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this barbie is a bad feminist 💖👠🌴 (barbie movie review)

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  • Опубликовано: 16 авг 2024
  • the barbie movie was one of my most anticipated releases of 2023 and while it knocked it out of the park in some regards (casting & costuming), i unfortunately found myself disappointed in a lot of other aspects. in today's video i decided to review the barbie movie, talking about all of the things i liked and didn't like about it as well as the things i thought they could change. what did you think of the barbie movie?
    intro 0:00
    development 0:56
    plot 3:46
    review 8:40
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Комментарии • 3,4 тыс.

  • @aurelia6254
    @aurelia6254 Год назад +8560

    in my opinion the dealbreaker being cellulite wasn’t that barbie was scared of ‘being fat’ rather that she was scared of imperfection. the barbies are made of plastic- which is smooth, untextured and untarnished- so i would assume even the plus size barbies don’t have cellulite as they are portrayed as plastic, untouched dolls without any textural ‘flaws’. therefore, the cellulite is an abnormal human feature to barbie and so she is scared of it and immediately deems it as imperfection and ruination of her perfect life. we all know cellulite is normal and natural, but barbie doesn’t and seeing her life change before her including on her own body would’ve been the depth of the dealbreaker.
    or maybe i’m just too analytical and looking at things that aren’t there.

    • @jackie9397
      @jackie9397 Год назад +648

      No you’re completely correct!

    • @cassielcruzchavolla809
      @cassielcruzchavolla809 Год назад +255

      Yep, you're right

    • @noenya8047
      @noenya8047 Год назад +138

      That what I was thinking

    • @m.i7211
      @m.i7211 Год назад +357

      I agree that the implication of having cellulite wasn’t that she was fat but that she was imperfect, but I still think that having her age would have been a better choice story wise.

    • @marinatomasc
      @marinatomasc Год назад +251

      I also think that celulite is those kind of problems that are almost invented by The beauty ideal. The kind you don't notice untill some beauty market start telling you it is a problem, and for me I felt it made sense as something she would fell having more contact with human insecurities

  • @albarmz3430
    @albarmz3430 Год назад +5098

    Cellulite is more an allusion to the plastic perfect skin of barbie, than gaining weigh.
    Slim people also get tons of it. No escape if you have human skin.

    • @MaidenOfHusbands
      @MaidenOfHusbands Год назад +362

      I think the people who watch this film criticizing the cellulite part, completely forgot what the cellulite part even came from. None of them probably even knew what cellulite was until Barbie started having insecurities about getting cellulite, LITERALLY BECAUSE OF A REAL HUMAN BEING PUTTING THAT EMOTION ONTO HER (Of course Barbie is going to be insecure about it and think it's an imperfection, LITERALLY BECAUSE the real world forces women to believe that it's an imperfection, so women can hate themselves and try to change themselves to please men and society (to then bully them about trying to please men and society so they hate themselves more))..... It's literally meant to be a joke. Honestly, if anything, the other Barbies probably think cellulite is a form of imperfection like how pieces of a Barbie's leg would be slightly chipped here and there if a dog bit her, type vibes.

    • @Emily-xr6ny
      @Emily-xr6ny Год назад +223

      exactly, there’s a plus sized barbie (lawyer barbie?) who margot’s barbie is close with, surely if the cellulite joke was about weight then why wouldn’t plus size barbie have it? it’s a joke about perfect, cellulite is closer to acne or dark circles in this context

    • @SarahBright
      @SarahBright Год назад +1

      I agree!!!

    • @namehere4954
      @namehere4954 Год назад +25

      Yeah I was like she doesn't know what cellulite is.

    • @soot9145
      @soot9145 Год назад +32

      I'm chronically ill and used to be underweight because of that and I still had cellulite. Now I'm a bit overweight and have just as much cellulite🤷🏻

  • @gh0stfaquerie
    @gh0stfaquerie Год назад +3157

    I disagree that it doesn’t make sense for Barbie to end up wanting to go live in the real world. I really think the scene on the bench, where she cries for the first time and tells the old lady she’s beautiful, is everything. That scene really felt like Barbie learning how to empathise with others in a very deeply human way that she could never really experience in Barbieland, and since empathy is often referred to as being one of, if not the, key component in being human, the scene really feels like Barbie becoming human.

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 Год назад +167

      I also rlly like the fact that she has this interaction with a woman she specifically doesn’t know. I think it adds to the humanist message of the film and makes it feel more effecting. Like there’s something about just her alone that evokes this strong reaction out of barbie. Not what she means to barbie, not through anything she could do for barbie through a relationship but just her like that was enough. Idk, I think I’m explaining it badly but I thought it was sweet

    • @akanaeru9359
      @akanaeru9359 Год назад +89

      exactly!!! not only that but she looks around at all the people around her and sees both the happiness and sadness of everyday life! I dont understand why she was saying she ONLY had bad experiences

    • @geo.nerd.
      @geo.nerd. Год назад +25

      @@akanaeru9359agreed, and those experiences you named happened after she steps out into the real world and is just immediately accosted by sexism, which I think is the only way that can be introduced and portrayed. It’s basically culture shock.

    • @brianaguilar8283
      @brianaguilar8283 Год назад +9

      @@geo.nerd.last time I checked, you get arrested for slapping someone on the ass in public, and the movie didn’t show that guy receiving any consequences

    • @gummy5862
      @gummy5862 Год назад +10

      @@brianaguilar8283Depends honestly. The police probably aren’t gonna go on a manhunt for him, but it’s interesting that she and Ken were apprehended but not the ass slapper. That didn’t make sense. I also don’t know how Barbie had the intuition of self-defense when there’s no such thing as violence or sexual assault in Barbieland. Barbie hands also don’t close (well if you’re sticking to the source material lol), so I don’t know how she knew how to make a fist and punch.

  • @safirak7988
    @safirak7988 Год назад +1366

    I disagree with the "flat feet = human => gross" argument. I think flat feet in Barbieland are gross because they are unnatural, it's like seeing hands without nails. Uncanny and weird.

    • @free2bkittenforever
      @free2bkittenforever Год назад +38

      But plenty of Barbies in the 90’s had flat feet lol. Including Skipper and some actual Barbies so this confused me

    • @josephdarpa1179
      @josephdarpa1179 Год назад +1

      Yes, really weird just like commenting on a Barbie movie

    • @1saamor897
      @1saamor897 Год назад +5

      @@josephdarpa1179 BOOHOOO IM SOBBING WAAAA

    • @RandomJtv
      @RandomJtv 11 месяцев назад +20

      @@free2bkittenforever: I think the flat feet thing was also a commentary on the expectations of women, that wearing heels is a defining factor of womanhood / being a woman. I didn’t take it as a factual thing that Mattel had never released a Barbie with a flat foot. Because even at the very start of the film when you see all of the women dressed up as Barbie, some of them are in flat sneakers and boots.

    • @blakasmurf
      @blakasmurf 10 месяцев назад +19

      @@RandomJtv It wasn't THAT deep it was just to highlight she's becoming imperfect... Stereotypical Barbie is "supposed" to have feet made for heels so it was just a trope to make the changes seems extreme. She needed a catalyst to go see weird Barbie and set her on her journey... it's what movies do

  • @maruty2108
    @maruty2108 Год назад +5760

    I think Barbie entering into the real world for the first time symbolizes how girls enter her teenage years and the bubble pops and you become “a women “ in men and society eyes. You start to doubt about your confidence.
    Edit: men, stop crying. You guys don't get it, get over it.

    • @genesisstanley8163
      @genesisstanley8163 Год назад +83

      I can see that🤔💗

    • @sophiaannnn
      @sophiaannnn Год назад +358

      Yes, it’s one of my favorite themes in media ever. the way female adolescence is a loss of innocence all at once. People are constantly telling you when you’re a girl that you can do anything etc and then as soon as you grow boobs or start being s3xualized the world is suddenly much scarier

    • @tamiresamaral2714
      @tamiresamaral2714 Год назад +217

      And that's exactly why is not possible for her to go back, because its the same for us when growing up, even knowing that reality is what it is

    • @elblooderino
      @elblooderino Год назад +6

      @@thecanadakid7622this is so off topic and inappropriate…….

    • @thecanadakid7622
      @thecanadakid7622 Год назад +1

      @@elblooderino yeah, it is a bit innappropriate, sorry. deleted it.

  • @ariellagoichman3513
    @ariellagoichman3513 Год назад +1938

    I think Barbie getting cellulite was a perfect breaking point. Because, even though there is a plus size Barbie in Barbieland, all of them are still made of smooth plastic. So the idea of skin that isn't perfect plastic is as foreign in Barbieland as getting a grey hair or a wrinkle.

    • @carlathecaptain1709
      @carlathecaptain1709 Год назад +138

      I kind of agree. Cellulite doesn’t mean you’re getting fat. I don’t think that was the point. Everyone can get cellulite without getting fat.

    • @ionabab7274
      @ionabab7274 Год назад +41

      I agree. I’m underweight due to disability and trying to gain some weight, but I’ve always had a bit of cellulite on parts of my body. It’s just genetics.

    • @ceecee4729
      @ceecee4729 Год назад +7

      True but cellulite is often associated with weight gain in media... and honing in on her mortality by feeling tired faster, not having kenergy, wrinkles, basically age related... would have made the bench scene make sense... cuz with all that Barbie has seen in her life... seeing an older person should cause fear first... it's only after understanding the life and wealth of experience the woman has... she realizes beauty isn't just skin deep
      There's many other ways i wish this movie went... and to the gynecologist as the last line was not one of them... it was a funny ending... but the end messaging was so wonky... it just didn't make sense...

    • @ionabab7274
      @ionabab7274 Год назад +41

      @@ceecee4729 Yeah but cellulite is often *incorrectly* associated with weight gain in media. Just because it is, doesn’t mean it should be. I personally found it really validating to see Barbie, as a skinny woman, have cellulite (I know that’s just a silly personal thing, but it made me feel better about myself). Skinny people can have cellulite and fat people can have no cellulite. It’s generally more obvious on fatty tissue, but it was cool to see it included.

    • @porassrivastava8242
      @porassrivastava8242 Год назад +1

      Then why did she find the old woman pretty irl? 😭 movie was mid I'm afraid.

  • @melodywong8265
    @melodywong8265 11 месяцев назад +748

    Ken's arc is the one that actually represents the feminine experience. 1) feeling like you exist to support someone else more in power 2) realising that the real world is a "patriarchy" which celebrates "masculine strength" 3) mimicking the image and symbols of "masculine strength" so that you too will hold power 4) realising you were just playing the role because you felt unseen, powerless, and do not know your true self 5) try to find yourself while continuing to live in a society which pressures you into gender roles, when you are now fully aware the roles are merely "ideas"

    • @treehann
      @treehann 9 месяцев назад +23

      Most men can and should go through steps 2-5 too!

    • @TenArashi
      @TenArashi 8 месяцев назад +84

      Yeah, this is what confuses me so much! The Kens are the second-class citizens of Barbieland! Barbie is a privileged member of the elite! Whatever Ken goes through in the movie, it's so WEIRD to attribute it to 'the patriarchy hurts men, too': it's a story of a member of an oppressed gender who finds out about a different world where they're on top, tries to implement it in their world, is easily manipulated into having the status quo restored, and then reacts with excitement and relief because... it's better to be the subservient gender? Because they would only ever screw up being in power? What??
      The movie very very clearly treats the Kens as parallel to IRL women and vice versa, and yet still wants to treat the Kens like just privileged whiny white guys. It's such a weird, honestly anti-intersectional and radfem-y idea.

    • @melodywong8265
      @melodywong8265 8 месяцев назад

      @@TenArashi yes totally! well said. barbie is an IRL man. they just switched the body parts lol. barbieland is a patriarchy... a world where e.g. "doctors" are valued more than "pregnant woman" (a lifesaver vs literal lifegiver), where laws, state, capitalism are seen as the only order and system, above morality, family, community, even spirituality or nature, are literal products of patriarchies

    • @ryanallen2647
      @ryanallen2647 7 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you Barbie shows the toxic side of masculinity and femininity. It shows equality which isn’t feminist or patriarchy

    • @noobsmoke79
      @noobsmoke79 7 месяцев назад +16

      I actually thought Ken was the modern young male who feels purposeless and turns to misguided and toxic people like Andrew Tate and other Red Pill gurus for advice. They tell him to “hold frame” and make him feel like his worth is tied to being able to attract women for casual flings. Barbie tells him his worth is not defined by validation from others and that he is already “Kenough.” I want that shirt btw!

  • @mothmanlol6263
    @mothmanlol6263 Год назад +796

    Cellulite isn’t to do with being a larger size, it’s a textural thing, all human sizes have cellulite and no barbies of any size have cellulite
    She’s not afraid of gaining weight and that was never brought up, she’s afraid of not being smooth plastic

    • @pattychurra
      @pattychurra 11 месяцев назад +27

      Exactly! Cellulite is normal in any size of body, gaining weight wasn't mentioned

    • @BreakofDawn
      @BreakofDawn 11 месяцев назад +26

      Exactly I’m quite skinny and have lots of cellulite. And I have a lot of friends who are thicker than me who don’t have any at all. Anyone can get cellulite and associating it as a “fat” thing sounds way more offensive

    • @pattychurra
      @pattychurra 10 месяцев назад +16

      @markstein2845 this is cellulite: "the name for collections of fat that push against the connective tissue beneath your skin. It often appears on your thighs, stomach and buttocks. Cellulite makes the surface of the skin look lumpy and puckered, or appear dimpled." You might be thinking of stretch marks?

    • @blakasmurf
      @blakasmurf 10 месяцев назад +2

      Well I'm hear to man splain... she's scared of not being perfect stereotypical barbie. The cellulite is just a trope to portray that her world is falling apart with the flat feet being the final straw.

    • @scarletbabushka
      @scarletbabushka 7 месяцев назад +1

      This is what I came here to say myself. Everything in Barbieland is perfect, and cellulite is typically regarded by society as an imperfection. They could have given Barbie acne instead and it would have had the same effect.

  • @taleytaleytaley
    @taleytaleytaley Год назад +2703

    I personally am OVER the "snarky teen/child that's smarter and more well spoken than everyone else" trope. I teach teenagers. They are incredibly smart, enlightened, and often grossly underestimated. But they have excessive faults, blind spots due to inexperience, and a ton of misplaced confidence that it seems like the majority of Hollywood writers go out of their way to not showcase.

    • @glocrowhurst
      @glocrowhurst Год назад +481

      I honestly thought the teenage character was pretty flawed. She's mean, she's too cool for her wonderful Mom that loves her, and some of the leftist talking points she makes land in a goofy way. When she called Barbie a fascist, the entire audience laughed, myself included --because that's SUCH a Teenage thing to do. (also a person who teaches teenagers!)

    • @luanaaraujo9869
      @luanaaraujo9869 Год назад +69

      It's satire 😐

    • @planckismus
      @planckismus Год назад +197

      @@glocrowhurst exactly lol, she said Barbie was a fascist 😂 how did that monologue not show fault, blind spots and a ton of misplaced confidence.

    • @thesevenkingswelove9554
      @thesevenkingswelove9554 Год назад +49

      She has OVER CONFIDENCE tho, not the same as intelligence

    • @Ash_W04
      @Ash_W04 Год назад +59

      The teenager was obviously a joke I thought. Who would take someone just randomly shouting fascist seriously? And that’s coming from someone who probably holds similar beliefs to the teenage character up to a degree

  • @starduvalley
    @starduvalley Год назад +5043

    One of the best things to come out of this movie: You are Kenough, everybody.

