Why Modern Movies Suck - The Strong Female Character

2023 ж. 9 Мау.
3 353 986 Рет қаралды

One of the most tiresome tropes of the past ten years in moviemaking is the "Strong Female Character." Not women who are smart, capable, well written and complex, but bland, boring, superficially "strong" characters designed to pander to simplistic ideals of female empowerment.
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  • FYI - Experienced an editing glitch that caused the video to freeze half way through. Sorry about that, but its fixed now so enjoy the vid!

    @TheCriticalDrinker@TheCriticalDrinker11 ай бұрын
    • It's not an issue. Keep fighting the good fight against THE MESSAGE

      @davejacobs7245@davejacobs724511 ай бұрын
    • I thought ‘they’ had disappeared you. Relieved! You are a ray of fun in a crazy world, who saves my frame of mind.

      @l.sophia2803@l.sophia280311 ай бұрын
    • I thought you had been flagged.

      @justinpeterson3686@justinpeterson368611 ай бұрын
    • my conspiracy theory brain just overloaded when midway through your video it stopped and was suddenly not available anymore ;-P

      @UnicornStorm@UnicornStorm11 ай бұрын
    • Too bad... I had a great and poignant comment on the last video, but since I forgot it I'll just say... women ☕️

      @HasanPikerIsADouche@HasanPikerIsADouche11 ай бұрын
  • People don't dislike female characters. They dislike poorly written characters.

    @Jabberstax@Jabberstax11 ай бұрын
    • No, women cannot act the part and they do not look the part. Same stances, same looks, rarely looked trashed and will never go through the movie with the black eye or swollen lip received while they were being strong.

      @winstonsmiths2449@winstonsmiths244911 ай бұрын
    • ​@@winstonsmiths2449 Yes they can dumbazz, there are many women who have acted perfectly well and can pull emotions better than men actually since they tend to use emotions more often. The fact you deny this means you are just one of those incels. Are there bad female actors? Yes just like there are bad male actors. Are all of them bad at acting? No to generalize so is stupid.

      @dewolf123@dewolf12311 ай бұрын
    • ​@@winstonsmiths2449 Bro, if you think we want your type, your wrong. We hate sexisim agains men AND woman. Edit: I have said that I misunderstood them and even said sorry. I'm getting real annoyed how you guys keep replying to my comment but won't put any effort to see my new responses. Edit: I would usually be proud of this many likes but something tells me it's by woke lunatics, unless I'm wrong. Also, for the love of gosh, please stop sending me hate and saying how I'm sexist or wrong when I have admitted to being incorrect

      @zonebro6205@zonebro620511 ай бұрын
    • Thank you, This channel is starting to turn into right wing circle jerk. These are just movies at the end of the day.

      @baseballproyo@baseballproyo11 ай бұрын
    • No, it's not the role for them no matter how you write it, it's out of place. Stop with this "compromise" nonsense. Stop being a fence sitter.

      @johnames6430@johnames643011 ай бұрын
  • Write female _characters_ Not _female_ characters.

    @XeniaChow@XeniaChow11 ай бұрын
    • Don't write strong characters write characters who are strong

      @justsomeguywholovesberserk6375@justsomeguywholovesberserk637511 ай бұрын
    • Truth has been spoken!

      @ramthorus@ramthorus11 ай бұрын
    • I think these writers are conflating strength (which has a moral dimension) with power (which does not).

      @cognitivedissidents4642@cognitivedissidents464211 ай бұрын
    • This ^

      @Marshal_Dunnik@Marshal_Dunnik11 ай бұрын
    • More like beMale characters

      @dejellybeanz8260@dejellybeanz826011 ай бұрын
  • Sarah Connor is a very good example which I never realized about. The writers never tried to overpower her from other men, she ran and escaped where she had to. She planned things out with her team. The writers never forcefully tried to show us that she's "equal" and as strong as the terminator.

    @mistyydagoat@mistyydagoat8 ай бұрын
    • Female or otherwise....that's what you WANT to see. An underdog protagonist bravely fighting against something much bigger/stronger/dangerous.

      @pauldraper1736@pauldraper17368 ай бұрын
    • yea but only in the first and second movie

      @rphb5870@rphb58708 ай бұрын
    • @@WaryofExtremes after the third film they discarded the John Conner act. Yes the messianic figure that the original film and its even more popular sequel build up. Instead they reintroduced Sarah Conner as a "strong female character". She was played by the same actress just older, but now she was scrubbed clean of flaws and personality. My old drama teacher always said that they make the first film because they have a great idea, and the second just to make money. But what do they do when they turn it into a franchise? well I don't even think money is the goal anymore. by the fifth film they actually kill John conner in the past

      @rphb5870@rphb58708 ай бұрын
    • @@stevej71393 Sarah Conner is the mother of John Conner, that is her MO, he is the one that is the prophetised one in the frasnshise

      @rphb5870@rphb58707 ай бұрын
    • That key toss as a diversion before the gut hit with the baton was such a nice touch .

      @geno7462@geno74627 ай бұрын
  • Eowyn vs the Witch King is how its done. Perfect example. I even smiled when she took off her helmet and said, "I am no man." And fucked him up. That wasn't insulting at all. She stood her ground, faced absolute death and won. Thats worthy of a standing applause in itself.

    @nikcue2542@nikcue25429 ай бұрын
    • i mean.. the witch king gave her the perfect pass by saying no man can kill me. At that moment, we all though in our heads... " wait a minute...."

      @akhsdenlew1861@akhsdenlew18615 ай бұрын
    • If you read the book, it's even more significant, the meaning of those words, "no man can kill me" it's almost like a prophecy that he was destined to be defeated by a woman, and her trajectory, of desperation and hopelessness lead to her facing him and being the one, scared and all, but overcoming him for he was dishonoring his father that she só much loved, to the point that facing him was almost an everyday task, pretty amazing

      @FodoBolseta@FodoBolseta5 ай бұрын
    • Great example

      @anthonywayner8734@anthonywayner87345 ай бұрын
    • Also, it seems like he was taken back by surprise at her statement, and that worked to her advantage.

      @enohav@enohav5 ай бұрын
    • She was also shown to be caring and compassionate while being of royal blood...who could fight to defend King and Country to the death.

      @gregorykiernan7849@gregorykiernan78493 ай бұрын
  • Don’t forget the first ever female character to be strong: Jennifer Lawrence

    @chucksenhowzen9740@chucksenhowzen974011 ай бұрын
    • Then everything changed when Mystique came and downright assasinated her character with one line 😂

      @justsomeguywholovesberserk6375@justsomeguywholovesberserk637511 ай бұрын
    • Didn't she literally take it in the ass from Harvey Weinstein to get her oscar?

      @Sixstringman@Sixstringman11 ай бұрын
    • She won’t let us forget!

      @GIBBO4182@GIBBO418211 ай бұрын
    • Hahaha. Oh, stop.

      @mantabond@mantabond11 ай бұрын
    • Jennifer Lawrence is the first woman to exist, read the Bible

      @Jean-ClaudeGodDamn@Jean-ClaudeGodDamn11 ай бұрын
  • Ripley was done perfectly. She was often scared, indecisive, bested in battle, belittled by her male coworkers, and even - gasp - cried now and again. At the same time, she was 100% grade A badass.

    @iceman242436@iceman24243611 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely 100%. She was such a wonderful character. She also valued the men and women around her she felt she could trust and didn't treat them like they were less than her, but instead as equals. She was one of the best action heroes, man or woman.

      @TheShadowKarl@TheShadowKarl11 ай бұрын
    • I propose that female characters in action movies be measured in units called Ripleys (R). Ripley = 1 R. Someone like, say, Sarah Conner = 0.85 R (Aliens are slightly harder to deal with than Terminators). Of course, Strong Female Characters should be measured in Micro-Ripleys (mR, 1 R = 1000 mR). Rey would be ~20 mR.

      @pfoster1666@pfoster166611 ай бұрын
    • She was one of a great many strong female characters who we all loved. Sarah Conner. Furiosa. Uma Thurman(Kill Bill). Vasquez. Princess Leia. Karen Allen(Raiders of the lost Ark)... to name a few. They were badass, and empathetic characters. We cared about them. Now they make strong female characters that no one gives a shit about.

      @Godstud@Godstud11 ай бұрын
    • best female character tied with Sarah Connor...Sijourney wins because she had more films...

      @alb4271@alb427111 ай бұрын
    • My favorite

      @bozcro@bozcro11 ай бұрын
  • Im from Sri Lanka, and I think my mom was a strong female character. She did not fight an army or defeat a super villain nor had super powers. But she raised me alone amidst all the hardships the society threw at her. Now she inspires me. Not all powerful Captain America. 😢

    @Escape_Reel@Escape_Reel9 ай бұрын
    • proud you man, best wishes.

      @blockshar4782@blockshar47827 ай бұрын
    • 同意します。強い女性とはフェミ的なものでなく母親であるべきです

      @kobachau8815@kobachau88157 ай бұрын
    • ​@@kobachau8815and thats why people needs to stop joking about ither people's moms

      @fabionoronhazampieri7639@fabionoronhazampieri76396 ай бұрын
    • Not a single one of these so called female character in these movies is real! All of them do have an Y-chromosome! People are programed for believing in their stars, they've got blinded by makeup, wigs, plastic surgery, hormons and false voices!

      @reginaknoll4258@reginaknoll42586 ай бұрын
    • Beautiful comment

      @GOPSlayer@GOPSlayer5 ай бұрын
  • I think Over-confidence looks gross on both men and women. No balance.

    @estebanpavez3162@estebanpavez31627 ай бұрын
    • Exactly!

      @dantehajime709@dantehajime709Ай бұрын
    • IT LOOKS LIKE THAT EVEN ON WOMEN

      @cutiepie6796@cutiepie67968 күн бұрын
  • Mulan is the perfect example of what you are talking about. In the original animated Mulan, she started off as a weak recruit that was trained and hardened into a fighter. She learned to fight using her speed and intelligence, not brute force. In the live action remake, she started off with a special ability that allowed her to quickly excel with little effort. The first one could be seen as inspiration for girls to exceed despite what hinders them. The remake just says, "she exceeded because she had special powers."

    @wolfpile1@wolfpile110 ай бұрын
    • meh, all female protagonists are empowered by magic including the ones we look back upon fondly. Men are twice as strong in the upper body. That is not a little. Men evolved to mentally cope in combat situations. Men have faster reflexes. A woman vs. a man is a child vs. an adult. No comparison. More female nature does not allow for heroism. They evolved to be too valuable to risk and naturally avoid conflicts and risk. See how many female firefighters died rushing into the burning WTC (zero btw) Take Beth Harmon Utterly fictional character because women do not compete mentally either. Hundreds of male top chess players exist for a single average female chess player. Hence why Beth was fiction (yet acted like women were good at chess, they are not)

      @TheBelrick@TheBelrick10 ай бұрын
    • She was trained, worked with, and fought... MEN. So... does that make her magically STRONG and EMPOWERED??? Ummm... and one more thing... IT. WAS. AN. ANIMATED. FILM. BY. THE. WOKE. HEADQUARTERS... DISNEY!

      @linus1792@linus179210 ай бұрын
    • @@TheBelrick is this supposed to be bait?

      @DrakeSilver@DrakeSilver10 ай бұрын
    • @@DrakeSilver truth does tend to upset awful people who then get baited. So i suppose so? But more importantly, it raises the awareness of how fooled into believing lies like muh empowered women, normies are.

      @TheBelrick@TheBelrick10 ай бұрын
    • @@linus1792 yep, the original mulan was still a circle jerk of unfounded reality but at least it was done in a minimalist to ego boosting way There are people who want us to believe that women can fight for the same reason why their are people who slip poison into besieged cities wells.

      @TheBelrick@TheBelrick10 ай бұрын
  • I'm a tall girl, 5'9. I was in a brief relationship with a guy who was shorter, skinnier, and weighed less than me, and he was still significantly stronger than me to the point I knew he could hurt me if he actually tried. Modern movies are ridiculous in their lack of realism.

    @seacrest73@seacrest7311 ай бұрын
    • atomic blonde is a film I would recommend as it has realistic action based on the hand to hand combat they teach women who work as spies and in special forces.

      @samueldawkins@samueldawkins11 ай бұрын
    • ​@@samueldawkins I still don't buy it. I'm in the army and even when women join special forces, they alway take support or surveillance roles. Those hand to hand combat techniques are last ressort and will still fail most of the time if your opponent is bigger/stronger.

      @thibaldus3@thibaldus311 ай бұрын
    • _looks up at ya_ Dang, you're tall, hehe! 5' 8" here.

      @Gyrfalcon312@Gyrfalcon31211 ай бұрын
    • @@samueldawkins a story based on something I heard, from someone who told me, that something was possibly based on a thing they heard, was maybe true. Tell us more about the so called SF/spy techniques that are taught. Please. The audience is enthralled with your fairy tales of she-hulks barely defeating average men.

