@AngryMadMan0 you would probably benefit from watching the movie and learning men don't have to have no personality and revolve their lives around what they're taught masculinity is lol
@@watcherinmaze But they didn't market it to kids, you just heard that there was gonna be a movie about Barbie and came to the conclusion that it was for kids by yourself. The first teaser released was literally a parody of a space odyssey lmao
Honestly one of my favorite jokes in the movie (besides the Ken’s threatening to “beach each other off”) is when Barbie’s trying to convince the mom she’s not pretty, then the narrator jumps in and goes “Note to the writers, if you want to get this point across, Margot Robbie is not the right woman”
That was hilarious! My friend and I were in tears, but we had to somehow get it together, because the scene immediately afterwards was so serious and heartfelt.
Thats not *my* Barbie. My Barbie was rescued from my friend's sister's pastel hell and recruited by my GI Joes to be a ninja doctor. Because her lab coat wouldn't fit my Joe's and they had a surplus of ninja gear. I was diversifying my fighting forces before it was cool.
In my opinion, I think a big point of the movie was missed in your analysis. Of course I’m just some guy on the internet so what do I know, but I think a big theme of the movie wasn’t just female empowerment but equality across all genders. We see Ken create basically a “guy paradise” and then Barbie come to topple it and restore women as the leaders of society in Barbieland, as the movie started. But when she does restore it you also see that she’s unhappy with how the Kens are being treated because now she’s experienced what that’s like in the real world. There’s also that dialogue with the old woman at the end that i really liked where she said “we make up words like patriarchy to make ourselves more comfortable with how much life just sucks for everyone no matter who you are”. To me, the message of the movie was that a world dominated by women isn’t good and neither is a world dominated by men. True Equality is what we should strive for. I think that’s a really important concept to highlight because we kind of live in a time of media where the two genders are pitted against each other. You have chumps like Andrew Tate and all of sigma male youtube basically talking about how inferior women are, and then you have the female music industry talking about how they don’t need men and just use them for money/ sex/ power. It’s a negative rhetoric on both sides in today’s media and Barbie was really refreshing to me because it showed that both sides have their own things that suck about life but that doesn’t mean one is better than the other. Of course, this is just my opinion. Love your moist meter videos and the dialogue they create Charlie!
it's relieving to see takes like these, especially being a guy, because most of the takes I'm seeing from guys is either "this movie hates men and is too woke" or "this movie was only good because of ryan gosling" and don't get me wrong, gosling was amazing, but it feels almost...dismissive.
I don't think it achieved that equality message, if that's what it was really going for. For starters, just about every woman in this movies is competent and intelligent, which is great, but there isn't a single guy with either of these qualities. They are literally as dumb as they can be. And if the only way for women to be equal/better is if men are dumb, it just kind of kills the message, no? Also, at the end, when the Barbies beat the Kens and are back in charge, lowkey only Margot's Barbie learns a lesson of "wow you guys were in our position before this, sorry for taking you for granted, we should do better". No other female character has that much consideration for the men, and they're like, a nudge better off than they were at the beginning. We're back to "girls run the world and I guess you guys could maybe do your thing. But not the important stuff, of course!". I'm all for female empowerment and girlbossing and whatnot (I'm a woman myself, ffs) but I really wish it'd be done right for once.
when did andrew tate ever say that women are inferior how can you say that while the main thing he says about them is just that they should be protected and i dont think this movie delivers a message of equality but rather female superiority as barbiland comes back to its exact original "perfect" state when its ruled by women
Even if the jokes didn’t always land (which was rare imo) there was a group of ppl in my theater who laughed nearly every time ryan gosling was on screen and it made the movie even more enjoyable for me
the mother daughter relationship & the discourse about how mothers give up everything to watch their children succeed really got to me, it was super relatable for me & made me cry
That’s what being a parent is. For at least 18 years your desires and wants are 100% secondary to the well being and betterment of your children. Even after the 18 years, you’ll still be looked to for advice and guidance. It’s something that requires a lot of dedication, patience and commitment… That is assuming you’re intent on doing it properly and want a functioning human being at the end of the journey of course. If you don’t care the process is way easier and all it costs is your respectability.
It also got me when they showed her flashbacks of playing with her daughter and then how the daughter is an angsty teen now. I could imagine how lonely it is to be there from your child's first breaths, where they used to play and laugh and sit in your lap, and now they don't even want to talk to you or a hug. Made me feel a little guilty for my grumpy teenage years.
I'm a Dad who gave up as much to raise my children as their Mother so I can (almost) relate, since I didn't actually carry them nine months, give birth to them, and nurse them the way she did.
Honestly, my theatre was laughing through the whole movie, and at the end, people actually started clapping. The experience in the theatre really does depend on the audience you're with.
Had the same experience in my theatre. Most people came wearing pink (including the men) and at the end people were crying and clapping and all the jokes landed (I’m in the UK tho so our humour is probably a bit different to the US). Also the cinema was almost fully sold out.
Yeah same, my theater was cackling at a lot of stuff that I didn't find funny (I don't laugh much, though) so I really think the experience very much varies
I'm Dutch and my theater was generally laughing at most of the jokes I found funny. I know some people who cried, but not sure if there were any in my viewing. I think that ending is just a worse version of Lady Bird's ending, so I meannnn
@@WritingGeekNL I saw the film in Amsterdam and everyone was having a good time! Might just be a US humor thing, we're not very good at laughing at ourselves
the theatre i went to see the movie in was the same way, the audience was super reactive throughout the entirety of it. pretty much everyone in the theatre was wearing pink too, lol
The movie was definitely not targeted to little girls, but to adults that get nostalgia because they played with barbies. And I feel the movie is very much about Barbie, and how people think of Barbie, as in there is a lot of conversation on if Barbie is feminist or not. It's such a complicated thing where Babrie is a woman with so many careers and meant to be a role model but at the same time setting unrealistic standards on how a woman's body is supposed to be. I believe the movie and the message behind it is deeper than most people see (partly because it's a comedy) because of Barbie is seen as just a toy when it is so much more.
Barbie is still a toy? If I get a small wolverine toy in my childhood, I don’t fucking overthink about how hard Logan had it when they pierced adamantium into his body cuz I was a fucking child and I couldn’t care lesser about the meta and both wolverine and Barbie are fantasy characters. And yeah wolverine has abs and a very good body type but I don’t see any boy complaining about the men’s body standards.
@@dr.downvote sure but Barbie is THE TOY for little girls. What makes it so amazing is that it was the first doll that girls were supposed to see themselves in, because up until then it was mostly baby dolls to simulate motherhood. There are many studies that show the impact of Barbie dolls on body image etc. Maybe it´s also because us girls are confronted with beauty standards at a much earlier age than boys.
@@dr.downvote boys don’t need to overthink about things like toys because the world is catered for them, girls on the other hand have been raised for thousands of years to be something in a man’s life, be it a wife or a mother. If you think this is about toys you are already in the wrong mindset… I’m not gonna explain to you the entire history and psychology behind feminism and the patriarchy etc.
In a hundred years it will still be marketed for adults. Somehow. Just like how the target audience for anime is always teens and young adults for the past 40-50 years.
@@biteofdog??? What not really there are a bunch of movies that appeal to young adults because it’s about stuff they grew up on and now it has a more mature take cause : the kids have grown up That being said I could see kids enjoying it too at around 12 or older Although every kid is different and depends on the specific kid It’s just that kids aren’t really the intended audience based on the tone, humor etc
It was marketed that way. At least in my country. I was in the theaters with my friend and we were surrounded with toddlers in their pink dresses along with their moms
Blame the marketing. The geniuses behind the movie decided to market and openly state it being for kids but put messages in the movie that is not for kids at all
my small town theater was filled with adults and the occasional teenage girls dressed in pink. it was full of laughs and ended with shared tears. the movie was beautiful
@@mitty9109 I mean…yeah I guess? Not trying to diss y’all for crying or maybe I’m emotionally stunted. But I have read a lot of stores with truly heartfelt messages. Barbie’s was just …okay lol
I will say that airing at the exact same time as Oppenheimer was honestly genius. The fact that people are buying both tickets to see both films at the same day really does say something.
@@Blanktester685barbie is artistically oscar bait. they would win “best set design” or something like that where as oppenheimer might win “best leading actor” or “best cinematography”.
For me the focal point was Ken dealing with Barbie's rejection in toxic ways and in the end in a healthy way, also I loved how Barbie was able to empathize with him. I actually like your comment about Will Ferrell, you are right, they have no effect on the plot, but maybe that's the point, the story is telling us that Barbieland exists despite the corporation and not as a result of It, It exists because of consumers and their relationship with the product and the corporation is there with no motivation other than to make money.
@@blankblank2370 yeah but that's because I loved the movie lol. Remember that we live in a world where male characters always get the girl at the end of the movie and the patriarchy is a prevalent theme in the movie. So It makes sense that they would explore the theme of male ego and romantic rejection. Ken identifying with the patriarchy is presented as a toxic way of him dealing with her rejection, and in the end Barbie empathizes with him but she doesn't fall in love with him, instead she helps him deal with it in a healthy way.
@@renasouza8261but in the movie they are said to be girlfriend and boyfriend and she is not really nice to him. And in the end shows fake interest in him and causing the Kens to fight.
@@thecube844Yeah it's an awful message unless the point is women thing miserable men is a happy ending which I wish wasn't the message we are trying to send.
I feel like most of the people criticizing it for it being “woman are better than men” clearly didn’t pay attention to the last part. Barbie in the end wanted Barbie’s and kens to be equal.
No she didn't, she wanted to keep the Kens with less power than them, just being a tad "generous" for giving the Kens some small level of power, but still being inferior.
@@MiggyBiggy Yeah, I just hope more people realize that the Barbie movies is nothing more then feminist garbage. And it's hilarious most defenders are calling out people who rightfully hated this toxic men-hating movie as "Toxic and Insecure", it shows just how much they project their own insecurity lol
@@Orion-V, Margot Robbie is a two-time Academy Award nominee and played Harley Quinn. She’s definitely a box office draw. 💀 As for Ryan Gosling, he‘a also a two-time Academy Award nominee, and he was in Blade Runner 2049, La La Land, First Man, the goddamn Mickey Mouse Club, and Crazy, Stupid Love. BONUS: Greta Gerwig, the director, is a three-time Academy Award because she’s an acclaimed director and writer. Meanwhile, you’re just a nobody. 🤡
Gotta be honest, this is the hardest I've ever disagreed with Charlie. Everyone was laughing their asses off for the entirety of the movie in my local theater. Even I, someone who's only experience with Barbie was the ads on TV and my cousin, had an amazing time with this movie.
