There are many they people notice.

    • @jjmiles7173
      @jjmiles7173 Před 4 lety +1

      @@2ndairborneguy790 And some Gary Stus are only Gary Stus in personality alone(like Goku).

    • @2ndairborneguy790
      @2ndairborneguy790 Před 4 lety +4

      @@jjmiles7173 well there are 7 factors that make up a Gary Stu/Mary Sue
      - Being Overpowered
      - Having no logical explanation for that power
      - Having little personality
      - Lacking concrete goals
      - Being perfectly morally good
      - Never failing or showing a moment of character flaw
      - Being instantly liked by people for some bizarre reason.
      Rey fits all of these, whereas Goku only fits some of these.

    • @jjmiles7173
      @jjmiles7173 Před 4 lety +2

      @@2ndairborneguy790 To be fair....
      Goku gets stronger when he fails, and personally I think Plot Armor factors in the source should also be a factor.

    • @2ndairborneguy790
      @2ndairborneguy790 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jjmiles7173 well "never fails" is part of that. When the plot works to ma L sure you dont die (like kylo getting shot so Rey can beat him)

  • @angeldude101
    @angeldude101 Před 5 lety +394

    _Sometime in 1985-86 at Nintendo_
    "Wouldn't it be funny is Samus was a Woman?"
    ...
    "MAKE IT SO!"
    And one of the most badass female characters was born on a whim after most of the game had been developed.

    • @realjoemavro
      @realjoemavro Před 5 lety +21

      Samus is one of the greatest bounty hunters in all of fiction, right up there with the Fetts and Spike Spiegel. I even thought she was handled fairly well in Other M, even though the game itself wasn't that good.

    • @-Ryu
      @-Ryu Před 5 lety +21

      Samus is a good example of strong female characters
      Rey is an example of shitty woke politics in star wars

    • @kylefrank638
      @kylefrank638 Před 5 lety +22

      Not trying to start a "woke" competition or anything, but when I was 9, I watched Raiders of the Lost Ark and thought Marion was really cool. Like, she loses as much as she wins, just like Indiana Jones himself. That's what makes characters endearing. They can't just be perfect and be on top of every situation they're thrust into.

    • @JK-xt5ex
      @JK-xt5ex Před 5 lety +1

      CAPTAIN FALCON

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@-Ryu Oh grow up. There's nothing political in the new SW.

  • @Metruzanca
    @Metruzanca Před 5 lety +397

    When you mention making her a woman as an after thought I immediately thought of one of my most favorite franchises: metroid. Where making Samus a girl was purely an afterthought, one that's not designed to be made a big deal of. The game is made to be enjoyable without knowing who you are playing as. Then a reveal "hey you're a girl btw" and she becomes one of the most beloved characters in gaming.

    • @ch.illmatic
      @ch.illmatic Před 5 lety +13

      Samus is pretty damn cool, although me being a silly young boy, I always thought she and megaman were related lol

    • @isauldron4337
      @isauldron4337 Před 5 lety +3

      Well said.!

    • @KindredBrujah
      @KindredBrujah Před 5 lety +13

      Great example! A situation where a fanbase actually liked a character _more_ after learning she was female, having already enjoyed the character essentially genderless beforehand.

  • @quintincastro7430
    @quintincastro7430 Před 5 lety +148

    Just make a good story with good characters and people will watch it

  • @BioGoji-zm5ph
    @BioGoji-zm5ph Před 4 lety +94

    I wish George Carlin had lived longer. I would LOVE to hear the guy go on a rant about the shit we have going on in today's world.

    • @jasondyrkacz8270
      @jasondyrkacz8270 Před 4 lety +4

      We do have Bill Burr having George Carlin moments.

    • @TheMoose126
      @TheMoose126 Před 4 lety +1

      I think they killed him cuz he was telling ppl the truth

    • @ertymexx
      @ertymexx Před 4 lety +2

      He would probably hand it to both sides of the fandom though. ;-)

    • @youknowyoufuckedupright3058
      @youknowyoufuckedupright3058 Před 4 lety +1

      That's why we still have Dave Chappelle.

    • @LearnedSophistry
      @LearnedSophistry Před 4 lety

      Mason Dahr they shot him with the CIA heart attack gun early on in his life. Killed him way too early. I’m just grateful they haven’t shot Noam Chomsky or others with it yet

  • @ursaber
    @ursaber Před 5 lety +907

    Its the personality of a female character or any character in general that matters. Not their testicles or vaginas. Rey simply has no nuance, no personality, no charm, no charisma, no pull, no interesting history or backstory. She's literally a blank slate character who came out of nowhere and somehow she's the most special person in the galaxy without a reason for it or without any struggle or hardship.

    • @thenomad4606
      @thenomad4606 Před 5 lety +27

      People are people. Identity politics divides us. But you must look beyond to peoples' collective humanity.
      I thought we knew that...

    • @ursaber
      @ursaber Před 5 lety +10

      @@thenomad4606 Oh we do know it. Sometimes, we just don't care about rational logic and just go with whatever the fuck we want regardless. Das the problem with us in modern pop culture.

    • @thenomad4606
      @thenomad4606 Před 5 lety +26

      @@ursaber I think that the problem is recent. We knew that identity politics and racism and what-not was already bad. But now the mainstream media has resurrected this type of thinking. It could lead to actual racism. In fact, I believe it already has.

    • @ursaber
      @ursaber Před 5 lety +8

      @@thenomad4606 identity politics is all exclusively about racism. racism was used mainly for people of color but now its for literally everything. skin color, beliefs, mannerism, sexual orientation, just being who and what you are.

    • @Armoless
      @Armoless Před 5 lety +22

      "You don't like me because I'm -insert reason here- "
      It is an escape. Blame the other person for something they don't like about you.
      For me I get it, I understand some people don't like me because I am an asshole! But I don't go around telling people they should love me and stop being assholist! That'd be crazy... So no.. I blame it on being Italian, "You just don't liked Italians."

  • @andreydikit652
    @andreydikit652 Před 5 lety +1141

    Rey was such a "wtf?" character. She could do anything, everything, and wasn't bad at it. There were no struggles, no hurdles to climb, she was just always the winner, always the best. Beat down trained Empire troopers by herself? Sure. Pilot the Millennium Falcon better than its owner? Yup. Defeat a trained dark jedi in saber-combat? Or course. Defeat numerous elite guards of the main antagonist with very little combat training? Damn straight. It's those little dumb things that pile up higher and higher that tend to annoy me.

    • @blupool867
      @blupool867 Před 5 lety +30

      research the movie, she makes mistakes all the time, so I never understand this arguement. She even seems cringy sometimes

    • @andreydikit652
      @andreydikit652 Před 5 lety +127

      ​@@blupool867
      The mistakes she makes doesn't take away from the fact that there are things she should not be able to do, because being able to do them makes no sense. Take her lightsaber duel with Kylo-Ren, for example. It makes no sense for her to handle a lightsaber so easily. She wasn't great at it, but she didn't suck either. She was supposed to suck and even cut her limbs off. A lightsaber is nothing like her staff, or any other sword. The weight is only present on the hilt; the beam portion of it has no weight because it's composed of pure energy. Realistically, that should make the weapon very unbalanced. It should be extremely difficult to swing it around like a normal sword because the blade is weightless, and we naturally use the weight of the blade to lead weapon swings.
      It would be like swinging around a flashlight. An overhead strike with a flashlight, pretending the light portion is a beam, should not deal much damage because of the absence of weight, when it makes contact with another user's lightsaber. No weight means no gravity, which means no momentum created on every weapon swing. Before her duel with Kylo-Ren, Rey never had formal lightsaber training. This means she was using the lightsaber the same way she would use any other weapon with weight. That is a very bad idea. Using a lightsaber against inanimate objects, like a door or a brick, is fine. Those items won't resist, but a person will. In a lightsaber duel, physical strength is very much required. Kylo-Ren, as we've seen, is very fit. Even if he had an injury, overpowering Rey should have been easy. That fight is pure nonsense.
      Learning not to hurt yourself with a lightsaber should take a very long time of training. Yet she, somehow, skipped months (generously speaking) of lightsaber familiarization training.

    • @TerryAVanguard
      @TerryAVanguard Před 5 lety +18

      @@andreydikit652 okay so first of swinging a lightsaber is no different then swinging a chefs knife around, the lack of weight actually makes it a lot easier to control and maneuver. If anything the lack of weight means a welder won't have a problem welding it but is more like to forget its length and danger an cut themselfs with the spinny moves movies love but not so much with the regular sword fighting moves.
      As far as kylos wound, by your same logic a laser should have no weight behind it and yet the crossbow that kylo was shot with in the organs had enough weight to throw a trooper head over heals into the air. He the chased them down on foot in the freezing cold. Kylo should have been dead dead, he was a monster to keep moving after that hit. He then had a fight with fin, granted he won it pretty easily but it still would have tired him out further.
      Her latter fight with the elite guards was alot less realistic as unlike Yoda, Luke didn't train her at all. Self training can do a lot but, a great teacher will make a big difference and without it it would take longer to get so proficient.
      Though even though Luke has Yoda, he really dosent have a sparring partner(as yodas to old) untill he faces Darth Vader who is considered to be one of the best Saber fighters of all time.
      The time table is kind of iffy there but it was probably only a few days at most a few months. The show time passing for Rey and Luke but a month long chase scene through space seems silly.
      Anakin Skywalker pod race expert who built his own pod, a Droid and took out a space base at the age of what 8 maybe 13, would say becomes a master jedi by 18 but he had the help of the full council though he was one of the youngest jedi ever to become a master
      Vs ray who is 18-22 and has been working with machinessince she was 5-8 on a planet where the people would steal and ripe her off if the could.
      I agree that she definitely has some over the top feets but I also the alot of the ones people have problems with aren't takening everything into account.