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Год назад +156

      Precisely, Ryan Gosling stole every single second of his screentime!

    • @mayaleeleng
      @mayaleeleng Год назад +55

      I NEED that to become an actual sweater! 😫

    • @thebeesknees2503
      @thebeesknees2503 Год назад +23

      @@mayaleeleng it is actually! but its only available in the us :c

    • @cheese6197
      @cheese6197 Год назад +13

      I bought a shirt from Amazon that says that 😂

    • @botanicalitus4194
      @botanicalitus4194 Год назад +25

      @@trinaqidk everyone was saying Ken was the best part of the movie but I dont see it. He was just kind of meh to me, and how exaggeratedly airheaded he was wasnt funny to me it just felt too tryhard

  • @notayoutuber4496
    @notayoutuber4496 Год назад +2514

    Tbh not every movie catered towards women has to have a groundbreaking feminist message. The only criterion for a good "men's movie" is "Is this movie entertaining?" And I don't see why "women's movies" have to adhere to stricter standards

    • @victoriaa7128
      @victoriaa7128 Год назад +350

      Well, I'd say for this movie it's because it pretty often spouts feminist talking points without any nuance or depth. I really wish it was just a fun, entertaining movie, even if it didn't say much. But just because it looks fun, doesn't mean it was fun. That's of course my opinion. I liked looking at this movie and enjoyed the performances, but it didn't feel like the celebration of Barbie that I was hoping for. I felt like I was being lectured half the time.

    • @cotebecerra3978
      @cotebecerra3978 Год назад +208

      I agree, but if you are trying to give a feminist message, give it right.

    • @gummy5862
      @gummy5862 Год назад +236

      This comment is so bullshit, this movie definitely tried to have a message and tried to take a feminist angle. They just did it half-baked. The men’s movies you must be referencing didn’t try to have any of that social commentary, or they were more subtle and they left a lot more to interpretation. Barbie was pretty in your face about it.

    • @melissam597
      @melissam597 Год назад +1

      Ditto with female characters

    • @gisela_oliveira
      @gisela_oliveira Год назад +71

      Mamma Mia is a movie for women that doesn't talk about feminism, is just a fun movie

  • @brandyzulu7561
    @brandyzulu7561 Год назад +1332

    in defense of gloria: it IS shown how her colleagues don't listen to her and how her daughter's snarky to her, but i think the real crowning achievement is that she doesn't change just because she's aware of the sexist double standards imposed on women. she has to go back and still live in a society that's still going to impose those standards on her regardless of a change in character or personality. the point is she's ordinary, and many women, while being hyper-aware of these standards can't do anything about it. that's why she proposes the ordinary barbie at the end; she's moved by barbie's ordinariness bc she herself is too. like many of us.

    • @lararys7765
      @lararys7765 Год назад +80

      And that makes Barbie real, which is what happens at the end of the movie. Sooo many people are not understanding the symbolism of Barbie becoming real. It's a lot deeper than youtubers are realising.

    • @nocturnalrecluse1216
      @nocturnalrecluse1216 Год назад

      Simp

    • @blakasmurf
      @blakasmurf 10 месяцев назад +5

      @@lararys7765 It's a movie! It's about as deep as a paddling pool! Ok Einstein you've got a whole comment section. Explain what every RUclipsr's not realising???

    • @Bubaiel
      @Bubaiel 8 месяцев назад +7

      @@blakasmurfare you okay?

    • @Bubaiel
      @Bubaiel 7 месяцев назад +8

      @eyabuni It is so baffling when people say “it’s just a movie it’s not that deep” like movies are meant to incite these types of conversations and make you feel emotions that’s the POINT 🤦🏾‍♀️

  • @aquaarietta
    @aquaarietta Год назад +1792

    Barbie did have positive experiences in the real world, though. One of my favorite scenes was her on that bench near the park just observing everyone and noticing the beauty of the world and feeling real emotions for the first time. That's what plants the seed in her that the world is more than the awful things she had also just experienced.

    • @kaatyblue
      @kaatyblue Год назад +313

      she literally says "that felt achy... but good" when she cries for the first time, like, she just can't go back to living like a non sentient being after experiencing being sentient even if there's pain involved

    • @jayla3282
      @jayla3282 Год назад +45

      I guess a lot of ppl, me included, felt it just wasnt enough, as mg said, because its so broad it ends being unrelatable and honestly aimless

    • @cheesecake134
      @cheesecake134 Год назад +133

      The scene of her telling the old woman she was beautiful was so touching. The way Margot laughed and happy cried at the same time was really moving. 💖

    • @lukeshioshio
      @lukeshioshio Год назад

      She has zero positive experiences with any men in the real world. It is a sexist portrayal of reality.

    • @rowenalumacad8348
      @rowenalumacad8348 Год назад +51

      ​@@jayla3282it's just saying that even the littlest moments like that observing people living life would want you to also live and experience life even if it sucks sometimes

  • @taylorgayhart9497
    @taylorgayhart9497 Год назад +715

    The scene after the Kens have taken over, and Margot’s Barbie is breaking down, and she tells America’s character something along the lines of “I can’t fix this, I’m not one of the smart Barbies, I’m just stereotypical Barbie, not good enough for anything” I have NEVER felt so *seen* by a movie!! The re were so many layers to it all, like the way Ken was lost because his identity was wrapped in Barbie is very relatable to someone who has a tendency to lose themselves in relationships.

    • @hazalmaral8368
      @hazalmaral8368 Год назад +73

      Also stereotypical barbie saying stuff like I cannot believe I said that was not a classic bimbo I am just a stupid women moment like the video states as it is. She does not have a clear purpose like the other barbies hence she has never thought of her self as being smart. So she just surprises her self. I think many of us as woman realize as some point that we are smart because it is never accepted for girls to be smart. Society values a beautiful women more that it values a smart women.

    • @OReily08080
      @OReily08080 Год назад +2

      Yes, I love this break down

    • @Lyra_king
      @Lyra_king Год назад

      ur stereotypical...

    • @OReily08080
      @OReily08080 Год назад +2

      @@Lyra_king stereotypical Barbie?

    • @mfirdanhb
      @mfirdanhb Год назад

      ​@@Lyra_king tbf it's kinda satire the movie anyway

  • @Mari-zb1ge
    @Mari-zb1ge Год назад +657

    I think the negative scenes in the real world were important for Barbie to understand that the world is not like she thought it was. But the key scene in the real world I think is when she sits on the bench and appreciates the beauty of everything and especially her talking to the older lady and seeing a future for herself she never had thought of (and seeing another life she could have). As far as Gloria and Sasha I think they could’ve given Gloria more of s backstory and love for the character but I think the scenes of Barbie remembering Sasha growing up were really good. Lastly I think the movie did a good job at showing Sasha’s shift in her views, it was definitely done more through subtext though. Anyways that’s my take

    • @CCela1608
      @CCela1608 Год назад +16

      Exactly. She DIDN'T just experience negativity in the real world, she had the moment on the bench with the old woman where the beauty of the passing of time, the fear but wonder of constant change that encapsulates the human experience, which barbie had never had in Barbieland. She feels all this despite the hardships and negativity she also experienced in the real world. She still chooses the human experience because of the beauty of it despite the hardship and it is a wonderful message for us in the real world.

  • @jessey3721
    @jessey3721 Год назад +1636

    Barbie does have a genuine and meaningful, positive experience in the real world with the older lady on the bench. In those few seconds, Barbie is able to see the beauty of someone who has lived an entire lifetime in the "crappy" real world and still is able to maintain a positive outlook and self image. It impacts Barbie to hear the older woman say, without hesitation or apology, that she knows she is beautiful. Not only that, but, the montage at the end. The one filled with instances of all the other, beautiful, things it means to be a woman. Even being privy to a small portion of that is enough to solidify for Barbie that it is enough to want to leave Barbie land behind. It sends the message that, though the real world still needs to fix a lot of its issues in the way women are treated... being a woman, despite the obstacles, still has a unique beauty to it. At least that's how i saw it.

    • @Serpentine2s
      @Serpentine2s Год назад +12

      I saw it as a hateful anti-men poorly done , throat shoving feminst movie pushed to children (yeah its rated PG-13, but parents will take their little kids to see it and the company knows that.) Why is a kids toy movie filled with sexual and political themes?

    • @hakidonmuya9807
      @hakidonmuya9807 Год назад +1

      @@Serpentine2s how is it man-hating? :)) it literally shows a flipped perspective of how women used to live for decades. It shows the reality of how women are treated(sexualised, catcalled, and not taken seriously a lot of times). It showed toxic masculinity when Ken didn't accept that Barbie did not have feelings for him and he punished her for it by taking her home and acting the way he did. It showed how men make women to feel bellow them and use them for their own comfort and pleasure when they get power over them. I really do not understand people like you. The movie is quite profound if you have the intelect to grasp it. It speaks about existentialism, feminism, the patriarchy, motherhood and girlhood. Go out more and maybe talk to some real women to see how they see things.

    • @iateyursandwiches
      @iateyursandwiches Год назад +1

      ​@@Serpentine2smeh avatar the last Airbender was an amazing show that had political (and maybe a couple more inconspicuous) sexual themes yet was was literally for kids. Kids aren't as dumb as you think they are and thinks don't have to completely talk down to them for them ro enjoy it. Besides, I hate when people like you,usually men/those of a more privledged race(white), say dumb shit like this. As if girls don't experience sexism(and in some cases depending how fast they develop, actual sexulization) at young ages. as if black kids dont experience racism at young ages. Wake up and smell the fire. Just because you got to keep your childhood innocence for the longest time doesn't mean the every or even most of us, had that privilege.

    • @Beatmyguest001
      @Beatmyguest001 Год назад +134

      @@Serpentine2soh shush. What a load of over emotional uncritical nonsense. Not everything has some evil over the top villainous agenda.

    • @hellomynameisanna_
      @hellomynameisanna_ Год назад +65

      @@Serpentine2s talking about sexual themes in a film about a kids toy. ever seen a transformers movie?

  • @samp3622
    @samp3622 Год назад +5178

    After a decade of superhero movie fatigue, I was so happy to see a fun summer blockbuster film that was targeted towards a feminine audience. Even though the feminist themes were surface level, it still has better feminist messaging than anything Marvel has released.

    • @neilwiththereeldeel
      @neilwiththereeldeel Год назад

      and this is why all the Marvel Criticisms, whether the movies are art or not, are absolutely irrational and retarded

    • @jms855
      @jms855 Год назад +59

      Why should a comic book movie have a feminist message?

    • @morganmidnights
      @morganmidnights Год назад +417

      @@jms855because women exist in comic book movies

    • @udontevenwannaknowbruv
      @udontevenwannaknowbruv Год назад +322

      @@jms855 Because a lot of boys and men watch ‘comic book movies’ and it influences their ideas of women. If women are only portrayed as helpless, sexual and nurturing beings in comic book movies, where they only play a part if they’re the love interest, if they are a victim of the protagonist’s opponent having to be saved or if they are the mother/caretaker of the protagonist, then guess what boys are going to think the worth of a girl depends on?

    • @janaforkel1
      @janaforkel1 Год назад +40

      @@jms855why should a movie about a plastic doll have a feminist message?

  • @msfthe1st117
    @msfthe1st117 Год назад +1917

    I honestly think the movie works best when read as a coming of age story for Barbie, grappling with her brand identity and metaphorically replicating the often abrupt way in which children leave the realm of childhood safety (represented by Barbieland) into adulthood (represented by the harsh reality of the Real World).

    • @msfthe1st117
      @msfthe1st117 Год назад +181

      less exploration of feminism through Barbie and more so exploration of Barbie through feminism, exposing her perfection to the contradictions with which we perceive her with.

    • @rachellydiab
      @rachellydiab Год назад +79

      this is so spot on!!! I feel like people desperately want to apply gender politics to this- and i know in some ways its unavoidable- but if you just let it be a sweet story about a few people figuring their shit out then its So Good 💖

    • @maruty2108
      @maruty2108 Год назад +5

      Yesss

    • @littleseaturtle
      @littleseaturtle Год назад +4

      you get it, thank you

    • @m.i7211
      @m.i7211 Год назад +30

      I don’t think you can call it “applying gender politics” when the movie clearly wants to send a message regarding gender issues…
      That said I like op’s take on the movie that it’s a look on Barbie through a feminist lens and not the other way around.

  • @pwnership3292
    @pwnership3292 11 месяцев назад +128

    Ken was not the villain, he was the antagonist.

    • @rangoooo2312
      @rangoooo2312 10 месяцев назад +20

      Ken was not water, he was H2O

    • @bangband1
      @bangband1 10 месяцев назад +28

      @@rangoooo2312 Learn the difference, google is right there.

    • @blakasmurf
      @blakasmurf 10 месяцев назад +11

      Ken's neither he's the hero. He saved the whole film... It wouldn't be nearly as funny without him!

    • @cinnamonroll96
      @cinnamonroll96 10 месяцев назад +8

      @@blakasmurf he is the antagonist. girl he was one of the funniest characters in this movie (weird Barbie, Alan were also awesome) but let's not forget his antagonistic side is the parody of a sexist and patriarchal man over the course of this movie. And the movie was freaking awesome regardless. He did not save the movie. He was an important part of it! So of course he’s essential and of course it wouldn’t be as funny without him. He’s the type of person the film is making fun of and doing satire with.
      Edit: So you laugh at him bc he’s a joke and a clown. You don’t laugh bc what he says is funny and he’s a role model and inspiration (unfortunately a lot of dudes did not get this memo). Even the serious part of the song was a mirroring of what women experience in the real world. Being an accessory not their own person, being defined through their husbands, boyfriends. Being systematically overlooked and ignored, disrespected and put down. Not seen as their own person worth of being recognized, given credit where credit is due etc. Or even that their success and hard work, achievements and performance is being credited to their husbands and bf. Not something most dudes can relate to, bc they are not the “and Ken”.
      Only the „friendzone“ and not getting this kind of undivided attention and simping/adoration (like with the guitar scene on the beach) part was mirroring something dudes can relate to. But that was more of a parody, also with the whole „check me out, I’m great at doing stuff” thing. The song didn’t end with being enough. The part about being enough as you are, is the important message. But that didn’t come from ken nor the song but Barbie. Somehow a lot of dudes act like he or the song said that though? Which I don’t understand. And this one is so important. You are enough. You don’t need a bros or a woman’s undivided attention to be worthy of something. You are kenough. And you shouldn’t define yourself and your whole being over another person, be it a friend, be it a partner, be it parents or children or whatever.