      @BandAid350z@BandAid350z11 ай бұрын
    • ​@thibaldus3 agreed. When I went through combatives training, I had the opportunity to have to roll with two women. One immediately went to my back and correctly applied the rear naked choke. She wasn't strong enough. I choked the first one I grabbed until she tapped, then I pulled the one off my back and did the same. She was really upset and couldn't understand why it didn't work. I told her she just didn't have the strength necessary to apply the choke.

      @gregoryteeple9306@gregoryteeple930611 ай бұрын
  • I’m glad you included Samantha Carter in your list of real women of strength. She often gets overlooked. I’ve known females in the Stargate fandom who went into a scientific field because of her.

    @lorismith1722@lorismith17228 ай бұрын
    • The "I'm an expert at everything science plus impossibly advanced alien tech" trope was a bit eye-rolling, but overall Sam was a great character. Smart, capable fighter with realistic strength, strong compassion/emotional depth (e.g. Five). Stargate did a great job with all the female characters.....Dr Fraiser, Dr Weir, Teyla...even Vala Mal Doran and Adria. All interesting in their own way.

      @pauldraper1736@pauldraper17368 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pauldraper1736aka just good characters. Even the supposed week and undermining Woolsy in the final season, I feared would be the story equivalent of a nuclear bomb to the show because he seemed to be the bad side of male archetypes was a extremely well written and intelligent character who was competently written and through a interesting scenario where most of the main cast live were at stake demonstrated his worth and diplomatic capability by being a driving force and one of the only reasons they made it out of that situation, a interesting episode. The show was better written then alot. Honestly it suprised me how better call saul seem to manage to dodge most of this left stuff.

      @anonymousunknownbenafactor8790@anonymousunknownbenafactor87908 ай бұрын
    • -Come over and see ‘I Sent Amber Heard's Lawyers A Letter…’

      @tdowling2562@tdowling25627 ай бұрын
    • Yeah she could save the day with both her fists and smarts, but its not that she could do everything!

      @shjp2148@shjp21485 ай бұрын
    • Well...maybe from Season 2 onwards. Accomplishments of Season 1 Carter: - mouthed off to a room full of superior officers about her genitals being on the inside. - Got offended on Sha'uri's behalf upon hearing the first 1% of the answer to "So how did you and Sha'uri meet, Dr. Jackson?" - Literally fought the patriarchy. With a knife. Among other just...cringeworthy uppity feminist shit they wrote for her. They eventually toned that shit down and you get the slightly workaholic ubernerd she was through the rest of the show.

      @thegardenofeatin5965@thegardenofeatin59655 ай бұрын
  • BEATRIX FUCKING KIDDO - I love her character so much. My favorite part of the film series? Her rigorous training with Pei Mei and how she had to EARN his respect and admiration. The strength he teaches her comes full circle when she has to free herself. It’s *chefs kiss* perfection

    @annabelledee6554@annabelledee65549 ай бұрын
    • Not to mention the main antagonist if the first movie O-Ren Ishii, who is given a clear and understandable motivation for eventually become as powerful as she did. Tarantino was writing genuinely powerful women years before we got the completely flat and one-dimensional girlbosses of modern times.

      @xShinigamiRyukuux@xShinigamiRyukuux6 ай бұрын
  • Sarah Connor remains one of the most compelling female leads - she totally comes across as more than capable to best most men she encounters as she actually put in the work to convincingly portray the part. Yet in T2 the second she encounters the terminator she collapses in fear and flees, as she is self aware and understands her limitations. And NO ONE with a functional brain or beating heart thinks any less of her for it.

    @johanbothma8031@johanbothma803111 ай бұрын
    • The awesome "Sarah-ness" continued in Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Lena Headey has almost eclipsed Linda Hamilton as my favourite Sarah, and I wish the series had done better. The writers said that the end of T2 left Sarah in a really interesting dramatic position: she was a single mother on the run from law enforcement, knowing what was coming and having to prepare John for the future. The series reflected this, how angry and isolated she is, and the certainty that she's going to die sometime between 1999 (when the series starts) and 2007 (they do a time jump in the first episode). And the horror of raising a wayward teenager who does stupid things like hack into the school's computer, which can leave a trail to tip off future Terminators is something she has to deal with every day.

      @ellagoreyshorrorstories7524@ellagoreyshorrorstories752411 ай бұрын
    • I mean, she is cool, but is she compelling? I don’t think anyone watching her is thinking wow, what a well written naunced character

      @scottgimple8107@scottgimple810711 ай бұрын
    • @@scottgimple8107 I think so. We are introduced to her working in a diner. A completely unremarkable and average woman of her age. She largely plays mentee to Kyle Reese throughout the first movie, but you see her grow as a character. Only a few days pass throughout the entire first movie. At the end we see her drive off into a storm and expect a positive future for her. The beginning of the second movie, we find that she didn't live happily ever after, she's institutionalised, she failed at raising her son, but she is hardened, physically and mentally. After John and The T800 rescue her, and some more growth after trying to kill Dyson, she then takes on the mentor role for John that Kyle Reese did with her.

      @hjf3022@hjf302211 ай бұрын
    • @@hjf3022 I absolutely concur with that. She is written very well, with plenty of failings and struggles to overcome. And when she overcomes them, we cheer her on because we know that she put in the work to get where she is.

      @Nightweaver1@Nightweaver111 ай бұрын
    • Think less of her? It made her more compelling. To see the determination not flinch but just shift current priorities. Love that. That's good writing

      @nix9vex13@nix9vex1311 ай бұрын
  • The reason why Sigourney Weaver was so incredible in Aliens, is because her character didn't possess any insane abilities. She wasn't overly smart or strong, she didn't fly around and walk through walls. She was a average scientist who had no idea how to fight or operate guns etc. Her weaknesses were on display the entire time and she managed to get herself though it. The role wasn't some stupid caricature of female empowerment and everyone loved it.

    @RobinMasters007@RobinMasters00711 ай бұрын
    • Mad integrity, too, to refuse to let her injured mate on the ship because it could (and did) harm everyone else on board.

      @mnels5214@mnels521411 ай бұрын
    • She wasn't even a scientist. Ripley's job was like an interstellar truck driver. They wanted her to come along because she was the only one who had a damn clue about the Xenomorphs.

      @vixeneris2307@vixeneris230711 ай бұрын
    • She had courage, reasonable intelligence and _common sense_ - something severely lacking in Weyland Yutani employees.

      @whenpigsfly8178@whenpigsfly817811 ай бұрын
    • Ridley did whatever she could to survive with what she had. She didn’t possess special powers only an instinct to survive. That’s what made this movie so great and Weaver’s character so iconic. The other characters were great as well. I never get tired of watching this movie!

      @suesabalburo6235@suesabalburo623511 ай бұрын
    • She was just a pilot, not a scientist. Like someone working on a container ship.

      @samblack5313@samblack531311 ай бұрын
  • Emily Blunt in Edge og Tomorrow is the brilliant way to tell a strong female character, we do not even see a second of what made her a Rey-like but we all learn from watching Tom Cruise go through the exact same over and over, we learn how it's all muscle memory and experience. Seeing women today just reminds me of how ridiculous it was watching Steven Seagal movies, wondering how he could possibly do 99% of the things he did or try to relate to his bland characters.

    @rednaskela4830@rednaskela48309 ай бұрын
    • Edge of Tomorrow is such an underrated movie. It has its faults but damn it’s entertaining, looks good and has well written characters. I haven’t seen the movie in years but can easily recall the plot, the locations and the characters. Can’t say the same thing about most if any of the Disney/Marvel/DC garbage I’ve seen in the past years.

      @ez_w0rks@ez_w0rks2 ай бұрын
  • I think it's funny how the one time Disney hired an actress who actually looks like she has a pretty reasonable chance of being able to fuck up an average man in a one-on-one fight (Gina Carano) they went and shit-canned her.

    @Kevin-jb2pv@Kevin-jb2pv6 ай бұрын
    • She herself is a completely anti toxic feminist so they threw her out.

      @cgxapurba8450@cgxapurba84504 ай бұрын
    • she's a strong female character in real life and she was blackballed by Disney

      @WeedSmoker69@WeedSmoker694 ай бұрын
    • I do love seeing her fight in movies cause it's extremely believable, as she's also an actual fighter; she does seem like she could rip someone in half. But she hasn't had many good scripts to work with...

      @theteob689@theteob6894 ай бұрын
    • I never watched the mendalorian so I googled to see how she looks and HOLY FUCK, this woman could suplex a bear and I wouldn't give a shit.

      @TheRasengan0@TheRasengan02 ай бұрын
  • Marge Gunderson from _Fargo_ is one of the strongest characters in film history. Coincidentally, she's a great example of how Lawful Good doesn't need to be "lawful stupid."

    @antoyal@antoyal11 ай бұрын
    • All the female protagonists in the Fargo TV series are also pretty great characters. Smart, brave, and likeable, but also flawed. And not just written like male action heroes.

      @andybrice2711@andybrice271111 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely. One of my all time favorite female movie characters. Seems like a naive rural housewife first, but is actually a super clever detective. Very well written and well acted.

      @Imlaor25@Imlaor2511 ай бұрын
    • Great movie

      @Necromonger69@Necromonger6911 ай бұрын
    • Heck I'd argue Penny from the Rescuers in 1977 is a better female character and shes just an animated little girl. In the first half of the film, she drops a help message in a bottle that travels to the Rescue Aid Society and attempts running away too. Madame Medusa the villain of the film even yells shes done it again meaning this isnt Penny's first escape and the fact Penny is willing to run away without packing any supplies prives her willingness to escape her captors

      @Thomasmemoryscentral@Thomasmemoryscentral11 ай бұрын
    • @@andybrice2711Probably one of the best TV shows of all time IMO.

      @xandercylinderpants9440@xandercylinderpants944011 ай бұрын
  • Traits like arrogance, self-entitlement, know it all, stoic, bluntness, rudeness, ruthlessness, confidence, self-respect, and aggressiveness For males, they’re flaws But for females, they’re “strengths”. Double standards

    @titanblade3706@titanblade370611 ай бұрын
    • Yep. According to modern "progressivism", women mist be toxic men, and men must be subservient and fawning.

      @hariman7727@hariman772711 ай бұрын
    • this is what you get from your hate filled sis feminist writers. I wrote a funny.

      @Parlimant_Strifey@Parlimant_Strifey11 ай бұрын
    • Very *_TRUE_*

      @VMIFerrari@VMIFerrari11 ай бұрын
    • Being stoic is not a flaw, especially in men, but there's a time and place for stoicism, and a time and place for compassion and empathy.

      @z3r0_35@z3r0_3511 ай бұрын
    • Right-on brother!

      @neurotraumatized-thrall@neurotraumatized-thrall11 ай бұрын
  • A friend of mine is an actual female writer. When I asked her about her views , she says the issue is agenda. Modern/woke female writers don't want to write female characters as people. They want to write them as agenda driven memes.

    @brianfuller757@brianfuller7576 ай бұрын
    • Which proves how lazy they and the companies are.

      @justinaddison769@justinaddison7692 ай бұрын
    • That's why everyone hates it but the psychos and political liars

      @DeuceGenius@DeuceGeniusАй бұрын
  • I would also include Selene from underworld, and Alice from Resident Evil. Don’t think people mind a strong female lead, just when it’s done right, and not forced.

    @skyflores9827@skyflores98279 ай бұрын
  • Strong female character is really just shorthand for abrasive, unlikable, completly flawless, and portrayed by an actress garaunteed to get into Twitter fights with anyone who doesn't worship her role as stunning and brave

    @dakotanichols8533@dakotanichols853311 ай бұрын
    • I wonder if you’ll consider this template being used for a man character problematic.

      @DarkLord30199@DarkLord3019911 ай бұрын
    • @@DarkLord30199 "Gary Stu" is a thing, yea.

      @Sasha-zw9ss@Sasha-zw9ss11 ай бұрын
    • Modern definition refers to a non ovulating female with too must testosterone as a strong female. A strong female character would be what is a woman. Muscles is men. Nurturing is women. Ripley only went back to the planet because of her nightmares, but once there she kept fighting because of her maternal instincts protecting Newt when her own child grew up without her and had already died. Sarah protected her kid. Marion in Indian Jones, she didn't seem that strong. Buffy was given a younger sister to raise after losing her mom.

      @Skitdora2010@Skitdora201011 ай бұрын
    • Women need to be allowed to act feminine on screen again

      @GalaxyOfBoltz@GalaxyOfBoltz11 ай бұрын
    • Too perfect Mary Sue = "Strong Female Character".