    • @user-xb5bz4fu9o
      @user-xb5bz4fu9o Před 5 lety +8

      @@andreydikit652 If we're going to use that interpretation of how hard a light saber is to handle, than Luke should not have been able to understand it as quickly as he did. Even with training, there should have been a much longer grace period. And besides, during the Kylo Ren fight not only was Kylo Ren emotionally distracted from KILLING HIS FATHER and pretty badly injured, he wasn't trying to kill her. He wanted to turn her while she just wanted to win, big difference.

    • @andreydikit652
      @andreydikit652 Před 5 lety +18

      ​@@TerryAVanguard
      When I said swinging a lightsaber is difficult, I wasn't pertaining to the near-weightless aspect of it. I was pointing to the fact that it would be too a little too easy (as in dangerous) to swing it without weight and gravity to act as a counterbalance, especially with the amount of strength it usually requires to strike another user's lightsaber. Naturally, when a sword, or any other weighted object, is swung, a certain amount of physical force is included to create momentum that not only carries the weapon to its intended destination, but to deliver damage. In the case of the lightsaber, the damage dealt is more dependent on the actual force of the swing and the saber itself; basically, weight, gravity, and momentum have no place in that equation. Since Kylo-Ren also has a lightsaber, the deciding factor would be skill, stamina, and strength. Kylo-Ren had her beat in strength and skill, but his stamina was taxed from previous injuries. However, it didn't seem to bother him very much in the beginning of their fight. It was only after Rey's "closing and opening of eyes" moment (a very cheesy way of focusing the mind/body, done in many movies and shows) where she started to overpower him. I assume that was the moment when she started gathering the force to strengthen herself, a technique she should not have known yet due to lack of instruction.

  • @tosh40638
    @tosh40638 Před 5 lety +52

    TLJ doesn't actually portray strong female characters. Sure it has characters that are strong with the force (Rey and Leia) or in positions of power (Holdo) but they aren't emotionally strong people.
    Rey forgets that Kylo Ren murdered his own father in front of her as soon as she saw him shirtless. She then had to go see him because she suddenly feels a connection to him. What does this say about women?
    Then we have Holdo. She doesn't tell anyone what her plan was because.... she's angry with Po? That results in a mutiny in a very critical time. And it wasn't just Po that mutinied either. So it's not just Po she kept out of the loop, there were others. She killed morale on her ship at a critical time, which resulted in a mutiny.
    Then we have to consider Holdo and Leia's plan to go to Helms Deep. The movie tells us it's a good plan, but is it? Something like 90% of the Resistance dies, and the only reason they all didn't die is because a man Luke Skywalker shows up to help them escape.
    Now we need to consider Po's plan. It might have face everyone if it weren't for the fact that Rose illegally parked on casino planet. And besides that, Finn was attempting to save everyone and is prevented from prevented from doing that by Rose, because of her feelings. So this movie portrays women as being unable to control their feelings in combat situations, making them or for that role.
    Now I don't believe women make for bad soldiers and bad leaders because they can't control their emotions. But this is exactly what was put on screen in TLJ.
    But Disney was very successful in getting out ahead of the issues of the movie and controlling the narrative. They made sure anyone that disliked the female Chargers in their movie would immediately be labelled a misogynist. In this way they avoided the criticism that they put out a movie that portrays women negatively. Which is exactly what they did.
    In some ways I have to admire Disney's ability to spin doctor this. They made a movie were women are compromise by their emotions and make objectively bad decisions because of it, and not only were able to control all criticism on that, but they slanted so that any criticism about them portraying women poorly is labelled as sexist.
    So for those of us that actually wanted to see string women in Star Wars and are disappointed that we didn't get that in TLJ, we aren't even allowed to express that disappointment for fear of being labeled a misogynist.

    • @t3jf
      @t3jf Před 3 lety

      @TofAnimation affirmative action put them in charge I guess. Wasn't Han the general in Return of the Jedi but then they made him this clueless idiot in Force Awakens.

  • @sophiabeebeeboo4579
    @sophiabeebeeboo4579 Před 4 lety +42

    Honestly a character I’ve always thought as a ‘strong female character’ is Coraline Jones from Coraline (both the book and movie but I’m gonna narrow in on the movie cuz I know it better) Coraline Jones persistently throughout the film stays focus on her goals... hardly ever getting sidetracked by other things and people despite there being many things and people that actually, literally distract her. She remains focused on saving her parents when she believes they’ve been taken by the other mother in the other world. And how she’s so friggen brave for going into the other world and doing whatever it takes to get them back. Do you have any idea the f***ing courage you have to have to go into another world you know you cannot trust and face countless frightening situations and people to save your parents? Especially since she’s only 11 years old and just the night before she was feeling lonely and isolated and lost and confused and was sulking in her pillow wondering if she’d actually even make it out alive and see her parents ever again? I mean... like damn. Also just her personality too. She is full of it...personality that is lol. She is vibrant and dreamy and sarcastic and effortlessly humour full. A strong character in general always has depth to them and layers and Coraline has all of that. She has a sort of charm to her that almost instantly makes you like her. She’s brave, she’s determined, she’s resilient and you know what? She’s introverted. Why is it that being introverted is some sort of flaw that the main character needs to over come in stories? It’s not. It’s simply a personality trait. Coraline Jones was seriously a big role model for me when I was 7. She taught me how bravery works: how you can be terrified and that’s okay, it’s how you push that fear aside and go through with it to protect the ones you love that counts, to figure for what you believe in, for what’s right She taught me the difference between right and wrong. She taught me that it’s okay to not be perfect and to make mistakes. I seriously think Coraline Jones is a very strong female character and a strong character overall. And that’s just because she’s flawed and layered and you learn something from her not as a character but as a human being. And that seriously is the greatest gift a reader, viewer, whatever can receive from that someone.

    • @ARandomSpace
      @ARandomSpace Před 2 lety +1

      Actually, Coraline's young age may have prevented her from being too scared of going into the button world. Kids are crazy.

  • @RogueFox2185
    @RogueFox2185 Před 5 lety +449

    We just want relatable female characters, it can be done without making them OP and unlikeable to the point where the audience roots for the villain to just kill them.

    • @Hunting380
      @Hunting380 Před 5 lety +28

      that is soo the last jedi XD

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 Před 5 lety +2

      Did you really root for Vice-Admiral Holdo's death?

    • @RogueFox2185
      @RogueFox2185 Před 5 lety +28

      I did after the resistance ships were getting blown up and Leia explained the plan to Poe, at that point I was just hoping that TFO would take her out.

    • @21Roofdog
      @21Roofdog Před 5 lety +10

      that would actualy be a movie i'd watch. Get a strong sjw character be the main person in your film so everybody normal starts rooting for the bad guys to win. And then kill off said character in the most gruwesome way imaginable :D

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 Před 5 lety +3

      Didn't they do that in Solo?

  • @nateavery2875
    @nateavery2875 Před 5 lety +281

    Btw. Alita was really good.

    • @RedLeader327
      @RedLeader327 Před 5 lety +14

      Hell yes

    • @techno639
      @techno639 Před 5 lety +6

      I didn't see it yet but I heard mixed reviews of it

    • @crazytidy2426
      @crazytidy2426 Před 5 lety +18

      @@techno639 the story had a few flaws, but the actual character was great.

    • @techno639
      @techno639 Před 5 lety +3

      @@crazytidy2426 Yeah so I've heard. I also heard mixed reviews of Captain Marvel

    • @freierHimmel
      @freierHimmel Před 5 lety

      @@techno639 As far as the honest reviews go: Every white male character in this movie is depicted in a negative light and as putting her down. Arnold Schwarzenegger is symbolicly beheaded and she stands up from the shackles of the white males (the "patriarchy") and realizes that she can do anything. Thats basicly the subplot. The feminism is subtile (not as ridicilously obvious as the the Ghostbusters reboot). And Larson performs like a wooden Log even in her highly emotional scenes. The movie is said to be still entertaining, as for the Cat, Nick Fury and "Captain Feminists" best friend (they claim to be besties forever but are said to have no detectable emotional connection).

  • @kityhawk2000
    @kityhawk2000 Před 5 lety +47

    As a man I know nothing about being a woman, but I'm assuming that most women don't have power, privilege and respect handed to them on a silver platter. Brie Larson did an interview where she talks about how hard it is to be a woman in Hollywood, and presumably many women have to struggle and fight very hard to be at the peak of their professions. But she is playing a character who doesn't have to struggle at all (apart from that brief falling down montage). Any time CPT Marvel needs more power she's is granted it. She becomes the most powerful character in the MCU barely breaking a sweat. To say this is representative of women seems strange to me as I doubt many women's struggles to the top are as easy overcome as CPT Marvel's

    • @TheSurrealist.
      @TheSurrealist. Před 4 lety

      Yeah it’s called free food.

    • @cheerbabeF17
      @cheerbabeF17 Před 4 lety +1

      Here's why I love Captain Marvel. When a man told her to fight him without her power to "prove" she was really "better" than him, she blasted him in the face. She didnt hold back and lose a fight so she could play by imaginary and arbitrary rules to make a man feel good about himself.

    • @cheerbabeF17
      @cheerbabeF17 Před 4 lety +1

      @European Colonist I'm not. I was excited for that moment in theater. I (as a woman) grow up around boys and men who'd change the rules the moment I was besting them so that I could "prove" I was truly better than them despite clearly being better. This moment was great because it perfectly represented men trying to move the goal line on women and a woman saying no.

