Showing posts with label Fix-it Friday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fix-it Friday. Show all posts

Friday, June 12, 2015

"Up" Has Got Me Down

Fix-It Fridays 
Part 2: Up






Up is one of my favorite movies.  It's heartfelt yet hilarious, gorgeously animated, and bursting with originality: a house flying by balloon, a bizarre bird who loves chocolate, a blimp full of skeletons, an army of talking dogs; how did Pixarians THINK of all of this?

Because of my love for the movie, I was wary of watching Up with a critical eye. So to keep myself in check, I made a hypothesis before I pressed play.


Up's sexism doesn't present itself through insulting portrayals of female characters (see Monsters Inc.), but rather the sexism of absence, of female characters not being depicted. 

To prove or disprove my thesis, it's helpful to split the movie into two categories. City World and Paradise Falls (the majority of the film occurs in Paradise Falls). However, City World contains Up's redeeming female character: 




Ellie. I am tearing up right now because OH MY GOD the montage of Ellie and Carl getting married and growing old is a guaranteed admission to Weeping.  Ellie's dirty face and uneven teeth and static locks are one of the best images of female childhood Pixar has. Good job, Pixar! We first meet Young Ellie when Young Carl hears her yelling from inside a boarded up house. Ellie has turned the house into a make-shift pretend blimp, like the blimp of her idol, Charles Muntz. 


ELLIE
Winds out of the east at ten knots...there's something down there. I will bring it back for SCIENCE. What are you doing? Don't you know this is an exclusive club? Only explorers get in here. Do you think you got what it takes? WELL DO YOU? Alright, you're in. Welcome aboard. What's wrong can't you talk? Hey, I don't bite. You and me we're in a club now. 


Ellie sets the whole plot in motion by sharing her childhood dream with the silent Carl:

ELLIE
When I get big I'm going where [Charles Muntz is] going: South America. I'm gonna live in Paradise Falls.


And BANG! It's 15 years later and Carl and Ellie are all grown up and getting married and the montage of their quiet, happy, childless life unravels. They put their dreams of reaching Paradise Falls aside as they pay for regular life hang-ups, broken bones, a tree falling on their house. Just when Carl decides they need to move to Paradise Falls now or they're never going to get there, Ellie passes away. Then the bulk of the movie begins. 

There are a few other City World moments of ladies:

-one lady in a scary black business suit - no line
-one image of a mother/father/daughter in the reflection of a store window - no lines
-one little girl playing in her room - no line
-Russell's mom waving to him after he gets his Ellie badge - no line 
-a female police officer (we don't see her face) BUT SHE HAS A LINE 

Carl escapes his one-way trip to the nursing home by filling up enough balloons that they rip the house right off the ground. Pulled upwards by this array of balloons, Carl ekes above the skyscrapers and sails away from City World, and away from Women. 

The cast breakdown of Paradise Falls: 

PROTAGONIST: Carl. Male.
SIDEKICK: Russell. Male.
BAD GUY: Charles. Male.
GOOD GUY SIDEKICK: Kevin. Female (originally thought to be male) 
SWING SIDEKICK: Doug. Male.
BAD GUY'S SIDEKICK: Alpha, Beta, Gamma. Male. Male. Male.

Paradise Falls' male to female ratio is 7:1. And let's not forget that Kevin, the ONLY female in Paradise Falls, cannot speak. (See Boo in Monsters Inc.) So the male to female characters who speak a human language becomes 7:0. 

(NOTE: You could argue that Ellie/the house is a character in Paradise Falls. Carl still talks to her. Her small oval portrait near the bay window of the house is often referenced.  Is the house a character in Home Alone? Is the Ring a character in Lord of the Rings? If the answer is "yes" then we can raise our cont of male/female character ratio to 7:2. But the ratio of speaking male to female characters in Paradise Falls remains 7:0.) 

7:1 or 7:2, or 7:0. Painful odds for one of the best animated films ever written. So how does it happen? How does a group of people setting out to make a family film forget to include an entire half of the population that are so instrumental to the family-making process? 

I have a made-up theory. My made up theory is called: Spiral Gender Casting. 
It loos like this. 

