Tag Archive for 'reviews'

Sex, the City, and How We Grew Out of It

The two best moments of Sex and the City: The Movie were in the first hour. Not long after the opening credits, Candice Bergen playing Carrie’s editor at Vogue cheekily remarks how “forty is the last age a woman can be photographed in a wedding gown without the unintended Diane Arbus subtext” (which is the only clever line in the entire film), and then thirty minutes later, Carrie, a technophobe—a fact one would know only by watching the TV series—announces that she doesn’t know how to use an iPhone. The rest of the movie is a popcorn flick accompanied with sex and designer shoes. In other words, Sex and the City unfolds with the wardrobe, plot, and emotional depth found in the typical episode of Gossip Girl, but instead of budding adolescents, the cast is comprised of aging adults.

Sex and the City assumes that you have (1) watched the TV series (which I have) and (2) you like pretty clothes (which I do). But the movie holds little appeal—or sense—for anyone else. Without the years of screen history, the inside jokes fall flat and the characters become caricatures. Charlotte is the saccharine woman of social status. Miranda is the driven embittered career woman. Carrie is the idealist girlish romantic. Only Samantha—despite her consumerist sex-driven self—attracts any interest. Her impulsive and colorful wisecracks are refreshing compared to her friends’ bland lines.

But even Samantha—as with the others—could not be saved from mediocre writing. Fart jokes, humping dogs, and lingering shots on sculpted derrières are more crude than crafty. What made the TV show brutally honest makes the movie honestly brutal. Crudeness happens in real life and sometimes it can be funny, but the off-color humor presented here makes these women of forty-odd years seem like girls entering their twenties, like they haven’t changed in the past twenty years.

And that is what makes Sex and the City unattractive. Whether or not the audience is familiar with the characters or upcoming plot, the movie drags simply because it doesn’t go anywhere. Miranda learns that she was too selfish. Samantha learns that she is too self-giving. Carrie learns that she is too self-centered. (Charlotte learns that she can get pregnant.) But these lessons don’t have any ramifications, except a new baby (an exciting event made completely unexciting by lack of screen interest), a new apartment (an unexciting event made moderately exciting by a gargantuan closet), and a wedding (an unexciting event made still unexciting by a two-dimensional plot line). Even the end of a relationship brings the four women back together—likely permanently—in New York. Nothing else changes.

At the end of the film, Carrie—through her omniscient voice-over—remarks how “in the same city where they met as girls, four New York women entered the next phase of their lives”. Whoever these women are, they are not Carrie, Miranda, Charlotte, and Samantha. Those women are still the same as they were at the start of the film, and—unlike the rest of us—they will never mature.

categories: media
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Scripted

Last week, I posted a quote from Wendy Shalit’s Girls Gone Mild. In many ways, the book speaks to me, especially about the pressure to be sexy from peers and media. Shalit encourages young women, telling them that they don’t have to bow to the pressure, that they don’t have to engage in sexual activity if they don’t feel ready or comfortable. Women can choose, and sometimes that choice is not the one expected from their peers.

But I have since finished the book, and I am now left with very ambivalent feelings about its contents and its author. While I do agree that women of all ages should have the right to dress how they would like, have sex in ways and with whom they would like, I don’t agree with some of the reasoning behind the new “good girl” script.

Shalit says that premature exposure to sex ruins the mystique and passion that sexual and romantic relationships have later in life. I would say that premature exposure to sex is a form of abuse. (Personal anecdote: I have found each relationship—sexual, romantic, or both—in my adult life to be new and interesting; I learned from every one.) More irritating is her belief that there is only one healthy relationship model: monogamy. (Many know how much I disagree.) But what really ruffles my feathers is that Shalit equates modesty with self-respect and high standards, and promiscuity with confusion and low expectations.

The hell?

What happened to the idea that empowered emotionally-healthy women are the ones who make their own choices? To have self-respect, I have to dress modestly and abstain from sex?

So far, whenever I mentioned the book by its title, I have left out its subtitle, It’s Not Bad to Be Good. We haven’t gotten past the cover, and already we are thrown into two distinct mores of “bad” and “good”. The “bad girl” is hip, popular, and has lots of sex without emotional attachment. The “good girl” is ridiculed, forced into behaviours she dislikes, all because she wants to wait for an emotional commitment to have sex. The bad girl is well-loved but lacks self-love. The good girl is not loved because she loves herself.

I repeat: The hell?

Sure, promiscuity is a symptom of depression, but lots of sex doesn’t cause mood disorders or low self-esteem. (Correlation is not causation!) But just as important as misinterpreted statistics (or maybe even more) is the idea that “good girls” and “bad girls” act only in certain ways.

And, of course, it’s all tied to sex.

The NY Times recently printed an article on purity balls. For those not in the know, purity balls are formal ceremonies where fathers and daughters share dinner and dance to bond with one another. At these ceremonies, daughters vow to remain chaste and “pure” until marriage—so they aren’t “sullied” for their future husbands—and fathers vow to protect their daughters’ honor and virginity.

The horror behind purity balls is the objectification of young women. Their worth is only measured by their virginity—their “purity”. But not only are young women only defined and valued by sex, they need protection from the corrupting, confusion influence of the outside world. Randy Wilson, organiser of a purity ball, tells the attending men:

Fathers, our daughters are waiting for us [...] They are desperately waiting for us in a culture that lures them into the murky waters of exploitation. They need to be rescued by you, their dad.

The fucking hell?

Yes, everyone needs their fathers, but no one needs to be “rescued”. Young women can’t make their own decisions? We can’t understand what is best for us? Aren’t we also intelligent, independent human beings who have the ability to define ourselves?

Young women—or rather, our virgin “purities”—do not need protection. What we need are people who don’t limit “good” and “bad” to only two definitions. We need people who tell us that “good” and “bad” is not about sex. We need people who tell us that self-worth is not tied to “sexual purity”. We need people who tell us it’s about being informed, making your own decisions. It’s about having the strength to define yourself.

I’m sure that Wendy Shalit and Randy Wilson have the best intentions for young women. But their messages aren’t entirely honest. Their new scripts are supposed to be refreshing and rebellious in a period of sexualisation, but these new “female-positive” messages are merely rehashes of the same old script: Women can only be valued by sex, or lack thereof.

categories: culture, links, media, news
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