    • @mish375
      @mish375 Před 4 lety +6

      @@cheerbabeF17 Except that Captain Marvel had no character arc or struggle. It would have had more weight if she she had an arc like that but she didn't apparently. Even in Endgame she was so arrogant in her short scenes and OP that she was pretty much the epitome of everything wrong with the strong female trope that I worried they were going to do. Couple that with the actress's massive ego, and it just makes her further unlikeable.

    • @Missingno_Miner
      @Missingno_Miner Před 4 lety +3

      Tbh coming from Brie Larson, I dont feel any of the sympathy she is trying to get. She's an narcissistic piece of shit. Just about any other actor or actress, I would feel sympathy for, but Larson? No. She doesnt deserve it.

  • @Redneck_Technophile
    @Redneck_Technophile Před 5 lety +65

    How to make good female characters:
    Step 1 - make a good character
    Step 2 - make that character happen to be female
    How not to make good female characters:
    Step 1 - make the character female
    Step 2 - make that character happen to be good

    • @lawrenceadriennevalero3633
      @lawrenceadriennevalero3633 Před 2 lety

      @Gabriella Maroney
      dont do *female* problem, do female *problem*

    • @lawrenceadriennevalero3633
      @lawrenceadriennevalero3633 Před 2 lety

      @Gabriella Maroney
      something similar to that. A truggling parent having a hard time understand and interacting with her child.

  • @scifigeezer5271
    @scifigeezer5271 Před 5 lety +196

    It is funny how they conveniently forget that most men like Ellen Ripley, Sarah Conner, Wonder Woman, Black Widow, Alita, Trinity, Furiosa, Hit Girl, Leia, Officer Lewis, Atomic Blonde, Lucy, Emily Blunt in Edge of Tomorrow, Major from Ghost in the Shell, Gina Carano in Haywire, Geena Davis in The Long Kiss Goodnight, and anything starring Michelle Yeoh.

    • @jasonbrown4526
      @jasonbrown4526 Před 5 lety +6

      Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon was awesome.

    • @michaeljacquart7791
      @michaeljacquart7791 Před 5 lety +22

      The Bride, Vernita Green, and O-Ren from Kill Bill, Mrs. Brisby from Secret of NIMH, basically every female in the Aliens movie, X-23 from Logan, Dr. Sattler Jurassic Park, the lionesses Lion King. Not all lead roles but powerful characters who have inspired many people.

    • @pkconred7960
      @pkconred7960 Před 5 lety

      No Beatrix Kiddo?

    • @aquilesriffo
      @aquilesriffo Před 5 lety +1

      Because neither the protagonist or the character speaks in 'Misandry' tongue

    • @noxian3006
      @noxian3006 Před 5 lety

      True

  • @selinnazsur2328
    @selinnazsur2328 Před 5 lety +978

    Lol I'm a woman and I'd rather have a creepy bug-eyed alien angel of war and destruction in cinemas than an overpowered lifeless mannequin that has Kristen Stewart's emotional range in Twilight. Brie pulled a plank face since apparently that's what "strong women" look like and it's hilarious.

    • @wumpusrat
      @wumpusrat Před 5 lety +116

      It's kind of funny to watch, really. Over the last few years, maybe upwards of a decade, the people who write stuff like that (who have come to be dubbed SJWs) seem to think that you can only be a "strong female character" if you divorce yourself from all feminine traits. You have to talk, act, move, and think like a man, at all times. You can never show emotional weakness, compassion, any motherly instincts, be a sexual or sexy being, etc. Nope. You have to be no-holds-barred muy macho all the time. You can see it really clearly in the SJW Marvel comics. Hell, they even make the female characters flat-chested and square-jawed, to make them even more manly. It's eye-rollingly cringy.

    • @lisapepin926
      @lisapepin926 Před 5 lety +10

      Thank you. I couldn't have said it better myself (including Kristen's inability to show emotion!)

    • @Bonez0r
      @Bonez0r Před 5 lety +27

      @@wumpusrat I stopped reading Marvel comics about 15 years ago so i don't know their current state. But when you mention flat chests I think that's probably more of an (exaggerated) reaction to the period before that where most female characters were walking around with huge balloons under (and often hanging half out of) their costumes. Obviously to keep their male teen audience interested, but I think it's understandable that they wanted to try to get a wider audience so they changed it. Hell, I was a teenage boy when I started reading them and even I thought the mega boobs were too much. And the characters were interesting enough in their own right (at least in the 80s and 90s when I read them), they had some brilliant writers and didn't need the extreme bodies to keep people reading.

    • @wumpusrat
      @wumpusrat Před 5 lety +37

      @@Bonez0r
      The problem is their "wider audience" didn't show up. Sales have plummeted for pretty much all Marvel titles ever since they embraced the SJW mindset. Comics that used to sell 100k+ per issue now sell 50k, and others that sold in the 60-70k range are selling 20k. Their new titles, which push heavy SJW politics, sell anywhere from 8-15k per issue. Back when Shooter was in charge, if a comic dropped below 60k it was likely going to be cancelled. Now comics regularly sell around 18k for their #1 (and they CONSTANTLY relaunch #1 comics, just trying to sucker people into buying them when they 'start over'), and then drop off by about 50% after 1-2 issues.
      Superheroes are supposed to be larger than life, colorful idealized people. Not all the female characters were sporting DD cup boobs. Most of them had pretty average chest sizes, with a few smaller, and a few larger (depending on the artist), just like real life. Making all the women flat-chested and the same personality doesn't help create appeal. It just makes people get bored and leave. Or worse, they completely ruin a character, like Coates did with his Black Panther and the Crew comic, where he turned Storm into an angry anti-white racist. Wtf.

    • @kaitourobin3206
      @kaitourobin3206 Před 5 lety +19

      @@Bonez0r as a E cup women there need to balance of different sizes. Having all flat chest is not realist. The solution isnt changing size but shape. A artist tip is you can make a very modest women large chest and than have fan service type with a small one. They needed to change the outfits and vary the sizes not all flat chested.

  • @wk3820
    @wk3820 Před 5 lety +137

    Rey and Carol Danvers are not even characters. They're position statements with legs. It's hard to enjoy a movie starring a non-character.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety

      Spoken like a true Weinstein. They have as much character as Wonder Woman.

    • @saimircomani1339
      @saimircomani1339 Před 4 lety +15

      Schlock Jocks I have seen you on so many comments bashing wonder woman. Wonder woman is an actual character who grows throughout the movie. She has emotions and is not perfect. Diana thinks mankind is all good and simply under the influence of Ares but by the end of the movie she realizes that humanity is not only good and that bad people exist. She is not perfect like Captain Mary Sue.
      While Carol never fails in the movie , has no personality, a character arc that is barely the focus of the movie. Brie Larson’s performance is the worst she has ever given.
      You don’t care about Carol because she doesn’t feel like a human.
      Her character arc is letting out her emotions but she never shows any emotions except a few smiles and a slightly shocked face.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@saimircomani1339 "Wonder woman is an actual character who grows throughout the movie"
      Naive woman child becomes slightly less naive woman child. Wow, profound.
      "She has emotions and is not perfect."
      So is Carol, but she's dealing with brainwashing that messed up her emotions.
      "Diana thinks mankind is all good and simply under the influence of Ares but by the end of the movie she realizes that humanity is not only good and that bad people exist."
      Actually, she turned out to be RIGHT about Ares being involved so I guess she's essentially perfect.
      "She is not perfect like Captain Mary Sue. "
      We're talking about Carol, not Steve Rogers. He's a Captain Sue if you get down to it.
      "While Carol never fails in the movie , has no personality, a character arc that is barely the focus of the movie."
      Neither did Steve Rogers, in his first film.
      "Brie Larson’s performance is the worst she has ever given. "
      She's playing someone brainwashed into being emotionless. How is she SUPPOSED to act? You hate Robocop too?
      "You don’t care about Carol because she doesn’t feel like a human."
      At the start, she isn't.
      "Her character arc is letting out her emotions"
      No, it's about her realizing she doesn't need to live by the Supreme Intelligence's commands and Yon-Rogg's standards. It's a humanist story of someone breaking free of the shackles they've been forced into.

    • @samantaraafat8526
      @samantaraafat8526 Před 4 lety +12

      Dude, you’re such a troll. If you like Captain Marvel and not Wonder Woman, that’s completely fine. But saying that’s Captain Marvel is an objectively good character and Wonder Woman isn’t is plain wrong and not true.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety

      @@samantaraafat8526 How is Captain Marvel objectively bad? I want to hear this.

  • @scottsaunders5453
    @scottsaunders5453 Před 5 lety +57

    One example to also toss in with the movies you mentioned is Eowyn from 'Lord of the Rings.' Her killing the Witch King after proclaiming 'I am no man' got a big round of applause from everyone in the theater when I saw the movie.

    • @IgorSalaj3578
      @IgorSalaj3578 Před 5 lety +19

      Agreed. Even Eowynn had struggles to become who she is now

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +4

      If that happened now, the Anti-SJWs would cry about it and demand her head.

    • @whyarewestillherejusttosuf1373
      @whyarewestillherejusttosuf1373 Před 4 lety +11

      @@ShadowSonic2 "If that happened now"
      Pal, it's still happening. LOTR is still widely watched and discussed. It literally won't end. And people still praise Eowyn, they still respect Galadriel just like they respect Gandalf, still adore Arwen, etc. It's not about the gender, it's about the character. Eowyn was working hard to kill that dang Witch King, she'd lost almost everything. The same goes for Arwen too, she sacrificed herself and all that. Heck, even the characters that weren't in the movies (like Luthien) is also adored. Even Tauriel, who's not in the book. I'd said it before and I'l say it again: it's not about gender, it's avout the character.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +5

      @@whyarewestillherejusttosuf1373 Eowyn wasn't the lead, Galadrial was barely in the story, Arwen was barely in the story.
      Easy.