Meet the creators of Up, A and B: 

A: I have an amazing idea for a movie, it's about an old man, Carl!

         B: We should make Carl's enemy a guy, because we don't want there to be the    
              possibility of romantic tension between Carl and his enemy. 

A: We also need to put a little kid in this movie. And because the bad guy is going to be a guy, we don't want an old man being cruel to a girl, because that's distasteful and could be perceived as sexually predatory so let's make the kid a boy
    
      B: Great. The bad guy is going to have an army of dogs, but the bad guy will have  
           created them, and be mean to them, and make them his servants, and it would be 
           creepy if he had made himself a bunch of girl dogs, so all these dogs will be boys.  

A: Awesome, but our comedic relief dog, the kind of dumb, quirky, lovable dog, is going to be picked on by the other dogs. But because all the other dogs are boys, and we don't want to watch the only girl dog get picked on by mean boy dogs, and we also don't want the audience worrying that this comedic dog might have puppies, we should make this dog a boy.
    
        B: Yes. And then we have this bird who is trying to get back to its babies, so thats'                     obviously going to be a girl


If male THIS, then male THAT, and if male THAT then male THIS: all spiraling from that first decision of a male protagonist. And most protagonists are male. So according to Made Up Spiral Gender Casting, most supporting casts of most movies are going to be male as well. 


Look! I put their pictures on a spiral! 


Up has other representational wins for sure. It has a non-white kid. Its main character is a senior citizen. These are people who do not often get their own movies, so yay for Pixar for making those choices. 

In total, there are two women with speaking roles. One is Young Ellie, the other is the faceless policewoman Edith. The City World has three speaking male construction workers, one Nature Scout master, two male nurses, and a male announcer. 
Final ratio of male to female speaking roles: 14:2. 

But unlike Monsters Inc., for Up I don't have a page of notes on offensive stereotypes of secretaries. I just have no notes at all. One cannot take notes on the inequity of roles when there are no roles to look at: sexism in the absence of women. Yay! I proved my thesis. 

But I learned that the sexism had a bit more nuance to it.

Women, such as our policewoman Edith, did exist in City World, the realistic space. The animators seemed able to picture women on the streets of a town. But in Paradise Falls, the imaginative space where writers and animators are free to follow whimsy: rare birds, dogs that speak English as well as cook, an old man carrying a house by balloon, a 50-year-old blimp that still flies: Paradise Falls seems like a magical place where almost anything can happen!  Anything except women. 
















Friday, May 22, 2015

Monsters, Inc.

Fix-it Friday: Part 1
Monsters, Inc.





Pixar is one of the few studios that can boast consistent production of "four quadrant movies," films that entice all four age groups/demographics. These four quadrant films are colorful and action-packed for the kids, and have thematic sophistication and humor to satisfy the adults.  It's a win-win for everyone! Except the ladies who Pixar repeatedly bashes through innumerable counts of exclusion, sexism, and drawing the majority of their female characters with the exact same face. 

I hadn't seen Monsters, Inc. in a decade and was excited to watch. The first scene won me over with its belabored corporate lady monster trying to teach some hopeless new scare recruits. And it's downhill from there. 

The Counts Against 

1. Mike and Sully's Walk to Work (aka World Introduction)
       A. There is, in this entire sequence of store clerks and monster children, a single female monster. A tiny Wife Monster kisses her tiny Husband Monster on the cheek and says "have a good day, at work, honey!" as he flies away. 

2. Enter  Monsters, Inc. and meet...



            A.  Celia: a young, hot, trophy of a receptionist. 

CELIA (to Mike)
Googly bear! 

MIKE
[wishes her a happy birthday]

CELIA
Googly woogly, you remembered. Hey Sully Wully!

    


 B.  Roz: an old, slug-like hag of a receptionist. 

MIKE
Good morning, Roz, my little succulent garden snail. And who would we be scaring today?

ROZ
You didn't file your paperwork last night. 

It's funny because she's an old, fat, ugly snail. 

3. Pixar's insistence that during the few scenes Roz and Celia are in, the focus should be on their appearances. 

             A. When Mike brings Celia to an expensive restaurant for her birthday dinner. 

CELIA
Oh, Michael! I've had a lot of birthdays...well...not a lot of birthdays, but this is the best birthday ever. What are you looking at? 