@@gerardoruiz6613 If you consider Charlie to be the epitome of humor, then I can see why you don't like it. (not saying Charlie is unfunny, but his humor is of a certain type.)
@@andrescd9327no he probably just doesn’t find movies that shit on men every opportunity they get funny in the slightest. Not really hard to understand
I'm pretty sure the main demographic for this movie is the people who grew up playing with barbies, so mostly adults! I think it hit the nail on the head at making the jokes subtle enough to fly over some kids heads, for the people who wanted to bring their kids.
I can't believe Charlie didn't expect this movie to blow up. I mean, I seriously haven't seen a movie with a marketing campaign this huge and aggressive. They've been hyping up this movie hard since the end of last year, and people have been eating it up. The hype is real with this one.
This movies is definitely not just for kids. It’s surprisingly mature film and it doesn’t take an easy way out on the themes and the jokes just because it’s for kids. I think this is a movie that appeals to any demographic who likes comedies really. Also you rarely see this kind of comedy come out nowadays, so to me this has been the most surprising movie of the year. Very fun and creative.
this movie was definitely geared towards adults, specifically adult women who feel like we’re never enough. i’m a massive fan of barbie and a doll collector so im obviously super biased, but also this movie was basically tailored towards people like me and i appreciated it! esp references to the weird ass lore of barbie dolls like gay ken, pregnant midge, and puberty skipper
Having will Ferrell be the ceo really made me think it was gonna go down the trope of Barbie vs evil corporate heads but was pleasantly surprised when it wasn’t. Felt intentional.
I'm glad Will didn't play into that "men rule everything you're just an accessory" role and that he actively wanted to help the dreams of little girls. He didn't care how well the kencasas were selling
Are you people braindead? Mattel paid for this movie, you think they are going to portray THEMSELVES that way? That's exactly why they serve no purpose in the movie, because they knew the messaging they were going for would clash with anything else they did. And the messaging of the movie is absolutely "muh ebil patriarchy"... Wtf movie did you watch?
@@lxi..yeah actually liked that twist and seemed like he realised where he was being a sort of blind ceo and was acting in the same way barbie was with the we are helping girls.
@@buttershy_ Yea, it was nice that it wasn't that stereotypical but it also kinda goes gainst itself... in reality the Mattel CEO is still a man and the entire movie was just a giant Mattel and Chevy ad. There's already 50-60 dollar hoodies that say "I am Kenough" for sale on mattel's website... the movie really shows it can't actually say anything bad about mattel
Saw it earlier today with my grandmother and I can confidently say that the target audience of this film is not children, rather current adults/teens that played with Barbies when THEY were children.
My favorite part of the movie was when Ken said it's "Kenning time!". And unleashed his "Kennergy" in the final showdown with Barbie at the Mojo Dojo Casa House.
Dude, damn near all women had a Barbie. Every chick I know wants to see this. I can’t believe how surprised people are at how well it’s doing. Barbie was a big part of our childhoods for generations.
@@hayleyhellbound9513 honestly tho... greta even said her whole goal with this movie was to show people that movies/any form of art can be good AND girly/pink/whatever.
My guy friend had the same reaction. He was confused why so many people wanted to watch a barbie movie. His store sold barbie shirts and he was shocked how quickly they sold out.
I cried during the scene where Barbie is manipulating the beryllium hemisphere with a flathead screwdriver... the most chilling performance of her career.
@@fatcammal if the two halves of the sphere completely seal the plutonium core, the particles bounce a gorillian times ad infinitum and the entire thing goes super-critical in the blink of an eye. I didn't think they were going to cover the Demon Core incident in the movie, I figured it would mostly be about shoes and dresses.
I loved the Barbie cameo in Oppenheimer when she proposed at Los Alamos why they don’t just base the bomb off of the fusion of hydrogen and she got side eyes and laughs from the rest of the scientists
Personally, my favorite thing about the movie was Ken’s character arc. It’s a pretty good portrayal of how a lot of younger boys and some men feel when it comes to struggling with self-worth. Not gonna write any essays here, but I definitely enjoyed the movie.
My favorite part was how, during the big Ken fight, one of the Mattel employees gets shot. Like straight up shot in the arm, and they say something about bringing weapons over in a throwaway line, then never addressed again; but they make sure to have that employee in an arm cast later
Oh yeah dawg, I was kinda confused why they included that in there? Like I thought maybe Mattel was going to start like selling guns with Barbies in the real world, kinda like how Ken’s Mojo Dojo Casa House came alive in the real world. But no. Just a throwaway line with MANY implications
SAME LMFOA I THOIGUT THAT WAS SO FICKING FUNNY. Maybe the fact that they came from the real world made them get hurt like if they were in the real world, since we see that the dolls don’t really get physically hurt. Idk maybe it’s like Mario from the Mario movie, going to nyc and getting legitimately bruised
@@anthonypuente9072I think they were making another subtle nudge to the point that we all face mortality. That even in Barbieland you can eventually get hurt and face death. And you shouldn’t take your life for granted. But maybe that’s just me.
@@wizardlizard55555that’s how I see it too. Like how when little girls play with Barbie’s, maybe they can have them battle each other and have one get hurt and die, even though clearly the weapons are fake
Honestly, Ken's arc where he is figuring out he can exist without Barbie was great. I can relate to that after a bad breakup, I didn't know how I was supposed to go on without her. I'm not saying this movie helped me, I came to the same conclusion on my own, months before this movie came out. But it's still great to see on screen and be handled maturely.
My favorite part was when Ken traveled to Mordor, to the summit of Mount Doom, then declared for all to hear, “I am Ken!” And all of the 9 realms were then set free of Odin’s rule. Truly a cinematic masterpiece.
My favorite part was when a bunch of people went on CZcams and just said the same exact thing just with slightly different spins. Yeah, the meme died after Morbius left theaters, but hey, why not kick a dead horse that’s so beaten the bones have been crushed to dust? Laugh at the joke everyone! ARE YOU LAUGHING?! ITS SO ORIGINAL AND FUNNY, LAUGH!!!!
@@samuelcollinsTXas someone who used military dolls/toys when I played with a neighbor who used Barbie dolls I can confirm there would probably be more nukes
Honestly I cried like a fucking child at the end of the movie. Just seeing Barbie experience all the womens lives she touched (thats my interpretation at least) kinda makes me think that the focal point of this movie isnt about feminism, or equality (even though those are very major points, as they should be), I really think its about intent. Barbie never wanted to be a sex symbol that made little girls feel awful about their bodies, her intent was the exact and complete opposite. Her intent was to show little girls that they could have careers and make a name for themselves and have a life that is not at the behest of a man. Ken never intended to take over Barbieland to actually opress the Barbies- it was his intention to find an identity outside of Barbie so he didnt have to feel the constant hurt he felt when he failed to impress her (his sole purpose). (Side note: I also like how the movie takes an unapologetic look at how Barbie views Ken. Usually, even though his suffering is very sympathetic, in scenes like these the character rejecting is villainized for really no good reason. Idk man I just like that the movie didn't go that route). I honestly think this movie, alongide themes of feminism, kind of show how pure, good intentions can be very easily twisted by a world that already has a mold and expectations for the person intending- that their thoughts and autonomy dont matter as long as they have a box to fit in. This doesnt just go for Barbie and Ken, either. The mother character has good intentions to bond with her daughter, but it doesn't turn out that way until the end. Ferrell ceo seems to unironically love women in a way that isnt attached to what they can provide him- but his board room is full of men. I think that this movie is trying to say that intent doesnt cover the damage you mightve wrought without even knowing, that you have to put work into your beliefs to see a fraction of change you want to see in the world. I dont really know man, but I think that this movie is powerful and wonderful and messy and complex and I really love it :) Edit: spelling mistakes
now that you mention it, they never did explore the mom and daughter relationship. was the girl just frustrated with being unable to grow up faster because she's apparently the world's smartest middle schooler or did she dislike her mom for working for a company that embodies many of the problems in her world?
@sorenkair I do feel they very much could have explored the mother daughter relationship a lot more!! But at the same time the scene where the girl calls barbie a fascist does actually have a narritive purpose along with comedic. There were also criticisms of putting an unattainable body type as the standard for many girls who would never achieve it; at the same time the girl doesn't understand that barbie was meant to be a role model to look up to instead of an object to resent. That is also very much in part because of Barbies real life reputation in the movie not matching up with her direct characterization and the misunderstanding beginning between the two characters because of that disconnect. All of this circles back to your initial point. The mother sees barbie as a figure to pour her genuine emotions into, to create in the vision of what she is because she sees barbie through the more feminist lens. The daughter sees barbie as a symbol of something wanted and what she'll never be The intent=/=action theory holds true! Sorry I just love this movie so much and I love discussing it :)
What i love about the film is barbie's transtion emotionally she went from basically not feeling anything aka perfect to slowly experiencing a varied colors of human emotion, i have trouble understanding and expressing my emotions and have trouble crying when i should and when my body wants to so i really related to it
Watching Kens character development was amazing he had no idea what he was doing but he was doing it confidently and it made him feel like people noticed and respected him
I think part of their presence was to highlight/make light of the consumer aspects of barbie and Mattel like how it’s all just about making money and maybe that self awareness can be used to evade certain criticisms people may levy against the film from a commercial standpoint.
especially when you know Will is married to a Swedish woman. He makes a joke about Sweden in the movie. If you know anything about sweden socially then you know how non-patriarchal sweden is. Especially compared to America. There’s meta commentary mixed in.
Will Ferrel and the board of directors being completely useless an unnecessary in the movie feels like a perfect metaphor of what they represent in universe
I disagree about the jokes, I watched this at 9PM last night and a lot of people are laughing with every joke and Ryan Gosling is a born comedian, he really delivered every joke flawlessly. Also, I think the target audience are 20 years old and above as this movie is pure nostalgia and you can actually see this as the real owner of barbie was the mom and not the kid.
@@AirsoftKeksTVTo me they’re like the Team Rocket Trio from Pokémon. Seemingly diabolical, but ultimately dumb oddballs that want to get more money and fame through crimes that participate in cartoony hijinks and end up accidentally benefitting the protagonist. The only way they aren’t similar is that they don’t blast off into the sky cause of an element. But Ken already did that.
@@mackielunkey2205 Yes, but the important part is that IRL Mattel management, responsible for making "toys targeted for girls" is 11 men and only 1 women, which is absurd. Men get to decide what women are supposed to play with? It's great that this was allowed to be in the movie.