    • @desirefabela6421
      @desirefabela6421 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@cinnamonroll96Oh, so when the Barbies were ruling and treating the Kens like dumb boyfriends it's okay, but it makes Ken the villain when it's the other way around, so you're saying sexism towards men is okay and it makes Barbie a heroine t stop the patriarchy, so imagine if Barbie was the villain and someone said she was the hero that saved the movie, you would probably agree just cause she's a woman, it's feminists like you that piss me off, you women get everything you've ever wanted yet still bitch about your lives being awful, and you don't actually do something you just bitch, if you wanted to help out help the women who are still getting harassed or raped rather than whine about a guy staring at you, and the modern feminists of today are just hypocrites! Just to let you know I'm a woman, just shows how the feminists of today are failing so much even a woman can't agree with their ways anymore, you guys are just spitting on your ancestors grave at this point🙄

  • @isobel_mary
    @isobel_mary Год назад +287

    THANK YOU SO MUCH for explaining Gloria and Sasha's lack of character, scenes and development!! Oml, I felt like I was going crazy bc no one talks about how rushed their whole arcs are. And Greta can manage big casts, so I was pretty disappointed. The cognitive dissonance monologue feels so generic to me, and America Ferreira having literally no character played a huge part in that. (I also had no idea what her name even was and I've seen the movie twice)

    • @emmablack1230
      @emmablack1230 8 месяцев назад +14

      The movie had an issue with overlooking the actual women in the story

  • @idrinkandiknowthings9738
    @idrinkandiknowthings9738 Год назад +9266

    I agree with the criticisms but I also feel like this was finally a movie just unapologetically just fun for the girls and I really am tired of tearing things down that are just fun. We can always do better socially in every space but can’t we also just enjoy when something is made for us without being hypercritical that it wasn’t a feminist masterpiece

    • @justatinyhalfling
      @justatinyhalfling Год назад +1455

      I haven't seen such an unapologetically girly film since Legally Blond, which was and still is iconic and impactful. It is important and rewarding to delve into criticism of any movie, yet even with its flaws, Barbie will be a powerful rewatch for me whenever I need a confidence boost. :)

    • @Unsweetened8618
      @Unsweetened8618 Год назад +103

      And if they went that route. It would've felt like "Disney Life Size" 2.0

    • @ambiguoussarcasm
      @ambiguoussarcasm Год назад +27

      Facts

    • @jackie9397
      @jackie9397 Год назад +33

      Thank you🥹

    • @pir2251
      @pir2251 Год назад +284

      This is why Barbie will make a billion dollars. It's the ultimate female power fantasy and ppl justifiably find escapism in that

  • @ItsCatGurl
    @ItsCatGurl Год назад +996

    I’ve watched this movie twice and I have to MASSIVELY disagree about the comedy. I don’t think comedy belittles a message, I actually think sometimes it enhances it. Sure, you might lightheartedly laugh at something that does indeed touch on a tough topic but those moments of true heart hit even harder and act as a sobering message. I’m in my late twenties and can happily say I’ve cried multiple times during this film and adore it. Sure, could it have delved deeper? Maybe! But I also don’t think it needs to. Look at all the conversations we’re having because of it. I do agree though, the Mattel scenes needed to go 😭

    • @Emily-xr6ny
      @Emily-xr6ny Год назад +122

      it also can’t be ignored that comedy has always been viewed as a man’s game. There’s a huge stereotype that women aren’t funny, so to have a female led comedy by a female director is a HUGE deal

    • @SarahBright
      @SarahBright Год назад +4

      I agree with you.

    • @erinkathleen9610
      @erinkathleen9610 Год назад +42

      Agreed I think they gave better critiques of patriarchy/ misogyny and gender rolls through the satire comedy than the parts where it got serious. Although there were some more serious emotional parts that I did connect to like when Barbie was sitting on the bench people watching and when she told the elderly woman at the bus stop she is beautiful.

    • @Juliette5044
      @Juliette5044 Год назад +8

      When I watched I found it both, funny and very sad. Because I found it relatable and touching!

    • @lovelilly140
      @lovelilly140 Год назад +11

      I think it’s extremely important too bc the men who went to watch are 100% going to be paying more attention to the comedy that’s calling out the patriarchy/misogyny than when the barbies are blatantly talking about it

  • @ffx2fan122
    @ffx2fan122 Год назад +211

    I love your idea of having Barbie spend one day in the real world! As for Gloria, I wish they would have made her a low leveled Barbie designer. We could see her in a creative slump or bored with coming up with the same thing over and over (maybe a little jab at some complaints mattel gets about Barbie's style) and then after meeting Barbie, she feels more connected to the doll she is helping to design for.

  • @SpandexTree
    @SpandexTree Год назад +283

    I thought it was weird when America's character suggested making a Barbie that was a mom. And it's like, Midge is right there...

    • @cheerextremeladies
      @cheerextremeladies Год назад +87

      I think the difference is that midge has no choice but be a mom, while Gloria was suggesting a Barbie that can be anything she wants to be (including having children or not) and still be the same Barbie

    • @mascara1777
      @mascara1777 Год назад +25

      I guess a working mom. I didn't become a mom until later in life and I was SHOCKED at the outright discrimination that still exists from employers. I saw a lawyer but could only only afford the $300 consult fee not the thousands I need to pursue a lawsuit

    • @mhawang8204
      @mhawang8204 Год назад +20

      There’s a reason they made Midge pregnant but not Barbie. And she got discontinued 😂

    • @blakasmurf
      @blakasmurf 10 месяцев назад

      Ew Midge...

    • @emmablack1230
      @emmablack1230 8 месяцев назад +3

      I don't like how they belittled Midge. She had a poster but not a line. They said a pregnant doll was "too weird." But why is that weird? Because pregnancy is weird and should be hidden or at least covered? There is nothing wrong with playing with a pregnant doll and it can be a good way for kids to learn.

  • @freyayayaya
    @freyayayaya Год назад +297

    I kinda felt like Sasha (and her friends) really were similar, and a nod, to Bratz. She is a lil judgemental because she's a teen, but in the end she is the one that wants to help save barbieland with her mom. When going into barbieland, her clothes still have that bratz-theme (loose pants & cool tshirts combo) whilst her mom has the barbie aestethic. (If i remember correctly, one of her friends in school was named Jade!!)

    • @basicismymiddlename
      @basicismymiddlename Год назад +50

      OMG!, Thats such a very keen observbation especially because in the 2000's Brats gave barbie such competition. I mean teenagers who own a successful fashion magazine, have crushes while balancing school work too. What could be more teenage than that. and this took roleplaying out of the picture and felt like Bratz understood teenagers while barbie was for children and older women like Grace and not teenagers like Sasha. I'm positive Gretta never ment for this to be the case but with her, you never know. If i ever achive my dreams of beciming a producer, i should make a Barbie bratz crossover movie.

    • @NoraBhsas
      @NoraBhsas Год назад

      ⁠@@basicismymiddlenameThat would be amazing! Wish you the best luck of becoming a producer 🙏🏻

    • @emyconfer9641
      @emyconfer9641 Год назад +5

      yeah someone said that all of her friends were actually named after Bratz dolls! Not sure how true it is but it's fun to think

  • @LooksByNaheemah
    @LooksByNaheemah Год назад +301

    I don’t expect this movie to be all things at all the time. I think it was intentionally a simple take on feminism explored in a very complex way. Especially for a story that is very authentic to the doll

  • @CosmicFox808
    @CosmicFox808 Год назад +89

    I completely agree about too much Ken. Could have done with a much shorter musical number. I love your idea for having Barbie stay in the real world for a night, hanging out with the 2 human characters. That was SUCH a missed opportunity.

  • @asterionismo
    @asterionismo Год назад +190

    "The films approach to womens empowerment felt like an intro to feminism instagram graphic" EXACTLYYYYY 💯

    • @brysiax3
      @brysiax3 7 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed, but I wouldn't say that it is necessarily a negative

    • @Raina430
      @Raina430 6 месяцев назад +5

      It’s disturbing how popular something this shallow is.

    • @NotAnotherKuromi
      @NotAnotherKuromi 6 месяцев назад

      ​@brysiax3 Do you not think the film covering feminism in more depth would be a good thing?

  • @camillefaith2005
    @camillefaith2005 Год назад +563

    The commentary wasn't perfect, but it was absolutely a conversation starter and I'm not gonna lie the emotional moments really hit for me. It gave me such a strong feeling of nostalgia that I probably wouldn't have grasped at a younger age. (I'm 18 and I grew up with Barbie dolls) It also hit different seeing it with my 52 year old mom who also played with Barbies as a child. It's also just come out at a very transitional time for me. I just graduated high school and I am about to enter college and by proxy adulthood so the themes landed even harder.

    • @yexazabala2908
      @yexazabala2908 Год назад +12

      i had the exact same experience! i've started college some months ago and Barbie has been the most influential thing in my childhood, and my mom always supported that even though she isnt a big fan of pink nor she has played with barbies when she was a child. But watching the movie together i can tell you we both ended up crying like crazy!! We saw each other represented in Gloria and Sasha, and fell in love with the message of the film

    • @adrielayson749
      @adrielayson749 Год назад +16

      Yeah the commentary was more snarky than it was constructive. I cried at seeing the scenes of Ruth Handler and Barbie. Even the parts about America's Monologue and her memories about how close, her and Sasha were, to say they were undeveloped is a bold statement.

  • @dfsnsdfn
    @dfsnsdfn Год назад +2494

    Ironically I feel like treating Barbie as though it should be a "groundbreaking feminist masterpiece" not just a comedy that is satirising issues related to gender, highlights one of the films key points. Women and the things women make are always judged to a higher standard than men and things they make, and it's ok to just be ordinary. I love that this movie invited discourse and is a great conversation starter. If you're going to watch a movie to learn nuanced and deep feminist theory you're looking in the wrong place.
    EDIT: To be clear I appreciate critique and would largely agree that the feminism is pretty surface level. But even that is unusual in mainstream cinema and deserves to be celebrated. The movie is not above critique but it's also silly to treat a 90 minute comedy like it can (and even should tbh) discuss all the nuances of feminist theory!

    • @SuperJust4girls
      @SuperJust4girls Год назад +139

      Yes. It's not that deep... it's just supposed to be a fun movie 😩

    • @danielledelrosario1393
      @danielledelrosario1393 Год назад +21

      this!!!

    • @Rosie-xm7ry
      @Rosie-xm7ry Год назад +202

      YES they literally said it in the movie 😭 people always feel they have to be extraordinary when its ok to be ordinary barbie. You’re kenough as you are

    • @mushroomshrub
      @mushroomshrub Год назад +77

      Also like... it's a movie for tweens. Introducing a young girl to a palletable, broad strokes, on the nose idea of feminism isn't necessarily gonna stop her from growing up and reading bell hooks. It might even be the first step on the path that takes her there.

    • @simrabawany2546
      @simrabawany2546 Год назад +117

      Yeah its simultaneously too feminist for men but not enough for some women, which is literally such an ironic statement.

  • @fleurelise997
    @fleurelise997 Год назад +54

    Your analysis of the film's treatment of key themes and issues really clarifies the main challenges with making this film a serious treatise on the experience of women and social roles. I think that the filmmakers did not want to offend anyone and wanted Barbie to have broad appeal. But it ends up being too light to have a sharp satirical focus and too weighed down by cynicism to be truly comical. It's a toy picture they tried to turn into a major cultural event. Barbie reminds me so much of the Brady Bunch revival movies, but the thing is the Brady movies were really entertaining and laugh out loud funny enough to hold your interest for the entire film. It was hard to stay awake at times during Barbie. They focused so much on the visuals and costumes and not enough on a compelling storyline.

  • @thisnigerianlovesdrinkingg4522
    @thisnigerianlovesdrinkingg4522 Год назад +544

    I don’t care what anyone says. This movie was amazing. People need to understand that this movie is supposed to act as a CATALYST for conversations relating to this issues. That’s why it didn’t have like final ending. Their stories are still on going so when kids ask their parents about this, parents can explain. I love it 💓

    • @j1430
      @j1430 Год назад +67

      I AGREE! im so tired of leftists complaining about this movie being too basic in its message when millions of women and even men felt touched and represented. its a damn corporate blockbuster you cant expect or put your hopes up in having a highly intersectional film especially staring a white blonde thin woman. it’s silly, campy, and most importantly: ENTERTAINING comedy first and foremost that brings about issues of womenhood and the patriarchy. it’s so well done in my opinion and there isnt really a movie that totally compares. I want to rewatch it again and again.

    • @chemtrailsoverthecountryclub
      @chemtrailsoverthecountryclub Год назад +59

      ​@@j1430 if it was just "a silly, campy and entertaining movie" with a few jokes about misogyny and patriarchy here and there it'd be completely fine. However the main theme of the film WAS misogyny and patriarchy, so of course I'll take it seriously and yes I am disappointed that it was so shallow.

    • @missnoneofyourbusiness
      @missnoneofyourbusiness Год назад +8

      @@chemtrailsoverthecountryclub There's a bazillion films about WWII. Are they all on point/accurate/function as a history lesson? Nope. For starters we barely just got a hollywood movie where they acknowledge that the atom bomb was a bad idea. There are movies that make fun of youknowwho, romances, action movies...La Vita E Bella is about finding joy in life when in tough times instead of the conflict and it won an oscar. There are already a lot of feminist movies and there will be. Let this be the one that's plastic and basic yet fun to watch.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Год назад +4

      ​@@j1430I'm a "leftist", I guess, and loved it.

    • @seesee5363
      @seesee5363 Год назад +3

      ​@@missnoneofyourbusinessAre you talking about those films that literally frequently get criticized for the thing that we're talking about You talking about those films that literally get called propaganda are you serious

  • @d.v.7494
    @d.v.7494 Год назад +1618

    Summary for those that didn't get the movie:
    Mattel wanted to keep the Barbie brand alive by making a movie for any woman old enough to feel nostalgic about Barbie. NOT FOR KIDS! Yet at the theater I saw a bunch of kids. 🤷‍♀️
    The whole movie is supposed to be satire of Barbie lore, how little girls tend to play with Barbies (ex. Kens have no homes, they are an accessory for the Barbies, how everything is "perfect", etc), and satire about how ridiculous the patriarchal side of society is by showing you how ridiculous a matriarchy is in Barbieland.
    Now, the juicy stuff. The whole movie is filled with metaphors! Yes, Barbie represents a doll but she is also supposed to represent a little girl growing into a woman! She realizes that her body is that of a woman and that it can be objectified now when she gets to the real world. The real world represents growing up and realizing how things work, how things are different than what you expected as a little girl, how not everything is perfect and how you have to deal with it anyway because you are an adult. The fact that she is developed and does have a vagina, the realization that she will eventually age and die, hence the scene with the old lady at the bus stop, these are all things she already knew as a little girl but that where never at the front of her mind until now that shes growing up. The Margot Robbie Barbie represents specifically a girl that is growing up, that is doubting herself, and doesn't know who she is, the other barbies generally know who they are or who they want to be (ex, doctor, president, etc) but the main protagonist doesn't. Yes Mattel tries to prevent havoc from occurring but it also represents how corporations target young girls and women as consumers and try to put them in "boxes" to solve all their problems and sell them "solutions" or fixed identities to make money. Barbie looking for answers with a corporation didn't solve anything. So later in the movie she seeks answers with her creator who can very easily represent god or a mother figure, telling her that yes, they created/birthed her but that she needs to be the one to decide who she is and who she wants to be. Barbie decides to leave fantasy land and go to the real world where she can find herself and confront reality and mature as a woman.
    Ken also represents a boy reaching manhood. He does not represent all men, he only represents those who wanted to take the easy path, those who chose to keep the mentality of immature boys instead of putting in the hard work in becoming men. Ken doesnt decide to find himself, he ties his self worth to female attention and trying to seem more cool/masculine than other Kens. When he goes into the real world he doesn't feel objectified even when is being objectified and sees all attention as good attention. When he goes to the real world he seeks jobs with other men (lifeguard, etc) but these men tell him that he still needs to put in some work to become something (prepare himself, learn skills, etc), so he decides to take the easy path instead and goes back to the fantasy world to try to gain power there by force. At the end of the movie he realizes that his self worth doesn't depend on a woman, that its ok that he doesn't know who he is or what he wants to do with his life yet, but that he needs to try to figure it out, even if it takes work.
    The whole movie shows that both matriarchy and patriarchy are stupid. That both men and women can be shitty to eachother when they cling to eachother for self worth without at least trying to figure out who they are outside of a relationship and the work they need to put in themselves as they grow from kids to adults to face reality. In other words its about both men and women maturing before they can come together in a healthy way.

