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Not a promotion, so not against strike rules. Just think of this as an interpretation/review from someone who happens to really like movies.

Spoilers ahead. (Duh.) spoiler

In my obviously super duper unbiased opinion, the movie was pretty good. Especially that lead actress whose name I forgot, who did some sweet dance moves and wore some cute outfits and should totally win an Oscar for this. (also, cellulite free)

If you think the movie was just about feminism, you're wrong. (Well, not entirely, but it's not the main point.)

In the beginning, the little girls smashed their baby dolls to defy their motherly stereotypes and replaced their dolls with the grown-up Barbies, which in time just turned into yet another stereotype for little girls to defy.

The role of Barbie has indeed evolved over time to be inclusive: more people of color, more gender identities, smarter, more career driven, more powerful, and sometimes, more ordinary. Barbie is now everything, yet the stereotype remained.

Our protagonist lived in a world of absurd privilege where Barbies ruled the world, she had this perfect life with everything she ever wanted and partied every night away. Until she was somehow struck by the very human fear of death (and also cellulite and dirty heels) so she decided (kinda...) to go real world to return to her perfect, plastic life. I don't really know how dimension travel is achievable by rollerblades or the exact mechanisms of how these two worlds relates to each other or how Will Farrell works either, but it doesn't matter, it's not that kind of movie. Don't think too hard about it.

It's absurd and is meant to be absurd. Almost as absurd as some bored Hollywood actress (and also, marketing genius) shitposting about her own movie promotion on some obscure tech forum called Lemonworld as some kind of weird meta commentary.

And once our protagonist escaped to the real world, she discovered that unlike the Truman Show, compared to the place she left behind, everything is no less absurd, just reversed now. The little girls whom she thought she inspired hated her, and everything she thought the Barbies have ever accomplished have only existed in the minds of men who wants nothing more than to put her back in a box. They just learned to hide it better now.

Then, somebody brought part of the absurdity of the real world back to Barbieland, and Barbieland was polluted with cynicism, and men's thought on the nature of war, and also, a lot of horses. (A bit disappointed that no one here ever asked any questions about why the "Blood Meridian" quotes.)

It turns out that it's really the cynical grown-ups of the world with grown-up worries like you (yes, YOU in particular) who needed Barbie in their life, to remind them of who they once were and rediscovering what they once had, their humanity and sincerity, in spite of the absurdity of the world.

Jokes are indeed way less funny once you explain them.

In the end, things was handwaved back to "normal" with society being improved somewhat, but our protagonist discovered that she does not belong in Barbieland anymore, in the same way that you don't belong in reddit anymore. She choose to exist as a human, even if it means death or worse, cellulite.

(I will, however, concede that the 4th wall breaking narrator aside gags were a bit overused.)

You are who you choose to be. This is not the ending for me or you here in this world. Not yet anyways.

Remember to support the strike.

Oh, also, for the record, I did say we couldn't get Nicolas Cage to play a Barbie here, https://lemmy.world/comment/1010947

spoilerso we had to get potato salad instead.

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[-] Solemn@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 points 1 year ago

On the good side, I spent the majority of the movie smiling, and overall enjoyed it. Some of the jokes definitely really landed great.

The acting was great, the balance between doll like and real movement was well done by everyone.

Main complaint was some of the more serious parts felt like they were going way too long, without anything to justify paying attention to them after a while.

Not sure how I feel about the feminism stuff, though I do feel like I may have gained some more appreciation for what the world feels like to a lot of women. The parody of men was what it was, but I can't say it didn't all have real roots, and generally was a reasonable balance of cringe and hilarious. It did not make me stop smiling, just made me wince at the same time.

Simu couldn't keep from smiling himself, which was hilarious. I'm glad he was enjoying himself so much.

[-] stratoscaster@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 year ago

My main takeaway was that it was tongue-in-cheek cringe. It was more than reasonably self-aware of how hamfisted it was, which made it excusable and occasionally funny

this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
69 points (85.6% liked)

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