I think it's especially men that have to watch the movie because women are very aware of the problems they face in this world but a lot of men aren't. I also think exactly the people that need to see it and understand its message are the people who feel offended the most and end up hating it the most.
😂 So men need to see Ken actually doing better for Barbieland than how Barbies ruled it? And the ending that Barbie given visions of a mother and daughter that she’d rather live in patriarchial real world than her Barbieland? Sounds to me that women really need to be more aware of the irony of their ideology presented in this movie.
He didn’t forget, he did this on purpose, he is in fear that he’ll get canceled, this channel is going to fall off very soon and you’ll look back at this video at the start of it all
I think the Mattel board is supposed to not only represent corporate greed, but also show just how out of touch multibillion dollar companies are when it comes to the people they sell their products to. They were very cartoonish but in this case it works. When it comes to relating to the movie, i think it was very relatable even as a man the themes of growing up, of losing your childlike innocence are still there and those are universal no matter what your gender is. Yes it is clearly targeted towards a more female audience, but if anything it had a lot of male centric themes too. Allan represents a man who doesn’t fit the mold into the idea that society has of what a man should be. We aren’t all blessed with perfect bodies, we aren’t all equally brave, confident or even interested in pursuing women in the same way that other men are. It depicts the pressures that society has put on all of us regardless of gender and while it is shedding a brighter light on women (which like dude come on, seriously? Its like blatantly obvious that was gonna be the case so if it bothered hou that much why would you even bother watching the movie?) it still does a good job at shedding some of that light onto how men are viewed by the world. Its about finidng your true self and being happy with who you are, because you are good enough, you are worthy of love, and you shouldn’t have to fit any mold to be noticed.
@@zhouyongkang5331 it is very sad but people would rather have a fight over the internet than actually have a discussion. Tis the world we live in unfortunately
I also thought the Mattel board was supposed to depict a child's idea of a big company, like the FBI calling an employee who's in a hollow cubicle with very dark lighting and who goes "all the way up" just to see the CEO who's in a board meeting, idk if it was intended to be interpreted like this but that's the impression I got
Alan felt a bit mishandled to me in the end. Seems like the movie couldn't decide what to do with him. In one scene he can take on a group of Ken dolls, but in another he's a bumbling buffoon and is a detriment to the Barbies, merely being strung along because he has nowhere else to go. In the end everyone seems to just ignore him and they don't care about him.
man i dunno about this one, it feels like you went into Barbie with a preconceived notion about what it was gonna be and who it was gonna be for, and let that influence your enjoyment of the movie. i really enjoyed every minute and everone in my theater seemed to feel the same. mostly 20-30 year olds dressing up in all pink hyped af for the Barbie movie, it was a great experience. also, Will Ferrell and the Mattel board were an important and funny part of the movie
You enjoyed every minute of that absolutely enervating monologue towards the end? It’s not even that I disagree with the message, the movie just kept breaking the rhythm of jokes and grinding the pacing to a halt for the sake of bringing the hammer down a little harder.
(SPOILER) Just wanted to comment on this but I wouldn't say the message of the film was to uplift only women. As we saw towards the end of the film, Ken expressed his frustration with Barbieland, and how he and the other Kens are not treated as well as the Barbie's there. I mean, Ken's whole character is defined by his love for Barbie, and at the end of the film, he realizes he needs to find out who he is. The main message of the film was about how both patriarchy's and matriarchy's are bad, and that society should strive to get rid of these inequalities. Men and women should live for themselves and not for the opposite sex.
I hate to be a bummer but to be honest I disagree with Kens story arc being uplifting for men. I get the message - living for oneself and not the opposite sex (which is great!) but it was a bit disappointing how Ken learned the message. He went from lashing out and making bad decisions to basically being forced/manipulated into submission again, and then when he finally gives up Barbie pats him on his back and explains his character development to him. I don't know it just felt a bit... condescending. It would have been much more redeeming and relatable if it was something he got to discover himelf. Maybe I'm overanalyzing it but I thought it was a bit disapponting that no of the Kens (or men for that matter) had any qualities or realizations that could make me as a man relate to them.
@@malmcrantz4943 You're not being a bummer, I'm glad you pointed those things out. 👍 I agree that the story would have been better if Ken had found this out himself. I mean, they could have switched the POV, so we could see life from Ken's point of view and have a whole scene where he does this. I wish they made the Ken's more relatable too. I think (beach) Ken was probably the most interesting character in the movie, but he definitely was not relatable. I know they were trying to make Ken not very smart, but if they wanted to do that, I think it would have been better if they made him not very smart in an intellectual way, but smart in a human/emotion way (like Kronk or something). I think that would have helped make him much more relatable to everyone. (They also should have given all of the Kens more of a personality). In all honestly, I just think that it's cool that they made a movie about equality on both sides. But it definitely could have been changed... I mean, that whole last bit of the film was a bit strange 😂
@@chickencluck4059 That's a good point! if he had been intellectually dumb (living up to the stereotypical Ken image) but smarter in a human/emotional way... yeah that would have been perfect. Not only to make him more relatable but I think that would make the whole take on the patriarchy more nuanced as well (that it doesn't just apply to the dumb frat-guys). But yeah I agree, in the end it's still refreshing that a movie like this got made. The "Kenough" shirt was still pretty uplifting, not gonna lie 😄
I disagree with the take on Will Ferrell and Mattel. He wanted to send her back to Barbieland but she escaped. They are definitely part of the plot and I enjoyed Ferrell’s performance. He’s timeless
So they wanted to bring her back to Barbieland, she escaped, then returned to Barbieland And later on the mother-daughter duo and Allen tried to get out of Barbie- well, Kenland, and they ended going back anyway Moral of the story: there's no escaping Barbieland
Naw, Charlie makes a fair point; Barbie went to the real world to meet whoever was messing with her doll and Ken went to the real world to learn about a world not dominated by femininity, Mattel arch was unnecessary except for Barbie meeting her creator but that's more to do with the Heroes Journey
Because it’s a shit movie he know it but he’s too scared to go against the woke nazi agenda, this movie literally propagates a matriarchy, and division of men and women, it’s a man hating movie, pathetic.
@@WellytonNandi this movie is literally sexist, how is pointing out mainstream sexism misogynistic. Defending males has become a taboo nowadays, very very sad.
i cried so hard watching it i'm not ashamed to admit it. I'm surprised how many people didn't like the human world scenes bc for me they were the most impactful as barbie realised how unfair the world really was towards women and the consequences of this hatred.
@@VioletDeathRei Why do you comment negative things on every comment that says something good about the movie? It's as if you think your opinion is the only valid opinion and everybody else around you are objectively wrong. What's wrong with you?
I see after harassing me every comment about my privates you report me so my reply to stop doesn't show up. Thanks for helping with that CZcams, very empowering.
I've been stuck in a dissociative state since watching Oppenheimer and Barbie back-to-back. They were so good it altered the very chemistry in my brain.
The Mattel arc definitely made sense to be in. Barbies first thought they solved gender [job opportunity] equality but in the real world the Mattel C-suite was all men, who all patted themselves on the back for promoting equality but could barely even name a girl who ever had an exec position in the history of the company, and when Barbie came to the real world "causing trouble just by being there" they wanted to just put her in a box, but they didn't give a shit about whether Ken was running around
An extremely heartless and anti-semitic comment, to be honest. Surprising coming from Hollywood, the most Jewish thing out there. I wouldn’t be surprised if a couple people searched up what fascism was and became anti-Zionist after the movie. As a Jew, we need a worldwide Nazi ban; free speech is not hate speech.
@@uhlexseeuh So they reference genitalia, sexual harassment, and arguably pedophilia multiple times but you draw the line at poking fun at internet users lol? It’s a pg-13 movie
In the theater i went everyone was laughing and having an extremely good time with the film. Hearing my friends laughing their asses off with the godfather bit was the best part of that experience. Overall it’s a good movie in my opinion. I like the heartfelt moments too, they were pretty awesome. Goofy, funny and Ryan Gosling 9/10 would be my overall score.
I like a more honest theater, when people don't laugh just cause they feel required to, however I've been in the awkward reverse situation where I'm the only one laughing at the jokes in the theater
It was surprising to learn how proficient Ken was in Kendo after picking up that stick and unleashing his 7 Verboten Kenjutsu, obliterating Barbie in one clean sequence of blows Easily one of the most Kentertaining moments of the movie, which made the second half of the movie where 87% the world experienced gradual Kentrification seem much more appealing of an idea
I watched it and absolutely loved it, I loved all of the parts where Mattel was making fun of themselves, portraying themselves as an evil corporation, even admitting that Barbie was never about feminism and the Shoehorned Feminism didn't work either. The film is very self aware and brimming with meta humour that I absolutely loved, I was laughing a lot during the whole movie, easily the best movie I watched all year and I'm a 21 year old guy. It's totally meant for all genders and adults
It made me so happy that Ken was almost a satire of roles that Ryan Gosling always plays where he’s the usual moody heartthrob but it’s dialed up to 100 here
@@tdspkhype3042The whole movie is full of references to not just Barbie merchandise, but in how girls play with barbies. Barbie floats down to her car because why mimic walking them downstairs? We didn’t do that as kids. Swimming pool is just a flat surface Barbie can walk on. Fridge has sticker decals as food like Barbie fridges do.
this was kinda a miss lol. i just think bro didnt pay attention enough cuz he already went in thinking it was for little girls but thats just my armchair psychologist take
barbie is such an open ended and imaginative movie that charlie joined along, wanted us to reflect upon ourselves and imagine the final score he gave the movie. such a visionary
charlie was referencing barbie's tagline of "Be whoever you want to be", applying it to the moist meter and re contextualizing it as "be the score you want to be".
@@Justin-pe9cl I swear lately he's just not been including scores lol I always have to go into the comments to find where in the video he even attempts to rate it
Mfs really have rotted their brains with political youtube channels, pointing at any western media and claim its propaganda with some weird mental gymnastics logic.
Oh God, AMEN! It's quite clearly a mockery of the Redpill Manosphere turds lol - they're out here triggered pink lol making all kinds of shit up about it. I've seen RP Alpha Trogs claim that it's pro-gay, pro-trans, pro-abortion... but never what it was... a piss take of a very specific "Alpha Turd".
Lmao it’s actually insane how so many men have missed the point! The movie could not have made it more clear. You were uncomfortable about how the Kens were treated? Good!
It's actually meant to be mocking the real-world extreme feminism, while also sending a message about what actual feminism is all about. Because even when matriarchy is restored in Barbie Land, Barbie still decides to leave showing that she doesn't actually think the world is so patriarchal. It's a mockery of it.