    • @vivianchiong
      @vivianchiong Год назад +163

      you explained all the story beats so well!!

    • @adrielayson749
      @adrielayson749 Год назад +99

      PREACH!! SAY IT LOUDER!!

    • @d.v.7494
      @d.v.7494 Год назад +270

      Allan is also immune to the Kens' antics because he represents a healthy mature man. He is the only one that is a FATHER (he comes with the Midge doll) and also knows of the real world/adult world!

    • @marinatomasc
      @marinatomasc Год назад +37

      Yes!! Just Yes. You explained so many fellings I was having since I saw the movie.

    • @phyynproductions
      @phyynproductions Год назад +44

      your takeaway is better than the movie, ive seen it 3 times now(to make a video rewriting it to be more feminist) and i didnt get a few of those metaphors at all while watching, but im glad you came up with those.

  • @valentinariquelmel.1665
    @valentinariquelmel.1665 Год назад +682

    I feel you glossed over one of the most important scenes in the movie, Barbie with the older woman in the bus stop. It is very significant because this experience sparks her interest in the real world and real women.

    • @basicismymiddlename
      @basicismymiddlename Год назад +45

      No she didn't. While the scene was touching, it quickly faded away. ModernGurlz infact gives a better way to tackle that scene. Instead of focusng on the fact that she's getting flat feet, Barbie could have woken up with wrinkles or gray hair,introducing a fear that most women face in this industry, ageing. She is afterall 64 years. This then would not only make telling the older woman she's beautiful more touching, it would say that its ok for women to age because in hollywood, The minute you loose youre youthfullness, youre done. I mean at the raw age of 30, a models career could easily end if they haven't solidifed themselves as a pop culture icon. This then would tackle a serious issue and even to some extent, highlighted a very crutial issue women face in this industry, sparking conversation and makng women realise that they are beauiful, wrinkles and flaws.

    • @TheMuseSway
      @TheMuseSway Год назад +39

      I agree with Modern Girlz with this. It was a touching short moment. Quickly overshadowed by the spontaneity of everything else in the movie. The movie had too much going on. It brought out a point then pulled away from it. Mentioned another then quickly overshadowed by humor. Perhaps most of society has some short attention span issues but some people want to actually dwell at the deeper points before being pulled away for a long dance number.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart Год назад +4

      ​@@TheMuseSwayI disagree, I loved all the issues touched on and gave my family and our friends lots to discuss.

    • @juliennecordy5111
      @juliennecordy5111 Год назад +9

      Exactly. And because she was becoming more in tune with her 'humanity', she was more able to recognize 'real beauty' rather than stereotypical beauty standards. It was an awesome moment and just enough to make you think.

  • @koteek8657
    @koteek8657 Год назад +165

    You hit the nail on the head!! Most things felt rushed. We didn’t have time for emotions to sink in, or for us to witness the “why” behind characters’ personalities and directives. I love you idea of replacing the Mattel subplot with Barbie spending a night or two in the real world, to truly experience more of what humanity is like. She could really pry into Gloria’s character too. That would give so much more meaning to the movie as a whole.

  • @penthousewhippit
    @penthousewhippit 10 месяцев назад +32

    Just watched this again after watchign the disney adkorable characters one and I'm now seeing a pattern of studios being afraid to let an emotional moment exist without ruining it with a punchline

    • @firstnamelastname534
      @firstnamelastname534 6 месяцев назад +1

      watch overly sarcastic productions videos abt lampshading and bathos if you wanna have these feelings completely validated lmao

    • @1940semochild
      @1940semochild Месяц назад

      I really liked the "Margot Robbie is not the person to cast if you want to make this point" line and it got the biggest laugh in the theater when I saw it. But upon watching the movie a few times now, I have to agree. Barbie was having a real moment of vulnerability in grappling with her identity and purpose in the Barbieland community that a meta joke about the actress wasn't needed. The core issue for her was she didn't serve a real function in that society because she did not have a high powered career, was not professionally accomplished. To harken back to what she said earlier she was just likeable and pretty. Its a genuine emotional moment she has and what she's unpacking that I wish they leaned into more without the joke and before launching into Gloria's monologue immediately.

  • @keleneds
    @keleneds Год назад +459

    I actually agree with almost all the critics especially the shallowness of the characters but I still find so refreshing to have a camp, girly and fun movie! Especially when seeing all the girlies dressing in pink for the movie, having fun etc so I hope it is only the start of more girls girls movie like that who will become more refined!

    • @mir7020
      @mir7020 Год назад +52

      this! while it does lack deeper feminist themes, i feel like it's a great conversation starter and can pivot the way for young girls who only learned about the system through this movie. i still hope that they tackle the themes better in the supposed sequel, but for now i really like what we got.

    • @etheric1
      @etheric1 Год назад +16

      Yeah I don't know if I have rose tinted glasses because going on the first day and being around a bunch of excited dressed up women was so cool and I've only had comparable movie going experiences that felt like spaces for us at screenings of Spice World and But I'm a Cheerleader, but it is exciting to see a movie that is so for us and I hope the box office turnout shows that we are a demographic that should be catered to.

    • @anthonyalles1833
      @anthonyalles1833 Год назад +8

      indeed, if only the characters in _Barbie_ had the depth and development of the characters in the _Transformers_ movies...

    • @keleneds
      @keleneds Год назад +6

      @@etheric1 exactly! I feel like nowadays it’s rare to see a bunch of woman from different age and stuff all together having fun and just relating to a fun movie!

    • @gogopartytime
      @gogopartytime Год назад +1

      Agreed! I could see it evolving into a campy cult classic similar to Rocky Horror Picture Show where everyone gets dressed up to see it and sings along.

  • @m20047
    @m20047 Год назад +182

    i really liked the movie, i definitely didn’t view it as a serious, groundbreaking feminist story more of a satire and it works that way, also very wholesome my inner child is happy all the little details/barbie lore were so fun if you understood them. however i agree gloria and sasha and their relationship should have been more fleshed out + the movie definitely could of been an extra 40 mins longer to be more satisfying and have more depth but it’s definitely one of my new comfort movies!

  • @CoquetteCygnet
    @CoquetteCygnet Год назад +145

    This video analysis has a lot of gaps in its “constructive criticism.” For one thing, if you believed that Barbie’s fear of getting cellulite was connected to fat-phobia, you clearly didn’t watch the same movie. Stereotypical Barbie reiterates multiple times that her number one fear is CHANGE. She wants to stay in Barbieland initially because she fears the constantly changing Real World. As humans, our bodies change all the time! Our bodies are capable of fluctuations in weight and aging! That means that your body can have cellulite regardless of size. Barbie resists becoming human BECAUSE she’s afraid of the changes that come with growing up and being a real person. NOT because she’s fatphobic. That’s why the moment with the old woman is so crucial to Barbie’s evolution as a character, since she comes face to face with someone who HAS experienced those changes. She then realizes that change can be scary but also a beautiful part of life. It was a very profound moment of women celebrating other women. We need more of that in a society that still participates in tearing down women. In conclusion, suggesting that Barbie is shallow CONTRIBUTES to the culture of hating female characters, which is not the kind of world we should be striving for.

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +5

      If this movie is about women celebrating women, why does it end on a TERF joke?

    • @Pink_pr1ncess
      @Pink_pr1ncess Год назад +26

      @@MegaMilenche going to the gynecologist is being a terf now? Lord have mercy…

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +1

      @@Pink_pr1ncess That's what trans activists tell me. It's saying you need a vagina to be a real woman. It's very TERF-y, isn't it xD

    • @Pink_pr1ncess
      @Pink_pr1ncess Год назад +4

      @@MegaMilencheyou’re clearly just trolling. I’ve seen your other comments on this video, just making up random shit to distract everyone

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +2

      @@Pink_pr1ncess This is not the only Barbie video I commented on, so my comments could be anything. Have I've been commenting anything else aside from TERF joke on this video? TERF joke is a troll, but it is also true. Since no trans woman is going to see it and think it empowers them. Aside from that, if I said anything else, I was being perfectly serious. If you disagree with any of my takes, you clearly need to elaborate so that I can have a discussion with you on our differences. If all you have to say is "well obviously you're nothing but a toxic man, if you were a girl, you'd have seen THE TRUTH" etc etc you didn't even need to bother with commenting at me.

  • @KingoftheShibas
    @KingoftheShibas Год назад +53

    I think it also would have been interesting to explore how the production of ‘mojo dojo casa houses’ into the real world affected boys and their perception of masculinity like barbie affected young girls in the way that it reinforced unrealistic standards of beauty and achievement onto them

    • @daimanekeyre2259
      @daimanekeyre2259 11 месяцев назад +2

      you are right but the movie wasn't about men issue but girls

    • @emmablack1230
      @emmablack1230 8 месяцев назад +1

      I don'r actually think Barbies irl were reinforcing "unrealistic standards and and achievement onto them." Barbies are blamed for negative body/self images when it is society telling the kids that that's how they are supposed to think. All studies of if dolls like Barbie negatively impact kids either came back as inclusiveness or having a positive affect.

  • @anto4380delaguaridaa
    @anto4380delaguaridaa Год назад +451

    I think it is unfair for us to expect this movie to represent every single aspect or angle of feminism, because no movie would live up that expectation. Yes, the feminism seems at times superficial here but considering it's a PG-13 movie, I think ti will be a great introduction for girls growing into teenagers,

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад +25

      It's more developed than Don't Worry Darling.

    • @magimerlyn9596
      @magimerlyn9596 Год назад +12

      Sure, but the barbies' solution to the whole kens taking over thing was to go back to oppressing them. Considering Barbieland's matriarchy basically works the same as the patriarchy in our world, just with the genders swapped, it's hard to see that half of the story as feminist at all.

    • @eliawillinger4329
      @eliawillinger4329 Год назад +17

      @@magimerlyn9596 personal i think it points out how in the alternate universe where the men are oppressed it still functions the same wa and it points out to us as viewers that while wanting all female things is fine in some cases it would still function similarly and then we wouldn't necessarily reach the equality we claim to want. it points out that equality means exactly that. that everyone is treated equal . i do understand what you're saying and do agree in some ways but do always think that if we look from other perspectives we can learn more. so i am just providing a different lense for u to look through and learn.

    • @magimerlyn9596
      @magimerlyn9596 Год назад +8

      @@eliawillinger4329 exactly. The biggest difference between the two worlds is the existence of the concept of violence. Before Ken brought back the human concept of violence, Barbieland didn't have it.

    • @jaimarshall6043
      @jaimarshall6043 Год назад +7

      I believe that was the point of the review. That he movie tried to tackle too much. That it may have succeeded more, if it had focused on a few key issues, rather than trying to say it all. I enjoyed the suggestions and ideas presented 😊

  • @helloitsmealeks7958
    @helloitsmealeks7958 Год назад +212

    I do not mind the "shallowness" of the movie because I am very emotional and if it had run any deeper I could not have enjoyed the aesthetic and jokes because I probably would have cried the whole time. It is pink and fun and just enough to make people think and that is what I hoped for. Also, we needed two musical scenes.

    • @SuperJust4girls
      @SuperJust4girls Год назад +15

      I agree with that. I had some moments that were too close to home.

  • @myasmith1820
    @myasmith1820 Год назад +9

    So is it a deep feminism movie or light fun? You can't have it both ways people. It was surface feminism and what's okay, it is strange how this comment section is so pushed back by criticism.

    • @lapinpuff
      @lapinpuff Год назад +5

      I agree, I'm so confused by these comments insisting it was a deep feminist masterpiece (and that the video creator simply "doesn't get it") while also insisting it's just silly fun with no deeper meaning
      As you said, it is very surface-level feminism, but that's fine. And it's also fine for the video creator to long for more.

    • @navarog378
      @navarog378 Год назад

      Surface-level feminism? More like heavy handed anti-men feminism.
      Kens in Barbieland are literally homeless and cannot take any important political positions, which is treated as a good thing, while the real world where women can do absolutely anything if they work for it is considered evil and patriarchal.

  • @shanabloom8165
    @shanabloom8165 Год назад +23

    But Gloria’s biggest hardships were shown in the two montages of her and Sasha’s relationship since Sasha was a little girl. It shows that she’s sad that the child-like imagination in Sasha is fading away and that she’s gradually being ignored and brushed off by her daughter who used to double as a friend.

    • @VanNessy97
      @VanNessy97 10 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I just wish that plot point got more screentime.

    • @emmablack1230
      @emmablack1230 8 месяцев назад +1

      the issue is that those characters, as well as other's, didn't have enough screen time for a fleshed out arc when they needed on- or at least more personality

  • @Wendigirl11
    @Wendigirl11 Год назад +789

    Personally, I loved how this movie highlighted how both men and women are affected by the systemic issues in our world caused by the patriarchy. The Kens’ fall from grace is clearly caused by the pressure on men to be perfectly put together, in control, never emotional (excluding anger), have the perfect body, get girls effortlessly, and overall just be soulless, Godfather-loving macho men. This can be juxtaposed by Allan, who I believe is a representation of a man who does not fit in with the others because he is not traditionally masculine. Gerwig did a phenomenal job showcasing the effects these “ideals” have on men and the women around them, and how this isn’t what Ken is. Additionally, I love how the film showed how unattractive this is to women lol. This isn’t a film that hates men, it’s a film that hates the system that favors men (specifically heterosexual, white, able-bodied, conventionally attractive men)

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Год назад +32

      Agreed, I loved how they addressed patriarchy, but I was slightly disappointed that the Barbies just went back to having everything their way again, with the Kens being treated as mere accessories again.

    • @Wendigirl11
      @Wendigirl11 Год назад +103

      @@trinaqwell, they didn’t end with nothing. It showed a gender-swapped version of how women have to climb the ladder in the real world. It wouldn’t make sense for them to get everything automatically, especially after the tirade they just went on. Think of it as when women entered the workforce during WWI. Important positions in our government and corporate conglomerates didn’t just fall into their lap. They had to fight tooth and nail for it. Now, it’s happening to the Kens.

    • @janellimarie
      @janellimarie Год назад +83

      @@trinaqThe narrator explained that the Kens would begin to gain power as slowly as women in the real world…

    • @Wendigirl11
      @Wendigirl11 Год назад

      @@janellimarieexactly

    • @20000dino
      @20000dino Год назад +2

      Well yeah, but it inherently leaves genderqueer people and gender non-confirming people out of the picture. That’s a huge but unfortunately expected oversight (because… Barbie).

  • @robynlee143
    @robynlee143 Год назад +1091

    I think a lot of people are making the mistake of taking the film more seriously than it takes itself.

    • @FloraDArtCat
      @FloraDArtCat Год назад +35

      A movie HAS to take itself seriously otherwise, you're just wasting people's time.