    • @joemiller1057
      @joemiller1057 Před 4 lety +3

      But that was actually relevant to the plot, she was told multiple times by theoden and other dudes she could not fight

  • @Blodhelm
    @Blodhelm Před 5 lety +267

    Ellen Ripley and Sarah Conner where two of the best characters in cinema.

    • @chiffmonkey
      @chiffmonkey Před 5 lety +51

      And you know what's notable about them? They both started off normal and earned the title of badass.

    • @vietnamd0820
      @vietnamd0820 Před 5 lety +3

      chiffmonkey
      Good point

    • @kylesprinkle7015
      @kylesprinkle7015 Před 5 lety +9

      @@chiffmonkey exactly, they were relatable in that they lived normal lives until they were forced into a corner and had to fight to survive, thus turning them into badasses, Sarah Connor finally had to step up when Kyle died, he wasn't there to protect her so she had to fend for herself. Ripley had her unit killed off and she was force to fight to survive, but now "strong female characters" Are Mary sues. They automatically are given the power to overpower just about anyone, they have no flaws and they are virtually perfect

    • @joshuabrown9398
      @joshuabrown9398 Před 5 lety

      Not even sarah comes to close ripley for me, shes a real baddass in Alien and Aliens

    • @brandonm5731
      @brandonm5731 Před 5 lety +5

      Is everybody forgetting furiosa in the new Mad Max?

  • @i.j.dragonfly3123
    @i.j.dragonfly3123 Před 5 lety +698

    Ironically, the whole "LOOK! A strong lady! How unusual and unique!" advertising strategy seems really sexist. If you really want to depict more women as being just as powerful and interesting as men (which I'm 100% on board with), shouldn't you just treat a strong female character as... normal?
    Putting something or someone on a pedestal for a trait they can't control might not be as overtly dangerous as degrading them for it, but it's just as annoying.
    This is all coming from me, a female writer who's currently doing a story about two girls saving their planet and falling in love. You just have to treat them like any other character. Give them strengths, flaws, fears and dreams. Those are far more interesting than gender.

    • @joythought
      @joythought Před 5 lety +71

      @@gamephreak5 according to some measures and not others. Sure, in sport the top male athletes are almost always stronger and faster than the top women in their sport but those top women athletes would wipe the floor with most guys in the sport. Thinking that women are weakened by emotions is to ignore the opposite truth that many guys lack emotional connection with others and that we live in a world that's likely to need both highly rational people and deeply connected people to achieve significant improvements that actually benefits the whole society.

    • @dabossman5650
      @dabossman5650 Před 5 lety +30

      @@gamephreak5 Yet there are MMA Women fighters that could beat up like around 80% of men doe

    • @promcheg
      @promcheg Před 5 lety +35

      @@gamephreak5 powerful, does not mean physically stronger. If you seen/read The Expanse, there is a ton of powerful women and most of them aren't really physically strong. There is also Alita: Battle Angel, who could probably break a strongest man in half, but the strongest thing about her is not physical but the uncompromising will to not back down.

    • @sbcd7808
      @sbcd7808 Před 5 lety +10

      Good luck with your story.

    • @brianwalsh9595
      @brianwalsh9595 Před 5 lety +1

      It is against morality.

  • @abcd12346768
    @abcd12346768 Před 5 lety +171

    They should make a female sith.
    That might be interisting.

    • @tiffanypersaud3518
      @tiffanypersaud3518 Před 5 lety +8

      Kazuki Yanai, oh I want to see that!

    • @UberMangaka
      @UberMangaka Před 5 lety +41

      Plot twist. Rey becomes sith when she doesn't get her way and Kylo realizes he's taken his emotions way too far and reigns them in just enough to be a gray jedi and save the day.

    • @austinosborne121
      @austinosborne121 Před 5 lety +38

      Asaj ventress

    • @lordpyron3934
      @lordpyron3934 Před 4 lety +5

      @@austinosborne121 I was just about to say that

    • @thedarkknight9021
      @thedarkknight9021 Před 4 lety +15

      @@austinosborne121 She is not properly a Sith, just a dark side user

  • @theartofmgtow6934
    @theartofmgtow6934 Před 4 lety +60

    And look at Scarlett Which in the MCU. Everyone, men included, love her while at the same time almost every universally hatted Captain Marvel.

  • @aidankeys8534
    @aidankeys8534 Před 5 lety +293

    Every action has an equal and opposite reaction.
    Push an agenda, you will get opinions pushing against, push harder and you will be pushed back harder.
    It’s a constant cycle of hate.

    • @MJ-jd7rs
      @MJ-jd7rs Před 5 lety +2

      Agreed. But that also goes both ways. Push back against an agenda, and they'll push that agenda even harder.

    • @brettsteinbook5370
      @brettsteinbook5370 Před 5 lety +10

      I don’t really care about the agenda. I hate bad movies. I hate being told I don’t like their agenda and I should go to hell because I don’t like bad movies.
      I happen to agree with the agenda. I just don’t like being told what I believe by anyone else.
      If you don’t believe that I don’t like your movie because it’s a shit pile, fine don’t believe me. But don’t tell me that the fact that I don’t like your movie makes me a racist bigot or misogynist.

    • @stepanbrazda5738
      @stepanbrazda5738 Před 5 lety

      Until someone takes a weapon and stop pushing and start cleansing the other side

    • @alexvogel610
      @alexvogel610 Před 5 lety +7

      A lot of my politics boils down to "I don't necessarily think they're wrong, but they're being assholes, so fuck 'em"

    • @leodouskyron5671
      @leodouskyron5671 Před 5 lety +12

      Actually the addenda started years back and led to all most all heros being White and male. That means if you don’t fit that category you felt left out and you pushed back. Now that those that were not represented had power some are going to push for that representation.
      But people with hack writing and other skills thought the only thing that was needed was the right biological bits or look. That was NEVER what we who wanted representation wanted. We never wanted those that liked the white male standard to be kicked or insulted, we never said or wanted to stop white males from being at the media “table”. We wanted a bigger table so everyone in the seats are in every part of the film.
      The problem is not that there is an addenda, it is that they have failed to give any of us what we wanted. I don’t know if you agree. But that is what I wanted and most people I know wanted. What we talked about. The way things are now no one is happy.

  • @davidcomito505
    @davidcomito505 Před 5 lety +342

    I was excited to see to Rey grow as a character but that didn't happen in Last Jedi. Forgive me if I'm disappointed.

    • @patrickdempsey1045
      @patrickdempsey1045 Před 5 lety +22

      That's because Rey didnt need any growing. She was already established as perfect in every conceivable way from the force awakens and didnt need any training whatsoever. That's what makes her a Mary sue.

    • @Spontaneous1984
      @Spontaneous1984 Před 5 lety +14

      ​@@patrickdempsey1045 People who say Rey didn't need to grow focus too much on the action scenes and believe (mistakenly in my opinion) that the action scenes defined her as a character. For me, and I assume David Comito, it was the Force vision Rey received after touching the light saber that truly drove Rey's character.
      i don't regard the action scenes as essential, at all, to Rey's character. The Jedi mind trick, reading Kylo's mind, beating Kylo in a light saber duel, avoiding detection and not needing extensive Jedi training to do the things she did in TFA, they could have removed that from the story and Rey would still have been Rey. Having said that, the writers made a huge blunder by including those action scenes.
      To me, the true character of Rey was her backstory. It was the Force vision, her being abandoned on Jakku, her trying to find a purpose.
      Rey was a badly written character for sure, but not beyond redemption. Unfortunately Rian Johnson ruined a perfect opportunity to develop her as a character. All she does in TLJ is stalk Luke Skywalker and try to find ways to get Kylo returned back to the light.
      I'm perfectly fine with the idea that her parents abandoned her for . . . what was it . . . drink money? Something like that. I mean, at least it wasn't something stupid like being a bastard child born out of wedlock, for example, Luke's daughter. . . . or being in any way related to the Skywalker's and Solo's.
      I still believe Rey can be "saved" as a character. There is one more movie in the trilogy. Maybe Jesus will appear to her in a dream and she will convert to Christianity. As long as Rey is still alive, there is still a possibility for salvation. (I'm kidding about Jesus btw.)
      I'm not all that fussed about alleged feminist influences in movies. What really puts me off is when you see aspects of their ideology in the movie itself, or when an actress like Brie Larson so blatantly and militantly proclaims a feminist agenda. Brie Larson really should learn to keep her trap shut.

    • @snowangel7980
      @snowangel7980 Před 5 lety

      The director change was apparently a large contributor to this. Cameron made a backstory for her, and then didn't get the opportunity to put it on screen. I'm hoping since he's back for the next one he'll try course correcting.

    • @randomperson8571
      @randomperson8571 Před 5 lety +6

      Same! I liked Rey in TFA. She had room to grow at the end of that movie. She was going to get training from Luke! Then TLJ came along and suddenly she didn't need any training, because... reasons.

    • @Fer00007
      @Fer00007 Před 5 lety

      i think the problem is rlly the movie itself because i got the impression that the last jedi was just to connect episode 7 with 9

  • @mbmmhm501
    @mbmmhm501 Před 5 lety +62

    Scarlet Witch, Nebula, Gamora, Black Widow, Valkyrie, and Okoye are all amazing female protagonists and it's insulting to us and them as actors/characters that the most bland, uninteresting character in all of the MCU is immediately going to overshadow them to stand on the hill that they built over the last 11 years.