I think I like the Mattel board, they are painted as kinda delusional and just as comical in the barbie world. It also requires some action during that point to get barbie and the family to meet. I guess it maybe diminishes the message that that is the real world, and that the real world is harsh though.
I think it was also used to point out the fact that so many companies that release items geared towards uplifting and inspiring women and girls are ran by old men in suits who at the end of the day will never quite understand their audience as they are men
@@ang841I mean you could argue women would have just as hard a time understanding what random kids want too. I think it’s more about age than gender, since different generations tend to like different things w trends and all that
@@ang841 It's still pretty weird and funny that Mattel's board in the movie is a bunch of old goofy men when their actual board of director's is pretty much equal with 6 men and 5 women, and only one of those men is above 70.
Barbie was somehow more political than Oppenheimer
fr it was so unnecessary lol
So true
@@thxnderbxlt1954 it was necessary grahhhh
@@tucosalamanca5818why?
Literally man
Barbie is not aimed at kids, it is absolutely aimed at those of us who grew up with them, not those actively growing up with them.
Tbf, there are a LOT of Barbie shows in 2004-2018. My nieces and small cousins are around 10-13, and they love Barbie because of these shows.
Your problem is they really marketed it to kids, which is the Barbie main audience, and that doesn't work at all.
No way you grew up playing with Barbie’s bro, that’s so weird. What did you have tea parties with stuffed animals too?? 😂😂😂
@AngryMadMan0 you would probably benefit from watching the movie and learning men don't have to have no personality and revolve their lives around what they're taught masculinity is lol
@@watcherinmaze But they didn't market it to kids, you just heard that there was gonna be a movie about Barbie and came to the conclusion that it was for kids by yourself. The first teaser released was literally a parody of a space odyssey lmao
The delivery of the “I am become plastic” line still gives me chills just thinking about it
I am become plastic, destroyer of worlds
I am become plastic, consumer of oceans.
I am become plastic, destroyer of oceans
@@SharonVeeLeelol
I am become plastic, destroyer of fish
Honestly one of my favorite jokes in the movie (besides the Ken’s threatening to “beach each other off”) is when Barbie’s trying to convince the mom she’s not pretty, then the narrator jumps in and goes “Note to the writers, if you want to get this point across, Margot Robbie is not the right woman”
That was a great quip lol
That was hilarious! My friend and I were in tears, but we had to somehow get it together, because the scene immediately afterwards was so serious and heartfelt.
That was my favorite gag in the movie, the second favorite was when they did the fake depression barbie ad
I bout died when Ken was throwing out her clothes
I found that line especially funny because before the movie came out there was a huge argument online over whether or not Margot Robbie was hot.
My favorite part is when Barbie and Ken watch the first atomic bomb test together. So moving.
@@TooColdProdzomg 💀
_lemme fix that rq_ why don’t you go fix your relationship with your parents.
@@ryanside7095 violation 💀💀
Who actually Barbenheimered 🤔
@@ryanside7095 And that my friends, is how you do a gottem on the interwebs
I don’t think the target audience was kids, it’s for adults who grew up with Barbie. Our theater was mostly adults watching!
since it was announced, not one second was I thinking about kids watching it. I got whiplash when he said it was a kids movie
Same here, it was mostly young adults and teenagers
That's sad 😂
Thats not *my* Barbie.
My Barbie was rescued from my friend's sister's pastel hell and recruited by my GI Joes to be a ninja doctor.
Because her lab coat wouldn't fit my Joe's and they had a surplus of ninja gear.
I was diversifying my fighting forces before it was cool.
wtf
I love how Charlie completely forgot to give it a score😂
The score might have been cut out of the video, but maybe I'm being too cynical.
@@youtubeviolatedme7123it probably was
I give it a Ken out of Ken.
Why score this garbage
@@MegaChickenfishBravo
In my opinion, I think a big point of the movie was missed in your analysis. Of course I’m just some guy on the internet so what do I know, but I think a big theme of the movie wasn’t just female empowerment but equality across all genders. We see Ken create basically a “guy paradise” and then Barbie come to topple it and restore women as the leaders of society in Barbieland, as the movie started. But when she does restore it you also see that she’s unhappy with how the Kens are being treated because now she’s experienced what that’s like in the real world. There’s also that dialogue with the old woman at the end that i really liked where she said “we make up words like patriarchy to make ourselves more comfortable with how much life just sucks for everyone no matter who you are”. To me, the message of the movie was that a world dominated by women isn’t good and neither is a world dominated by men. True Equality is what we should strive for. I think that’s a really important concept to highlight because we kind of live in a time of media where the two genders are pitted against each other. You have chumps like Andrew Tate and all of sigma male youtube basically talking about how inferior women are, and then you have the female music industry talking about how they don’t need men and just use them for money/ sex/ power. It’s a negative rhetoric on both sides in today’s media and Barbie was really refreshing to me because it showed that both sides have their own things that suck about life but that doesn’t mean one is better than the other. Of course, this is just my opinion. Love your moist meter videos and the dialogue they create Charlie!
such a fucking good comment, great analysis!
great comment! everyone is trying to make it men vs women when the movie wasn’t like that at all!
it's relieving to see takes like these, especially being a guy, because most of the takes I'm seeing from guys is either "this movie hates men and is too woke" or "this movie was only good because of ryan gosling" and don't get me wrong, gosling was amazing, but it feels almost...dismissive.
I don't think it achieved that equality message, if that's what it was really going for.
For starters, just about every woman in this movies is competent and intelligent, which is great, but there isn't a single guy with either of these qualities. They are literally as dumb as they can be. And if the only way for women to be equal/better is if men are dumb, it just kind of kills the message, no?
Also, at the end, when the Barbies beat the Kens and are back in charge, lowkey only Margot's Barbie learns a lesson of "wow you guys were in our position before this, sorry for taking you for granted, we should do better". No other female character has that much consideration for the men, and they're like, a nudge better off than they were at the beginning. We're back to "girls run the world and I guess you guys could maybe do your thing. But not the important stuff, of course!".
I'm all for female empowerment and girlbossing and whatnot (I'm a woman myself, ffs) but I really wish it'd be done right for once.
when did andrew tate ever say that women are inferior how can you say that while the main thing he says about them is just that they should be protected and i dont think this movie delivers a message of equality but rather female superiority as barbiland comes back to its exact original "perfect" state when its ruled by women
Ryan Gosling really portrayed the right amount of Kenergy to his performance
He is kenough
AND TRUMP ALSO POTRAYED THE WILL BE POTRAYING THE TOMMY VEFCETTI IN THE VICE CITY MOVIE
Wow, ok so now I know the word Kenergy exists. Thanks alot 😒
His cheerful personality is Kentagious
Ken we stop with the bad puns?
Honestly imagining Charlie walking up to the counter and requesting tickets to Barbie paints a hilarious picture
Lol pretty sure that was his intro to the dora movie
For real tho
Bark 🐟
Thinking about that, it’s funny as hell 🤣
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
Even if the jokes didn’t always land (which was rare imo) there was a group of ppl in my theater who laughed nearly every time ryan gosling was on screen and it made the movie even more enjoyable for me
Ikr i think it's just a hit or miss when you watch movies in theaters (cause that's the main enjoyment of theater people we watch it with)
I started cheering and clapping when I saw Ken and I know my friends and I were the worst people in the theater
Yeah I loved every second that Ken was onscreen . “I’m just Ken” is an musical masterpiece for the ages
Ma boy Ryan Gosling was literally the only best thing in movie but for the costumes and sets
@jervin8132 = special needs kid
the mother daughter relationship & the discourse about how mothers give up everything to watch their children succeed really got to me, it was super relatable for me & made me cry
That’s what being a parent is. For at least 18 years your desires and wants are 100% secondary to the well being and betterment of your children. Even after the 18 years, you’ll still be looked to for advice and guidance. It’s something that requires a lot of dedication, patience and commitment…
That is assuming you’re intent on doing it properly and want a functioning human being at the end of the journey of course. If you don’t care the process is way easier and all it costs is your respectability.
It also got me when they showed her flashbacks of playing with her daughter and then how the daughter is an angsty teen now. I could imagine how lonely it is to be there from your child's first breaths, where they used to play and laugh and sit in your lap, and now they don't even want to talk to you or a hug. Made me feel a little guilty for my grumpy teenage years.
Honestly it broke my heart and made me think deeply about my own mum and the sacrifices she’s taken 🥺
I'm a Dad who gave up as much to raise my children as their Mother so I can (almost) relate, since I didn't actually carry them nine months, give birth to them, and nurse them the way she did.
I guess you can relate. But seriously how do you cry.
Barbie for the philosophy and Oppenheimer for the laughs
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
Barbie for Best Picture Win, Oppenheimer for Box Office
@@dj07677looks like my heart is stopping🫶
"Now I am become death, the destroyer of worlds" - Barbie
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
I gotta say, the arc of Ken becoming a redpill made the real world scenes so worth it
Horse Ken is based
@@Josephextremei can’t tell if you’re being sarcastic or not
@@VioletValk Don't worry about it
That's not redpill, that's just a big exaggeration of the patriarchy xD, just dumb as fuck.
@@VioletValkhorse ken based
Honestly, my theatre was laughing through the whole movie, and at the end, people actually started clapping. The experience in the theatre really does depend on the audience you're with.
Had the same experience in my theatre. Most people came wearing pink (including the men) and at the end people were crying and clapping and all the jokes landed (I’m in the UK tho so our humour is probably a bit different to the US). Also the cinema was almost fully sold out.
Yeah same, my theater was cackling at a lot of stuff that I didn't find funny (I don't laugh much, though) so I really think the experience very much varies
I'm Dutch and my theater was generally laughing at most of the jokes I found funny.
I know some people who cried, but not sure if there were any in my viewing.
I think that ending is just a worse version of Lady Bird's ending, so I meannnn
@@WritingGeekNL I saw the film in Amsterdam and everyone was having a good time! Might just be a US humor thing, we're not very good at laughing at ourselves
the theatre i went to see the movie in was the same way, the audience was super reactive throughout the entirety of it. pretty much everyone in the theatre was wearing pink too, lol
The movie was definitely not targeted to little girls, but to adults that get nostalgia because they played with barbies. And I feel the movie is very much about Barbie, and how people think of Barbie, as in there is a lot of conversation on if Barbie is feminist or not. It's such a complicated thing where Babrie is a woman with so many careers and meant to be a role model but at the same time setting unrealistic standards on how a woman's body is supposed to be. I believe the movie and the message behind it is deeper than most people see (partly because it's a comedy) because of Barbie is seen as just a toy when it is so much more.