    • @ipunchedu8884
      @ipunchedu8884 Год назад +138

      @@FloraDArtCat it's satire so you have to take it partially seriously but not completely, otherwise you fall into the trap of what satire does

    • @UnicornLoft
      @UnicornLoft Год назад

      ​@@ipunchedu8884yee

    • @selrox879
      @selrox879 Год назад +45

      The conservatives are having a meltdown lmao

    • @thisnigerianlovesdrinkingg4522
      @thisnigerianlovesdrinkingg4522 Год назад +14

      @@FloraDArtCatLmao? What? That sounds so stupid. It’s a COMEDY.

  • @missbellaiza
    @missbellaiza Год назад +81

    My only flaws in the movie:
    1. How fast Sasha and Gloria changes. Gloria’s speech is beautiful but it didn’t win me over because how little she was developed. I agree that Barbie should’ve stayed in Gloria’s house for a day, just like how Giselle from enchanted stayed in Robert’s house for more then a day.
    2. Ruth as a mother and Barbie as a daughter would’ve been expressed better. The mother daughter expression could’ve been pushed more.
    3. I think because it has too many conversation and discussion that it overlaps and overdoing. It does some showing and not telling, some not all. I feel like they should’ve condensed the overstated conversation and expand on the relationship with Gloria and Sasha and have Barbie express the ugly side of life like getting old, grey hair, etc. and other common human things, then it would’ve been better. I would’ve preferred if their messaging was subtle, the humor is pretty good. I feel like some things were condensed through editing, but because of this movie, I doubt it won’t win any awards. I see this movie getting an Oscar or two. I feel like the feeling and commentary of the movie hits better with the sound off sadly, but I’m not entirely disappointed seeing it, is a relief. I just wished there was more to be added. The music, visuals and the acting are phenomenal, just wanted more. Barbie the icon is great, but I would’ve loved Barbie the character.
    I’ll still rewatch it, it’s not bad, is like a 9/10.

    • @user-cp1lj3bn3b
      @user-cp1lj3bn3b 10 месяцев назад +12

      Exactly. Although I love the bench scene, like 5 minutes of her there does not convince me that she's convinced that the human world is way better. Having a plot line where she hangs out with Gloria and Sasha would be amazing AND if they got to develop Gloria and Sasha's relationship with each other while Barbie is there would be even better. That way Barbie can see human struggles with relationship but also the beauty of family and overcoming issues. If the plot was more about aging and complex human relationships and emotions, this would be a beautiful movie. I was way too taken aback by the fast pace, lack of character development and overlapping satirical plotlines to really enjoy this film, but it just needed a little tweaking tbh

    • @mochi8847
      @mochi8847 7 месяцев назад +2

      I totally agree, that's my main problem with it. Though I adore the message and what they were trying to do, I feel like it's such lazy film making and writing to explain the entire feminist dialogue instead of displaying it through meaningful actions, character development, and symbolism. Like you said, too much tell, not enough show.
      I know Greta Gerwig is an absolutely fantastic director but I think she was just too caught up here in making it a kids AND adult movie. Kids need the message to be straightforward. Adults can handle it being more nuanced and therefore, more impactful. But, by combining audiences, it was just a weird mix of language children could understand with topics adults have to deal with. I also think in today's modern society, we are geared towards more superficial movies, rather than those which are in-depth and require a lot of intellectual thought from the viewer, so that's also part of it.
      I was really excited for this movie, but ended up being disappointing in it unfortunately. I think the real feminist movement though was how everyone gathered to watch it, which was so heartwarming and endearing.

    • @kakerumasumoto3275
      @kakerumasumoto3275 7 месяцев назад

      Only but made 3 reasons damn

  • @kathryneconomou791
    @kathryneconomou791 Год назад +85

    Amy Schumer as Barbie? Thank goodness that didn't happen!

  • @Iknowitsweird
    @Iknowitsweird Год назад +536

    The woman sitting next to me in the theater couldn't stop crying when the credits rolled. While I also think the film tackled too many themes and missed a lot of opportunities (why didn't Gloria and Midge get a moment??) I think there will be people who are profoundly affected by the straightforward message that women should exist as they choose to

    • @stellarr.r
      @stellarr.r Год назад +87

      THIS. womanhood is beautiful & seeing that hit hard for a lot of us because we’re taught that it’s not.

    • @FloraDArtCat
      @FloraDArtCat Год назад +2

      Poor you.😅

    • @Vortex_ICEcold
      @Vortex_ICEcold Год назад +13

      Who tf cries over a stupid movie like this lol

    • @stellarr.r
      @stellarr.r Год назад +94

      @@Vortex_ICEcold who tf takes time out of their day to judge & hate on people they’ve never met 💀

    • @sim9373
      @sim9373 Год назад +4

      Ok… but my sandwich isn’t gonna make itself

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +1449

    I wished that they'd done more with Midge, Allan or Sasha. Those characters felt wasted, especially Midge, and she barely got to say anything, if I remember correctly.

    • @Wendigirl11
      @Wendigirl11 Год назад +252

      I’m pretty sure Midge was just a gag at Mattel, but it would’ve been great if they showed how Barbie can be respected and powerful while also being a mom (but hey, we got that with Gloria lol)

    • @fake.it.flowers
      @fake.it.flowers Год назад +36

      same with skipper 😢

    • @daeity1
      @daeity1 Год назад +31

      @@fake.it.flowers i really hope the sequel kinda takes on the other barbies. also other characters in the animated movies to adapted as well!

    • @RogueVideoRaven
      @RogueVideoRaven Год назад +60

      Sasha started out strong but fizzled out towards the end so I wish she had more to do. I did like that Midge was a ‘jumpscare’ character though but she should’ve teamed with Weird Barbie

    • @danicee
      @danicee Год назад +55

      Totally agree. I really like the idea of Midge as a parallel to Gloria and her daughter. There seemed to be an air of shame about her character in Barbieworld, even when the Mattel CEO walked by her. And no one seems to interact with Allan, not even the other Kens. It could have been a good opportunity for him to dissect/address the negatives of patriarchy since he was so against what the others were doing and wanted to leave for the real world, as well.

  • @frozenweevil4022
    @frozenweevil4022 Год назад +118

    it felt for me like it tried to have its cake and eat it too; tried to be existential but didn’t develop, tried to be camp and self aware but then tried to be serious in the same breath. it was pretty short and didn’t leave much room to explore.

  • @MaggieMono5poly
    @MaggieMono5poly Год назад +144

    I feel like I didn't need to be explicitly told most of the things you mentioned because I KNOW them, you know? This movie is For The Girls in every way. We don't need to hear Sasha say what her relationship to womanhood is because we know it. Her rejection of Barbie says it all to me because most girls live that. We didn't need to see Gloria be shat all over in corporate America or explicitly state her complicated relationship to motherhood because we already know it. We live it and we see our mothers, sisters, friends live it even if we haven't. Those experiences are as ubiquitous as Barbie herself. And, yes, they are incredibly nuanced, but I didn't really think it was the movie's job to be a masterclass in feminist theory. It's something fun for the girls and clearly most people are connecting with it in a deeper and more personal way. The movie did its job and it's going to be right up there with Clueless and Legally Blonde as a classic girl movie.

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +17

      Please don't compare this mid Barbie movie with good movies like Clueless and Legally Blonde.

    • @lauras5359
      @lauras5359 Год назад +3

      It's a bit too soon to say whether it will be a cult classic. It would be cool.

    • @Katiewithdaffodils
      @Katiewithdaffodils Год назад +11

      ​@@lauras5359It's made over a billion already, I think "cult classic" would be an understatement. I know financially successful doesn't mean "good", but I do think there is enough ingenuity and enough funny and resonant ideas in Greta Gerwig's Barbie that it will last in one way or another.

  • @UncommonPlans
    @UncommonPlans Год назад +306

    The only thing I disagree with in this video is that cellulite equals being fat. It does not and never has. All women of all shapes & sizes are capable of having cellulite. I think the use of cellulite is just another way to show how Barbie isn’t perfect and was becoming more of a real life woman.
    I do agree that using aging would have been more meaningful but I don’t think the cellulite was used as a reference for her being afraid of gaining weight.

    • @CountGrishnakh
      @CountGrishnakh Год назад

      I'm 5'7, 117 lbs, and still have thigh cellulite if I squish the skin on my thighs together 😐

  • @Ella-gb7no
    @Ella-gb7no Год назад +198

    weakens the emotinal impact? bro i disagree, i was SOBBING at the montage scene, there were its serious sad moments- especially for a comedy, not a drama. and yet it still managed to be heartfelt and touching.
    Also, i disagree with the will ferrel thing. i thought he was hilarious and i loved his performance, one of my favorite lines form the film was the "im the son of a mother and the mother of a son" thing. i was literally laughing out loud at that. yes hes played comedic characters like that a lot, but thats just cuz hes GOOD at it. just my opinion.

    • @Pinkladyisv
      @Pinkladyisv Год назад +14

      I also found myself crying at the montage too. I absolutely loved this movie!

    • @kittycolours
      @kittycolours Год назад +7

      The montage was the nail in the coffin for me, I’m even tearing up just thinking about it. To me, it was to show how ever since her creation, Barbie was there for little girls and women alike. She has had every experience of a little girl and every adult because Barbie was made to be every experience. Barbie isn’t just a plastic Bimbo, Barbie is what it is like to be a woman.

    • @FloraDArtCat
      @FloraDArtCat Год назад

      You were sobbing not because the movie was "emotional", but rather it's because you're soft.

    • @Ella-gb7no
      @Ella-gb7no Год назад +9

      @@FloraDArtCat girl tf? i cry because the movie reminded me of my childhoood. if thats "soft" to you, even though its not, then fine by me cuz ill cry whenevr the hell i want

  • @Sim77j
    @Sim77j Год назад +154

    i think if it would be more "emotional" as you'd like it to be, it would've be less impactful. Because they would've minimize women to their emotional nature, and personally, i liked that they would've explore the emotional nature of the kens, because given that the barbies looked more empowered and stable to have control over positions of power.

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +9

      Barbies were plenty emotional in the movie.

    • @Anggell707
      @Anggell707 Год назад +13

      I don't think it had to be super dramatic or emotional in that way, I think they just had to deliver the message in a more subtle and a "show don't tell" way instead of just saying "oh patriarchy is bad!" in your face

    • @Dhjbj453gyDh
      @Dhjbj453gyDh 11 месяцев назад +4

      women can be emotional and also in positions of power... its not something to be ashamed about

  • @sayo2990
    @sayo2990 Год назад +109

    14:43 isn't true, as evidenced by the scene at 14:52. One of the major things Barbie learned from her time in the real world is that human things like aging can be beautiful and rewarding. Also, she did have other positive experiences, in the most human way ever. Bonding with Gloria and Sasha while in a genuinely high stakes situation with Mattel was a way for Barbie to see the joy and positivity even when things are going to shit, which imo is a very human experience to have. Yes, the harassment and disrespect are experiences, but so are the laughs and companionship.

  • @kellyb7561
    @kellyb7561 Год назад +181

    i disagree about barbie only having negative experiences in the real world. she has that beautiful moment in the park when she really gets to take in the world for the first time. i also think she had a great time talking to ruth in the mattel building and probably enjoyed the car chase where she gets to meet gloria. even though i do really agree that she should have spent more time in the real world i don't think its fair to say she only had negative experiences.

    • @bethanysingsmrs849
      @bethanysingsmrs849 Год назад +2

      i dont get why she told that grandma that she was beautiful

    • @CoquetteCygnet
      @CoquetteCygnet Год назад +13

      @@bethanysingsmrs849it’s mainly because she’s learning to appreciate the real world, and things that aren’t plastic like dolls. For her to call the old lady beautiful is a sweet moment because she feels a connection to other women in the real world, and though they’re not Barbies, they’re still beautiful to her.

    • @CCela1608
      @CCela1608 Год назад +1

      She also sees the flashes of memory of the teen girl growing up and how bittersweet and beautiful that is, how experiencing all the changes over time is what it means to be human and that is beautiful. She connects all these things and can then see the beauty of the old woman too

  • @music4life813
    @music4life813 Год назад +410

    One of Enchanted’s major wins was getting us to understand why Giselle would choose the real world

    • @Larissa-zt6nr
      @Larissa-zt6nr Год назад +27

      i disagree.... her main reason is bc of a guy (and his daughter) then the realworld itself

    • @arrenshepperd6146
      @arrenshepperd6146 Год назад +60

      @@Larissa-zt6nr that is just as simplified as when someone says, Ariels main reason to go to the human world was for a guy.

    • @mhawang8204
      @mhawang8204 Год назад +6

      Not really. Giselle brought the magic with her. Animals helping you clean or people doing a whole choreographed musical number in Central Park don’t happen in the real world. She experienced an unreal version of the real world.

    • @saltedcaramel88
      @saltedcaramel88 11 месяцев назад

      delusional, barbie better than that crap

  • @Zappbrannigan83
    @Zappbrannigan83 Год назад +105

    I actually found the scene where Barbie and Ken renact Streetcar Named Desire, but with Ken at the upstairs-- shouting down to Barbie--an interesting deconstruction of gender performativity, as we see the Ken's performing what they've been told is masculine, making evident the more subtle, insidious ways societal norms shape and shame the individual to conform to societal expectations. Ken is in the traditionally dominate, higher space, having taken over Barbies house, yet he feels truly powerless and threatened by Barbies autonomy, being on the ground but able to walk away as Ken suffers, trapped in his despair and awesome power ballads. However, the performativity is exposed even further when Ken reveals he really wasn't interested in Patriarchy after he found horses weren't involved, but was expected to perform anyway. The combination of satire and sentiment reflect the tonal duality of Bojack Horseman, another fantasy comedy that replaces the gender politics with just, soul crushing depictions of mental illness.
    Also, Ken's name, written in the Metallica font on his black leather fannypack really embodies the thin line between masculinity and parody. Regardless, I want to buy that fannypack so bad. Gotta get that merch.

    • @AnnelisR
      @AnnelisR Год назад +4

      Fun fact: Metallica’s official Instagram reposted a photo of that fanny pack 😂

    • @Zappbrannigan83
      @Zappbrannigan83 Год назад +1

      @@AnnelisR They're just leaning into it, lol. Love it. Just Ken Debuted at #4 rock/streaming charts. It payed off.

  • @LaneyEP
    @LaneyEP Год назад +174

    “we have to always be extraordinary but somehow we’re always doing it wrong” I feel maybe the mark was missed on this one, whirl sure its a very surface level and bit cheesy but thats the point! its just a fun movie about transitioning from girlhood into women hood and the territory that comes with. The audience for this movie are for all people of all ages and sends a very understandable message especially to young girls. I feel saying that this movie wasnt “deep enough” is totally looking over the main point of the movie. If you watch tbis movie with the intent to criticize you will always find something wrong with it. Its ok to just watch a movie for fun and have fun watching a movie!! its not always about the deeper meaning of things

    • @marespinosa-fj5zm
      @marespinosa-fj5zm Год назад +30

      sure its not always about the deeper meaning of things but greta gerwig obviously made this movie with a message and intention to get that message across to a very wide audience. with that said, when you center an entire movie around an idea of feminism such as this one, you cant seriously just say "just enjoy the movie it was just fun!" when the ENTIREE movie is LITERALLY about the hardships of being a woman and living in a patriarchal world. you can have fun while also critiquing its weak spots

    • @NiseGen-13
      @NiseGen-13 Год назад +5

      ​@@marespinosa-fj5zmMajority of the movies were catered towards men and screams patriarchy. How comes there is no "Deep Discussions" about it like what you are doing?
      Additionally, the original poster is right. You overlooked the main point of the movie and only pointing out what you wanted to see.
      For audiences who sees the movie with open mind and not look for things that isn't there, they understand the message of the movie.
      The message of the movie is that it is OK to be normal and not be perfect. It is OK not to be like Barbie, a very perfect being that every girls in the 90s dream of. It is OK to be YOU and not being just an accessory to Barbie.