      @hariman7727@hariman772711 ай бұрын
  • Also, can we just talk about how Disney felt the need to elevate already strong female characters into "even stronger" by basically making their whole personality "badass female character"? For example, Belle was already a well written character, a girl who is nerdy and quiet but also knows where to stand up for herself or the people she cares about (rejecting Gaston directly, yelling at the Beast and refusing to join him for dinner, showing no qualms about walking away from him when he tried to scare her, scolding him later for not controlling his temper). But the live action? Belle is not strong enough, she needs an occupation to be a good character, so she is the scientist now. They also shoved in a few sexist comments that were too on the nose and cringy, to say the least. Jasmine? OG Jasmine was already strong. Again, she knew when to speak for herself and exactly what she wanted. She knew her own worth and she wanted a suitor who would accept her as a person, rather than for her title. But in the live action, Jasmine needs an ambition. She wants to be the sultan. And she positively insults all men (unlike in the animated version, where she only insults the over the top haughty princes) and has an entire song that talks about not allowing herself to be silenced when there were no instances of anyone trying to silence her. Again, "strong female character". And quite possibly the most unnecessary change was to Mulan. OG Mulan was arguably the most physically powerful female character but the creators felt the need to change that as well. OG Mulan was a socially awkward girl who cares about her family, and disguises herself as a soldier for selfless reasons. She is not perfect; she has to learn everything from scratch, she fails time and time again while training, she has to work her way to the top. She also used her brains in most of the fights because physical strength in itself isn't enough, and that's what made her stand apart from the others. She got along with the male characters perfectly well, with no need of comparison or proving herself to be better. But the live action version? That Mulan is born with magical chi, she has trained from when she was a child, so she has to face no difficulties when joining the army. The only thing stopping her from proving herself is the society; otherwise, she is perfect. She is far from being a realistic character because young girls would look at her and think, "well, she's strong because she was born with it". Not to mention, the live action Mulan was as boring as a slice of bread. She had no character other than "female warrior", emphasis on the "female". Basically, physical strength isn't everything. All of the OG princesses were strong in their own ways. Cinderella dealt with abuse and torment for years, but still kept her good morals and kindness. Snow White realized that running away from toxic situations is not cowardly. Tiana wanted to have an occupation to support herself and her mother, and worked hard for it. Ariel wanted to explore a new world that she didn't know, and be part of new experiences. Also. Romance is not weak. A strong female character can still fall in love. And if they choose to stay single, it should not be because "she's too independent for a partner". You can be in a relationship and still be independent. If the relationship is built on mutual trust and understanding, no one is "too strong" for it. I understand that aroace characters can exist, but their motive for not having a partner should not be "oh, I don't need a man"; it should just be that they're happier with friends or family, and they don't really feel the need to be in a relationship.

    @XeniaChow@XeniaChow11 ай бұрын
    • Basically they had to make the side characters pathetic so they can stand out 😂

      @justsomeguywholovesberserk6375@justsomeguywholovesberserk637511 ай бұрын
    • Very well said, and great points!

      @deniswauchope3788@deniswauchope378811 ай бұрын
    • Exactly

      @corvoadrian6970@corvoadrian697011 ай бұрын
    • Mulan was pretty stupid in the animated version too though. She went from what you'd expect from a young girl who's been raised to be a housewife and completely in over her head as a soldier, physically unfit and far behind her male counterparts, to suddenly being able to outshoot, outrun, outlift and generally outperform all of the others - even defeating the captain, a man clearly much more physically imposing and trained as a warrior his whole life, in a sparring match, over the course of a single song (okay, of unspecified time but logically at best a few weeks to a month or two) purely from sheer force of will. I'd totally get it if was just that she'd been using her smarts and being underestimated (elements like causing the avalanche, maybe figuring out how to climb the pole) but no. Literally she just instantly turns into the best.

      @doubledee8677@doubledee867711 ай бұрын
    • Because they cant write female in the first place

      @SubZero-hs9xc@SubZero-hs9xc11 ай бұрын
  • My personal favorite example of a strong female character written really well comes from the animanga series Black Clover. The series has such an outstanding female cast, but the one that really takes the cake is Noelle Silva. The series follows a young boy named Asta in a medieval world where magic is everything, but he has absolutely zero. Not one to back down, he works his ass off to get into the a Magic Knights squad and gets into the worst one, the Black Bulls; there, he meets Noelle. She starts off as a really unlikeable character: she’s royalty, who naturally have huge magic powers, and thus she’s demeaning, condescending, and outright hostile to her fellow knights. However, this is all a façade, as she’s unable to control her magic powers and has been constantly ridiculed by her peers and her family, giving her a really nasty inferiority complex she takes out on others. However, due to her being inspired by Asta and the rest of her squad, she slowly overcomes her lack of magic control and grows to love and care for them as family. This, of course, naturally brings her to being one of the strongest characters in her universe, and it feels earned. IMHO it’s damn good writing on the author’s part that a seemingly unlikeable character showed that much growth and depth throughout the series, to the point where she’s been voted fan favorite consistently. It just serves to highlight all of Drinker’s points that showing weakness in any character, regardless of gender, does more to strengthen them than being a badass bitch who don’t take shit. Hollywood should honestly take a page from this, since idk how many more Rey Palpatines we can take.

    @WindMaker305@WindMaker3058 ай бұрын
  • Loving the call out for Colonel Samantha Carter! Amanda Tapping is one of my personal heroes ❤️ Her character of Helen Magnus in Sanctuary also deserves recognition in this context

    @Helen_Magnus_@Helen_Magnus_8 ай бұрын
    • Carter is awesome - proof that you can write a strong, capable, interesting female character who's also positive, optimistic and... nice

      @TheCriticalDrinker@TheCriticalDrinker8 ай бұрын
    • @TheCriticalDrinker Cheers for the reply mate 🙂 🍻

      @Helen_Magnus_@Helen_Magnus_8 ай бұрын
    • Samantha Carter, smart, tough, but can put on a dress and heels and be feminine. Love her!

      @addieroth5201@addieroth52013 ай бұрын
    • Hell yeah, some Stargate SG1 love!

      @stephentichenor3024@stephentichenor30242 ай бұрын
  • Ripley from Aliens was one of the best female characters ever because she showed bravery and skill not because she was not afraid-she clearly was-but because she was so committed to rescuing the little girl that she found the courage to confront the Alien mother and kill it. Humanity with courage and competence is a very attractive combination.

    @kaunas88@kaunas8811 ай бұрын
    • Lmao right? I just got out of a semester with a professor who said that the movie was sexist because she was “too masculine.” She was a woman too.

      @_.hybrids._1680@_.hybrids._168011 ай бұрын
    • @@_.hybrids._1680 imagine not steeling your nerves when someone else’s life is in danger, your lady professor would’ve probably been the first casualty in a survival movie 😂

      @cakefrosting6451@cakefrosting645111 ай бұрын
    • Also, Ripley character wasn't written with a woman or man in mind. The writers created a well rounded believable character, then it happened Sigourney Weaver was cast as Ripley.

      @stratocactus@stratocactus11 ай бұрын
    • Yepp one of the best female characters in one of the best movies ever

      @SvenskSork@SvenskSork11 ай бұрын
    • Ripley was the "strong female" only because the men in the cast were portrayed as a bunch of incompetent sissies, even the little girl had more balls then these military trained men. Even the guy that was in charged of the mission freaked out under pressure, so with idiots like those, it was pretty easy to see Ripley as the "strong female" type.

      @efrankphd@efrankphd11 ай бұрын
  • Another actress who gets slotted into the 'strong female character' role a lot these days, Evangeline Lilly, has also come out against this 9:14 trend in particular: "Why are we only applauding masculinity in women and villainizing it in men? And why are we only applauding femininity in men and debasing it in women? Why can't we just allow for all of it? Why do we feel the need to vilify a man wearing shit-kicker boots, driving a pick-up truck who's not afraid to punch someone in the face, but if they were a woman, they would be the epitome of cool? Why is a man who loves make-up, cries easily and stays at home to tend to the domestic responsibilities valiant, but a woman who does the same is pathetic?"

    @heskymarky@heskymarky11 ай бұрын
    • There is an answer to her question. Because it upends tradition and accelerates the destruction of society. That is the drive and always has been.

      @peterc3262@peterc326211 ай бұрын
    • Then why's she playing those roles

      @santhosh4474@santhosh447411 ай бұрын
    • ​@@santhosh4474 people need to eat

      @supsock180@supsock18011 ай бұрын
    • @@supsock180 Nah. She's too big of a star to go out of job.

      @santhosh4474@santhosh447411 ай бұрын
    • @@supsock180 she literally had no role in Ant man 3. Remove her and it's the same movie. Did she not have any other movies to act? Only Ant Man 3?

      @santhosh4474@santhosh447411 ай бұрын
  • Just rewatched 'the love bug' from 1969. Carol Bennett is such a strong character. Smart, headstrong, no fear, automecanic and the way she get mad at Douglas still gives me the chills!

    @thieryvercammen@thieryvercammen8 ай бұрын
  • The problem in modern Woman Power movies is that they have to one-up a man to prove what they can't prove. For example, Bruce Lee is an amazing, ultra-disciplined badass of a man, yet if he were to go against Mike Tyson, there is no way he would win. The reason a weight class exists In contrast, Because I am female, I beat man that is 150lbs more than me because I have woman parts. That is what the problem is - if you put Gina Joy Carano, a woman with superior genetics, against a soy boy, then I would completely side with her badassness because alone she already has an impressive build.

    @therealistseb6597@therealistseb65977 ай бұрын
  • No faults. No learning. No suffering. No realism. No story.

    @JD..........@JD..........9 ай бұрын
    • = No Truths

      @Schwertfisch13@Schwertfisch135 ай бұрын
    • So simple…. So basic… yet, it’s ignored to pander to an audience whose support is almost statistically nonexistent.

      @jayavionharris@jayavionharris5 ай бұрын
    • @@jayavionharris And the support they do get isn't even from normal women, it's from crazy feminists and trans women. And they all pretend they care when these movies flop, but they don't, really. Success or not, they're just happy that Hollywood panders to them. They know that all they have to do is say over and over that they flopped because mAn tRaNspHobiC & BaD, and way too many people will just go along.

      @dongiano@dongiano5 ай бұрын
    • I can't say why "strong female" characters are so popular ( it seems they aren't ), but I can say why I found the obvious matriarch of this gynocentric genre of kickassery appealing ( it wasn't her fabulous fashion sense in leather ). Most of the time Xenia was just hanging out and messing around with Gabriel - she was off duty. This what I find disappealing about so many "strong male" characters. Stuck in tough guy mode. You kicked somebodys' ass did you ? Wow, get over it. The problem is these "strong male" characters were not invented by tough guys. What we got is a preadolescent image of what a man should be ( Jody ).

      @johnteets2921@johnteets29214 ай бұрын
    • A complete Mary Sue. Who need such ridiculous character, which does not evolve at all?

      @user-tm3si7pw3u@user-tm3si7pw3u2 ай бұрын
  • Hermione Granger wasn't as powerful as Harry but she often outperformed him cause she spend hours and hours reading books and no one ever said that one of these characters were weaker than the other. Hermione just found a way to compensate the lack of pure power and used her intelligence to outsmart others.

    @Wortmagie@Wortmagie10 ай бұрын
    • Hermione is not a good exemple. She was not just intelligent, she could do spells on her first try. She was not just book smart. Harry was forced to be competent in moment of crisis because he was put in those positions. He was powerful but we never knew if his magic was stronger than hers.

      @Miranda-gi9fx@Miranda-gi9fx10 ай бұрын
    • @@istoria4999 Um--the magic is a metaphor for her other "powers" of brains and personality--the reason she has more powerful magic is that she studies a lot! She's not ALWAYS superior magically--e.g. the contrast between her dissing the others over raising a feather (it's winGARDia!) and her paralysis before the troll, when it's the guys who can say the spell better in a physical crisis. Metaphors, metaphors.

      @JOHN----DOE@JOHN----DOE9 ай бұрын
    • Mulan (in the animated movie) is a better example of overcoming physical weakness with smarts.

      @TuAmigoElMorrocoy@TuAmigoElMorrocoy9 ай бұрын
    • Hermione put in more work than the entire school man, she even asked for an artifact that could turn back time just so that she can attend more classes, man, a time machine. to do more work. There is a reason that she always acts like a know-all, it's 'cause she fkn do. She deserves all of her strength and wit. she a real one in my book.

      @damsoyinc9235@damsoyinc92359 ай бұрын
    • Hermione was great at magic because she is smart and her thirst for knowledge drove her forward but she was never perfect. She has her flaws like being extremely good in a classroom setting but less competent in dangerous situations (more notable in the earlier books/years), she also could be annoying because she got hyper focused on studying and would chatted insistently about it and although she was usually the best in every subject she was not as good in Defence Against The Dark Arts (she even admits this herself and struggled to produce a patronus until Harry helped her in their DA lessons). Now I admit she was probably the closest to being a perfect character in the books (and film) but she wasn’t actually perfect, she was still a flawed individual who messed up and struggled but her struggle was to do with growing up, discrimination and social interaction with her peers. Hermione is a weird example because she could be interpreted as a “strong female character” but she is nuanced and well written enough that she comes across as talented individual that you low key envy in some respects but don’t actually wish you were. Sorry about the essay but I thought Hermione was an interesting character to discuss in this subject matter.