You reminded me of the simspons episode where Lisa creates Lisa Lionheart to combat Malibu Stacy. Really good Lisa episode.
Barbie is still a toy? If I get a small wolverine toy in my childhood, I don’t fucking overthink about how hard Logan had it when they pierced adamantium into his body cuz I was a fucking child and I couldn’t care lesser about the meta and both wolverine and Barbie are fantasy characters. And yeah wolverine has abs and a very good body type but I don’t see any boy complaining about the men’s body standards.
@@dr.downvote sure but Barbie is THE TOY for little girls. What makes it so amazing is that it was the first doll that girls were supposed to see themselves in, because up until then it was mostly baby dolls to simulate motherhood. There are many studies that show the impact of Barbie dolls on body image etc. Maybe it´s also because us girls are confronted with beauty standards at a much earlier age than boys.
@@dr.downvote boys don’t need to overthink about things like toys because the world is catered for them, girls on the other hand have been raised for thousands of years to be something in a man’s life, be it a wife or a mother. If you think this is about toys you are already in the wrong mindset… I’m not gonna explain to you the entire history and psychology behind feminism and the patriarchy etc.
In a hundred years it will still be marketed for adults. Somehow.
Just like how the target audience for anime is always teens and young adults for the past 40-50 years.
It's crazy to me he thought the target audience for this movie were kids when it's definitely 20 somethings.
Barbies have been around since 1959, they have to appeal to a wide audience from all age ranges.
Maybe cause the commercials were misleading
@@biteofdog??? What not really there are a bunch of movies that appeal to young adults because it’s about stuff they grew up on and now it has a more mature take cause : the kids have grown up
That being said I could see kids enjoying it too at around 12 or older
Although every kid is different and depends on the specific kid
It’s just that kids aren’t really the intended audience based on the tone, humor etc
It was marketed that way. At least in my country. I was in the theaters with my friend and we were surrounded with toddlers in their pink dresses along with their moms
Blame the marketing. The geniuses behind the movie decided to market and openly state it being for kids but put messages in the movie that is not for kids at all
The fact that this Moist Meter has no Moist Meter has shook me to my core. Literally crying rn.
Lol
moist metern’t
reeling rn
Yeah does he even say the % like I’m scrubbing and not hearing Shit
i just imploded because of it
my small town theater was filled with adults and the occasional teenage girls dressed in pink. it was full of laughs and ended with shared tears. the movie was beautiful
Y’all cried cus she got a gynecology test???
@@flameron1 no?? we laughed at that part lmao i meant we cried because of the message
feminist movie insulting men of course u would love it .......
@@flameron1you know what part they meant. Don't pretend like barbie talking to Ruth didn't happen
@@mitty9109 I mean…yeah I guess? Not trying to diss y’all for crying or maybe I’m emotionally stunted. But I have read a lot of stores with truly heartfelt messages. Barbie’s was just …okay lol
Ryan gosling as Ken is one of the funniest characters in a movie I might’ve ever seen. Dude killed it
beats deadpool?
@@grundlefairyryan gosling and ryan reynolds are different, my guy.
@@hellbunniez3reading comprehension isn't your strong point, is it?
When he started dancing ❤
Ken dance scene was my favorite. Ryan carried the movie
I will say that airing at the exact same time as Oppenheimer was honestly genius. The fact that people are buying both tickets to see both films at the same day really does say something.
I honestly think it was planned. Both films are Oscar bait. No coincidence they came out the same day.
@@puffball4484it’s a pretty good business plan, mutual benefit
@@puffball4484 barbie is oscar bait? lmao
@@Blanktester685barbie is artistically oscar bait. they would win “best set design” or something like that where as oppenheimer might win “best leading actor” or “best cinematography”.
@@ImNeoFrThe later seems most likely.
For me the focal point was Ken dealing with Barbie's rejection in toxic ways and in the end in a healthy way, also I loved how Barbie was able to empathize with him. I actually like your comment about Will Ferrell, you are right, they have no effect on the plot, but maybe that's the point, the story is telling us that Barbieland exists despite the corporation and not as a result of It, It exists because of consumers and their relationship with the product and the corporation is there with no motivation other than to make money.
I think you might be reading too much into the film, lol. It just seems really disjointed as a film.
@@blankblank2370 yeah but that's because I loved the movie lol. Remember that we live in a world where male characters always get the girl at the end of the movie and the patriarchy is a prevalent theme in the movie. So It makes sense that they would explore the theme of male ego and romantic rejection. Ken identifying with the patriarchy is presented as a toxic way of him dealing with her rejection, and in the end Barbie empathizes with him but she doesn't fall in love with him, instead she helps him deal with it in a healthy way.
@@renasouza8261but in the movie they are said to be girlfriend and boyfriend and she is not really nice to him. And in the end shows fake interest in him and causing the Kens to fight.
@@thecube844Yeah it's an awful message unless the point is women thing miserable men is a happy ending which I wish wasn't the message we are trying to send.
@@thecube844She never loved him romantically from the start, it was very obvious.
I feel like most of the people criticizing it for it being “woman are better than men” clearly didn’t pay attention to the last part. Barbie in the end wanted Barbie’s and kens to be equal.
No she didn't, she wanted to keep the Kens with less power than them, just being a tad "generous" for giving the Kens some small level of power, but still being inferior.
Even so, I think we deserve it after years of oppression, murders, civil rights violations and general misogyny
But they never did anything to make them equal…they distracted them and voted without their say lol then kicked them back to the curb
@@MiggyBiggy Yeah, I just hope more people realize that the Barbie movies is nothing more then feminist garbage. And it's hilarious most defenders are calling out people who rightfully hated this toxic men-hating movie as "Toxic and Insecure", it shows just how much they project their own insecurity lol
@@MiggyBiggy The fact that they wanted it, shows signs of progression. Something which this real world really needs.
Charlie leaving us on an intense cliff hanger wondering what the actual movie got on the moist meter lmao
Bro forgot to moist meter it
I thought I was tripping lmao. Thought it was going to come after the sponsorship maybe 😂
Does this mean it’s to good or to bad for a moist meter score?
My brain is hurt after this happening 😭
@@Orion-V, Margot Robbie is a two-time Academy Award nominee and played Harley Quinn. She’s definitely a box office draw. 💀
As for Ryan Gosling, he‘a also a two-time Academy Award nominee, and he was in Blade Runner 2049, La La Land, First Man, the goddamn Mickey Mouse Club, and Crazy, Stupid Love.
BONUS: Greta Gerwig, the director, is a three-time Academy Award because she’s an acclaimed director and writer.
Meanwhile, you’re just a nobody. 🤡
Shame to the director for not casting Charles. His performance in the hunger games was truly an inspiration take. Barbie could've been so much more
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
His sleeper build would've been the perfect casting choice for Ken
It's Barbie not the Bible
Trueee, talking about perfection and a perfect world it's a shame they didn't cast the perfect actor
Gotta be honest, this is the hardest I've ever disagreed with Charlie. Everyone was laughing their asses off for the entirety of the movie in my local theater. Even I, someone who's only experience with Barbie was the ads on TV and my cousin, had an amazing time with this movie.
You were probably born yesterday to actually encounter this as being funny
@@gerardoruiz6613Meh. To each their own.
@@gerardoruiz6613 If you consider Charlie to be the epitome of humor, then I can see why you don't like it. (not saying Charlie is unfunny, but his humor is of a certain type.)
Charlie said in his theater
@@andrescd9327no he probably just doesn’t find movies that shit on men every opportunity they get funny in the slightest. Not really hard to understand
I'm pretty sure the main demographic for this movie is the people who grew up playing with barbies, so mostly adults! I think it hit the nail on the head at making the jokes subtle enough to fly over some kids heads, for the people who wanted to bring their kids.
The jokes was definitely not subtle lol.
Fun fact: the old lady at the bus stop Barbie calls beautiful is Barbara Handler, the woman who Barbie was created for by her mom!
She’s actually played by Ann Roth a famous actress and costume designer, og Barbara is not in the film
@@izzytoledo2580 she actually is ! She is playing her mother the creator of Barbie
@mort3126 That's Rhea Perlman
@@christopherpeterson4215 yeah you right I heard this from my friend and just now looked it up sorry for the mistake
@@mort3126 look at you, regurgitating incorrect information just to be able to say "The more you know!!".
I can't believe Charlie didn't expect this movie to blow up. I mean, I seriously haven't seen a movie with a marketing campaign this huge and aggressive. They've been hyping up this movie hard since the end of last year, and people have been eating it up. The hype is real with this one.
yeah, fashion world and media loves this! celebs, influencers everybody wearing pink, makeup brands bringing huge campaigns that paint everything pink and barbie like, yeah it's gonna blow up.
I didn't care for this movie (still won't watch it) but now they made me hate it already.
Barbie is one of the highest selling children's toys all time. Of course it's blowing up.
@@manwiththeredface7821you absolutely should, it's worth it
@@manwiththeredface7821the movie is amazing dawg
This movies is definitely not just for kids. It’s surprisingly mature film and it doesn’t take an easy way out on the themes and the jokes just because it’s for kids. I think this is a movie that appeals to any demographic who likes comedies really. Also you rarely see this kind of comedy come out nowadays, so to me this has been the most surprising movie of the year. Very fun and creative.
this movie was definitely geared towards adults, specifically adult women who feel like we’re never enough. i’m a massive fan of barbie and a doll collector so im obviously super biased, but also this movie was basically tailored towards people like me and i appreciated it! esp references to the weird ass lore of barbie dolls like gay ken, pregnant midge, and puberty skipper
Was there a reference to gay Ken? The friend I went with said there wasn't one and he was hoping there would be.
Having will Ferrell be the ceo really made me think it was gonna go down the trope of Barbie vs evil corporate heads but was pleasantly surprised when it wasn’t. Felt intentional.
I'm glad Will didn't play into that "men rule everything you're just an accessory" role and that he actively wanted to help the dreams of little girls. He didn't care how well the kencasas were selling
Are you people braindead? Mattel paid for this movie, you think they are going to portray THEMSELVES that way? That's exactly why they serve no purpose in the movie, because they knew the messaging they were going for would clash with anything else they did. And the messaging of the movie is absolutely "muh ebil patriarchy"... Wtf movie did you watch?
@@lxi..yeah actually liked that twist and seemed like he realised where he was being a sort of blind ceo and was acting in the same way barbie was with the we are helping girls.