    • @Gamelover254
      @Gamelover254 Před 5 lety +8

      I would KILL for a Scarlet Witch movie. Not even an origin story, just a movie about her like Spider-Man Homecoming but obviously more serious. What I like about her is that we’ve seen how much torture she has been through, losing so much and she still fights back and nearly killed thanos. Her aesthetic is just amazing but the great thing is that’s not all she has.
      She has proper motivation, emotion, an established arc & her powers are shown growing through the movies.
      Like honestly, she would be perfect for a movie. Shame she kinda got pushed aside to a mini tv series but I’m still glad we’re getting that at least.
      Wanda Maximoff ❤️

    • @mbmmhm501
      @mbmmhm501 Před 5 lety +5

      @@Gamelover254 I know man. She's got a really underappreciated character arc. And Elizabeth Olsen is definitely an amazing actress and could carry a movie on her own if they gave her a shot.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      ""Scarlet Witch, Nebula, Gamora, Black Widow, Valkyrie, and Okoye are all amazing female protagonists"
      So you're fine with women as long as they're Secondaries?

    • @johnstovall7503
      @johnstovall7503 Před 4 lety +9

      @@ShadowSonic2 You literally never understand ANYTHING anyone says. Talking to you in real life must be like punching a brick wall.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@johnstovall7503 I'm pointing out the stuff the OP doesn't want to admit. That those females named are all secondary characters and the real leading one gets criticized.

  • @igor6096
    @igor6096 Před 4 lety +14

    Honestly the "TRAITOR" stormtrooper had more personality then Rey

    • @Smerpyderp
      @Smerpyderp Před 3 lety +6

      At least he had an implied backstory, and therefore motivation. Rey has no motivation.

  • @killgriffinnow
    @killgriffinnow Před 5 lety +359

    The thing is, Ventress has always been my favourite Star Wars side character, yet whenever I say that Rey is a Mary Sue (which is a fact), I’m accused of being a sexist bigot. It’s infurating.

    • @vivekkandasamy5317
      @vivekkandasamy5317 Před 5 lety +39

      All TCW female characters > Disney's new female characters

    • @saricubra2867
      @saricubra2867 Před 5 lety +39

      Leia, Padme, Mon Mothma, Ahsoka Tano, Bo katan, Satine Kryze, Asajj Ventress, Sabine Wren, Hera Syndulla, Mara Jade >>>>>>>>>> Holdo, Rey, Rose Tico.

    • @leodouskyron5671
      @leodouskyron5671 Před 5 lety +12

      Practice with me “I loved Ventress but Rey sucks”. Make them step over the first part - for the win.

    • @EnlightenAlchemist
      @EnlightenAlchemist Před 5 lety +5

      I also love ventress.

    • @Dakarai_Knight
      @Dakarai_Knight Před 5 lety +19

      Friendshipismagic what I love is arguing with them wait for them to call me a misogynist then inform them I’m an officer of a woman’s activism group and a slightly effeminate gay man. They implode

  • @tryhardshreck4784
    @tryhardshreck4784 Před 5 lety +501

    I don’t know anyone who hates Jyn Erso *sorry if I misspelled* because of her gender.

    • @isaac14ac
      @isaac14ac Před 5 lety +63

      Devin Smith She’s an alright character

    • @hardin2525
      @hardin2525 Před 5 lety +118

      If anyone doesn't like her, it is because Rogue One replaces the EU version of the Rebels getting the Death Star plan via Kyle Katarn.
      But besides that, she's alright.

    • @professorthox4499
      @professorthox4499 Před 5 lety +108

      She’s bland, but not awful.

    • @Armoless
      @Armoless Před 5 lety +15

      It's spell "Jan Ores"

    • @brettsteinbook5370
      @brettsteinbook5370 Před 5 lety +71

      Nope. The flaws in that movie have nothing to do with her. It is just disappointing on other issues but is by far my favorite Disney era Star Wars Movie by about 17 parsecs.

  • @darkwolf9253
    @darkwolf9253 Před 5 lety +13

    That's the thing Thor, the Sequel Trilogy was never about Star Wars. It was about 'look our protagonist is a strong woman'.

  • @mr.sinjin-smyth
    @mr.sinjin-smyth Před 5 lety +13

    Does not matter the race or gender. Just create well written characters, and people will enjoy them for the inspiration they bring.

  • @gamingmetstijn3917
    @gamingmetstijn3917 Před 5 lety +414

    Didn’t a lot of people like jessica jones because it was pretty good not because she was a woman but just a good character?

    • @l33lzonwh33lz
      @l33lzonwh33lz Před 5 lety +6

      GamingMetStijn very true!

    • @tintillor
      @tintillor Před 5 lety +10

      I was on the side of indifference with JJ. I only liked the first season due to Killgrave.

    • @liawinter5245
      @liawinter5245 Před 5 lety +21

      yeah - it seems to be a theme with me. can;t stand any books with female characters anymore, and have only found a few so far that i truly love - all wound up either being anti-heroes (because ya'll know the only good characters are the morally grey ones) or very bad-ass, intelligent characters that didn;t flaunt their feminity like a badge.
      it's why i love male characters so much and tend to towards them; i know a few people who have called me sexist because of this, despite being female myself. but, really, when nearly every book with a female protagonist is the same, where the male characters are dumbed down to make room for the all-might, all-intelligent queen, i just can't stomach it. Hermione is a good example. as the series continued, the boys grew dumber and she grew smarter and smarter. i love intelligent female characters - cunning, manipulative, tactical, and just brilliant altogether, characters. but not characters like Hermoine, or characters like all the fucking females in fantasy romances.

    • @ShinyFood
      @ShinyFood Před 5 lety +2

      @@liawinter5245 i feel exactly the same way. I always look for a male character in books but its not always easy

    • @Drakonflare
      @Drakonflare Před 5 lety +4

      @@liawinter5245 If you want to give it a shot, try Wildbow's Worm. Excellent story with a cunning and tactical female protagonist who's still very human. Also has a a very big and diverse set of characters. Fair warning though; the story is rather dark.

  • @rubeng370
    @rubeng370 Před 5 lety +194

    Alita is one of my new favorite female action characters (outside the MCU) since Furiosa in Mad Max 4.

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 Před 5 lety +3

      There are a couple of problems with the two women there... yet they can be hand waved away with some psychological analysis. *Shrugs*
      Great Movie, just small minor details which prevent me from giving it higher than a 9/10.
      Edit: I'm surprised the Critics gave it a 60% and the audience is giving it some where around 90% 3.5+ stars, lol.
      Admittedly, I'm not sure how close to the source material the movie stayed to... as I have no inclination to watch Battle Angel Alita.

    • @fmabincarim34
      @fmabincarim34 Před 5 lety +12

      Just saw the movie. AWESOME!!!

    • @midgetwthahacksaw
      @midgetwthahacksaw Před 5 lety +18

      @@aralornwolf3140 As someone who HAS read the source material, Alita as a film is SPOT ON!
      It's a beautiful rendition of the first three volumes of the manga and it's wonderful!

    • @aralornwolf3140
      @aralornwolf3140 Před 5 lety +1

      It feels like there will be more movies about Alita, as the ending is so open ended.
      From other adoptions, if they stray too far from the source material, the other books can't be made into a movie (Example of two movies which made sure that the other novels couldn't be used: Phillip Pullman's Golden Compass and Christopher Paolini's Eragon). Are you saying that they deliberately made sure that they make the other volumes into coherent movie(s)?

    • @EuphoricCinema
      @EuphoricCinema Před 5 lety +11

      Me too! I just saw Alita Battle Angel today and she's one of my favorite characters now because of it

  • @andrewcarmichael2371
    @andrewcarmichael2371 Před 4 lety +22

    “Call to the attention to breaking of gender roles undermines the whole concept of gender equality by saying this is an exception and not the status quo.”
    Knuckles The Echidna.

  • @smdanny1
    @smdanny1 Před 5 lety +50

    Not so much of a paradox. People love strong females that love others back while people dislike/hate "strong" females that expect others to love them just because they're females.

  • @britbloc123
    @britbloc123 Před 5 lety +673

    Rey isn't a strong female character. She's a Disney Princess who opened all the loot boxes.

    • @poyi1013
      @poyi1013 Před 5 lety +13

      britbloc123 she’s LV 99 you newbs

    • @apothisiii5549
      @apothisiii5549 Před 5 lety +43

      Don't lump disney princesses in with rey. Some of them are actually good characters.

    • @britbloc123
      @britbloc123 Před 5 lety +14

      +ApothisIII
      The poing I was making is that Disney Princesses are often flawless, perfect and loved by absolutely everyone for no reason.
      Rather like a particular SW character we know...

    • @aleahlrb
      @aleahlrb Před 5 lety +5

      And it suddenly makes sense.
      Disney.

    • @uamedia898
      @uamedia898 Před 5 lety

      @Adam J. Harper 💯💯

  • @Rob-529
    @Rob-529 Před 5 lety +172

    I've always wondered why the Hollywood version of a strong woman, is that she's basically a man. Think about how strong women are portrayed and what they do that makes them 'strong'.

    • @RoreyG
      @RoreyG Před 5 lety +53

      Exactly! One of the best ways to illustrate a strong woman on film was in the ballroom scene of Wonder Woman. Diana carries herself with the beauty and grace of a woman but also with the iron will and determination normally associated with male action heroes. Compare that to Rey who's written like an idealized version of Luke Skywalker but with boobs.

    • @chiffmonkey
      @chiffmonkey Před 5 lety +17

      @@RoreyG Olenna Tyrell. Now that's a strong female character.

    • @i_chosen_one_ips432
      @i_chosen_one_ips432 Před 5 lety +3

      @@RoreyG yes very small boobs

    • @christianmbong
      @christianmbong Před 5 lety +10

      @@i_chosen_one_ips432 you're not helping our case

    • @bandotaku
      @bandotaku Před 5 lety +1

      @Alyssa Bennett I'd argue that they do flaunt her "womanhood" quite often, but for as many times as they do, they also try to balance it out with her actions. I don't really like her character as much as I did in the first couple of seasons, but I suppose she's not the worst.