    • @marespinosa-fj5zm
      @marespinosa-fj5zm Год назад +12

      @@NiseGen-13 tell me youre joking pls! barbie is a movie centered around feminism. the entirety of it is a message, a statement, about the patriarchy all of it is. when i went to watch this movie i was expecting a fun movie abt barbie discovering the real world however while watching it i realized its abt living in a patriarchal world. i understand the message of the movie but that doesnt mean it was executed well and makes it exempt from critique. have fun enjoy the movie but be open to discussions about the films goods and bads.

    • @NiseGen-13
      @NiseGen-13 Год назад +2

      @@marespinosa-fj5zm You don't have to defend yourself.
      If that is the only thing you wanted to see then that is the only thing you see.
      There is no point teaching the dog how to speak when it only knows how to bark.

    • @marespinosa-fj5zm
      @marespinosa-fj5zm Год назад +8

      @@NiseGen-13 if you cant handle criticism get off the internet. this movie was made to spark discussion and if you cant open your mind to other people's points of view, then i dont know why youre even bothering trying to counter my opinion.
      the wise man can change his mind; the stubborn one never.

  • @tatiana8050
    @tatiana8050 Год назад +133

    I disagree that the jokes take away from the seriousness, I feel like it’s appropriate for the movie to sort of “ignore” the seriousness up until the end. It’s reflecting Barbie and how she doesn’t start to really understand the seriousness of what happened until the end of the movie, then she is forced to deal with it, like life. 12:17

  • @cristinasponk
    @cristinasponk Год назад +128

    25:05 i think you missed the point!! Every woman has cellulite, regardless of their weight: meanwhile, the barbies don’t have it because they’re supposed to be made from plastic, not human skin. Also cellulite shows up during adolescence, waaay earlier than gray hair, so I think it fits the coming-of-age aspect of the story. I do agree with the other perplexities you’ve expressed about the film tho

    • @agirlwithdreams15
      @agirlwithdreams15 Год назад +5

      Not every woman has cellulite, and some men do

    • @swnbv
      @swnbv Год назад +37

      I was so looking for this in the comments! The cellulite isn’t about getting fat, it’s about being human. Literally anyone can have it.

    • @itzelwind5813
      @itzelwind5813 Год назад +8

      Yup im skinny and i have cellulite its just a thing humans can get

  • @Tinybeequeen
    @Tinybeequeen Год назад +92

    Your suggestion of having her stay in the real world longer is amazing, I really wish they’d done that 😩

    • @sashhhaa4874
      @sashhhaa4874 Год назад +6

      frr I thought Gloria was gonna take Barbie to her house too 😭😭 and Barbie was gonna stay in the real world for a bit longer 😅

  • @BobHooker
    @BobHooker Год назад +75

    She didn't just experience misery in the real world. There is that wonderful scene on the bus bench when she cries for the first time, and when she turns to the old woman, humans age unlike Barbie, and she says 'you are beautiful' to a woman who is definitely real world. The real world is complex but it is real.

  • @andthatsondana
    @andthatsondana Год назад +503

    I love your takes on movies, and I respect your opinion, but I have to disagree some on this one. I saw Barbie a few days ago and I have felt more emotionally attached to it as time has passed. I think it does an excellent job of explaining the message while still being lighthearted and funny. The first point of yours I disagree with it that when they make jokes, it under cuts the message they’re making. I don’t think that’s the case at all here. Most of the time when trying to discuss a serious topic (like misogyny here) it causes (typically men) to not listen or understand because they feel they are personally being blamed. But if the message is being given with quick quips and jokes, the people who need to hear the message are more likely to listen to it. I would have liked to see Barbie have one positive experience in the real world, but I think Mattel is important. It shows that even things made for women are still run by men. And I don’t think Gloria’s character is bad either. I see her as a representation of all women, a Y/N of sorts. And her big speech doesn’t change her personality because it’s something that all women know and understand and live already. So she’s not making a leap of judgment. I also disagree with the “Barbie not realizing she’s smart”. I think it mimics how as children grow up, they start to realize they know more than they think. Like I’ve had instances where I’ve explained something scientific, only then realizing just how much I know. I don’t think it makes her look stupid, I think it’s realistic. In the end, I think it is a well done feminist movie. It appears shallow, but it “lures” in people who wouldn’t normally watch any feminist content. It’s lighthearted to allow the points to hit a little softer. Meaning, it’s a fun movie to watch at the time, put provokes thought after. I respect your opinion though! Everyone having their take on movies is important :))

    • @rowenalumacad8348
      @rowenalumacad8348 Год назад +29

      YOU TOOK THE WORDS OUT OF MY MOUTH THANK U!!

    • @agirlwithdreams15
      @agirlwithdreams15 Год назад +10

      Just because you like the film doesn't mean OP is wrong. The Barbie movie is shallow, and it's ok to admit

    • @sophiaarias9341
      @sophiaarias9341 Год назад +66

      @@agirlwithdreams15they never said it wasn’t shallow, but that it serves as a nice introduction into feminism. Barbie is a very mainstream character and pop culture staple. I don’t think anyone should have expected the movie to serve as a great thinkpiece on feminism, when its target audience is very broad. there’s also going to be a lot of young girls who watch this film, so while it may appear shallow to you, Barbie could be the first step on a little girl’s journey to female empowerment. if you want a deep dive on feminism, you can look elsewhere. but i think making the movie heavily focused on the intricacies of feminism would undermine the entire film, which is supposed to be campy and fun. zootopia is a very shallow take on modern-day racism, but it’s a decent introduction for children and a way to start a conversation.

    • @beakiddo9532
      @beakiddo9532 Год назад +1

      Exactly!!

    • @qtdeshina
      @qtdeshina Год назад +6

      I am a 28 year old clinical children's therapist, and I agree! I love this movie.

  • @flordeespinart
    @flordeespinart Год назад +101

    I have had cellulite visible since age 12. I enjoyed the cellulite joke. yes there is fat/plus sizr Barbies in Barbieland but they are dolls! their skin is smooth, cellulite free because they are plastic! in the real world being fat is not equivalent to cellulite. and that is something they did, that even though Margot is labeled as bombshell she has cellulite because she is human

  • @tifanycryer8503
    @tifanycryer8503 9 месяцев назад +9

    Margo Robbie saying she isn't beautiful could possibly be more meaningful than funny. Since beauty standards are so messed up it makes beautiful people think they are not. And unrealistic standards from barbie making real barbie feel like rubbish is really real irl

  • @seiyoutscreator104
    @seiyoutscreator104 10 месяцев назад +8

    As a female, I cant really call the barbie movie something i can have fun with. If i wanted to have fun with the character, i wish they actually made it about her enjoying life like the ken dolls instead of the plot being about how miserable she is if she stepped into reality. I only wished we had a girly movie being just girly without bringing in the usual debates about gender politics. Its unfair that girl targeted movies has to establish something catered to "girl boss" themes and orher on the nose subjects.

    • @thischannel4334
      @thischannel4334 6 месяцев назад +1

      THIS. It was supposed to be a fun girly movie where you wear your pink outfit to the theater and watch the barbies have fun girls nights but it still just has to remind girls and women that we live in a terrible world and that men are actually the victims if we aren't nice to them. Barbie life in the dreamhouse show is sooo much better

  • @justatinyhalfling
    @justatinyhalfling Год назад +302

    The scene with Barbie and the wonderful lady at the bus stop will stay with me forever and that alone is enough for me to be glad this movie exists. 🥰

    • @KellyLatiolais
      @KellyLatiolais Год назад +20

      I found myself crying uncontrollably at that part!

    • @justatinyhalfling
      @justatinyhalfling Год назад +42

      @@KellyLatiolais Me, too! It was such a wonderful way of saying so much about female aging and the importance of seeing the wonder in it, simply by showing two visually very different women acknowledging and appreciating each other's worth and beauty. A powerful scene.

    • @nmejiag5030
      @nmejiag5030 Год назад +38

      Fun fact: Gerwig had to fight with Mattel to not delete the scene because she thought, rightfully, that it was the essence of the movie she wanted to make.

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Год назад +19

      Preach, it was so sweet, and honestly made me happy cry. The lady is played by award winning costume designer, Ann Roth, and not the real Barbara Handler, as some may believe.

    • @FloraDArtCat
      @FloraDArtCat Год назад +2

      Yup. People using another bad movie as an emotional crutch. Nothing new here.

  • @becalauren4654
    @becalauren4654 Год назад +1061

    I feel like Barbie showed pink, pretty, girl power world where matriarchy and feminisim rules and men are accessories and when they travel to the real world we are shown the patriarchy, the men in charge, the exact opposite of the female empowered Barbie land where the women are treated like objects.
    The political side of this film showed that both extreme patriarchal and matriarchal worlds extremely hurt the opposite gender.

    • @zljmbo
      @zljmbo Год назад +96

      which isn't really true, there have been cultures that adopted matriarchal system that helped with reducing violence and death caused by land distribution. men are hurting other men even in the system we are living right now

    • @Tarikkb
      @Tarikkb Год назад +128

      ⁠@@zljmboyes violence does go down but that’s not the only issue humans deal with , overall it’ll be better in some areas but it will also create its own issues , also matriarchy can also become oppressive , any group given the most power can later become oppressive no matter with what intentions it starts out with , with this movie ofc it didn’t cover every area of matriarchal and patriarchal oppression but it did touch a few points

    • @frenchbread7909
      @frenchbread7909 Год назад +117

      Im not sure about extremely. In the Barbie world, men are treated as accessories and ignored but they’re not harmed and abused. It’s a comedic film but I doubt the Kens fear for their life when they are around women vs a world with patriarchy where physical/sexual violence is a constant threat for women

    • @etheric1
      @etheric1 Год назад +93

      @@frenchbread7909 This, and also when Barbieland is a matriarchy the Kens are pretty much just ignored, the worst thing that happens to them is the Barbies don't really consider them that much. When it becomes the Kendom the Kens have taken over the Barbie's houses, taken their careers, and turned them into sexualized maids. There's a difference between indifference and exerting control.

    • @lachlainegordon806
      @lachlainegordon806 Год назад +10

      In the words of Simon Debeuviour ( I can’t spell her last name), “its the notion of power that needs to be destroyed”

  • @srbee9972
    @srbee9972 Год назад +35

    It'd be great to see a second movie expanding on Barbie's life as a human. Maybe, she would even decide to go back to Barbieland.
    Btw, I think the movie has really turned the tables by portraying men, aka Kens, as the "accessories" to Barbies - the role usually played by women in the real world

  • @treena9930
    @treena9930 11 месяцев назад +9

    Ken's plight does show why the Matriarchy was harmful too. Ken was treated like an object in Barbie Land. He was there to be an accessory to her. While it is played for a laugh. The fact that he got so excited that someone asked for the time. Just acknowledging him as a person. It is rather sad.
    More upsetting is how he got swept up into the patriarchy after years of being a primarily non-toxic male in support of Barbie.
    I've seen many girls comment on how Ken reminds them of their childhood male friends turning into sexist and gross jerks. I think Ken's villainous does reflect how it isn't people who are inherently evil. No one is born racist, sexist, etc. it is taught by our parents, society, etc.
    It's this thing that I think men should have taken into consideration watching the movie.
    As a guy, I will never be able to sympathize with the messages catered directly to females. It's not because I'm dense or don't care. As a male. I will always be treated differently, better in some regards, and rarely worse.
    I can still empathize with the plights of the mother. Feel for how unfair the situation is. Want to have it so women aren't in a position where they feel like nothing.
    Any guy watching the movie should have looked at kens plight, sympathized with it, realize it's how woman are treated in the real world (but much worse). Help to empathize with the overall message of being a woman.

  • @igortoons7287
    @igortoons7287 Год назад +61

    I don’t think that motherhood should be a plot or an angle on the movie it’s literally mention to exemplify that before barbie girls only were expected to be mother, I think that Barbie it’s everything but a mother, as kids had the toy for that, so I preferred the angle of the creator instead of a mother, even though Ruth refers as mother

    • @igortoons7287
      @igortoons7287 Год назад +19

      Also the trope on “omg I’m so smart” it’s literally exemplifying the thought on a kids playing barbie as smart or as incredible as they want to, like in cartoons

  • @359339
    @359339 Год назад +88

    The bus stop moment was my favourite, and I think her saying the line to a total stranger is really important. It's not a message of "you're beautiful on the inside." I read it more as Barbie finds it beautiful that this woman's visible aging shows she has lived a long life (instead of the same day over and over). Maybe Barbie simply finds her beautiful because she's something new and organic. I think Barbie doesn't have to have positive real world experiences to convince her to become human - I think it's enough that she isn't satisfied with being a conceptual object anymore. But I otherwise agree with a lot of the review. I think Sasha could have been integrated a bit into Ken's arc, since she's introduced asserting power over others at school to make herself feel important. They could compare patriarchy to juvenile posturing in a more sincere way. Also the non-Margot Barbies should have gotten their own musical number.

  • @Buzz0Killington
    @Buzz0Killington Год назад +5

    I usually love your reviews but this felt oddly judgmental. Like you weren’t meeting the film where it was. Not everyone has read Simone de Beauvoir and Roxane Gay. This movie is feminism 101 for the masses and they (including some conservative women) are embracing it, thank god! Can we just enjoy it for what it is? A fun, frothy confection with a strong feminist message. Name another movie that’s made a billion dollars with a similar theme. And yea, I’m including Captain Marvel.

  • @MorenaMaritaca
    @MorenaMaritaca 10 месяцев назад +48

    Gloria's speech about womanhood was very emotional to me, I legit cried hearing it. It felt important and big for me

    • @cinnamonroll96
      @cinnamonroll96 10 месяцев назад

      same. this is train of thought is something i had times and times again, and see women all over the world having and so it was so important and neccessary to be included in this movie!!

    • @russianvalkyrie2358
      @russianvalkyrie2358 10 месяцев назад +8

      I thought it was so pandery and oversimplified and lacked any nuance whatsoever. It felt fake and empty.

  • @cristenkray5192
    @cristenkray5192 Год назад +507

    The only thing that really bothered me ab this movie is the ending tbh. SPOILERS!!! Like I’m tired of the “non-human ends up becoming human,” trope and I think it’s frustrating.
    Also, Barbie being a shallow entrance point into feminism makes sense considering who wrote & directed it, who starred in it, and who the intended audience is. It was never supposed to be THE pentacle of feminist theory & rhetoric, it was meant to be a very surface level crash course.

    • @dearvermin
      @dearvermin Год назад +108

      Exactly I think the way they portrayed feminism was slightly shallow but good for wider audiences. If it went any more into it it might’ve potentially alienated some people and overshadowed the movie as a whole.
      Also I’m glad it’s not just me who thinks the barbie turning into a human was kinda boring 🚶🏾‍♀️

    • @cristenkray5192
      @cristenkray5192 Год назад +34

      @@dearvermin THANK YOU!! Ugh I was sitting there with my friends and going “but WHY though??” But then we got distracted by Barbie World.