I mean the film produced by Mattel is never gonna portray Mattel in a negative light, but yeah it was refreshingly different than the usual
@@buttershy_ Yea, it was nice that it wasn't that stereotypical but it also kinda goes gainst itself... in reality the Mattel CEO is still a man and the entire movie was just a giant Mattel and Chevy ad. There's already 50-60 dollar hoodies that say "I am Kenough" for sale on mattel's website... the movie really shows it can't actually say anything bad about mattel
Saw it earlier today with my grandmother and I can confidently say that the target audience of this film is not children, rather current adults/teens that played with Barbies when THEY were children.
Most kids nowadays don't play with Barbies. So I guess it make sense why this movie's target audience are the ones with Barbie nostalgia
@@15CandlesThey don't? Then who's buying them? I get the collector ones mostly go to adults but there's a huge market for the regular ones
yes thank you!!! everyone seems to be expecting this to be a kids movie but it's totally for women of all ages
@@BJGvideos Idk, atleast in my country, they sold Legos more than Barbie
what the fuck is that flag I can’t keep up with these man
Edit: is that the Pokémon dollar
My favorite part of the movie was when Ken said it's "Kenning time!". And unleashed his "Kennergy" in the final showdown with Barbie at the Mojo Dojo Casa House.
Amiya???
@@FenLupimo yes doctor, do not mind the drip
It was really stunning and brave to see Kendrew Tate fulfill his dreams of education and horses at Hustler's University
@@LinnaeusOSM Just imagining a Ken doll of Tate is making my mind trip out.🥴🤣
Dude, damn near all women had a Barbie. Every chick I know wants to see this. I can’t believe how surprised people are at how well it’s doing. Barbie was a big part of our childhoods for generations.
Honestly the fact that people think that kinda hammers home some of the message of the movie.
“It won’t do well, just women like it!”
It will do really well this weekend. But I think it’ll have a bigger drop than Oppenheimer
@@hayleyhellbound9513 honestly tho... greta even said her whole goal with this movie was to show people that movies/any form of art can be good AND girly/pink/whatever.
Boys all had unique toys yet girls all had barbie? That's NPC behavior
My guy friend had the same reaction. He was confused why so many people wanted to watch a barbie movie. His store sold barbie shirts and he was shocked how quickly they sold out.
I cried during the scene where Barbie is manipulating the beryllium hemisphere with a flathead screwdriver... the most chilling performance of her career.
im dying lmaoo what???
@@fatcammal if the two halves of the sphere completely seal the plutonium core, the particles bounce a gorillian times ad infinitum and the entire thing goes super-critical in the blink of an eye.
I didn't think they were going to cover the Demon Core incident in the movie, I figured it would mostly be about shoes and dresses.
this is so oppenheimer of barbie!
I loved the Barbie cameo in Oppenheimer when she proposed at Los Alamos why they don’t just base the bomb off of the fusion of hydrogen and she got side eyes and laughs from the rest of the scientists
I love this comment 😂
No moist meter?
STomP oUT ThE PAtRiaRChY
Personally, my favorite thing about the movie was Ken’s character arc. It’s a pretty good portrayal of how a lot of younger boys and some men feel when it comes to struggling with self-worth. Not gonna write any essays here, but I definitely enjoyed the movie.
My favorite part was how, during the big Ken fight, one of the Mattel employees gets shot. Like straight up shot in the arm, and they say something about bringing weapons over in a throwaway line, then never addressed again; but they make sure to have that employee in an arm cast later
Oh yeah dawg, I was kinda confused why they included that in there? Like I thought maybe Mattel was going to start like selling guns with Barbies in the real world, kinda like how Ken’s Mojo Dojo Casa House came alive in the real world. But no. Just a throwaway line with MANY implications
SAME LMFOA I THOIGUT THAT WAS SO FICKING FUNNY. Maybe the fact that they came from the real world made them get hurt like if they were in the real world, since we see that the dolls don’t really get physically hurt. Idk maybe it’s like Mario from the Mario movie, going to nyc and getting legitimately bruised
@@anthonypuente9072I think they were making another subtle nudge to the point that we all face mortality. That even in Barbieland you can eventually get hurt and face death. And you shouldn’t take your life for granted. But maybe that’s just me.
@@wizardlizard55555that’s how I see it too. Like how when little girls play with Barbie’s, maybe they can have them battle each other and have one get hurt and die, even though clearly the weapons are fake
Barbie was so good it can't be assigned a place on the moist meter. It cannot be measured. Truly the Barbie Movie of all time
It’s too moist for his meter
@@Anna-hb4uyyou win sir. I just fell off my couch laughing at your comment.
@@Anna-hb4uywho up moisting their meter rn
Fucking bullshit
dead morbius joke
Honestly, Ken's arc where he is figuring out he can exist without Barbie was great.
I can relate to that after a bad breakup, I didn't know how I was supposed to go on without her.
I'm not saying this movie helped me, I came to the same conclusion on my own, months before this movie came out. But it's still great to see on screen and be handled maturely.
I really do feel like even Charlie is the target audience. We all are, we all have something to learn and take away from the film
My favorite part was when Ken traveled to Mordor, to the summit of Mount Doom, then declared for all to hear, “I am Ken!” And all of the 9 realms were then set free of Odin’s rule. Truly a cinematic masterpiece.
And then Spider-Man 2099 comes in and declares it a canon event
My favorite part was when a bunch of people went on CZcams and just said the same exact thing just with slightly different spins. Yeah, the meme died after Morbius left theaters, but hey, why not kick a dead horse that’s so beaten the bones have been crushed to dust? Laugh at the joke everyone! ARE YOU LAUGHING?! ITS SO ORIGINAL AND FUNNY, LAUGH!!!!
Loved the part where Tony came in the replies and bippitied all over the place. Truly one of the comments of all time.
@@tonybippitykaye Should I call an ambulance for you?
@@bluenorth3965 Yes quickly because he is melting down that most people make fun of the movie
My favorite part was when Barbie said,"Now i am become Barbie, destroyer of glass ceilings."
"It's Barbing time"
*chills
Uhhhh you know, if Barbies ruled the world there'd be no need for nuclear weapons.....mhmhm come on barbie let's go..... denuclearize.
Underrated holy
@@samuelcollinsTXas someone who used military dolls/toys when I played with a neighbor who used Barbie dolls I can confirm there would probably be more nukes
@samuelcollins1160 Nuclear Physicists Barbie has entered the chat.
Honestly I cried like a fucking child at the end of the movie. Just seeing Barbie experience all the womens lives she touched (thats my interpretation at least) kinda makes me think that the focal point of this movie isnt about feminism, or equality (even though those are very major points, as they should be), I really think its about intent.
Barbie never wanted to be a sex symbol that made little girls feel awful about their bodies, her intent was the exact and complete opposite. Her intent was to show little girls that they could have careers and make a name for themselves and have a life that is not at the behest of a man.
Ken never intended to take over Barbieland to actually opress the Barbies- it was his intention to find an identity outside of Barbie so he didnt have to feel the constant hurt he felt when he failed to impress her (his sole purpose). (Side note: I also like how the movie takes an unapologetic look at how Barbie views Ken. Usually, even though his suffering is very sympathetic, in scenes like these the character rejecting is villainized for really no good reason. Idk man I just like that the movie didn't go that route).
I honestly think this movie, alongide themes of feminism, kind of show how pure, good intentions can be very easily twisted by a world that already has a mold and expectations for the person intending- that their thoughts and autonomy dont matter as long as they have a box to fit in. This doesnt just go for Barbie and Ken, either. The mother character has good intentions to bond with her daughter, but it doesn't turn out that way until the end. Ferrell ceo seems to unironically love women in a way that isnt attached to what they can provide him- but his board room is full of men. I think that this movie is trying to say that intent doesnt cover the damage you mightve wrought without even knowing, that you have to put work into your beliefs to see a fraction of change you want to see in the world.
I dont really know man, but I think that this movie is powerful and wonderful and messy and complex and I really love it :)
Edit: spelling mistakes
u put that really nicely
now that you mention it, they never did explore the mom and daughter relationship. was the girl just frustrated with being unable to grow up faster because she's apparently the world's smartest middle schooler or did she dislike her mom for working for a company that embodies many of the problems in her world?
@sorenkair I do feel they very much could have explored the mother daughter relationship a lot more!! But at the same time the scene where the girl calls barbie a fascist does actually have a narritive purpose along with comedic. There were also criticisms of putting an unattainable body type as the standard for many girls who would never achieve it; at the same time the girl doesn't understand that barbie was meant to be a role model to look up to instead of an object to resent. That is also very much in part because of Barbies real life reputation in the movie not matching up with her direct characterization and the misunderstanding beginning between the two characters because of that disconnect.
All of this circles back to your initial point. The mother sees barbie as a figure to pour her genuine emotions into, to create in the vision of what she is because she sees barbie through the more feminist lens. The daughter sees barbie as a symbol of something wanted and what she'll never be
The intent=/=action theory holds true!
Sorry I just love this movie so much and I love discussing it :)
@@ketameanii thank you @!
Ken deserved better.
I absolutely loved the part where she was a Barbie girl in a Barbie world
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
They really made life in plastic seem fantastic.
It looked like you could even brush her hair, or take her anywhere
I forgot how bad the spam was on Charlie's channel
Was it so fantastic made of plastic?
What i love about the film is barbie's transtion emotionally she went from basically not feeling anything aka perfect to slowly experiencing a varied colors of human emotion, i have trouble understanding and expressing my emotions and have trouble crying when i should and when my body wants to so i really related to it
it's for lefty feminist yahoos
Sameeeee. I don't know how to emotion as well
Too bad she didn't develop empathy
@@krulak292 She kinda did in the end
@@L16htW4rr10r really? How come she didn't try to change their own system at the end then? The evil patriarchy is bad, but matriarchy is good? Really?
I told my other male friend I wasn’t a fan of the movie he then said “I found it hilarious” and proceeded to call me a “Sexist”
That didn't happen, mainly because you had no friends to talk to to begin with.
Watching Kens character development was amazing he had no idea what he was doing but he was doing it confidently and it made him feel like people noticed and respected him
While the Mattel people were indeed unnecessary, Will Ferrels presence and his lines gave me extreme joy and had me smiling a big ass grin.
I think part of their presence was to highlight/make light of the consumer aspects of barbie and Mattel like how it’s all just about making money and maybe that self awareness can be used to evade certain criticisms people may levy against the film from a commercial standpoint.