  • @trucetruce335
    @trucetruce335 Před 4 lety +9

    I remember seeing someone say “The reason people love Leia but hate Rey is because Rey kicked ass without a bikini scene.” And I 🤢

  • @mayahdenman9401
    @mayahdenman9401 Před 4 lety +11

    Rey was not the best written character but at least I felt for her to an extent. Captain Marvel was just bland. She is the MCU's Bella from Twilight.

  • @andyofsandy2870
    @andyofsandy2870 Před 5 lety +220

    Never forget Bastila and Satele. Star wars will always be EU.

    • @michaelmckeay8203
      @michaelmckeay8203 Před 5 lety +4

      The Shaws are a great example of strong well written *female* charachters, as especially for Bastila it is actually a part of the story (though it makes less sense for me all ways choosing to play female Reven XD) where the plot at a point centers around her and the main charachters relationship, and how it saves her (unless your an ass XD) but even though that's what Star Wars fans like and respect are still called misogynists just because they dislike the new poorly written female charachters.
      A few more examples are;
      Ashoka
      Jaina
      And Mara Jade
      With many more to draw from from the EU. But most feminists do not do their research and just shout misogynist and bigot with facts and evidence to the contrary.
      The Shaws are some of my favorite EU charachters and they are actually well written.

    • @obsidiansinclaire3826
      @obsidiansinclaire3826 Před 5 lety +7

      @@michaelmckeay8203 the Shans were literally the best. I couldnt have asked for better adversaries :)

    • @papab34r
      @papab34r Před 5 lety +5

      Bastila is a really well written female character, one which dont try to compete in muscles with the main character but rather schools him/her like a child every time with smarts/wisdom, come to think of it, shes probably my favorite jedi character part from Qui Gon and yoda

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 5 lety +1

      ...yes (shreds a tear of left eye)...my girl Bastila. She is a new character in my sequel trilogy it takes place a hundred after episode 6.

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 5 lety

      @@michaelmckeay8203 ...yes...YES!!!

  • @dathmach8745
    @dathmach8745 Před 5 lety +864

    I'm fine with Strong Female Characters, not Mary Sues

    • @SkullCrusher-xk5wp
      @SkullCrusher-xk5wp Před 5 lety +43

      I've a problem with both because 'strong female character' gives off the impression that, that is all the character is. Just strong. That's it. There doesn't seem to be room for the character to experience being scared, angry, helpless or anything else. As a woman myself, I'm not saying I want damsels in distress, but I don't want the complete opposite of that either. I want female characters who embrace their 'human' side. The same thing can be said for males too. And for Mary Sues/Marty Stus, I mean, everyone hates them

    • @dathmach8745
      @dathmach8745 Před 5 lety +11

      @@SkullCrusher-xk5wp I mean, is that even a character? Someone who's always 'strong' doesn't seem like they have emotions. Definitely agree with you that those kinds of characters need work.

    • @SkullCrusher-xk5wp
      @SkullCrusher-xk5wp Před 5 lety +12

      @@dathmach8745 yep. Women cry. Women get pissed off. Women feel like they are out of their depth. Women get frickin injured (this makes me mad whenever a female character gets her ass handed to her, but comes away with a tiny scratch on the side of her cheek, like wtf)! And you should be able to show all that if it makes sense with the narrative, yet they don't and it's maddening.

    • @tiagogalvao654321
      @tiagogalvao654321 Před 5 lety +6

      How is captain marvel a mary sue and how does she differ from every other superhero in terms of bullshit

    • @Naveication
      @Naveication Před 5 lety +18

      @@tiagogalvao654321 she has no flaws, can do everything, is superior to everyone else in the movie both emotionally and physically, always does the right thing, no real motivation other than "this is what a good person would do"
      But she isn't the only one in the superhero franchise.
      Take a look at Ironman for example, first film was very well recieved by fans, Tony had his struggles, had flaws, was both emotionally and physically at his limit and got back on his feet with a lot of hard work.
      Great film, people loved it
      Now look at the second film. Tony was at the top the whole film, a rich, successful man who has everything, no more struggles, and his only few character flaws are only used for comedy relief. He had no issue with the villain (who was also badly written) and surprise surprise the movie flopped real hard
      Another good example is the matrix trilogy. First movie was amazing, everyone liked it, Neo was a regular emotional human going through his own journey of discovering this new perspective on his world. Working hard to get stronger, both failing and succeeding. He has his flaws, he struggles multiple times.
      Then second and third film: Hurr Durr Neo is basically God now and can do anything.
      And surprise surprise, the films were bad, who would have guessed it.
      The Superman franchise is also problematic and a lot of people don't like him because he can do virtually anything. But atleast the writers are aware of the problem in that case and try to give him some emotional baggage. And sometimes they can kinda pull it of and other times it's just silly and forced (Marthaaaa)
      Both Captain Marvel and Rey aren't depicted as humans, but as gods without flaws. They are at the top of their universe. Barely anyone can step up to them and additionally they always do the right thing, no mistakes, every conflict is just a matter of time when it's resolved and not a matter of if it can be resolved because they're perfect. They're Mary Sues just like many other characters in many other bad films.

  • @femmeboah7414
    @femmeboah7414 Před 5 lety +32

    Me through this video: just say it. Just say Brie Larson...
    Me at the end of the video: there it is

  • @laurahealy2163
    @laurahealy2163 Před 5 lety +9

    Hey, remember Trinity in "The Matrix Trilogy"? She was a strong female character and with Neo and Morpheus was integral to the story. Nobody made any negative comments about her.

  • @AbhijitBiswasDBZ
    @AbhijitBiswasDBZ Před 5 lety +211

    When did movies need to prove that men won't accept strong femald characters? We thrive on those, even in real life. Most of us have experienced our mothers standing up for us as kids, our partners having our backs when nobody is, very strong characters those are. Then there's so much more to talk about actually.
    We absolutely and obviously want that on screen but feminism is all about men always being on fault and women never doing anything wrong ever!
    So intentionally make bad movies and blame guys for not liking it is the way to go...

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety

      "We absolutely and obviously want that on screen"
      Videos like this and anything by Geeks and Gamers say otherwise.

    • @Kesiif
      @Kesiif Před 4 lety +2

      Strong women are more attractive than weak bitchy arrogant women.

    • @vibing6530
      @vibing6530 Před 4 lety

      @@Kesiif their appearance don't matter

    • @ItsBritneyBitch1
      @ItsBritneyBitch1 Před 4 lety

      The last two things you said especially is FACTS! 👏🏼

    • @multilolist
      @multilolist Před 4 lety +2

      That is not what feminism is about. It makes me sad that people think that. Most feminist are for equality for both. When people will finally understand that nobody can win in a war opposing men and women. It makes no sense. Don't let people who use the argument only to make more money, be the one on which you base of what feminism is about.

  • @BigCash-wt3jj
    @BigCash-wt3jj Před 5 lety +455

    When it comes to female characters I always think of the Wonder Woman ball room scene. She carried herself with such grace and beauty, while also being ready to dominate anyone that could have stood between her and her goal.

    • @gabymoekoe
      @gabymoekoe Před 5 lety +69

      Its Kenzybro Agreed, that is indeed a moment that showcases her as a great character, BUT it shouldn’t be the ONLY blueprint for a good female character.
      if it were, then it means they need to be graceful _and_ beautiful on top of being powerful, to be considered a good, strong character. That’s not true at all.
      A lot of female characters are great without having to be “feminine” (graceful/beautiful). Just like in real life, people are diverse, and there are women who are graceful & beautiful, but there are _also_ those who are neither, yet they are equally amazing and strong in their own ways.

    • @danieltatar7575
      @danieltatar7575 Před 5 lety +28

      I think there’s an interesting line there. If a character is void of feminine traits (doesn’t necessarily have to be beauty or even grace) I don’t think you can say she’s a great “female character”. She’s a great character who happens to be female. Ellen Ripley from Alien is in this category imo.
      A character like that is completely fine and can be amazing (obviously), but if you think the character being female is important to the role / moral of the story / setting, I think she should absolutely have some feminine traits (again, not talking about looks).

    • @JulesLife
      @JulesLife Před 5 lety +2

      Thank you for not saying "could of".

    • @blackonyx66
      @blackonyx66 Před 5 lety

      @@gabymoekoe name some. Not talking shit, just want examples to make my argument stronger

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 5 lety +2

      Wonder Woman is more of a Sue than Captain Marvel ever could be.

  • @blablahnothin1996
    @blablahnothin1996 Před 3 lety +9

    4:46 "Rational people that can seperate an actor from the role they play."
    Jar Jar: allow me to introduce myself

    • @hellacoorinna9995
      @hellacoorinna9995 Před 2 lety

      Darth Jar Jar did play the buffoon well, that it took many years for his true manipulation of Galactic events to become suspected.
      Glad you brought him up.

  • @JD92205
    @JD92205 Před 4 lety +10

    I enjoyed The Hunger Games series, Zero Dark Thirty, and Alita: Battle Angel. All of which have female leads who are well written and have a character arch. I hate forced characters that are forced and expected to be accepted. I have no issue with being attention to the lack of women in lead roles, I think it's a good thing. I don't care for the new star wars movies, and are the only ones I haven't watched. There was a ted talk about women in lead roles in movies a few years ago, it's worth checking out if you don't think women should be in that role because they're women

  • @Zathren
    @Zathren Před 5 lety +78

    I came here just to say I enjoyed Alita: Battle Angel so much, that I'm considering seeing it a second time in theaters. Really fun and awesome movie.

    • @Sorain1
      @Sorain1 Před 5 lety +5

      Suggestion: see if you can get a ticket for the 8th. I'm sure you'll figure out why swiftly or already know why.