    • @dearvermin
      @dearvermin Год назад +11

      @@cristenkray5192 I don’t blame you the barbie world was sooo pretty 🤩

    • @amysomething3370
      @amysomething3370 Год назад +26

      ​@@dearverminYeah, and also, feminism has always been growing and changing. And the same feminist has different views as they gain more life experience and meet people. So it makes sense that it was very surface level feminism, even for the characters.
      I liked her going to the real world though😂

    • @simpleton3781
      @simpleton3781 Год назад +47

      I totally understand the disdain to the trope of nonhuman to human with the last line. But in an interview Grewig placed that line to note that Barbie was stepping into her own autonomy and Grewig wanted to show that a humanizing and non embarrassing experience of watching a beloved character have a claim over her own body for the first time ever. It’s actually some her and Robbie fought to keep in the film
      Edit: I totally agree with u on your second comment and my first reply was to give context to the scene and how I personally feel like although it uses the trope it uses it well given what the director wanted to talk about

  • @prettybird2392
    @prettybird2392 Год назад +1611

    Honestly. I kinda found Sasha annoying, even though I love Ariana Greenblatt.

    • @iantempleton313
      @iantempleton313 Год назад +340

      She also didn’t even really learn anything or change. Her arc was just tossed to the side

    • @finland4ever55
      @finland4ever55 Год назад +211

      I don't like how she literally calls barbie a nazi.
      and when you consider barbie was based on a german doll and looks like s stereotypical german, the "fascist" thing also indicates that she's anti-german and it makes me uncomfortable how not only is that a possibility, but.... there's been a very weird and icky thing where Reich-related words like "fascist" and "aryan" are now being normalized as casual things to throw around. For example, if you're white or blonde and someone hates you or is talking about race, so many times they just call you an "aryan". These aren't words we should be using outside of talks about WW2.

    • @elblooderino
      @elblooderino Год назад +155

      @@iantempleton313i think this is my main problem with the character as well. i don’t have a problem with her being overbearing, edgy, and annoying with how she delivers her politics because that was (at least, in my pov) intentional. she’s an adolescent who is coming of age into womanhood and she’s trying to make sense of the world - particularly sexism and ways to unpack/challenge it. she views the world with a very black-and-white lens like many young people with underdeveloped politics do, hence why she lobbed heavy critiques towards barbie like calling her a fascist (even though she certainly does not qualify as such), instead of understanding her as a complex figure who has both positive and negative influences on our culture. she comes around in the end and makes amends with her perception of barbie, but this and the reconciliation of her relationship with gloria are kinda underbaked in comparison to other conflicts in the movie.

    • @botanicalitus4194
      @botanicalitus4194 Год назад +176

      @@finland4ever55wait, but that was the point. She called Barbie a fascist, which she clearly wasnt. That was literally the joke. It was making fun of how hyper cynical many young people are in the modern world and how quickly they jump to extreme conclusions and labeling people with extreme labels.
      Also, nazism and fascism still exist in the modern day, so its ok to use those words to describe people but only if its accurate. Like Richard Spencer

    • @kawaiimadeline3
      @kawaiimadeline3 Год назад +7

      That’s Ariana Greenblatt? She’s so much older now that I didn’t recognize her.

  • @heatherwood3352
    @heatherwood3352 Год назад +18

    15:47 I think a day in the real world might’ve felt like a copy paste of Enchanted. I think her draw to the real world was captured well enough in the mindful moment when she saw people experiencing a range of emotions and feeling it with them.

    • @18Aleziita
      @18Aleziita 7 месяцев назад

      This movie felt like a bad copy paste of Lego Movie, so...

  • @jo-lynnsomers8103
    @jo-lynnsomers8103 Год назад +42

    The thing I absolutely loved was the fact that i watched this with my mom. We had multiple moments where we took each others hand or leaned on each others shoulders. I actually had a really heart-felt conversation with my mom about how i'm scared of growing up (i'm 19) and how I miss my innocent childhood. We are even looking if we can go again, just us two, since we brought my dad and brother with us the first time.

  • @emmangarcia8658
    @emmangarcia8658 Год назад +66

    the fact that theres a barbie president and a nobel prize winner is still not an excuse for them to know what that entails as a whole just as a child doesn’t know either of it when they’re playing with that, and actually yes barbie saying “omg did i just say that?” it’s a great line that proves the previous point, it seems like all the barbies in barbieland are awear of the posibilities and carreers for women in the real world but still they are clueless about what all those things actually entails, so when barbie gets to the real world and knows a new perspective she has the ability to talk with a human knowledge of what being a nobel prize winner or a president entails, instead of talking like the clueless doll that she used to be

    • @emmangarcia8658
      @emmangarcia8658 Год назад +12

      + also, the idea of barbie and motherhood and the fact that barbie can also be a mother is not something that stays with midge in the movie, by the end gloria says that the new barbie can be everything, maybe she wants to be a president, maybe she don’t, maybe she wants to be a mother le maybe not but either of it, it’s okay, THAT shown that little girls can imagine with it and that the idea of barbie (and independent and empowered “woman”) it’s not separated with the desire of also wanting to be a mom, yes maybe that part shouldn’t be as brief as it was in the movie but is still there, just wanted to remind you

    • @stellarr.r
      @stellarr.r Год назад +8

      yeah i saw that “omg did i just say that” part as like “oh my god yeah… that is me. i am smart.” like a snap back. like she forgot who she was for a sec and then was impressed with herself bc that’s WHO SHE IS. i feel like me & a lot of other women i know sometimes forget their own power just due to day to day life and when you snap back into it, it’s shocking and amazing

  • @trinaq
    @trinaq Год назад +279

    Ryan Gosling should honestly be in more comedies, he's clearly great in them. Also, Will Ferrell's character and the Mattel executives didn't need to exist, I honestly kept forgetting about them.

    • @emd476
      @emd476 Год назад +16

      Ikr. Even just from the trailers I didn’t know what they were going to do with them, especially because Will Ferrell as an antagonist in this role is so similar to his role as President Business in the Lego movie.

    • @CC-ce8md
      @CC-ce8md Год назад +14

      Literally every time they disappeared I forgot all about them. Then they popped back up and i was like oh yeah, these guys... Literal object permanence of an infant, watching this movie

    • @cuzwhynot253
      @cuzwhynot253 Год назад +1

      Omg I see your comments everywhere 😂😂

    • @loryndabenson2118
      @loryndabenson2118 Год назад +5

      I thought they were escaped Ken dolls and that's what took them so long to catch Barbie. Alan mentioned how there are other Ken's that escaped and living as humans so I just assumed that's what they were since they were so agreeable to Barbie and were awful at trying to catch her.

    • @erinkathleen9610
      @erinkathleen9610 Год назад +7

      I actually liked Will Ferrell but I do think the Mattel scenes could’ve been used to better establish other characters

  • @tigs8441
    @tigs8441 Год назад +31

    I think it's using Plato's Cave allegory, which I think is why (although she has primarily, though not exclusively, negative experiences in the real world) she may choose "knowledge" above an abstraction of the real world. Would be HUGELY interesting to see it analysed from a platonist perspective!! A lot of themes seemed to be carried through this lens, intentionally or not. Considering it this way helped to ground some of the things you spoke 💖

    • @AnnelisR
      @AnnelisR Год назад +1

      I LOVE that you referenced Plato’s Cave! I can totally see that.

    • @joannelee5574
      @joannelee5574 Год назад +4

      First I’ve seen the cave allegory brought up for this movie, and you’re so right!! I feel like Barbie just knowing her world isn’t REAL real is enough for her to want to leave to explore the one that is!!

  • @boyinroses404
    @boyinroses404 Год назад +19

    Don't worry about the older woman, Barbie compliments. That was a good scene. That older woman is the daughter of Ruth Handler (The creator of Barbie), Barbara Handler. (Which is the origin to "Barbie"). So basically The first Barbie compliments her origin.

    • @valeriaramirez2204
      @valeriaramirez2204 Год назад +6

      It's not it's another person sorry

    • @LaureReminick
      @LaureReminick 10 месяцев назад +1

      Actually, that older woman is someone well known for designing movie outfits.

  • @zombiemannequinrobot
    @zombiemannequinrobot Год назад +295

    I think it’s important to remember that it’s an immense privilege to have even an intermediate concept of those ideas. Most Americans do not have the leisure or the access to a lot of information we take for granted to sit for hours bouncing these ideas off each other, reading, researching, etc.
    This film is made by a toy company about the toy product that made it billions of dollars and put it on the map in collaboration with one of Hollywood’s oldest largest studios. It was never going to give feminism with fangs. It’s about a children’s toy with the approval of its ceos who are represented as simple dudes who want to have tickle fights. Like… come on.
    It is also a comedy made for a broad audience which again most Americans are not talking about these things at length. For instance, my dad only cursorily knows some of this through me. He’s a truck driver who barely takes vacation because he can’t afford it. That’s how most Americans live.
    This may be elementary to many of us but will be the first time grappling with these ideas for many. And honestly it’s ok to refresh yourself on old concepts and have light fare about it. I would’ve loved a comedy like this as a child to introduce me to these conversations in a way that presented them as safe to have. I had things like Legally Blonde and All I Wanna Do growing up but this is much more pointed which is useful for girls coming up who may throw this on for a sleep over.

    • @kaatyblue
      @kaatyblue Год назад +35

      wish i could like this comment multiple times

    • @karentapia8868
      @karentapia8868 Год назад +9

      This!!!!!!

    • @abigailsmith4308
      @abigailsmith4308 Год назад +67

      This comment. Thank you! As a viewer outside the US in a country with a depressing number of feminicides, this movie was an excellent frothy introduction to feminism, especially for women who aren't so steeped in the privilege associated with being so deeply knowledgeable about THEORY. Not every woman needs a full on advanced course in feminism for a film to sufficiently connect to their lived experience and validate them, and this movie did enough to connect the dots for those unfamiliar with the broader points within feminist theory. Stop expecting Andrea Dworkin for 90 minutes and let the girls have fun 🤩

    • @adrielayson749
      @adrielayson749 Год назад +12

      THANK YOU SAY IT LOUDER TO MODERNGURLZ!

    • @lovelylanafansweetie4240
      @lovelylanafansweetie4240 Год назад +2

      Yesss ❤❤❤❤

  • @JossSCarlisle
    @JossSCarlisle Год назад +75

    1. This is a personal anecdote that really isn't objective on the overall quality or commentary that the film provides but this movie really helped me to better connected with my identity as a trans person. Very specifically the line that Gloria says, "I'm just so tired of watching myself and every single other woman tie herself into knots so that people will like us." There have been so many times that I've decided to put on pants (which aren't inherently masculine, but make an AMAB person like me present more masculine) instead of dressing more femininely because I wanted people to like me or take me more seriously. It helped me acknowledge the screwed up privilege in that but also how much I'm willing to let other people's perception of me affect how I express my gender identity. Which brings me to my next point...
    2. This movie did the right thing by not trying to be an academic breakdown of feminism through the lens of Barbie. There's a reason why it was the highest grossing film over the weekend, and that's because it was able to capture an audience that previously had not really been a part of online discourse. I never thought of this movie as a movie attempting to give a younger generation an in on feminism. They're already on the internet and they're already a part of the "discourse." I've always thought this movie was meant for the working mom who comes home from work, makes dinner, and then goes to bed because she has work in the morning and she has to take her kids to school. Those kinds of parents don't have time to be apart of the online discourse or the discussions we've been having about feminism and as a result, they've not been given the space to express how they've been affected by a patriarchal society. It's why I think, despite being a feeling expressed online for a while know, Gloria's monologue works well. It has been heard but not by this audience.
    3. I also think that this movie has a better grasp on the goals of feminism than other mainstream movies that claim to be feminist. The beginning of the movie looks like something straight off the end of Camilla Cabello's Cinderella. They're all girl bosses because that's what a feminist is right? The movie shows us that feminism, and feminist movements, have always been about the freedom of choice and the freedom to choose your own path. You should be just a mother if that's what you want, you should be able to be anything you want, and that's true feminism (at least from where I'm standing). It shows how patriarchal thinking is toxic to everyone, including men who don't know how to define themselves outside of what society thinks they should be.
    Overall, I do think the movie is doing A LOT, and to some extent I agree that Gloria should have been a bigger part of the movie. As someone who identifies as transfemme/nonbinary, I also think that this movie is VERY binary and it doesn't hold a lot of space for people like me who don't fit perfectly in the binary. Any criticism of this film (except for the criticism that it's a man-hating piece of trash) I've seen so far is valid and I understand the reasoning behind it. It's not a perfect film for me but at the end of the day I think this movie is doing a lot more good than it is bad. There's so much joy in this film and I think that's something that everyone needs.

  • @henrymilek
    @henrymilek Год назад +11

    Great review, you hit the nail on the head with a lot of the things that bugged me about this movie. It feels so close to being a genuinely meaningful story about gender and identity but ends up so shallow and corporate. Thanks for writing this, and I’ll be in the minority agreeing with you that the cellulite bit was bad

  • @magimerlyn9596
    @magimerlyn9596 Год назад +42

    My biggest complaint is actually that after the barbies take back Barbieland, they reinstate the system they had before (which didn't allow the kens to have any identity of their own, which is what caused Ken to be so fixated on Barbie and getting her to like him) and the narrator jokes "maybe one day the kens will have as much power in Barbieland as women do in the real world." They literally walk right up to the point and then completely ignore it.

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb Год назад +9

      Yeah that ending sucked, especially because he was such a sympathetic character, and arguably the best part of the film. The feminist scenes weren't that entertaining but every time Ryan (I drive) Gosling had a scene it was funny and enjoyable.

    • @magimerlyn9596
      @magimerlyn9596 Год назад +10

      @@jh565bb i wouldn’t say he was sympathetic, id say he was understandable, there's a big difference.
      As for stuff like Gloria's monologue, if you actually think about it it's really not something the Barbies would resonate with. Yes what she said is true for women in the real world, but not in Barbieland, where Barbies are encouraged to be the biggest, best version of themselves while Kens' lives revolve completely around the Barbies'.
      Another thing i wish was explored more is how the existence of violence as a concept contributes to oppression. It's my theory that the reason so many people who watch the movie aren't seeing how Barbieland's status quo is still opressive is because the Kens' oppression doesn't exist in the same form as real world sexism because violence as a concept doesn't exist in Barbieland. Even when the Kens fight each other they stop halfway through and have a massive dance number instead. It's unclear how exactly they brainwashed all the barbies, but however they did it doesn't seem to be by any kind of physical force because even when taken away from the kens the resistance has to actively deprogram them, implying its not just a "i have to go along with it so he doesn't hurt me" mentality.
      Overall it would honestly be better if Ken didn't really have any kind of arc, and the movie was entirely about Barbie finding her own identity outside of being Stereotypical Barbie. I like the ideas from this video, where she spends a night at Gloria's and gets to play with Barbies herself.
      Or, if Ken really needs an arc, have Barbie send him back to Barbieland (without the patriarchy shit, maybe he instead saw some male model stuff) and he talks to Allan and Weird Barbie about his issues in his relationship with Barbie. Then he actually could be sympathetic and we could still get the "Im Just Ken" song (honestly my favorite part of the movie)
      It honestly doesn't feel like the movie really did anything groundbreaking, and if it hadn't touted itself as a great feminist masterpiece that would be fine, but because of how it was marketet, there is an expectation of more that it simply didn't live up to.