      @SlideIX@SlideIX9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for including Buffy Summers as a an actual strong woman!!! 🥰 Although she has superhuman strength, she struggles emotionally and physically with this burden of a responsibility, and despite her power, she often gets her arse handed to her by underestimating her oponent or doubting herself. People shit of Joss Whedon for his Wonder Woman script and for Natasha Romanoff's attempt to date Bruce Banner (Wonder Woman origin story is terrible: literally falls in love with first male they see - Natasha is finaly free to make her own damn decisions, having never dated in her life beyond seduction for a mission). As a non-binary person (physically female), I loved that Buffy could kick arse, be emotionally vulnerable, does not always have a plan, has terrible dating experience, makes good and bad decisions, and LEARNS, yet manages to stay true to who she is. SPOILER ALERT - she goes from a 16yo who wants to be a normal teenager and is scared of responsibilty, suffers PTSD from a near-death experience, makes a tough call between love and duty, losing her youthful support as she becomes an adult, fights a literal God (yet another woman in heels, make up, physically impossible to defeat, and yet still more "human" than modern "strong female characters"), losing friends and family to NATURAL causes (i.e., people she cannot save), until she gets to the point where she is no longer alone and can finally live her damn life. All of this while still wearing impractical holter-necks because if she is going to be forced to be a monster fighter, doomed to die young, she may as well look pretty while she's at it! People mock Whedon's Buffy for being "contradictory" as she dresses and acts like the "dumb blonde" yet is super human, but that is the damn point. With great power, comes great responsibility - but that does not mean you have to surrender who you are as a person. Additionally, Buffy shows that you can have supernatural power, but that does not make you invicible, mentally stable, or able to save everyone... and that is okay.

    @erinspeller4025@erinspeller40259 ай бұрын
    • My daughter loves Charmed. They were not always victorious. They suffered plenty of heartache.They always were feminine and vulnerable.Women to look up to.

      @edwarddiaz9724@edwarddiaz97248 ай бұрын
    • BTVS was my all-time favorite TV show. Whedon was careful to show that Buffy's superior physical strength was only an asset when fighting supernatural evil. When it came to the ordinary challenges of real life, that strength was either a detriment to relationships (ex. Riley) or meaningless (ex. Angel and Spike were just as strong.) Another strong female character I really liked was Captain Janeway from Star Trek Voyager. She was in no way invincible, but her devotion to her crew, her respect for her duty as leader, and her perseverance in getting her people home the "right" way made her a totally believable, standout female character.

      @EricaEchos@EricaEchos8 ай бұрын
    • One thing I did appreciate about the first Wonder Woman movie, though, is that it pretty much showed equality between men and women (minus the required sexism for the setting, such as in the War Room). Diana and Steve, however, helped each other out in different ways. Diana didn't always drag him along on her own mission. Yes, they played with reversing some of the common gender tropes (e.g., Steve lounging in the bath tub), but they treated each other with respect.

      @johnwilson8482@johnwilson84828 ай бұрын
    • That's not even to mention Helpless, her 18th birthday episode where she loses her powers. This girl goes from superstrength to normal strength and still manages to defeat the bad guy because she's clever and quick on her feet

      @katelyntaylor7384@katelyntaylor73847 ай бұрын
    • Buffy 💕💖💗💞💓

      @jamescarr1265@jamescarr12657 ай бұрын
  • This is so true dear films stop telling me I have to be single hate men and put everyone around me down in order to be a ‘strong woman’ stop telling me having kids suck and I should be and appear perfect at all times and I have to be super tough and cool in every second of my life upholding the “perfection” standard you complain about in the same very movies. Please give me a real woman, with growth and flaws I miss when female characters didn’t just have 2 personality traits being victim complex , and Acting arrogant and better then everyone. Ps some of us like love stories and that does not make me less of a woman (can’t believe I have to say that now )

    @emilycorless8977@emilycorless89779 ай бұрын
  • The best example of this is Mulan. In the animated movie, she constantly struggles during boot camp to the point where others are telling her to quit. Then comes the giant pole with the arrow on top of it, and no one can get to it. No one! Not even the strongest recruit. Mulan refuses to give up, and while everyone else is sleeping, she keeps trying her hardest until she reaches the top of that giant pole. When her drill Sergeant comes out in the morning, Mulan throws that arrow at his feet. It was a powerful moment, not just for Mulans character, but for ALL kids regardless of gender. Jump to the live action movie, and Mulan is so strong from the moment of birth that she literally has to physically hold herself back so as not to easily embarrass everyone around her. Absolutely butchered her character with a straight trash message.

    @gollyg9339@gollyg933911 ай бұрын
    • That moment when is climbing up and song hits its peak. Fantastic, you are in on her journey.

      @MrBreakdownBoy@MrBreakdownBoy11 ай бұрын
    • Keep in mind it wasn't simply endurance that got Mulan to the top. Getting to the top of the pole had to be done while wearing weights. Mulan uses cleverness in order to use the weights as an advantage instead of a handicap. It played to her using her intelligence to keep pace and even surpass others.

      @Aleyck@Aleyck11 ай бұрын
    • This, right here. The cartoon Mulan had everything to lose. If she was discovered, she'd be arrested. Going into battle, she very well might die. But, even knowing this, she risked it for her father. She could not physically keep up with the men. She literally had to be helped just to try and keep up. But, when she climbed the pole, it wasn't brute strength that got her there. The men were trying to climb the pole wearing the weights and they couldn't. She couldn't. It was when she stopped trying to be the strongest and used her brain that she did it. Instead of letting the weights pull her down, she used them to climb with. It was brilliant. During the battle with the Huns, she again thought through the problem and played to her strengths, showing that everyone has talents and they are all just as valuable as physical strength. In the end, she again risked everything to save her friends and her country, also playing to her strengths. She grew in confidence and saw her value. She had the confidence to say to the men, "I have an idea, follow me." Can you see her doing that at the beginning of I'll Make a Man Out of You? And they follow her without question, even Shan. And we went on that journey with her. We wanted her to succeed. We cheered when she did. We learned that we all have skills and worth, even if we don't see it. We just have to find it. What risk did the new Mulan have? She was the strongest and the best. She wasn't going to die and all she had to do was just have the men get out of the way. She wasn't really likeable. There was no risk which made the reward hollow. I didn't get to know her and I didn't care if she won or not. What growth did she have, what did we learn? You are 100% right. The two Mulans are a very good illustration of what went wrong.

      @Laurtew@Laurtew11 ай бұрын
    • Not only that but once everyone saw that it could be done. Every one got their morale up and started working together.

      @crunchyfresco@crunchyfresco11 ай бұрын
    • Mulan turns the challenge of climbing the pole, around by thinking outside the box. Work/think smarter not harder, there's more than one way to skin a cat. They had to climb with 2 weights with was impossible for anyone at the time. She figured out the solution, ties the weights together throws them around the pole and uses them to her advantage to climb the pole super easily with barely an inconvenience. Overcoming the challenge and making it look easy to everyone else by comparison. Our mind and our ingenuity are our only and greatest weapon and Mulans mind has been honed to a razor sharp edge by the end. She also single handedly destroys the entire Mongol horde by using the environment to her advantage and causing an avalanche too. She learned a lot from the pole challenge. And later they infiltrate the palace to save the emperor using her technique of wrapping stuff around poles to enable them to climb up and do eventually save the day.

      @Huntron-go1bw@Huntron-go1bw11 ай бұрын
  • This video should be required viewing once a week in every Hollywood studio boardroom. Except Disney -- EVERY DAY for them!

    @davidanderson_surrey_bc@davidanderson_surrey_bc10 ай бұрын
    • Honestly Like Disney you don't have to make every character in your movies either strong female character gay or black to make a good movie.

      @MasenM@MasenM10 ай бұрын
    • @@MasenM if Disney doesn't do it. who will take the responsibility of making the next generation "ultra woke" all over the world?

      @premmahto4855@premmahto485510 ай бұрын
    • @@MasenM fr like you arent racist homophobic or sexist when you dont do that

      @odysseasgobets9285@odysseasgobets928510 ай бұрын
    • Yep, I like my fantasy halfway believable.

      @spiegeltn@spiegeltn10 ай бұрын
    • why are you still watching their movies then? just ignore them and thats all

      @Lord_earth@Lord_earth10 ай бұрын
  • Many of these ‘strong female characters’ fail because they’re strong from the off. They have no weaknesses, nothing to learn, no way to develop. They therefore come across as one-dimensional, which makes it hard for audiences to empathise with them.

    @neiltonks4627@neiltonks46278 ай бұрын
  • Does anybody remember the movie courage Under Fire with Meg Ryan? I remember watching that movie and thinking how great of a job they did portraying a courageous woman in a battlefield situation. Didn't remove the things about her that made her a woman. They didn't shy away from the differences and were able to portray her as a total badass. As a father of daughters I watched that movie and thought that was a portrayal that showed the sort of courage I would hope my own daughter's would display if their backs were ever to the wall.

    @dkmiller8420@dkmiller84208 ай бұрын
  • Amazing that in the same breath, they wish to call masculinity "toxic" meanwhile, EVERY positive trait that creates the modern; Strong Female Character™ is masculine! The irony cannot be lost if you are immune to it.

    @GruffGames@GruffGames11 ай бұрын
    • Lmfao nail on the head

      @TheForbiddenOne55@TheForbiddenOne5511 ай бұрын
    • More like a caricature of masculinity tbh

      @z3r0_35@z3r0_3511 ай бұрын
    • thank you! I swear I had given up hope that anyone would ever realize this OBVIOUS Paradox. But this aint even half the story. Feminists CLAIM to be for the "feminine (hence "Feminist") but they demonize everything that is feminine while at the same time glorifying everything that is masculine. So they should be called ANTI FEMINISTS!!!!! Though that has a limit. They only demonize the feminine until "the ship starts sinking". Then they all cry out "Women and Children first". No "equality" when it comes to DYING ey? Same with wars! Then there is another Paradox that is beyond funny! Imagine Slaves asking their Masters to "fight" for THEIR Freedom...can you imagine such a nonsensical Situation? That is EXACTLY what Feminists do. They call men "oppressors", "Tyrants", "Patriarchs" and then ask the SAME MEN to "help them" against men. That is so beyond ridiculous that only mental infants can come up with something like that.

      @harryhoudini714@harryhoudini71411 ай бұрын
    • 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

      @philw8049@philw804911 ай бұрын
    • Absolutely right.

      @paulduncan789@paulduncan78911 ай бұрын
  • I don’t think people talk about her enough, but Holly McClane is a great example of being strong without physical strength. When her boss, Joe Takagi, is shot by Hans Gruber, she makes sure the needs of the other hostages are met, literally walking right up to Hans to ask him to get the pregnant woman a sofa to help her back. She remains calm under pressure, and when she is taken hostage by Hans later in the film, she is not afraid to insult him right to his face (calling him a “common thief.”) She knows what kind of a man Hans is, and she doesn’t hesitate. Not to mention all of her dialogue is outstanding. Imagine if Holly McClane was written today, she’d kill a terrorist with her brute strength, start a hostage uprising, mow down all the terrorists on her floor, and when John is upstairs confronting Hans and the fake security guard, she shoots Hans and the other guy, saving her husband with not a scratch on her. I’m so glad the drinker made this video, as a homo sapien without a Y chromosome I feel better represented in this video than in 98% of Movies today. Edit: love these comments getting into all the details of her character, Holly is really underrated.

    @goldeneagle8740@goldeneagle874011 ай бұрын
    • Why is this comment not top-rated? It's incredibly accurate!

      @Dark_Kevlarian@Dark_Kevlarian11 ай бұрын
    • I would like to see a die-hard-sequel where John's and Holly's daughter has married the computer nerd from DH4 and both get in trouble over something, most likely dad. They could form a couple with her being the action and him ... well, doing what he did in DH4. I think that would work ...

      @Rezzatoni@Rezzatoni11 ай бұрын
    • Grace under pressure, this is what's lacking in these female roles and the Alphabet mob in real life. The roles are all boring but the real people are always "victims" who cry wolf every time some pressure and work are expected. An employer can't demand some competence bcoz that will be "harassment" and "toxic". They immediately need meetings to deal with simple problems and "therapists" to cement their "victimhood."

      @rasalasblack@rasalasblack11 ай бұрын
    • Totally agree with this. Great comment.

      @Zapp__Brannigan@Zapp__Brannigan11 ай бұрын
    • Yes, all of the characters in that film were well written, Allen Rickman as Hans Gruber is one of my all time favorite villains.