    • @schrodingerskatze6192
      @schrodingerskatze6192 Před 5 lety +4

      I also saw it a second time today. You can tell that it was made with passion and truely feels unique and anime-esque.
      I love it! Just a blast to watch.

    • @LuchoVena
      @LuchoVena Před 5 lety +5

      never seen a movie twice before and even when I repeated I was still moved by it.

  • @darthbretticus9951
    @darthbretticus9951 Před 5 lety +355

    Mara Jade is a Million time more interesting than any new female character in Disney Star Wars

    • @serenadesilhout
      @serenadesilhout Před 5 lety +12

      Unfortunately she's not canon in the new Disney universe. Killing Luke makes it hard to see where her character fits here.

    • @elementer5617
      @elementer5617 Před 5 lety +17

      @Robert Ortiz-Wilson Thrawn in Rebels actually was very accurate to the Legends Thrawn. The only difference is that Legends Thrawn was more intimidating and his history is different.

    • @elementer5617
      @elementer5617 Před 5 lety +6

      @Robert Ortiz-Wilson Come on man. You can at least appreciate his theme music and Lars Mikkelsen's performance, right? Thrawn is like the Ernst Stavro Blofeld of the Star Wars universe.
      Still, he was accurate to the source material. Timothy Zahn himself was even impressed with how they handled the character.
      At the core, Thrawn is a gifted tactician and an artist who values intellect over brutality. That is pretty much what we saw in Rebels.
      The Legends version is superior, but the new canon version is still faithful enough. The way they handled Thrawn makes me even believe Filoni can be trusted with re-canonizing Mara Jade, another brilliant character by Zahn. Or even Kyle Katarn.

    • @ggt47
      @ggt47 Před 5 lety

      YES!!!

    • @ravenousfire7798
      @ravenousfire7798 Před 5 lety +1

      Mara was one of my favorites. Admiral Daala and Jaina were also good.

  • @zomaariemand5650
    @zomaariemand5650 Před 5 lety +79

    I watched Captain Marvel and I really didn't see the problem, yes there were some parts were the kid was saying things someone at here age really wouldn't say and which was obviously agenda pushing, but overal I liked the movie and the character.
    Also I want to complement you for calmly, rationaly pointing out what all parties are saying and thinking. Most people are screaming their own opinion so hard that it's hard to understand what the AVERAGE person thinks. So thanks, good job and keep it up!

    • @alucard347
      @alucard347 Před 4 lety +7

      Well, the movie of captain marvel had little to that note.
      It wasn't pushing much agenda for the most part.
      The main issue most people have with it is carol being a marry sue and the story feeling dried out and not very interesting.
      Generally, it's a passable movie, boring at times, funny at times, but generally not something I'd watch more then once.
      However, the main controversy was not done from the movie, but outside of it.
      Bree Larson's comments who piss up everyone, including her fellow actors in marvel.
      The accusation from Bree and her defenders that anyone who thinks carol was not a perfect character and one of the best written characters in the history of cinema is a misogynist caveman.
      How little does her character matter to the MCU, yet how out of proportion and big they made her seem like.
      and probably most of all, the fact that from the ground up, the entire purpose of the character in the MCU is to be a feminist agenda pushed in, as there was absolutely no need for her or forshadowing involved, and as such, it just seemed (also from comments by bree herself), that the whole purpose of the character was a feminist self insert and nothing more.
      so, yeah.
      these are the main issues most people have with it.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@alucard347 "The main issue most people have with it is carol being a marry sue"
      No more than Wonder Woman.
      "Bree Larson's comments"
      The stuff that was totally twisted by her haters? Those comments?
      "The accusation from Bree and her defenders that anyone who thinks carol was not a perfect character and one of the best written characters in the history of cinema is a misogynist caveman."
      She never said that.
      "the entire purpose of the character in the MCU is to be a feminist agenda pushed in"
      There's no proof of that.

    • @Revanthorn
      @Revanthorn Před 4 lety +6

      @@ShadowSonic2 The difference is Wonder Woman doesn't abandon her femininity to be strong nor does she has to scream to make a statement- she personifies it. Why did Kevin Feigie have to come out and say "she is the strongest Avenger" before said film even came out? Why must we be told? Why the emphasis on pushing an agenda? Wonder Woman obviously can represent female empowerment but the movie doesn't shove it in your face nor did they say "Diana is the strongest member of the Justice League" or she's stronger than Superman"?

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Revanthorn He said she'd be the most powerful because in the comics when she was Binary she WAS mega powerful. And there was no agenda in Carol's movie either.

    • @Revanthorn
      @Revanthorn Před 4 lety +3

      @@ShadowSonic2 "In the comics when she was Binary" we're talking about the movie not a comic book. How come they didn't say World War Hulk is the strongest Avenger or Odinforce Thor? None of these characters were overhyped before their appearances but Marvel has to be?! Carol isn't even the strongest Avenger in the comics so it's untruthful to claim she is. The need to validate her as a "strong female character" before we even see her reveals a weakness in her design.

  • @I_am_a_cat_
    @I_am_a_cat_ Před 4 lety +8

    As a male, my all time FAVORITE character in ANYTHING is a female, from an old game from like... 2005? You guys probably haven't heard of it, but it's called knights of the old republic 2.. lol. Kreia is the most well written character in any of star wars.

  • @miaththered
    @miaththered Před 5 lety +262

    You have a point, quite a good one really.

  • @JD-hp8rz
    @JD-hp8rz Před 5 lety +52

    The problem, as I see it with characters like Rey, or Captain Marvel is that we are never shown WHY they are strong, we are just presented them as strong.
    They never "earn" their strength, they never learn to walk before they learn to run as they say. This is a problem with any character, male or female.
    You build sympathy and attachment to your protagonist through struggles, hardships, relatability, then you empower them.
    This is also why its very hard to make a really engaging Superman movie, you could get away with that in the 70's as it had literally no competition, but we require depth to our characters now.
    Alita is naive, young, and in way over her head at points. Then she gets punished for it. Before she manages to overcome it.
    Wonder Woman never needs any significant power-up, but she is also naive, a fish out of water and somewhat socially impaired before she learns to accept our world for what it is.
    Also, Rey in particular I find as such a passive protagonist, things just seem to more or less happen to her, like shes just along for the ride.
    To have the mindset that "these characters are female, people dont like them, they must not like female characters" is ridiculous, and exactly the same kind of twisted cause-and-efect reasoning a lot of anti-vaxxers use.

    • @Tearakan
      @Tearakan Před 5 lety +2

      Captain marvel we know why. Experiment with an infinity stone. She has the same issue that Superman has, too strong for most villains.

    • @tiffanypersaud3518
      @tiffanypersaud3518 Před 5 lety +1

      One character I think is beautifully scripted is TWD’s Carol. This beast of a woman starts out as domestic abuse victim who even loses her child daughter to zombies. She became someone, who understandably bounces back and forth mentally from PTSD, who used all that trauma and experience to be a badass and make decisions where it counted, and took responsibility for them rather than blaming others. Michonne is another well written character.

    • @richardroberts3719
      @richardroberts3719 Před 5 lety

      Even if they did it just isn't any type of realistic. Women have never really been warriors, that IS the domain of men.

    • @stagosaurus3181
      @stagosaurus3181 Před 5 lety

      @@richardroberts3719
      Well, I'd say the idea of women filling in the "warrior" profession is less _unrealistic_ and more of a _novelty._ It's kind of like the idea of men who willingly take on careers as nurses or caretakers. An easier and more common example would be stay-at-home husbands.
      Evolution dictates our roles in a society, but so does the society itself. But then again, we're living in a time of peace right now, so make of it what you will.

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 4 lety

      @@richardroberts3719 If that were true, there wouldn't be any Warrior Goddesses in Ancient Mythology. But there always have been.

  • @ripsessionkites
    @ripsessionkites Před 5 lety +11

    Thank you for making this video.Really, f**king thank you! The internet needs more people like you,honest,uncensored opinion

  • @kimballwolfs5863
    @kimballwolfs5863 Před 4 lety +6

    Avatar the Last Airbender and The Legend of Korra both have a LARGE amount of strong amazing female characters, also Eleven, Hermonie, Ripley, Mulan, Katniss, Kill Bill (The Bride), and many more!

  • @mikevasquez1103
    @mikevasquez1103 Před 5 lety +173

    A lot of us are just getting sick of these female characters "showing the boys how it's done" as if the "boys" they're showing haven't been doing it for decades. The very small group that may have "harassed Kelly Marie Tran on platforms that all have mute, block, and report features available, is irrelevant. It doesn't make the movie any better. Jake Lloyd got WAAAY more hate thrown his way after The Phantom Menace, but nobody defends that IP by saying "toxic fans must hate young boys". Ahsoka Tano is the strongest bit of evidence that crushes the shill narrative. It's one thing to be a beloved character nearly from the beginning, but Ahsoka went from being OPENLY REVILED to becoming a FAN FAVORITE over the course of her character arc. I still think they wrote her out of the Clone Wars the way they did so that she could avoid order 66 because too many fans would have been very very angry if she was killed off in that show. I know I would have been rather miffed if they killed a rough in that show.

    • @sillypuppy5940
      @sillypuppy5940 Před 5 lety

      As if real life they would be anywhere near somewhere strenuous or dangerous "showing the boys how it's done." No, as usual, the boys would be doing it all. And we're told that these characters are inspiring role models? Well, why don't they get inspired and join the air force? No, it's fantasy, and they should stop trying to present it as anything else.