MIKE
I was thinking about the first time I laid eyes on you. How pretty you looked. 

CELIA (bashfully)
Stop it. 

Thanks, Pixar for complicating the hot receptionist character by making her defensive of her age. 

               B. When Mike hasn't filled out his paperwork and tries to woo Roz again. 

MIKE
Roz, my tender oozing blossom. You look wonderful today. Is that a new haircut? Come on, it's a new haircut, got to be a new haircut. You've had a lift, you've had a tuck. Something has been inserted into your skin to make you look...

Mike trails off because he can't think of anything positive about her appearance. It's funny because she's an old, fat, ugly, snail. 

               C. After work, Mike describes to Sully how excited he is to take Celia out to dinner.

MIKE
What a night of romance. Tonight is about me and Celia. The love boat is going to set sail. Because that face of hers makes my life go--

He bumps into Roz and screams. It's funny because she's an old, fat, ugly snail. 


4. The male and female bodies

Male monsters have all different sorts of anatomies: furry, scaly, many-armed, spiked-heads, rubber-like skin. Male monsters (except for the head suit-wearing spider monster, and the child-catching yellow-ruber-clad swat team) are naked.  There is a single unclothed female monster in the opening Monsters Inc. commercial.   

But Celia is clothed, and in a tight, short little outfit to boot. Roz is wearing a sweater that shows off her saggy boobs although her lower-body is naked and unsexualized--probably partly due to the fact that she is ugly and old, so much easier to posit her as a non-sexual being. 

The combination of naked male monster bodies and clothed female monster bodies perpetuates the infuriating status of male bodies as un-gendered and sexless and female bodies as inherently shameful, derivative, sexual, and in need of policement or clothes.  



The Counts For


1. Boo 

Charming, playful, capable, loving Boo. She is obviously the center of this movie, the catalyst of Sully's change. She also can't really talk (Pixar enjoys this havoc-wreaking, silent-besides-one-word female trope as we'll see in Up). I do like Boo as a character. I really do. I'm glad she's a little girl even though her existence in the Monster world sets up Mike and Sully for a tired men-can't-really-parent cliche. But again, I recognize that Pixar chose to make this third, crucial character a girl because a boy would be just as cute at this toddling, babbling, nonsexualized age. 

2. Roz and Celia help out in the end!
     
      A. Hey look! Celia causes a distraction by making an announcement on the loudspeaker to help Mike find Boo's door!

      B. Oh, wow! It turns out that Roz is the head of the secret investigation looking into Monsters, Inc. But she was just letting the men do all of the onscreen work. So cool! Now her old ugliness is totally validated. 

         Q:  Boo is an awesome female character who balances out two male leads. Why                        isn't Boo enough? 

        A: Sexism is in the details. It's in the subconscious decisions of the writers,                              directors, producers, artists, who draw crowd scenes with 30 male monsters                       and 2 female monsters. It's in the subconscious decisions to make every                               other role besides Boo, Celia, and Roz a male: two leads, two villains, two                             bumbling teenage interns, the special Scaring Monsters task force, the                                 Scaring Monsters' hypemen, the restaurant patients, the monsters interviewed                     on televisions, the monsters on the way to work, the SWAT team, every other                       monster with a line. By showing this absurd ratio of men to women, we                               condition children to believe that men are more visible, vocal, and important                         than women. Men are the majority, the constant, and women the rare                                    exception to male existence. 


FIX-IT
My Suggestions to Pixar 

1. Take the four main monsters, two good monsters, two evil monsters, and make half of them women

          AND/OR

2. Take the two receptions and make one of them a woman

          AND/OR

3. Take the two bumbling teenage interns and make one of them a woman (but without making this character have a huge crush on Sully)

          AND/OR

4. Take all the Scaring Monsters and all their hype men and make half of them women 

         AND/OR

5. Make sure your extra scenes have 50% women in them

        AND/OR

6. Use those huge, f***ing creative brains of yours a little more creatively for women. It mystifies me that the men whose imaginations could create the vibrant, nuanced world of Monsters, Inc. could not imagine a world where female monsters did more than sit behind desks at a big company and take the boss' calls.