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb Год назад +3

      @@magimerlyn9596 I agree a little bit, although Ken needed an arc as big as his because the movie isn't just aimed at women. the director said she put messages in there for everyone.
      Ken's character is the story of someone who was abused, neglected, given no rights or identity and treated like a possession. Which causes him the moment he sees people actually respecting him, to go a bit mad because for the first time he's truly happy. And at the end he realises it's not ok to repeat the abuse he's suffered and that he is enough. Ken's arc is the best thing about the film because it's the only solid lesson in the film, they actually made it consistent and what's better they made him likable. He's anyone that's down trodden in society essentially, anyone who has crippling self doubt/an identity crisis. His character is actually helping people believe it or not.
      The patriarchy shit was completely unnecessary, because they clearly don't understand how the real world works (or the definition of a patriarchy) and make it as if every country is oppressive to women, and men are always on top, which just isn't the case. You can pick up any history book on world history and see men and women in positions of power and Influence, even in spartan society women with wealth held more power than the average man. And British history is full of queens and PMs.
      They tried to cram too much, into 2 hours and they really only got one thing right. They just relied on outdated stereo types which don't really apply to 2023. And the ending just sucked, Barbie had no reason to go into the real world, because throughout she was clearly disgusted by it. Feminism wasn't portrayed in a particularly well and the Barbie world wasn't exactly ran better because women ran it, if anything it was like a dystropean warped reality where everything looks great until you really look at it. It was overall an Interesting film though.

    • @magimerlyn9596
      @magimerlyn9596 Год назад +5

      @@jh565bb if they wanted to radicalize Ken and explore that story, then horses, trucks, and literally one woman calling him "sir" wasn't enough. It might be enough to briefly confuse him, but no one gets radicalized by horses.
      If they wanted to go that route, they should have had him hear something like an andrew tate podcast, show how people like that prey on young men's insecurities.
      Ive seen a lot of people call Ken an incel, and while he does technically fit the definition, the root problem is different: his identity is so wrapped up in being Barbie's boyfriend that he literally doesn't know what else he can be, and *that's* why he latches onto the patriarchy so much. Because he thinks itll make Barbie notice him. He would literally be the perfect target for someone like Tate, and it's honestly infuriating that they took such a simplistic view of a real problem.

    • @jh565bb
      @jh565bb Год назад +1

      @@magimerlyn9596 Thats actually a good point, but then again they cant go that deep because they also said the barbies were brainwashed in one day by the PATRIACHY lol. They clearly dont think that critically.

  • @fizzteria
    @fizzteria Год назад +299

    i literally loved the way you put and interpret everything i totally agree the way you said "little boys are allowed to grow up and retain their childhood interests and hobbies, but little girls are expected to stop playing make believe" like that actually hit me so hard i teared up

    • @_Sakidora_
      @_Sakidora_ Год назад +20

      It's also not true.

    • @katfujioka212
      @katfujioka212 Год назад +27

      @@_Sakidora_ It is if you live in a very conformist environment where traditional gender roles are maintained. I grew up basically like a boy and am neurodivergent, so dont really see the importance of social norms and gender role rules. When I grew up a little, I kept a lot of my wacky/childish hobbies, and was seen as a freak by the other girls who'd felt pressured to become adult before they were ready...

    • @_Sakidora_
      @_Sakidora_ Год назад +16

      @@katfujioka212 Possibly, but you can't generalise about the whole country based on your specific upbringing.

    • @dummy3300
      @dummy3300 Год назад

      That's silly boys are told to grow up way more than girls, boys are just more persistent with their hobbies because they get less social attention

    • @lastman7409
      @lastman7409 Год назад

      ​@@katfujioka212what hobbiws were they ans where did you grow up?

  • @anaa1834
    @anaa1834 Год назад +74

    can't belive THE barbie movie has more Ken focus and screen time than every other barbie movie ever 😭😭

  • @jaykim223
    @jaykim223 Год назад +56

    i mostly agree but a few minor points except the 5.
    points where i disagree:
    1. Ken wasn’t presented as just a friend, he was literally called Barbie's boyfriend. so it makes more sense that his expectations were that of a boyfriend, not just a typical guy friend who wants to be more
    2. barbie did experience goodness that came out of the real world; meeting an old woman, ruth as a creator, sasha and her daughter's relationship and how they tackle it - the latter two culminating in her words "i want to be ideator, not just an idea"
    3. i think the comedic timing was good in that the serious moments, of which there were many, gave a good amount of time to process, esp through repetition
    4. if the movie when with this reviewer's rewrite of sasha bringing barbie back to her house to hide...it just would've been so typical. i was gladly surprised by sasha going to barbieland with barbie
    5. reviewer backs up into her own logic when she says "the film shows that the matriarchy is just as problematic as the patriarchy" when she goes onto give examples of how kendom was worse than barbieland
    6. people like the person who the reviewer puts a clown face over think that the barbie movie hates men bc the film is angry at men, not bc ken was depicted as a bimbo.
    7. i think using cellulite vs. signs of aging as a "last straw" moment does hit harder bc the former is more commonly addressed as a beauty flaw, but the reviewer does admit that this is a minor thing
    8. reviewer's last line is "this movie quickly vanishes into nothing" but i've still been thinking about it and it's been two days and i'm a guy

  • @xoxomariexoxo98
    @xoxomariexoxo98 Год назад +33

    THIS IS THE BEST ANALYSIS I SAW ON THE BARBIE MOVIE! I love that you give your audience ideas for improving the movie rather than saying xy is bad or lacks potential. I am glad you made this video because so many reviews online (especially made by men ehm ehm) have no nuance or deeper understanding of Barbie as a brand. You did an excellent job!

  • @thomascardenas4656
    @thomascardenas4656 Год назад +369

    I wish they had done more with Alan

    • @anonymous-wb9tn
      @anonymous-wb9tn Год назад +40

      yeah he was so funny

    • @trinaq
      @trinaq Год назад +41

      Agreed, I've missed seeing Michael Cera in projects, and I loved that he got the chance to be funny.

    • @thomascardenas4656
      @thomascardenas4656 Год назад +31

      @@trinaq I know and he was the only ken who didn’t turn into a jerk and I feel like he wasn’t rewarded for it.

    • @finland4ever55
      @finland4ever55 Год назад +3

      Yes, I loved Allan, and I like Michael Cera. I think Michael's having a big comeback and they didn't use him enough in this movie

    • @finland4ever55
      @finland4ever55 Год назад +4

      @@trinaq He's having a big comeback. I mean this, and the new Scott Pilgrim cartoon on Netflix.

  • @user-xd2oh2hd4f
    @user-xd2oh2hd4f Год назад +68

    The Barbie land matriarchy was supposed to represent the human world patriarchy but less dark. It was meant to show the hypocrisy

    • @shrek3397
      @shrek3397 Год назад +12

      Why was it so easy for ken to overthrow the matriarchy when it's so hard for people to overthrow the patriarchy in the real world

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад +8

      So, why did the movie fail to say the word matriarchy even once?

    • @JayAreAitch
      @JayAreAitch Год назад +11

      @shrek3397 If Ryan Gosling tells me to put on a French maid uniform I'm not resisting (I am male)

    • @brianaguilar8283
      @brianaguilar8283 Год назад +2

      But there is no patriarchy

    • @lunaslangour1385
      @lunaslangour1385 Год назад

      the term matriarchy is techinically wrong because it is defined as women being seen as above all and respected but there is equal opportunity between sexs. this is an misconception of matriarchy made by men to show that in a women's world it wouldnt be "any different to when a man is ruling."

  • @itsallaboutaz
    @itsallaboutaz Год назад +85

    I think one element that you loverlooked is that to some extent Barbie & Ken are developed as if they're children in the begining in Barbieland, and Barbies journey to becoming "human" is a reflection of the journey of growing up from childhood more than anything else, which is very often when women start becoming self aware of the world around them and the fact they're treated differently. I know that some people might just say its because its meant to be like children playing with dolls, but it seems all very intentional, when Ken learns about patriarchy he takes it back to Barbieland and introduces it in the same way a child might, even going as far as to have a fake/play/pretend battle exactly like little boys do, which I think massively plays into the simplification of some of the messages and themes, because they're learning about them much in the way a child would with no prior knowledge of these concepts. I also feel like Greta would've gone further with a lot of these themes, but I think her and Margot were probably quite aware of trying to make this messaging as palatable as possible to sell to the masses, and people are still calling it "man hating" even with how light and comedic it is, even some women won't support its feminist message. I dont think its a perfect movie, I wish Gloria had far more development, and Ken took up precious screen time that should've gone to developing Barbie (But perhaps its intentional commentary on how even in a Barbie movie the male character has more development than her?), but I think it does a much better job of spreading its message than you give it credit for.

    • @TertiaryQuota
      @TertiaryQuota Год назад +3

      People are calling it misandrist because it makes them uncomfortable 💀💀

    • @ryanparker4996
      @ryanparker4996 Год назад +3

      ​@@TertiaryQuotatheyre calling it that, because it is 🤡

    • @mauve9266
      @mauve9266 Год назад +4

      I love the interpretation of the movie as a coming of age story. I think especially at the beginning (pre puberty) it adds another layer as to why Ken is so eager to cosplay adulthood like he wants to have a sort of sexual relationship with barbie but he doesn’t know why like a lot of younger boys (and men) are told sex is important and their ability to have it with a woman is what makes them a man. It’s also a reason that when barbie entered the real world the objectification and misogyny she experiences is so extreme. Like that’s how it FEELS when you’re 13 and ogled at by men sometimes 3,4 times your age.

    • @itsallaboutaz
      @itsallaboutaz Год назад +3

      @@ryanparker4996 I dont know how you can say that, if you've actually watched the film its actually very sympathetic to Ken and he somewhat gets more development and growth than Barbie, they flipped the roles of how women were treated in a 1950's world, if it makes you uncomfortable or makes you think its "man hating" - then you have no grasp on how women, or any othered group of people were actually treated for the majority of history, because it was far worse. If you think that its misandrist its only a reflection of your own thoughts on women and how they're treated.

    • @MegaMilenche
      @MegaMilenche Год назад

      @@itsallaboutaz God, you don't make any sense.

  • @y2kaylaog
    @y2kaylaog Год назад +818

    i don’t trust anybody that hates this movie

    • @Christlightheart
      @Christlightheart Год назад +160

      FR it’s a satire aka a comedy about reality making fun of the patriarch and the polarized extremist feminists not to be taken as religion bruh

    • @MM-ob3ke
      @MM-ob3ke Год назад +1

      lol @ anyone who thinks this was making fun of feminism, fucking “there’s violence on both sides” head-assery

    • @svftystrange
      @svftystrange Год назад +18

      exactly

    • @daeity1
      @daeity1 Год назад +19

      ​@@Christlightheartexactly but the movie is also a great way to showcase an issue that's happening and can be talked about.

    • @dayadyday
      @dayadyday Год назад +58

      criticism isn't hate

  • @emimon2351
    @emimon2351 4 месяца назад +3

    Right, Barbie was never intended to be a feminist, nor Ken was ever intended to be an accessory to Barbie. Ruth Handler, the creator of Barbie, created Barbie for her daughter Barbara and named her after her. She also named Ken after her son Kenneth, born 2 years after. It wasn't about politics and feminism, it was about family life. The Gerwigs film never intended to represent the franchise faithfully either, but to use a popular IP among women and girls to push an overly used socio-political message the large majority of people have been sick and tired of seeing for a long time. Barbie was indeed the first doll to have many careers and hobbies, but she was still a caretaker for her little sisters, a homemaker (hence the dream house), a married woman (hence the countless wedding dress editions), and a mother (hence the pregnant Barbie edition.) Some of her careers were typical women's careers and subservient to Ken's (who also had many careers and versions), like the Ken president and Barbie first lady, or the pilot Ken and the Barbie flight attendant. The film was unnecessarily divisive and unsuitable for all audiences, thus wrongfully marketed as a family movie, but after an intro showing little girls smashing dolls representing live babies, it rivaled Freddie Kruger on the psychopathic level. The most disturbing in all this, is that a lot of women seem to cheer for anything that claims to be "pro-girl" regardless of the unhealthy content.

  • @maiamosashvili2931
    @maiamosashvili2931 11 месяцев назад +4

    I loved the movie, no matter its faults. I consider extremely annoying the very familiar trend to criticize harshly those who DO SOMETHING, thrying to find flaws in every effort. I do NOT care about missing details, but rather appreciate and welcome the refreshing perspective. Perception of feminism is subjective.

  • @pixie4184
    @pixie4184 Год назад +305

    I actually really liked the Mattel exec’s storyline, because it further highlighted the message about the patriarchy in the real world and I think added to Barbie’s crisis. She was expecting a group of women to represent Mattel, but instead was met with a bunch of old men who made all the creative decisions on Barbies, Will contradicting himself as a feminist head of the company many times, like by calling Barbie a jezebel when she didn’t do exactly as he wanted, and barely coming up with any names for prominent female figures in their company. Although they wasted precious screen time by showing the executives chasing Barbie, they still played an important role in the movie. I took it more as a smart reference to how many male politicians are the ones making decisions on female bodies, much like the executives do about what Barbies are and aren’t acceptable.

    • @user-gg4kw6bv1m
      @user-gg4kw6bv1m Год назад +25

      I got the feeling the execs were supposed to be the main villain at some point but Mattell maybe didn’t want to go there.
      I thought the weakest part of the movie was when Ken took over tbh I thought it would have tied the themes together more cleanly if Mattell took over Barbieland instead and she had to save it using her own imagination or getting the Barbies to take it back.

    • @_Sakidora_
      @_Sakidora_ Год назад

      Except Barbie was invented by a woman, Mattel was run by a woman for years, there are women on the Mattel board now and the US is not a patriarchy. If it wasn't for the whiney scene where whatsherface winges about how hard it is to be a woman you could take this as a satire of feminism, the real world being as much a fantasy world as Barbieland, a world in which every man is a leering, bumbling idiot, something only feminists are stupid enough to believe.

    • @marplu
      @marplu Год назад +2

      @@user-gg4kw6bv1myes honestly these two plot lines really confused me. I didn’t know what to focus on

    • @mascara1777
      @mascara1777 Год назад

      Us women should be choosing life always.

    • @MyOrangeString
      @MyOrangeString Год назад

      Interesting take! however, I still think the exec part of the movie is one of the most cliched one, it's really the low hanging fruit of a feminist take on anything.
      Gloria's monologue, being all tell not show, resonated far more with audiences than the "show don't tell" exec storyline which was bland and cliched.

  • @noahisntanartist
    @noahisntanartist Год назад +44

    Cellulite isn’t necessarily caused by being overweight. There’s a number of reasons, many of which are just “symptoms of being human”. So I’d think the cellulite joke is justified. Also, cellulite such a non-issue in my opinion, and that’s part of the chuckle.

    • @joannelee5574
      @joannelee5574 Год назад

      Thought the same!! All humans can get cellulite, I felt that it was pretty clear that the Barbies were being super dramatic over a very normal human thing, like flat feet LOL