    • @KaiserMattTygore927
      @KaiserMattTygore927 Před 5 lety +9

      >>> Jake Lloyd got WAAAY more hate thrown his way after The Phantom Menace, but nobody defends that IP by saying "toxic fans must hate young boys

    • @bigsigh4061
      @bigsigh4061 Před 5 lety +1

      Isn't that just because those toxic fans were once young boys? Ahsoka Tano is just evidence that if you allow a character that you hate at the beginning to develop then she can become a beloved character. The fans didn't like Ahsoka for the first couple of seasons. Which means you just might love Rey by the end of Episode 9.

    • @eggsnspam
      @eggsnspam Před 5 lety +1

      @@bigsigh4061 no... very obvious problems with Rey character in Episode 7 that continued to Episode 8. Remember that the tv episodes have something that movies cannot compete with - extra time to develop a character. Movies have to get it right off the bat, especially the foundational first movie they appear in. You want to be a movie writer/director/etc., those are the stakes.

    • @bigsigh4061
      @bigsigh4061 Před 5 lety

      @@eggsnspam But the original comment was basically saying that Ahsoka is proof that men can like female characters and even said they didn't in the beginning. The obvious conclusions is that you might just love Rey considering how much hate there is.
      .

  • @tennkenobi
    @tennkenobi Před 5 lety +56

    Agree with most of your comments sir. Add to this the way Luke Skywalker has been used in the first two sequel films- nothing in ep 7 and unrecognisable in ep 8 and you have the perfect storm. Sullying the heroic childhood character of thousands of 40+ males (the hardcore of the fandom) + creating new hero that appears more powerful without any journey is bound to cause complaint.

    • @AndreNitroX
      @AndreNitroX Před 5 lety +6

      All 3 of my sisters are big Star Wars fans and even they were disgusted at what Luke had become and bored with Rey.

    • @dannytafrodon
      @dannytafrodon Před 5 lety +1

      Excellent comment

  • @christopherflux6254
    @christopherflux6254 Před 4 lety +5

    Personally I like Rey and the new trilogy. (Even though it has flaws) But I completely AGREE with you!
    When someone critiques Ja Ja Binks, no one accuses them of hating Ja Ja because he’s male. So we shouldn’t automatically assume the same with a female character, even though I don’t doubt that there’s an element of misogyny amongst some fans.

  • @hathifkappan6643
    @hathifkappan6643 Před 5 lety +16

    Hhhhhha....
    *People who hated JarJar Binks are Xenophobic against aliens*
    You heard it here first.

    • @IgorSalaj3578
      @IgorSalaj3578 Před 4 lety +1

      I am completely neutral toward Jar Jar Binls

    • @trafficcone7344
      @trafficcone7344 Před 4 lety

      Igor Salaj I sexually identify as jar jar binks

  • @mil.sek.
    @mil.sek. Před 5 lety +129

    You know what. This might be the calmest explanation of my feelings I have come across. Well done.

  • @endernightblade1958
    @endernightblade1958 Před 5 lety +170

    Can we all agree that Ahsoka is best girl? Ok? Ok.

  • @VOLightPortal
    @VOLightPortal Před 4 lety +9

    Princess Leia - an actual real strong female character
    Sarah Conner - an actual real strong female character
    Rey, Captain Marvel - nope

  • @peterfmodel
    @peterfmodel Před 5 lety +10

    Good video: Hypocrisy is the best way to detect ideology - reverse the onus and if there is no agreement then you are not dealing with logic.

  • @512TheWolf512
    @512TheWolf512 Před 5 lety +618

    You can't write a good female character if you're an awful writer

    • @poyi1013
      @poyi1013 Před 5 lety +4

      Eugene InLaw they could~ but then there won’t be so much talk about this movie... the end game is in 6 weeks~

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 5 lety +7

      Or if the original character is also awful. The MCU is performing miracles with third rate characters since day 1, Iron Man for example, the character was nothing before Downey Jr. There are some characters that are even bellow the third rate status, like the guardians of the galaxy and miss marvel. Saved by the F4 and all their relatives, some small doses of Thanos, etc.. the marvel cosmic universe is not that good. Gunn literally performed a miracle with his take on the guardians, a very strong foundation that thor and thanos took advantage later. But, it is inevitable... they were bound to commit a mistake sooner or later, these characters are too weak to become certain hits all the time. Miss Marvel is mediocre in the comics, the movie just expose that even more. It's that simple, everybody believed guardians of the galaxy would end up as a total disaster. In all the logical sense... but no, it was a success. Now miss marvel arrived to balance things, to show that miracles should be something rare, lol Luckily the MCU will get the F4 and the X-men back, maybe they can take the charge now after the reboot. If they didn't had those, idk man... no way in hell captain marvel and dr strange can carry the burden like Downey did single-handedly.

    • @m.ipopescu1219
      @m.ipopescu1219 Před 5 lety

      Awful characters have value also.

    • @RRRRRRRRR33
      @RRRRRRRRR33 Před 5 lety +1

      @@m.ipopescu1219 That's aquaman, lol Reis and Johns made great stories about him in the new 52

    • @robinbrown6530
      @robinbrown6530 Před 5 lety +4

      Well accidents do happen and it usually results in what most people call one hit wonders. And then there are writers that excel at certain aspects of writing but fail at others. Maybe you can write a good female character but can't write a cohesive plot to save your life. George Lucas often came up with genius ideas but his execution was piss poor. Just look at the original cut of the first star wars movie. It is all over the place and makes no sense. His wife and a few others on the project cut and edited the scenes into a cohesive product and in all honesty saved the movie that spawned the trilogy and the George Lucas empire. The biggest problem with the prequel trilogy is that Lucas didn't have those people to keep him in check because he thought his experience was enough to make the judgement calls at that point in his career. Turns out he was wrong and we got Jar Jar as a result. Jar Jar could have actually been a great idea but there was no one to say "Hey, lets cut this part from the movie. It is not funny, just stupid." Does it make him a bad director? Not to me. It just means he needed more help and expertise than other, perhaps better, directors and did not actively seek it. There is a lot of space between good and awful and even more space between good and great. This is why I think we should be careful saying things like "If X is true/false then Y is always the case" because more often than not there are shades of gray in the spectrum of whatever we are talking about.

  • @RoseyRedCringes
    @RoseyRedCringes Před 5 lety +384

    Okay but Wonder Woman though? Amazing strong character

    • @Regina.Falange
      @Regina.Falange Před 5 lety +14

      Cringing Rose sure, she needed Steve Trevor’s sacrifice to unleash her full power but whatever

    • @willdg8108
      @willdg8108 Před 5 lety +6

      Well the ending made me fucking die

    • @lucashamrock817
      @lucashamrock817 Před 5 lety +47

      Orionsbelt isn't that what every hero needs, something to push them over the edge and push themselves to the limit. It is a team effort. No one can solve everything on their own no matter how much you want them too. Women need help just like men do.
      Superman always wins the fight when one of his friends comes into harms way. No different than Wonder Woman

    • @Lostforface
      @Lostforface Před 5 lety +6

      Wonder Woman was more sjw then Captain Marvel

    • @scorxx6624
      @scorxx6624 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Lostforface totally, wonderwoman was shit

  • @qine6559
    @qine6559 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for this. Gave me new perspective and I loved the analogy. I will give your channel a shot based on this. Subbing!

  • @hohesC24
    @hohesC24 Před 4 lety

    I really love these Videos, thank you for them! I feel understood by watching them... and not like am i the only one who thinks "normal" nowadays? It's very pleasurable for me to see and here that there are much more people who think like you and me.

  • @Age_of_Apocalypse
    @Age_of_Apocalypse Před 5 lety +38

    Great, great comments with which I totally agree! The problem with Rey was never the fact that she's a woman, but that she was a very, very, very badly written character with an agenda behind his presence in the movie. Millions of men, including me, love strong female characters in movies: Ripley in Aliens, Sarah Connor in Terminator, Ahsoka Tano in Star Wars, Jyn Erso in Rogue One, Leia and Padme in Star Wars, Alita in Battle Angels, etc. We want strong female characters, but do it right way and for the right reasons.

    • @AndreNitroX
      @AndreNitroX Před 5 lety +3

      I actually wanted a female Jedi to be the lead, but I wanted someone like Ashoka, or even Mara jade, but instead we get Scarlett jos character from “ Lucy”, a god like political device, not an interesting character.

    • @zebbleganubi723
      @zebbleganubi723 Před 5 lety

      "behind his presence in the movie" ...found the misogynist

  • @joshuabrown9398
    @joshuabrown9398 Před 5 lety +172

    Just in the marvel movies its easy to name likable and baddass female characters. Widow, Scarlet witch, Valkrie, Maria Hill, The Wasp etc

    • @quinreimer5906
      @quinreimer5906 Před 5 lety +58

      And gamora and nebula! Don't forget them

    • @joshuabrown9398
      @joshuabrown9398 Před 5 lety +8

      @@quinreimer5906 yeah very true

    • @hartlandmckeown3170
      @hartlandmckeown3170 Před 5 lety +25

      They were really on a role until Captain Marvel came out :-/

    • @ShadowSonic2
      @ShadowSonic2 Před 5 lety +3

      @@hartlandmckeown3170 Oh grow up.

    • @teebee8141
      @teebee8141 Před 5 lety +11

      Marvel just never made a wonder woman and now they are trying force one instead of developing one because it would take too long. They've made good female characters but not many powerful stand alone characters. When you think of DC it's like batman, superman, wonderwoman, the rest of the jla and teen titans . Marvel's characters captain America, iron man, hulk,thor,before the mcu alot non comic heads didn't know the characters.

  • @ArcNeoMasato
    @ArcNeoMasato Před 2 lety +2

    What's funny is, my now ex wife was SUPER annoyed with Captain Marvel and Rey (and she lost her crap at the Infinity War "I'm with you, sister" thing) when I didn't even think anything of them. I guess she was more of a "man" than I was, which would also explain her leaving :P