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Finally watched Barbie!
(lemmy.ml)
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Here's a list of tons of leftist movies.
My issue with Barbie's structure and main plot comes from the fact that it essentially feels like we have two very different films and a bridge between them. The "coming to terms with being "broken" and helping her human" and "Ken establishing patriarchy" are always overshadowing eachother. First the former plot is on the front with the latter being slowly germinated and grown and then the latter is in full force and the former is given a ig almost silent sort of conclusion and the movie doesn't do a compelling enough script or pacing to make these parts feel whole. I agree that it does all the things you and others have been talking about and I might enjoy it better a second time because I won't have to worry about the plot structure and where it's going
See I disagree, that's actually a good feature. Many "movies with a point" can only take on the perspective a sole protagonist as a totalizing force. The split protagonists in Barbie show that the actual antagonists are the systems under which the protagonists exist both in Barbieland and the real world. It's a true solidarity movie in the sense that Barbie not only does what is good for Barbie but she also learns to make space for Ken in a society that is a gender mirror of our own. Ironically Barbie in this way does have an apotheosis as an avatar of corporate feminism (woman savior) in but in aesthetic only, because in action she is showing solidarity along intersectional lines within her own society. Something that she ultimately wants to bring to the real world. Barbie doesn't start the movie with all the answers as an all knowing intersectional socialist, she develops that on screen by bouncing off her deuteragonist in Ken. Ultimately not only does this structure make a fun movie, it makes a good movie with a point. Very often I have a hard time watching movies with a point with other people because at one point the "fun" of the movie falls apart for the "point", something that doesn't happen with the complexities of Barbie.