      @akidodogstar5460@akidodogstar546011 ай бұрын
  • Excellent insights - thanks. Your observation of how the "strong female character" in today's movies violates the classic story arc that makes for a good story is spot on. I wrote a screenplay several years back, and after the producer I'd sent it to read it, he criticized it by saying that, "It's written like one of those old, classic movies where the guy rescues the girl". (Apparently, the irony of using the term "classic" to describe something as "bad" escaped him.) In reply, I told him, "Well, I wrote it that way on purpose - because, personally, I am sick to death of all these movies where it's the female lead who ultimately beats the bad guy in the climactic confrontation - the male lead does his best, but basically gets his ass kicked and is about to be killed by the bad guy - but then the girl jumps in and does what the guy apparently couldn't, finishes off the bad guy. I just want to throw up when I see those scenes in action/thriller movies these days - and I don't think I'm alone in that among the moviegoing public."

    @BogartSlap@BogartSlap9 ай бұрын
  • What’s hilarious is that by writing every female character to be “Better” than the male characters they are in fact defining the female based on the male. And removing the true unique attributes to the females in the movie.

    @troyorem@troyorem9 ай бұрын
    • i could not give crap if the female is better than the male character as long as the "better" is earned.

      @fig1115@fig11159 ай бұрын
    • @@fig1115 exactly.

      @troyorem@troyorem9 ай бұрын
  • One important thing about Sarah Connor. Do you remember her repetitive dream sequence? This is the fucking huge epitome of her character. She sees herself, her former self, wearing a floral dress, playing with kid and being happy, just to be destroyed by impending doom. Her dreams about being a normal woman and mother of her child destroyd by an inevitable war. She hates this idea so much that she's deciding to kill that Cyberdyne dude. She never wanted to be like that, she just HAD to become one to protect her child. She decided to give up on her dreams not because she didn't want that "patriarcy induced bullshit" but because she wanted them so much that she had to sacrifice everything to keep them safe. It is not just "she is so cool and badass", people just didn't realize her strong feminine aspirations.

    @semyonanonov877@semyonanonov87711 ай бұрын
    • Her character is awesome, isn't it? She's a believable character. Not like Guy-ladrial

      @a.s.raiyan2003-4@a.s.raiyan2003-411 ай бұрын
    • Hahaha Guy-ladriel! That's a good one ;-)

      @altermellion6984@altermellion698411 ай бұрын
    • She had her femininity & innocence destroyed by the 1st Terminator's relentlessness. She just became like a hardened combat vet after, the writers didn't treat her as an overcompensating woman at all but just human. Reminded me of Vietnam vets that went into the woods & became anti-social survivalist preppers.

      @DB742@DB74211 ай бұрын
    • This! Thank god someone gets it.

      @thibaldus3@thibaldus311 ай бұрын
    • Yes! That's why that deleted dream scene with Kyle Reese is so important. Notice she's back to having her more feminine hair in that dream.

      @RisingUnderdog@RisingUnderdog11 ай бұрын
  • The way Sarah Connor was in T2 will ALWAYS be legendary. She was always fighting dirty to win, it felt legit.

    @fopeezy3097@fopeezy309711 ай бұрын
    • She fought in dangerous situations how people, both male and female, fight in real life. Screw being fair. If I can throw some dirt in that guys eyes to get an advantage, I’m gonna do it. If I see him clinching his fist and fixing to throw a punch I’m gonna punch him first.

      @OrtadragoonX@OrtadragoonX11 ай бұрын
    • Watched Terminator 2 recently and it hasn't aged one bit. Linda Hamilton performance is stellar. She's so badass

      @donk8589@donk858911 ай бұрын
    • yeah... it was men who came up with rules of warfare so that the full horror of war did not fall on the women and children. So absolutely, anti-hero females who fight dirty are the real modern protagonists. Dirty-fighting is a symptom of weak character. Just as claiming to be a girl so you can go from being a 500th place loser to a 1st place "winner"... because winning is more important than how you win.

      @Hiraghm@Hiraghm11 ай бұрын
    • @@OrtadragoonX That's true about how things work in a real, dangerous situation. Even in man vs. man, the fair fight only works in a civil setting with previously agreed upon rules such as official boxing or MMA fights. Bruce Lee, the legend considered to be the forefather of MMA, was notorious for being dirty and pragmatic. If he was in a fight, he aimed to win. He would poke your eyes, bite your hand, kick you in the knee cap, even deal a low blow. He never competed, he fought.

      @TKDBoy1889@TKDBoy188911 ай бұрын
    • Yep she learned from the first movie. Unstoppable machines coming to get her. She has to use everything possible to overcome.

      @misanthropicservitorofmars2116@misanthropicservitorofmars211611 ай бұрын
  • Haven't watched a new movie in years. It's all politicised these days. And yes, people still want to see the male hero rescue the damsel in distress...

    @Gonken88@Gonken888 ай бұрын
  • Chihiro Ogino from Spirited Away is another well written female protagonist who got actual character development.

    @nickhaas3550@nickhaas35506 ай бұрын
    • She does. It's literally a story about a sheltered child growing up and learning the hardship of work, demeaning bosses, and problem-solving through improvisation because real life has no definite answers! She even gets immense self-esteem boosts after cleansing the river god, as seen when she eats the red bean bread with delight. Such a great and timeless story.

      @user-gb7ji6xy5d@user-gb7ji6xy5d3 ай бұрын
    • Miyazaki knows how to write a character arc. He gives them personality and charm; by the end you can’t help but love the character. That’s why I’ll watch his movies over and over, whereas with Marvel movies I can’t hardly watch them ONE time.

      @joshcarter-com@joshcarter-com3 ай бұрын
    • I’ll add: Nausicaa is an interesting case, almost a counter example; she’s the “strong female lead.” However that story is less about character growth and more about sacrifice.

      @joshcarter-com@joshcarter-com3 ай бұрын
  • Sarah Connor had an incredible and believable character development across T1 and T2. T1 she was scared, working a dead-end job, lacked confidence, and didn't know what was going on. She was useless. T2 she's figured it out, she has purpose, she's been working out every day and training with guns all to protect her son. Her combat skills make sense.

    @kennethmacalpin7655@kennethmacalpin765511 ай бұрын
    • And simultaneously was neglecting her son (and becoming callous towards the rest of doomed humanity in general) whilst pursuing her single-minded hero's journey, and has to develop and begin to reconnect with him and appreciate her life in the moment rather than always being afraid of the future to come.

      @colinr0380@colinr038011 ай бұрын
    • @@colinr0380 and it helps she came to realise she was becoming no different than the killer machines she hated and feared so much than when she went to try and assassinate miles dyson in the belief killing him would prevent skynet. Outright almost killing him in front of his own wife and kid. And how she came to respect the T100 aftermoutright distrusting it given its twin almost ended her own life. She came to think of it as the sort of father figure John needed in life and gave it a salute when it chose to have itself destroyed. “If a terminator,a machine,can learn to appreciate the value of human life…there’s hope”

      @Sketchfan@Sketchfan11 ай бұрын
    • @@Sketchfan Absolutely. She 'changed' and 'developed' over the course of the film.

      @colinr0380@colinr038011 ай бұрын
    • The only thing I didn't particularly care for in T2 was they made her out as unhinged and almost psychopathic. I mean, I get where Cameron was coming from thematically with her character (i.e. she's becoming as machine-like as the Terminators themselves) and knowing the fate of humanity would cause anyone to go a little nuts, but I just didn't particularly care for it. The way Reese described Sarah in T1- "The Legend" "Who taught her son to fight," ect.-- made me believe Sarah kept her wits and was that revered figure that set John on his course to liberating Humanity. That's why, upon watching T2, I was disappointed that she was in a psych ward while John's out being a hulligan that just thinks his mom's a nutcase. Yeah, yeah, it makes a good story. I personally didn't care for it (but I'm also not the biggest fan of T2 in general, so I may be a bit biased).

      @GPMM213@GPMM21311 ай бұрын
    • @@GPMM213 hmmm. I felt frustrated at the way that Sarah Connor was being treated in the psych ward; but I think that’s how the audience is supposed to react. Since we, as the audience, know that she’s not delusional. And yes, it’s sad and also frustrating that John thinks that she’s crazy; but these things make the payoffs more satisfying; when she breaks out of the psych ward the audience is really rooting for her because we know that she probably doesn’t belong there. Same kind of thing happening with John and Sarah’s relationship; it starts out in a bad place but we see them rebuilding their bond during the movie; the fact that they are so much closer by the end - is made that much more rewarding given where they started. There are many satisfying and rewarding character arcs and relationship arcs in this movie. But hey, maybe it’s down to personal taste as much as anything. Personally I like T1 but I think that T2 is a perfect movie.

      @4231jerome@4231jerome11 ай бұрын
  • I think the scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark, where Indy and Marion are attempting to steal the plane is a perfect example of toughness on both counts. Indy is fighting a guy twice his size and getting his butt handed to him, but he keeps on fighting in spite of the size disadvantage. And Marion, far from the typical damsel in distress, fights alongside him, first by knocking out the pilot and then using the machine gun to take out a truck load of soldiers. A perfect action sequence that displays the bravery of both characters without going overboard.

    @wamingopublishing674@wamingopublishing67411 ай бұрын
    • Indy still saves her, just like if she were any other sidekick.

      @pflume1@pflume111 ай бұрын
    • @@pflume1 But she still fought by his side and kicked butt rather than just cringing in a corner and waiting to be saved.

      @wamingopublishing674@wamingopublishing67411 ай бұрын
    • ​@@pflume1yeah, but it is his movie after all

      @DiminutiveJerry@DiminutiveJerry11 ай бұрын
    • Agreed! I get so annoyed when the lady doesn't jump in to help. I mean, do anything besides just stand there..

      @CrowTRobot618@CrowTRobot61811 ай бұрын
    • They also did it without framing Marion as better than Indy in every way. They also didn’t remove Marion’s femininity and give her masculine attributes.

      @systematic101@systematic10111 ай бұрын
  • What’s annoying is you can see how slow and weak women are in these staged and scripted fight scenes and they just look so slow and weak and you can tell the men are holding back. It’s just so annoying

    @jordank316@jordank3168 ай бұрын
  • Every time Laura Dern's character flashed on your montage my stomach clenched...she made "Captain Phasma" seem plausible.

    @mattblatchley2061@mattblatchley20619 ай бұрын
  • As a woman, I'm just tired of this trope. It's not empowering to see a female character just act like an asshole to everyone and then succeed like Velma or Fake Galadriel. It's not empowering to see them be such a boring character like Rey. It's not empowering to see someone just be an inconsistent character like Wanda. I want more than the damsel in distress stereotype but by getting rid of it, they're just stereotyping us even more. You know what is empowering? Watching Mulan get kicked out of training for bringing the team down and instead of leaving and giving up, working all night to complete Shang's challenge and do what every other man in the camp couldn't by retrieving the arrow. That was character development. That was a beautiful and powerful moment. Why is it so difficult to have more moments like that for women?

    @sophieamandaleitontoomey9343@sophieamandaleitontoomey934311 ай бұрын
    • God Rey was so fucking boring. Nothing worse than English Mary Sues

      @jeanpaulchristian3282@jeanpaulchristian328211 ай бұрын
    • Preach

      @deathmeo@deathmeo11 ай бұрын
    • Because that would cause the women to have flaws. That doesn’t fit “ThE mEsSaGe” so it can’t be written as such.

      @ghostflame9211@ghostflame921111 ай бұрын
    • Why? Cause women are born perfect, it’s the law of nature, everyone knows that. And if you don’t agree, you must be a man then.

      @TheMusicMan1012@TheMusicMan101211 ай бұрын
    • yep , as a man i loved the original mulan . she was a badass cause she worked hard and never give up .

      @Marcusmanca@Marcusmanca11 ай бұрын
  • As a writer, we plan out a heroic character arc, then the suits come in and make the main character a female, gay, crippled, black, etc... And if they have any weaknesses, it becomes, "You Hate (insert non-hetero white male character type)." So, all of the flaws and weaknesses are removed and the character is suddenly perfect, just the way they are. It's got all the dramatic tension of watching someone play a video game with cheat codes.

    @Poisonedblade@Poisonedblade11 ай бұрын
    • Ironically, it makes it even more demeaning to minorities to make characters that are supposed to represent them so infallible.

      @jmal@jmal11 ай бұрын
    • And yet so many writers stand by their work. Bizarre behavior if it's the suits that caused it.

      @tezwah5651@tezwah565111 ай бұрын
    • @@tezwah5651 I can only presume that it is because they don’t want to make the people that pay their bills look bad publicly.

      @be1uuga355@be1uuga35511 ай бұрын
    • @@be1uuga355 maybe, but you could also presume they stand by their work.

      @tezwah5651@tezwah565111 ай бұрын
    • Are the “suits” jewish?

      @ipunchedsatan@ipunchedsatan11 ай бұрын
  • Thank you! I am writing a book and most of my heroines are old school so it is nice to see people might resonate to this wonderful depiction of such a heroine.

    @LorolinAstori@LorolinAstori8 ай бұрын
  • A reason why I love Nausicaa from the valley of Wind.