They should have spelled out Barbie existed as a toy for grown men. Similar to matchbook covers with embossed hula girl boobs.
Mattel is in it for the money
especially when you know Will is married to a Swedish woman. He makes a joke about Sweden in the movie. If you know anything about sweden socially then you know how non-patriarchal sweden is. Especially compared to America.
There’s meta commentary mixed in.
@@mauve9266that’s exactly it, how Barbie is now a corporate scheme whereas Ruth didn’t intend it that way
Will Ferrel and the board of directors being completely useless an unnecessary in the movie feels like a perfect metaphor of what they represent in universe
💀💀
They were there for SILLY POINTS! They were silly! Don’t hate on the silliness 😡
As a guy, I honestly felt more represented and gratified by this movie than any other film I’ve seen recently
I disagree about the jokes, I watched this at 9PM last night and a lot of people are laughing with every joke and Ryan Gosling is a born comedian, he really delivered every joke flawlessly.
Also, I think the target audience are 20 years old and above as this movie is pure nostalgia and you can actually see this as the real owner of barbie was the mom and not the kid.
The barbie movie is far too powerful to be assigned a moist meter score. It truly is the movie of all time.
Ok so im not the only one who noticed he didn't even give it a moist meter 😂
@@revan4130i thought i was trippin i’m glad it’s not just me 🤣
he didnt like it but also didnt wanna receive backlash for it lmao
Because he realizes it's not meant for him so he can't give it an objective score
😂😂😂😂
Barbie going into the upside down and defeating the mind flayer was an unexpected but very cool crossover.
Personally when Barbie defeated King Minos in 1 on 1 combat, I burst out into tears. It was truly one of the barbie movies of all time
My favorite part was when Barbie and Ken assaulted Omaha Beach and Ken took out several German bunkers alone
I liked when Barbie broke bad and started to sell meth. Truly one of the moments of all time.
ken shredding enter sandman was peak cinema imo
@@geffbob8960 machine
I love it how Critcal's review vids for Barbie and Oppenheimer both got the same number of views. Perfectly balanced as all thing should be.
barbie was trash lmaoooo
Nope Awesome
Charlie casually not dropping the score at the end is wild
why did he stop doing that😭??
@@roseturkey watch time
@@AzrulShaymi it makes me skip through it even more now tbh
@@roseturkey fr. shit's mad annoying
Cause he knows nobody listens to his shit takes and skips to the end
I agree the Will Ferrell stuff didn’t really work, but making Mattel partly the antagonists of a Barbie film is something I do appreciate
Honestly the best scenes involved him and the board of directors or whatever imo
The board was extremely important for the message, idk how people can miss that. Also it was a huge "how tf did Mattel allowed this" moment 😂
They didn’t.. there’s a chance we will get more Charlie videos on this.
@@AirsoftKeksTVTo me they’re like the Team Rocket Trio from Pokémon. Seemingly diabolical, but ultimately dumb oddballs that want to get more money and fame through crimes that participate in cartoony hijinks and end up accidentally benefitting the protagonist.
The only way they aren’t similar is that they don’t blast off into the sky cause of an element. But Ken already did that.
@@mackielunkey2205 Yes, but the important part is that IRL Mattel management, responsible for making "toys targeted for girls" is 11 men and only 1 women, which is absurd. Men get to decide what women are supposed to play with? It's great that this was allowed to be in the movie.
I think it's especially men that have to watch the movie because women are very aware of the problems they face in this world but a lot of men aren't. I also think exactly the people that need to see it and understand its message are the people who feel offended the most and end up hating it the most.
This
😂 So men need to see Ken actually doing better for Barbieland than how Barbies ruled it? And the ending that Barbie given visions of a mother and daughter that she’d rather live in patriarchial real world than her Barbieland? Sounds to me that women really need to be more aware of the irony of their ideology presented in this movie.
@@ophanimangel3143 no men need to realize that its wrong for them assume that they should have the power in every situation
How ironic that you are offended. That just proves my point and I won't argue with strangers on the internet.
@@riccbove you couldn't even dispute the argument lmao
I saw Barbie at the cinema 3 times for a reason, its a brilliant film that has a lot of soul behind its bright, playful and funny exterior.
Same
I love how Charlie completely forgot to give this film a Moist Meter, what a moment of all time
TRUMP REMEBERED THOUGH
He didn’t forget, he did this on purpose, he is in fear that he’ll get canceled, this channel is going to fall off very soon and you’ll look back at this video at the start of it all
@@Memorial24bro has lost it
I’ve noticed he doesn’t give moisture meters any more lol
@@Memorial24 My guy what are you on about 💀
I think the Mattel board is supposed to not only represent corporate greed, but also show just how out of touch multibillion dollar companies are when it comes to the people they sell their products to. They were very cartoonish but in this case it works. When it comes to relating to the movie, i think it was very relatable even as a man the themes of growing up, of losing your childlike innocence are still there and those are universal no matter what your gender is. Yes it is clearly targeted towards a more female audience, but if anything it had a lot of male centric themes too. Allan represents a man who doesn’t fit the mold into the idea that society has of what a man should be. We aren’t all blessed with perfect bodies, we aren’t all equally brave, confident or even interested in pursuing women in the same way that other men are. It depicts the pressures that society has put on all of us regardless of gender and while it is shedding a brighter light on women (which like dude come on, seriously? Its like blatantly obvious that was gonna be the case so if it bothered hou that much why would you even bother watching the movie?) it still does a good job at shedding some of that light onto how men are viewed by the world. Its about finidng your true self and being happy with who you are, because you are good enough, you are worthy of love, and you shouldn’t have to fit any mold to be noticed.
A bit sad that your comment is one of the few I've seen that addresses the politics of the movie without complaining about "wokeness" and feminism.
@@zhouyongkang5331 it is very sad but people would rather have a fight over the internet than actually have a discussion. Tis the world we live in unfortunately
I also thought the Mattel board was supposed to depict a child's idea of a big company, like the FBI calling an employee who's in a hollow cubicle with very dark lighting and who goes "all the way up" just to see the CEO who's in a board meeting, idk if it was intended to be interpreted like this but that's the impression I got
Alan felt a bit mishandled to me in the end. Seems like the movie couldn't decide what to do with him. In one scene he can take on a group of Ken dolls, but in another he's a bumbling buffoon and is a detriment to the Barbies, merely being strung along because he has nowhere else to go. In the end everyone seems to just ignore him and they don't care about him.
@@stohehato be fair that’s how the allan doll was treated in real life😭
man i dunno about this one, it feels like you went into Barbie with a preconceived notion about what it was gonna be and who it was gonna be for, and let that influence your enjoyment of the movie. i really enjoyed every minute and everone in my theater seemed to feel the same. mostly 20-30 year olds dressing up in all pink hyped af for the Barbie movie, it was a great experience. also, Will Ferrell and the Mattel board were an important and funny part of the movie
You enjoyed every minute of that absolutely enervating monologue towards the end? It’s not even that I disagree with the message, the movie just kept breaking the rhythm of jokes and grinding the pacing to a halt for the sake of bringing the hammer down a little harder.
(SPOILER)
Just wanted to comment on this but I wouldn't say the message of the film was to uplift only women. As we saw towards the end of the film, Ken expressed his frustration with Barbieland, and how he and the other Kens are not treated as well as the Barbie's there. I mean, Ken's whole character is defined by his love for Barbie, and at the end of the film, he realizes he needs to find out who he is. The main message of the film was about how both patriarchy's and matriarchy's are bad, and that society should strive to get rid of these inequalities. Men and women should live for themselves and not for the opposite sex.
I hate to be a bummer but to be honest I disagree with Kens story arc being uplifting for men. I get the message - living for oneself and not the opposite sex (which is great!) but it was a bit disappointing how Ken learned the message. He went from lashing out and making bad decisions to basically being forced/manipulated into submission again, and then when he finally gives up Barbie pats him on his back and explains his character development to him. I don't know it just felt a bit... condescending. It would have been much more redeeming and relatable if it was something he got to discover himelf.
Maybe I'm overanalyzing it but I thought it was a bit disapponting that no of the Kens (or men for that matter) had any qualities or realizations that could make me as a man relate to them.
@@malmcrantz4943 You're not being a bummer, I'm glad you pointed those things out. 👍 I agree that the story would have been better if Ken had found this out himself. I mean, they could have switched the POV, so we could see life from Ken's point of view and have a whole scene where he does this.
I wish they made the Ken's more relatable too. I think (beach) Ken was probably the most interesting character in the movie, but he definitely was not relatable. I know they were trying to make Ken not very smart, but if they wanted to do that, I think it would have been better if they made him not very smart in an intellectual way, but smart in a human/emotion way (like Kronk or something). I think that would have helped make him much more relatable to everyone. (They also should have given all of the Kens more of a personality).
In all honestly, I just think that it's cool that they made a movie about equality on both sides. But it definitely could have been changed... I mean, that whole last bit of the film was a bit strange 😂
@@chickencluck4059 That's a good point! if he had been intellectually dumb (living up to the stereotypical Ken image) but smarter in a human/emotional way... yeah that would have been perfect. Not only to make him more relatable but I think that would make the whole take on the patriarchy more nuanced as well (that it doesn't just apply to the dumb frat-guys).
But yeah I agree, in the end it's still refreshing that a movie like this got made. The "Kenough" shirt was still pretty uplifting, not gonna lie 😄
I disagree with the take on Will Ferrell and Mattel. He wanted to send her back to Barbieland but she escaped. They are definitely part of the plot and I enjoyed Ferrell’s performance. He’s timeless
I agree about Ryan Gosling he truly stole the show 🤩
So they wanted to bring her back to Barbieland, she escaped, then returned to Barbieland
And later on the mother-daughter duo and Allen tried to get out of Barbie- well, Kenland, and they ended going back anyway
Moral of the story: there's no escaping Barbieland
Dude nah, he was pretty fucking pointless
Naw, Charlie makes a fair point; Barbie went to the real world to meet whoever was messing with her doll and Ken went to the real world to learn about a world not dominated by femininity, Mattel arch was unnecessary except for Barbie meeting her creator but that's more to do with the Heroes Journey
I don't think Mattel was unnecessary, it was a bit underdeveloped, but there was definitely meaning behind it
Charlie not dropping a moist meter at the end shook me to my core
Because it’s a shit movie he know it but he’s too scared to go against the woke nazi agenda, this movie literally propagates a matriarchy, and division of men and women, it’s a man hating movie, pathetic.
He would be called misogynistic if he gave the rating it deserves
@@WellytonNandi this movie is literally sexist, how is pointing out mainstream sexism misogynistic. Defending males has become a taboo nowadays, very very sad.