    @ikagura@ikagura8 ай бұрын
  • I always loved Eowyn's story. She wasn't being left behind when Theoden and Eomer rode off. Theoden understood that they were going on a suicide mission. And he needed someone whom he could trust and was strong to lead the Rohirrim, thus making Eowyn queen. She faced down the Witch-King to protect her king and kinsman, showing both loyalty and bravery. After the battle, she married Faramir and settled down: "I will be a healer, and love all things that grow and are not barren." She understood that the time for being a shieldmaiden was over but she still had much to contribute in bringing peace after all of the destruction.

    @davidcox3076@davidcox307611 ай бұрын
    • Nailed it.

      @stockman214@stockman21411 ай бұрын
    • Good point, but I'm trying to recall moments she had genuine chemistry with Faramir.

      @louisduarte8763@louisduarte876311 ай бұрын
    • @@louisduarte8763 They were injured together and both were single. Times are simpler in such worlds and times.

      @dynamicflashy@dynamicflashy11 ай бұрын
    • And when she cried out, "I am no man!" it actually meant something other than "I'm better than you because I'm female."

      @ElveeKaye@ElveeKaye11 ай бұрын
    • @@louisduarte8763 It's briefly nodded at in the books; the movies spend like a moment of screen time hinting at it during Aragorn's wedding iirc both.

      @ericwolf9664@ericwolf966411 ай бұрын
  • Emily Blunt is probably the last good female action star, even in A Quiet Place, she's shown to be a caring loving mother but she's also still a badass momma bear who takes on horrifying aliens to save her kids. And she's believable at it too. John Krasinski hit the jackpot with her.

    @Will_Parker@Will_Parker11 ай бұрын
    • She is my favorite actress

      @FireJach@FireJach11 ай бұрын
    • And she's a funny, intelligent, gorgeous woman to boot.

      @thomasbecker9676@thomasbecker967611 ай бұрын
    • And has an amazing accent

      @nothajzl@nothajzl11 ай бұрын
    • Not to say she's a bad person, but Emily blunt isn't the characters she plays.

      @mad_elf@mad_elf11 ай бұрын
    • She stood on a nail and sucked it up because she had too

      @Ob1sdarkside@Ob1sdarkside11 ай бұрын
  • You need a strong female *CHARACTER* Not a *STRONG* female character

    @limeylime8027@limeylime80278 ай бұрын
  • This is good and to the point. Message and delivery are two of the most important components of messaging, and in this video you are scoring high on both…

    @LarsGartner@LarsGartner9 ай бұрын
  • One of the strongest female characters I've ever seen on screen was Mrs. Brisby from the Secret of NIMH. She had no powers, she was weaker and smaller than those around her. And she was terrified of what she was asked to face. But she faced the peril to save her family. She never gave up even in the face of utter failure. She was kind, she was caring, and she was brave (not fearless). Cinema and television need more Mrs. Brisby's.

    @philliptivis3082@philliptivis308211 ай бұрын
    • Excellent example! One of the most underrated heroines of film.

      @danielfisher6275@danielfisher627511 ай бұрын
    • Such a great movie.

      @andrewscasualmtb@andrewscasualmtb11 ай бұрын
    • WOW! SUCH a great example! That movie was PHENOMENAL.

      @sbjrcourses7961@sbjrcourses796111 ай бұрын
    • I had forgotten about her, it's been so long since I last watched it. But you're absolutely right!

      @BigNews2021@BigNews202111 ай бұрын
    • I agree with this, such a good movie and character. Came to my mind when watching the video and then saw your comment. May your day go well for you.

      @lucascampbell8790@lucascampbell879011 ай бұрын
  • Emily Blunt was called out for that comment on the basis of her having played a number of strong female characters. However, if you read the context in the interview where she said it she means that if a writer has to use that phrase to describe a character she knows that they are a terrible writer and the rest of the script or pitch is trash and she shouldn't waste her time actually reading it.

    @darthhodges@darthhodges11 ай бұрын
    • She plays the ultimate Strong Female Character in Edge Of Tomorrow, the script is smart in letting us know that the trials that Cruise's character went through were the same trials SHE went through. We believe she is tough by seeing how Tough Cruise gets it, making the whole thing much more believable. Scriptwriters must have noted that, learnt none of the lessons and just thought, oh Emily Blunt. She can play tough, and take it from there. The Drinker is right, it's so boring.

      @chrisparky@chrisparky11 ай бұрын
    • Actually writing down "Strong Female Lead" is a prime example of telling instead of showing

      @EvilDoresh@EvilDoresh11 ай бұрын
    • The Full Metal Bitch was way stronger than Cage. Cage let his feelings for Vrataski stop their mission. He knew she died in that farm, but once she realized she wouldn't let something as basic as a gruesome and painful death stop the mission.

      @Kayback@Kayback11 ай бұрын
    • @@Kayback Great point!

      @chrisparky@chrisparky11 ай бұрын
  • That was a beautiful breakdown on everything wrong with Hollywood and our society today.

    @user-tm1dc4sv7d@user-tm1dc4sv7d8 ай бұрын
    • How right you are.

      @pip333333@pip3333337 ай бұрын
  • Notice how most the trash "strong female characters" are created from Disney. I grew up watching Disney and now I just wanna puke with everything it pushes out

    @Ownyx@Ownyx8 ай бұрын
  • When you put Elizabeth Swan from "Pirates of the Caribbean", I had a realization: she is what a real "strong and independent woman who no need no man" is. She starts being trapped in her role as a daughter of a wealthy man whose only purpose is to be married to someone powerful for the sake of her family, but due to her strenght of character and intelligence, she ends up being a vital character, and not just a damsel in distress. And though she's not the greatest fighter (iirc, she learns how to fight after the first movie, but can't recall a single major duel of her), she never yields to the wims of others. In fact, all the female characters of the trilogy are pretty great (and yes, I said trilogy, the other movies don't exist), and if Hollyweird wasn't so fixated nowadays in turning women into disguised men, they would use characters like her more in their movies.

    @jackmesrel4933@jackmesrel493311 ай бұрын
    • She was so fun as well 😭 she was just as involved in the goofy antics as Jack and Will

      @jamescarr1265@jamescarr126511 ай бұрын
    • Elizabeth Swan is a great character. But everyone in Pirates have amazing and satisfying arcs from top to bottom from Jack Sparrow to Capt Barbosa to even James Norrington. Love the scriptwriting in this trilogy (yep trilogy) overall

      @icupnibba3533@icupnibba353311 ай бұрын
    • @@icupnibba3533 one of the best trilogies ever.

      @jamescarr1265@jamescarr126511 ай бұрын
    • They aren't even turning them into disguised men. They are turning them into unlikeable abominations. A very good example of how men are written good is in, say, Saving Private Ryan. This movie shows that all of the soldiers have their problems and flaws. They try to act tough at times, but at others their hold on their emotions breaks and they show how vulnerable they actually are. Captain Miller with his hand tremors from PTSD, the medic calling out for his mother when fatally wounded, Vin Diesel trying to save the girl, and getting killed for it, the translator that has to overcome his cowardice. It shows that, while men may be acting more stoic or seem emotionless at times, that they still do have emotions and the vulnerabilities that come with it.

      @Schnittertm1@Schnittertm111 ай бұрын
  • Éowyn was so well played by Miranda Otto in that scene. She looked so scared. And stood her ground anyway. That's a strong female character.

    @antalwahlers3574@antalwahlers357410 ай бұрын
    • That was a perfect example to use in that moment of explanation. Because she is SO POWERFUL in that moment. It makes a 34 year old big man cry to see it. She looks so afraid, but your eyes well up and you start to cry because you realize how unbelievably brave she's being. THAT is amazing story telling. The fact that she's doing it to protect her father because they nurtured and loved one another just makes her look even stronger.

      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat10 ай бұрын
    • Éowin represents everything that a man actually love in a strong woman. Beauty Courage Compassion Empathy Respect Fierceness But also vulnerability and Femininity Miranda Otto was the perfect cast for that role.

      @jocec3283@jocec328310 ай бұрын
    • ​@@twelvecatsinatrenchcoather uncle. Her father died long before events in the trilogy. She and her brother eomer stays in the palace with their uncle.

      @worldoftophits@worldoftophits10 ай бұрын
    • @@worldoftophits I did not know that.

      @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat@twelvecatsinatrenchcoat10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@twelvecatsinatrenchcoatpoint remains. He was her father figure.

      @SammaclauseGamgee@SammaclauseGamgee10 ай бұрын
  • No pink or blue haired "Justice warriors" around. This is going to be a great movie!!

    @ArrosticiniVore@ArrosticiniVore8 ай бұрын
  • the so called "Strong female Characters" lack three things: - strength - femininity - charcter

    @StapelBricks@StapelBricks7 ай бұрын
  • Tbh, before I discovered you're channel, I often felt like I was just spouting nonsense as no one really seemed interested. Glad there is someone out there, putting out their of frustration with modern entertainment and the lack of quality therein. Keep up the work Drinker.

    @archaeoman70@archaeoman7011 ай бұрын
    • No one tell him about efap!

      @wesss9353@wesss935311 ай бұрын
    • What’s funny is I have always found that man love, well, written, strong, female characters. You don’t have to go all the way back to terminator or alien. You don’t even have to go back to fury road you can look no further to everything everywhere all at once. You write a female character. Well, you can make her as strong as you want. Men will respond positively.

      @TheTree1@TheTree111 ай бұрын
    • mega dittos

      @mikeylicksit@mikeylicksit11 ай бұрын
    • @@TheTree1 Everything Everywhere All At Once was great. EEAAO showed that audiences will love great characters in an interesting story regardless of gender, age, ethnicity, whatever. Arcane was great. It showed that most people aren't turned off by interracial or same sex relationships, but are invested in good human stories.

      @jacevicki@jacevicki11 ай бұрын
  • Xena was a wonderful example of a female character who was not only physically strong but it didn't feel out of place. She would outsmart and use what she knew to her advantage, rather than just being strong. She had motherly instincts, emotional flaws and felt far more well rounded as a character than a lot of the female characters these days.

    @Mazikeen2904@Mazikeen290411 ай бұрын
    • Helps that Lucy Lawless is 6ft tall and built like a brick shithouse

      @SSDexter99@SSDexter9911 ай бұрын
    • The advantage was also that she was written as counterpart to hercules. As god of strengh he solved most conflict by tossing giants. Xena used her speed, techniques weapons and sorroundings more akin to a trained shaolin. It was still silly fantasy fights but within the universe it all felt natural and fitting. Now a days shed outmuscle a bodybuilder just because. But luckly her actress nailed it. Im dissapointed with how unbelivable and poor most modern action actresses peform as opposed to their past counterparts. Like someone using a weapon as if they picked one up for the first day in their life, weakly or wildly swinging while opponents let themseoves fall on purpose rather then delivering a good belivable coreography.

      @TrafalgarWaterDLaw-dl5cm@TrafalgarWaterDLaw-dl5cm11 ай бұрын
    • @@TrafalgarWaterDLaw-dl5cm I think the other difference is that Lucy Lawless genuinely looked like she could kick your ass if she put her mind to it. She was tall, muscular enough and imposing in a way that wasn't hyper masculine. Xena took those triats and enhanced them yes, but even though it was silly over the top fantasy, it felt like it was possible

      @Mazikeen2904@Mazikeen290411 ай бұрын
    • @@Mazikeen2904 I agree. She looked moved and acted the part to embody a belivable warrior woman. Now a days every skinny 5 ft girl kicks bulky man around while moving very stiff and fake. I miss when you had to learn skills for a role to a belivable degree.

      @TrafalgarWaterDLaw-dl5cm@TrafalgarWaterDLaw-dl5cm11 ай бұрын
    • Like Hercules though it was cheesy as hell - and in retrospect the association with Hercules and Kevin Sorbo does it no justice I'm afraid.

      @mnomadvfx@mnomadvfx11 ай бұрын
  • Looking forward to part 2. It's unfortunate that movies today can't simply tell a story. I am thinking specifically about types of literary conflict. It is easier to go back to the "Recycle Bin' and remake the same movie. Just update with a 'diverse' group of actors and throw in nostalgia bait for good measure.

    @rider275@rider2759 ай бұрын
  • Absolutely spot on... i loved the Alien films not because Ellien Ripley was the lead character. It was because she made it through a tough situation as a human being. She was scared , she cared about her crew , she was frustrated, highly emotional, ready to think practicality and do anything to survive. It was realistic and how anyone would react in tge same situation. The script was originally written with Ripley as a man so goes to show it didnt matter in te end because the writers knew how to build a character wthout worrying about weather it was a man or a woman.