Yeah I was waiting for that, this moist meter sucked ass too
@@Fleetstreetbestonewhy is it sexist?
Loved it when cockring Ken (aka Earring Magic Ken) was thrown into the movie. So fun to watch when you know the lore
i cried so hard watching it i'm not ashamed to admit it. I'm surprised how many people didn't like the human world scenes bc for me they were the most impactful as barbie realised how unfair the world really was towards women and the consequences of this hatred.
Did we see the same movie?
@@VioletDeathRei probably but i once cried at a fucking maroon 5 video so this isn't out of the ordinary
@@VioletDeathRei Why do you comment negative things on every comment that says something good about the movie?
It's as if you think your opinion is the only valid opinion and everybody else around you are objectively wrong. What's wrong with you?
I see after harassing me every comment about my privates you report me so my reply to stop doesn't show up.
Thanks for helping with that CZcams, very empowering.
@VioletDeathRei are you talking to me?? cuz I didn't do any of that
I've been stuck in a dissociative state since watching Oppenheimer and Barbie back-to-back. They were so good it altered the very chemistry in my brain.
That’s pretty bad considering Barrie sucked absolute ass and is woke, man hating propoganda.
honestly too true
barbie was not a good movie bro 💀
@chongert6396 cry about it
@@chongert6396”it’s feminist so it’s bad” vibes
He was so speechless about the Barbie movie he decided it didn't need a moist meter, he just wanted a fun talk with everyone
oh my god thank you for saying this, i have spent the last several minutes skipping through to see his rating before i go watch it lmao
@@nataliep.7152 same man lol
i thought i was going insane.
thats what I assume anyway, or he just forgor
It's been 3 weeks in my small town and the movie theater for barbie is still completely booked every single night for barbie. it is actually insane
The Mattel arc definitely made sense to be in. Barbies first thought they solved gender [job opportunity] equality but in the real world the Mattel C-suite was all men, who all patted themselves on the back for promoting equality but could barely even name a girl who ever had an exec position in the history of the company, and when Barbie came to the real world "causing trouble just by being there" they wanted to just put her in a box, but they didn't give a shit about whether Ken was running around
i absolutely lost it when the girl yelled and called barbie a fascist
I couldn't believe what I was hearing lmao
Fr lol
An extremely heartless and anti-semitic comment, to be honest. Surprising coming from Hollywood, the most Jewish thing out there. I wouldn’t be surprised if a couple people searched up what fascism was and became anti-Zionist after the movie. As a Jew, we need a worldwide Nazi ban; free speech is not hate speech.
That part was very obviously supposed to making fun of chronically online twitter users which I felt was spot on
@jinna321 but in a barbie movie that children were at? Lol
@@uhlexseeuh So they reference genitalia, sexual harassment, and arguably pedophilia multiple times but you draw the line at poking fun at internet users lol? It’s a pg-13 movie
When Barbie said “I’m barbie” and Barbied everywhere was the best part
She actually did something like that 💀
When she said Im Barbie and snapped her fingers, destroying half the universe
Nah it was when Ken summoned all his kenergy and kenergy’d all over the place
Ohhh that's funny because that DOESN'T happen in the movie. Wow that is hilarious
@@jadedjimmy the funny thing is, it's somewhat true this time
how moist meter if no moist meter
First movie ever to sell one barbillion tickets, truly one of the barbie films of all time and I'm glad to have been a part of this historic moment
Is 1 barbillion higher than 1 morbillion? I’m curious.
@@Litchy51 a barbillion is one oppenheimillion times more than one morbillion
☹️☹️☹️
@@SnjeguzicaBut morbius made a morbillion morbillion so thats more than the barbillion barbie made
I liked when she said "its barbin' time!" and totally barbed all over the bad guys.
Charlie, thank you for writing, directing, producing, and acting in yet another trillion dollar movie.
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
SO MANY BOTS!! 🤕
The fans are no different from the bots
@@EgotisticalNarcissisttrue
Abraham lincoln why are u in a charlie video
I don't think that the target audience is really kids, 75% of the topics and jokes are not for kids and are very blatant not hidden
So many bots in the comments saying the same thing its crazy
Honestly this seems like it’ll be the movie of the year. It’s definitely gonna make a Barbillion dollars at the box office
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
Ok
I think oppenheimer will be movie of the year because of how serious it is. Barbie def gonna be top 3
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
@@3pound hard agree. I’m seeing both within the next 2 weeks. My hopes is that Oppenheimer takes it home, but I can tell I’ll love both
In the theater i went everyone was laughing and having an extremely good time with the film. Hearing my friends laughing their asses off with the godfather bit was the best part of that experience. Overall it’s a good movie in my opinion. I like the heartfelt moments too, they were pretty awesome.
Goofy, funny and Ryan Gosling 9/10 would be my overall score.
Same here! Everyone was having a lot of fun on the theater I was in
OH MY GOD me and my mom were dying at the godfather part. it’s a shared experience
AI bots commenting
🗿
Me too, the room was laughing histerically
He never plugged it into the moist meter…
It's such a garbage film he didn't even rate it
I'm suprised that charlie's theater went silent on some of the jokes, I was also in a packed theater and the audience was cracking up the whole movie!
Agrees
Same
I like a more honest theater, when people don't laugh just cause they feel required to, however I've been in the awkward reverse situation where I'm the only one laughing at the jokes in the theater
@@lightningmonky7674 not all the jokes landed, but most of them did. The audience was just genuinely having fun watching the movie and you could tell
Its Florida man
It was surprising to learn how proficient Ken was in Kendo after picking up that stick and unleashing his 7 Verboten Kenjutsu, obliterating Barbie in one clean sequence of blows
Easily one of the most Kentertaining moments of the movie, which made the second half of the movie where 87% the world experienced gradual Kentrification seem much more appealing of an idea
When ken shattered The *Cat in The Hats* spine I literally dropped my popcorn and cried. I can't believe they would kill off a main character
Oh I thought you meant Allan.
Yeah, him opening all 8 Gates on Will Ferrell was seriously unexpected
I watched it and absolutely loved it, I loved all of the parts where Mattel was making fun of themselves, portraying themselves as an evil corporation, even admitting that Barbie was never about feminism and the Shoehorned Feminism didn't work either. The film is very self aware and brimming with meta humour that I absolutely loved, I was laughing a lot during the whole movie, easily the best movie I watched all year and I'm a 21 year old guy. It's totally meant for all genders and adults
It made me so happy that Ken was almost a satire of roles that Ryan Gosling always plays where he’s the usual moody heartthrob but it’s dialed up to 100 here
As a Barbie collector, i felt like a lot of the jokes was made for those who actually know the Barbie lore, and I loved that. 🥰
You loved a badly written movie? Wow
@@tdspkhype3042You’re so opinionated wow, very impressive. People like you.
@@tdspkhype3042The whole movie is full of references to not just Barbie merchandise, but in how girls play with barbies. Barbie floats down to her car because why mimic walking them downstairs? We didn’t do that as kids. Swimming pool is just a flat surface Barbie can walk on. Fridge has sticker decals as food like Barbie fridges do.
@@davidohanlon6937 Yeah better than people who fake it
@@Skwadley Wow these are easter eggs now?
Amazing we got the first movie to get a 1000% on the moist meter. Love to see it :)
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
CHARLIE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HE COMMENTED ON MY VIDEO A YEAR AGO GUYS HEY CHARLIE LITERALLY REPLIED TO ME HAHA HEHE 😃
O
Yo the guys below my reply got a point, Charlie didn’t even rate the movie 💀
My farts are better than Charlie's farts.
Barbie movie in short: "Man bad, women good."
this was kinda a miss lol. i just think bro didnt pay attention enough cuz he already went in thinking it was for little girls but thats just my armchair psychologist take
Same, I like Charlie but I think he missed the point of the movie
barbie is such an open ended and imaginative movie that charlie joined along, wanted us to reflect upon ourselves and imagine the final score he gave the movie. such a visionary
charlie was referencing barbie's tagline of "Be whoever you want to be", applying it to the moist meter and re contextualizing it as "be the score you want to be".
@@philatio1744Defeats the point of a moist meter.
@@Justin-pe9cl I swear lately he's just not been including scores lol I always have to go into the comments to find where in the video he even attempts to rate it
@@theweekndxo7438 Right? I’m trying to see if people really think it’s good or are saying it’s good to be ironic.
@@Justin-pe9clit really is good
it’s so frustrating seeing so many people completely miss the point of this film aaaa I’m losing my mind
same it's actually ridiculous😭😭 I don't think half of these people have even seen the movie
Mfs really have rotted their brains with political youtube channels, pointing at any western media and claim its propaganda with some weird mental gymnastics logic.
Oh God, AMEN! It's quite clearly a mockery of the Redpill Manosphere turds lol - they're out here triggered pink lol making all kinds of shit up about it. I've seen RP Alpha Trogs claim that it's pro-gay, pro-trans, pro-abortion... but never what it was... a piss take of a very specific "Alpha Turd".
Lmao it’s actually insane how so many men have missed the point! The movie could not have made it more clear. You were uncomfortable about how the Kens were treated? Good!
@@danig342why
This Barbie movies is hardcore feminist propaganda.
It's actually meant to be mocking the real-world extreme feminism, while also sending a message about what actual feminism is all about. Because even when matriarchy is restored in Barbie Land, Barbie still decides to leave showing that she doesn't actually think the world is so patriarchal. It's a mockery of it.
Yeah the creator of barbie even said the patriarchy is made up at the end.
Of course the main villain is the “patriarchy” can’t do anything but blame men lol
If they are like you then fuck yeah
Can you explain? I didn't watch the movie
I think I like the Mattel board, they are painted as kinda delusional and just as comical in the barbie world. It also requires some action during that point to get barbie and the family to meet.
I guess it maybe diminishes the message that that is the real world, and that the real world is harsh though.
I think it was also used to point out the fact that so many companies that release items geared towards uplifting and inspiring women and girls are ran by old men in suits who at the end of the day will never quite understand their audience as they are men
@@froggin-zp4nrso somehow doing that for women is bad but men don’t matter?
@@ang841I mean you could argue women would have just as hard a time understanding what random kids want too. I think it’s more about age than gender, since different generations tend to like different things w trends and all that
@@ang841 It's still pretty weird and funny that Mattel's board in the movie is a bunch of old goofy men when their actual board of director's is pretty much equal with 6 men and 5 women, and only one of those men is above 70.
The chase scenes weren't bad tbf