    @nicklambert5059@nicklambert50598 ай бұрын
  • I’m glad you mentioned the ridiculous woman taking down a man twice her size thing. As an average sized woman, that has always annoyed the hell out of me

    @caro1ns@caro1ns11 ай бұрын
    • @Caro1ns - that would be a difficult even for the average guy, or a man with some basic fighting skills. Twice the size? Nah, not gonna happen. That guy would simply want to be close to you, so he can grab you, and spin your body so your head will hit some pavement, trash can, some corner of a table in the pub, and so on. In extreme cases (when on drugs) he will try to take your eyes out, break one of youe fingers, crush your throat, stab you with a pen or pencil multiple times in a few seconds, or try to bite off part of your nose, cheek, upper/lower lips and so on... (note: seen all of that in a real life). Even a normal guy, with some basic skills wouldn't want to fight a dude like that. Even if you manage to win that one, good luck with your own treatment in a hospital.

      @tannhauser5399@tannhauser539911 ай бұрын
    • As a smaller-than-average-sized man, this annoys the hell out of me too. I’ve been hit by average sized women many times and I’ve never even had a bruise to show for it. Watching a 100 pound woman kick a man across the room is beyond ridiculous.

      @michaellamb8924@michaellamb892411 ай бұрын
    • The ONLY way it works is if the woman has magical superstrength

      @Superabound2@Superabound211 ай бұрын
    • @@Superabound2 Or, like the Drinker hinted at, the woman attacks with surprise and uses her environment and tools therein to get off a solid, staggering shot and then does not let up in her attacks. Even then, it only closes the gap in strength and size.

      @thomashauguel6811@thomashauguel681111 ай бұрын
    • Yea, that just makes them look stupid...

      @TheStepmonkey@TheStepmonkey11 ай бұрын
  • I'd like to nominate Jessica Fletcher from Murder She Wrote as a great example of an actual strong female character. She's highly intelligent without bring condescending. She's thoughtful, charming, graceful, forgiving, resourceful, and funny. The fact that I, as a thirty year old man, can relate to and respect a middle aged female character more than any modern day "hero" says a lot.

    @zackaccount@zackaccount11 ай бұрын
    • I loved Murder She Wrote as a kid. Such a great show and character

      @bZman@bZman11 ай бұрын
    • Love Jessica. She was so very classy, a real lady.

      @zephyrmist79@zephyrmist7911 ай бұрын
    • Without fail, everywhere Jessica went, someone died. That's power! Love how a novelist with no forensic training was able to walk through crime scenes contaminating evidence yet still gets the killer. Put realistic procedure aside, this show was so well written to the point where Jessica's strength as a character never needed to be acted at all. It solely came through in the writing.

      @PhantomFilmAustralia@PhantomFilmAustralia11 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, spot on

      @Naren25@Naren2511 ай бұрын
    • She was awesome! Great example 😀👍

      @mrkeogh@mrkeogh11 ай бұрын
  • What they did to our classic Luke Skywalker was atrocious, another casualty of the side effect known as the strong female lead.

    @wickedsolitude766@wickedsolitude7669 ай бұрын
  • I cringed so bad at the movie redeye when tiny little Rachael mcadams had a 20 minute fight against Oppenheimer dude...and kicked his ass... She copped a million hits to the head and still stayed concious.

    @emusaurus@emusaurus8 ай бұрын
  • The pregnant Marge Gunderson in Fargo was a strong female character. Persistent, courageous, intelligent, noble. I didn't have to see her kick some guy's ass to get the message.

    @danielplainview2360@danielplainview236011 ай бұрын
    • Yes, agree with you. Loved that movie, for years after seeing it I wanted my own personal heavy duty woodchipper, to use in case I ever found some guy intruding into my house. After I shot him, I'd chip him up, really good, and no one would know what happened!! LOL ;D

      @ronschlorff7089@ronschlorff708911 ай бұрын
    • Strength of character matters. Just as this video illustrates, all Hollywood seems toc are about is establishing a false equivalency of physical strength, demonstrating a clear preference for female empowerment over actual character development.

      @MiketheratguyMultimedia@MiketheratguyMultimedia11 ай бұрын
    • You can never be strong unless you have plenty of testosterone. You know how much women has it. Women ☕

      @josephstalin4385@josephstalin438511 ай бұрын
    • Oh yah, you betcha!

      @JadeRunner@JadeRunner11 ай бұрын
    • Like one of your fans below writes 'establishing a false equivalency' for the Corporate-World, the false equivalency media fuels the social deterioration CCP weaponizes via Woke fakery.

      @annharding9634@annharding963411 ай бұрын
  • That ending clip where Sarah Connor is comforting her son is the most badass womanly scene I can imagine. After John's idealized father figure, The Terminator, sacrifices himself to prevent the future from repeating itself, John is grieving because of his feelings towards the inanimate machine. John's mother provides him a shoulder to experience and release that emotion, an astounding feat given her personal animus against all things Skynet. The character of Sarah Connor isn't tough because she says "I AM WAMEN HEAR ME ROAR'. Sarah Connor is tough because she HAS to be to protect her only child from a deadly threat in the future. Yet, at the end of the movie, she turns that all off because the threat is over, and she returns to being a mother who needs to comfort her own son in his deep sadness. A loving mother--there's nothing more badass and feminine than that.

    @ohiorushbaby@ohiorushbaby11 ай бұрын
    • Well said

      @Drawnartist@Drawnartist11 ай бұрын
    • Agreed... although I would add that she was tough and strong because at the end of the movie the t1000 was no more and she was still standing (barely) .... she outlasted the machine. Anyone else would have broken, run, died, pick your poison. Because she was a trained operator AND a mum... take away either of those ingredients and that cake dont bake Good chat

      @TheMagusOfTheMagnaCarta@TheMagusOfTheMagnaCarta11 ай бұрын
    • It turns out that there is absolutely nothing inherently wrong with women being feminine and men being masculine.

      @Willie_Pete_Was_Here@Willie_Pete_Was_Here11 ай бұрын
  • Im happy you mentioned Samantha Carter, one of my favoeite characters and shows. I have liked Amanda Tapping ever since that role

    @Jeremy-zw8ur@Jeremy-zw8ur8 ай бұрын
  • Trinity is the person I always think about when good strong female charecters come up, and when she fights it makes sense because of the matrix

    @dessert506@dessert5068 ай бұрын
  • The days of Ellen Ripley, Sarah Connor, Clarice Starling and Thelma & Louise were a golden age for truly good female film characters.

    @mikebasil4832@mikebasil483211 ай бұрын
    • Ripley was a woman, which was obviously invented by a male. It suited the plot, as the feminist woke shit was already running in the US, which was the most important market. People knew, it was just a quota woman. But a man wouldn't be able to destroy "Mother" and kill an "Alien Queen" as it was politically incorrect in regard to liberals.

      @schadelharry4048@schadelharry404811 ай бұрын
    • Not really, but you have to go outside the mainstream to find them.

      @germantoenglish898@germantoenglish89811 ай бұрын
    • So were the 1950s in fact. Western heroines Annie Oakley, Dale Evans, Frankie Adams and Police Officer Casey Jones all ruled the TV while the movies had the actresses Grace Kelly, Maureen O'Hara and ESPECIALLY Barbara Stanwyck in multiple action or other strong roles. Can't believe he didn't mention any of them here.

      @thunderbird1921@thunderbird192111 ай бұрын
    • And Cynthia Rothrock from the action movies

      @lemonacidrounds7293@lemonacidrounds729311 ай бұрын
    • @@lemonacidrounds7293 Yes I remember Cynthia too. Thanks for mentioning her.

      @mikebasil4832@mikebasil483211 ай бұрын
  • "failure itself does not define a character, its how they react to it that matters" - The Drinker “Why do we fall, Bruce? So we can learn to pick ourselves up.” - Thomas Wayne

    @TristynRusselo@TristynRusselo11 ай бұрын
    • I wrestled in high school and in the US military. Served in two wars. Have been in countless fights. I lost every fight until I was 16, and most wrestling matches until I was 15. Still lost matches until my very last one, but have not lost a fight in nearly 40 years. I learned how to fight and defend myself by losing... a lot. Now I drag race, build my cars and compete against others. I learn more from losing than I do by winning, because it means someone has figured out how to do it better, go faster, or whatever else they did to win. Losing makes me better at everything I do. It teaches me where I need to improve, what I need to learn, and motivates me to put in the work required to win. When life beats you down, you have a choice. Lay there and take it, give up and expire, or get up and fight back. I have always gotten up and fought back, even when I would just get knocked down again and again.

      @SweatyFatGuy@SweatyFatGuy11 ай бұрын
    • There was a judge that often said to some people: "It is not a crime to fail and tumble. The crime is to notvtrying to get up again"

      @sirsancti5504@sirsancti550411 ай бұрын
  • Glad sb finally said it. Also i hate when they take already good established male leads & all of sudden throw a random female lead in there to takeover & now shes suddenly better than every male we seen on the show/movie 😭

    @SrtSlider376@SrtSlider3768 ай бұрын
  • With T2, I like that they made Sara Connor more of a desperate character than a strong character. It shows how she took the time between 1984 and 1997 to prepare, and she didn't just magically have all these inhuman strengths to start with.

    @dave23024@dave2302411 ай бұрын
    • And how she was terrified of the Terminator when she first saw him in T2, but she would power her way through fear to fight: like Ripley in Alien/s.

      @theelder4797@theelder479711 ай бұрын
    • Indeed. But wasn't it between '84 and '91? Or was T2 set in 1997?

      @reedr7142@reedr714211 ай бұрын
    • She was also a very active character. By that I mean, , whatever stuff gets inflicted upon her, how Sarah react to said-things, instead of actively making them happen, is what defines her character. She also had a defining personality, especially shown very well in the first film. Plus the two films manage to create some of the greatest instances of set up-&-payoff and dramatic irony to it's effect with her character.

      @osmanyousif7849@osmanyousif784911 ай бұрын
    • Right. Only male white characters, similar to me and you can acquire magically such great traits! We want movies with no females at all or at least in totally submissive roles! 🙃

      @arctic_haze@arctic_haze11 ай бұрын
    • @@reedr7142 I think it's set in 95, because Sarah was pregnant when she drove off at the end of T1, and John is listed as 10 years old in the police computer at the start of T2. It's reasonable to assume that he was born sometime in 85. However, the movie came out in 91.

      @soulextracter@soulextracter11 ай бұрын
  • As a black female growing up (41 now) I never felt that I wasn't represented in films! I loved seeing women in films that made me want to be like them. Not because they were white, black, asian, whatever race but because of what they over came in the story or how the raised above a hardship and the strength it took for them to accomplish it. I'm not saying that it isn't nice be diverse in films but don't do it for just to say you are being inclusive. Do it because this actor has something to add to the film. He or she is well fitted for the role. Now a days it feels so forced that it makes the film bad!

    @Chamber1baby@Chamber1baby11 ай бұрын
    • I'm a white guy from a rural area, growing up on a farm I loved to watch Fat Albert it provided a glimpse into the world of city life and it was fun to relate to characters from a completely different background, and they were relatable because they were human and humanity relates to it's own story

      @johntabler349@johntabler34911 ай бұрын
    • ~ Mic drop!

      @jameslfowler9988@jameslfowler998811 ай бұрын
    • ​@@johntabler349 yes I love Fat Albert. I also love MLP and The Main 6 because they learn a lesson and grow from it. They also use their gifts to help others.

      @jonelrobinson5189@jonelrobinson518911 ай бұрын
    • @@johntabler349 Normal people appreciate and are intrigued by different cultures and people groups. Society tries to indoctrinate us into being "threatened" by them. Divide and Conquer.

      @D2Kprime@D2Kprime11 ай бұрын
    • @@D2Kprime well said

      @johntabler349@johntabler34911 ай бұрын
  • One of my favorite iconic female protagonists is the Bride from Kill Bill. An authentic “strong female character.” She suffers, works hard, and genuinely earns the victories she accomplishes against her adversaries. Every fight scene she’s in, she earns those victories with her blood, sweat and tears. I so, so wish I could see more women characters like that in today’s media. I also appreciate his point about men’s physical advantage over women: because it’s an opportunity writers could use to create clever ways for women to overcome male opponents- a way to showcase her quick thinking, her resourcefulness, or her problem solving abilities. But unfortunately we don’t get many female characters like that anymore (although we used to). I still have hope though (just a fool’s hope, as Gandalf says. LOL).

    @Kiddo_04@Kiddo_046 ай бұрын
  • This analysis of the present state of current movie making says it all. Thankyou Critical Drinker for revealing the stupidity and ineptitude of those who run the entertainment industry!!! Well done.

    @pip333333@pip3333337 ай бұрын
  • I'm glad you included Clarice Starling. When she relates the story of her trying to save one lamb from the slaughter, it was chilling, and yet you could feel her sorrow and pain. Even Hannibal is moved by it, so much that he won't kill and eat her. That's saying something.

    @donaldbadowski290@donaldbadowski29011 ай бұрын
    • Silence Of The Lambs is a classic. She was perfect with her performance.

      @Doubleohstevo@Doubleohstevo11 ай бұрын
    • There was an element of "luck" to it too, in that if Hannibal's cell neighbour Miggs hadn't Spidermanned his jizz at Clarice, Hannibal wouldn't have opened up to her. He was combative and dismissive until that happened. In his words, "discourtesy is unspeakably ugly to me" - he felt that he owed Clarice his time because of this incident. Then he also convinces Miggs to kill himself as a perverse "gift" to Clarice, too.

      @Snuffsaid2007@Snuffsaid200711 ай бұрын
    • Hannibal Lecter was in love with Starling. He didn't feel sorry for her. He wanted her for himself. At the end of the novel Hannibal, sequel to Silence...he gets his wish. The movie changed it to a more stupid, less interesting end.

      @Marss13z@Marss13z11 ай бұрын
    • @@Marss13z The book is even weirder than just love, he sees Clarice as a vessel he can somehow channel his dead sister into. The chapters when he's genuinely trying to figure out a mathematical equation to reverse time and bring his sister back really illustrate how batshit insane he is, underneath the calculating genius. Although his origin story did hurt his mystique a fair bit.

      @Snuffsaid2007@Snuffsaid200711 ай бұрын
    • Amazing movie

      @monolithic7739@monolithic773911 ай бұрын
  • Great video! When I see 'Strong female character' in a movie review, I avoid the movie like the plague. Modern society has in some ways overcompensated for historic and contemporary gender-based discrimination; one example being efforts of the movie industry to depict female characters as perfect and infallible. This files in the face of human nature - yes, even female. If the intent is to get young men and women to watch these movies and be awed, its failing miserably. We'd (I know there are more people like me) watch a low budget realistic real-life drama where men are men and women are women any day over an action-packed female superhero lead costume-and-cape flick!

    @arunchaturvedi1960@arunchaturvedi19608 ай бұрын
  • A big problem with "strong female characters" I find to be that they often don't have a journey of solving your problems and self improving, but often times let men crash in their problems only for the "strong female caracter" to solve their problems because she is STRONG. This is not building a strong and well developed character, but forcing strength at the cost of men. To be better than men, rather than be good yourself.

    @elwinfennema3526@elwinfennema35268 ай бұрын
  • Some of Aragorn's most powerful scenes were when he displayed utter humility: closing Frodo's hand around the ring and telling him he would have followed him into the very fires of Mordor, consoling Boromir on his deathbed, and bowing to the hobbits.

    @tomforsythe7024@tomforsythe702411 ай бұрын
    • Then after showing signs of humility and superiority over Bomori who had been overcome of his "white man's greed"... His skin turned black. Now she is Aragon the black. Pretty sure that is how it will go in next lotr movie when progressives make it.

      @Tespri@Tespri11 ай бұрын
    • @@Tespri exactly, my grandmother told me that Aragorn was a powerful black queen, and noone can tell me otherwise

      @MrHungrySimon@MrHungrySimon11 ай бұрын
    • Yo I've never cried so much in a movie than the first time I saw everyone in Gordor bowing to those Hobbits. I saw it in IMax the first time and it was unreal.

      @monolithic7739@monolithic773911 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MrHungrySimon 🤣

      @AK.1988@AK.198811 ай бұрын
    • @@MrHungrySimon wow, my granny told me your grandma is a lair. She's dyslexic so I think she meant liar. That is, of course, if she isn't a rail.

      @silverclo@silverclo11 ай бұрын
  • Modern strong female movies make me appreciate Sarah Connor and Ellen Ripley even more 🙌

    @GiaHuy-cr8df@GiaHuy-cr8df10 ай бұрын
    • Leeloo was good too even if she was supposed to be the strongest

      @North1Isley@North1Isley10 ай бұрын
    • Or some anime characters like nami from one piece she is one of the weakest physically but mentally strong

      @sarov7658@sarov765810 ай бұрын
    • ​@@sarov7658 anime characters rarely have this problem, if a show has a well written male cast, then the female characters will also be well written.

      @takeuchi5760@takeuchi576010 ай бұрын
    • @@takeuchi5760 Though Nami is really annoying most of the time, which is a shame cause the mugiwara's background is often interesting

      @monstermagnet3150@monstermagnet315010 ай бұрын
    • Fun fact: Ripley was originally written as a male character, but was changed to female for I think shock value

      @sofiaf4526@sofiaf452610 ай бұрын
  • Love your stuff, and would say I mostly agree with every movie critique you post. Also happy to say that your channel has helped me to discover a lot of new movies in this otherwise drained shi*hole of a movie-decade. ...a small request though, if I may. I would love to see (if you could) a "review" of Jurassic Park!!!:))) Good god you just got to love the 90's right?

    @david-ravedding817@david-ravedding8179 ай бұрын
  • Twitter made me believe I was mysoginistic for feeling this way,now I know I wasnt wrong and Im not the only one feeling this way

    @svetlanaandrasova6086@svetlanaandrasova60868 ай бұрын
  • I think agent Clarice Starling from "Silence of the Lambs" is a really good example of strong character. The way she fights and overcome her inner demons to save the hostage in the final sequence makes her strong in a very credible way.

    @chpsilva@chpsilva11 ай бұрын
    • My favourite female character in cinema

      @dairyproducts@dairyproducts11 ай бұрын
    • She's also based on an ancient European storytelling trope: The virgin offered to the demon sealed in the cave to appease its hunger. MAN I love that movie...

      @CleverGirlAAH@CleverGirlAAH11 ай бұрын
    • She canonically ends up Hannibal's lover and they dine on brains together.

      @bitwize@bitwize11 ай бұрын
    • @@bitwize that’s the book serious, not the movies.

      @youthoughtaboutit6946@youthoughtaboutit694611 ай бұрын
    • @@bitwize Good point. But not in the movie.

      @chpsilva@chpsilva11 ай бұрын
  • The very brief clip of Mary Astor in the Maltese falcon is a prime example. She was clearly a strong woman, she held her own amongst thieves and cutthroats but she did it by using charm, manipulation, vulnerability and cleverly playing on all the male traits that naturally want to protect women. She was utterly relatable, very feminine and very strong. She met her match in Sam Spade of course, but it was a close run thing. Absolutely compelling.

    @f-u-nkyf-u-ntime@f-u-nkyf-u-ntime11 ай бұрын
    • There is this anime movie called Wolf Children, the main character is just a mom who have two half-wolf children in normal society. She has no super power or anything, but through entirety of the movie her determination and struggle to raise her "unique" children as single parent is what make her a very strong female character for me . She is not perfect, if you watch the movie you can see she was often near her limit, but the thing is she never once give up or complain, she wants happiness for both of her children and she did everything, sacrificing anything for it. And also because in a lot of ways, many people can relate to her and cheer when she overcomes her hardship because in a lot of ways it's realistic, really i don't understand why female characters are not considered "strong" from other aspects unless they are physically strong nowadays in modern films..

      @irvancrocs1753@irvancrocs175311 ай бұрын
  • If a character (or person) has to repeatedly tell you how strong/smart/good they are... they aren't.

    @oblivionsa7973@oblivionsa79738 ай бұрын
  • Aliens pulled off both Ripley and Vasquez in ways that worked and were believable. Vasquez arrived with enormous physical capability and supreme confidence who up until the events of Aliens had never faced a challenge she couldn't overcome with her own power. Then she's freaked out with just how over her head she's in once she realizes Ripley was right all along, whom she arrogantly dismissed beforehand. But once she knows exactly what she's up against, she uses her capabilities to the utmost even knowing she's likely going to die to save the others. Dying Moment of Awesome at its finest. Ripley had nowhere near Vasquez's capabilities to start. She was a space miner beforehand. But what she did have was prior horrifying experiences with an Alien, knowing exactly what they're capable of, and a grim determination to spare humanity from that horror to the extent she could. And she picks up just enough from the marines along the way, digs down deep with that grim determination, and manages to pull through. And both characters were terrified out of their minds, and showed their vulnerability. Ripley admitted to Newt she was just as terrified as Newt. The other thing was, the male characters showed vulnerability too. Hicks', yeah, chances are one of the Marines is going to react like that. Wish Hollywood could take notes from the classics.

    @SittingBull99@SittingBull999 ай бұрын
  • I've always looked at it from this point of view: Most of these writers work under a grave misconception. They seem to belief that power and strength (of character) are the same thing. As an example, let's take a look at Luke and Rey from Star Wars: Both of them are quite powerful by the end of their respective trilogies. However, whereas Luke by then has also demonstrated great strength of character, Rey has not. Over the course of the original trilogy Luke starts out as a cocky and arrogant teenage "boy" who gets humbled almost immediately after he leaves the small, secluded world he grew up in. And from the moment he learns of his uncle's and aunt's fate as well as coming across many tough and scary people in the cantina, he realizes just how dangerous of a place the galaxy is and how much he needs Ben moving forward to protect and guide him. By this point of the story Luke is still just a "weak" boy. But through all the trails and tribulations he faces, losing Ben, losing to Vader, finding out the truth about his father and being unable to rescue his friend Han, he never gives in to despair, he perserveres and rights the wrongs of the past. He helps free Han, free his father from the darkness and frees the galaxy from the tyrannical empire. What makes Luke so inspiring is not his power with the force, it is the strength of character he developed throughout his journey. Rey on the other hand doesn't have these defining moments. She beats Kylo and basically every step of their journey. She develops force powers of extreme potency without putting the work into it or struggling with it. For crying out loud, from the start of her trilogy, at which point she doesn't even believe the force to be a real thing, to the end of episode 8 she somehow learns to do feats of power with the force that take jedi masters years of dedicated training and struggle to match. To show how ridiculous this is, between the start of episode 7 and the end of episode 8 just a short few days have passed. She however doesn't need to train for any of this. She never falls short at anything. She never yearns for anything because she already has everything the writers want or need her to have for the plot to move forward. By the end of her trilogy she has never once shown any strength of character because she never had to struggle for anything or fail at doing anything. She only ever shows feats of power and might. To me that is just not compelling though. Anyway, that was my two cents on the matter. Go away now.

    @LeonVor99@LeonVor9911 ай бұрын
  • What I love about Ripley in Aliens is during the opening scenes she is totally traumatised by her experience in Alien. Then throughout the film she is continually facing her fear, pushing through and doing what needs to be done. Then at the end, that moment in the lift as she is prepping her weapons about to dive into the alien hive to get Newt, you can tell she is terrified but psyching herself up, breathing, focusing, getting through that terror. It's so engaging to watch and grounds the character and film, and makes the win at the end well and truly earnt. I've watched the film countless times, but that level of humanity draws me in every time, so despite knowing the end by heart, it always makes me feel tense as to whether she can or will survive that literal nightmare.

    @TobiaLaurentum@TobiaLaurentum11 ай бұрын
    • True, but horror movies also historically have a young women be the main character and only survivor. I think horror suffers from an entire different issue when it comes to gender stuff.

      @cancerino666@cancerino66611 ай бұрын
    • Plus sigourney weaver was an excellent actress

      @bryan81584@bryan8158411 ай бұрын
    • @@cancerino666 I was going to post about this very thing. The "Final Girls" in horror films were always dismissed by the horror hating critics of the time, but they were almost always resourceful and survived in the end, in spite of being in terrifying situations where all of their friends have died. They were true "empowered women", before it was even a thing. Kirsty from Hellraiser is probably my favorite of these as she managed to negotiate her survival with the demonic Cenobites, crafting a deal to give them her uncle Frank who escaped them in exchange for her own survival.

      @RazorFriendly@RazorFriendly11 ай бұрын
    • Long Kiss Goodnight too

      @vampyretime177@vampyretime17711 ай бұрын
    • @@vampyretime177 Love that movie!

      @RazorFriendly@RazorFriendly11 ай бұрын
  • Quote from the movie "The Hunt For The Wilderpeople"; "Im the Terminator, you're Sarah Conner. No, I'm the terminator and you're Sarah Conner, the first one not the second one, before she could do chin-ups!😄

    @craigoakman6268@craigoakman62687 ай бұрын
  • I do find it funny when people tell me that I'm an idiot for not liking these characters, then I tell them, "I don't like them for the same reason I don't like Superman; they're invincible and boring."

    @TheLazySamurai@TheLazySamurai9 ай бұрын
  • This is why I like Mr. and Mrs. Smith fight scenes: Angelina uses weapons and tries to keep her distance to even her odds but loses that advantage when Brad gets into close range not to mention how she’s great with protocol but bad with improv. It shows that she has strengths and weaknesses and how she tries to negate the weaknesses

    @Tony_409@Tony_40911 ай бұрын
    • Pretty sure a modern remake would make Angelina's character some all perfect battle machine and make her save Brad's character constantly so that people can get the Message™.

      @a.s.raiyan2003-4@a.s.raiyan2003-411 ай бұрын
    • Movie was shit.

      @secondchance6603@secondchance660311 ай бұрын
    • those actors had great chemistry too but we know the reason why…

      @jamescarr1265@jamescarr126511 ай бұрын
    • Good example

      @Alan_Edwards@Alan_Edwards11 ай бұрын
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