Quickies

Skepchick Quickies 10.10

Amanda

Amanda works in healthcare, is a loudmouthed feminist, and proud supporter of the Oxford comma.

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3 Comments

  1. Re: Frozen
    I get what he’s saying: when you confine female characters to a very, very narrow range of acceptable appearances, it becomes difficult to animate them as all of their expressions will tend to look the same and you look pretty lame as an animator. (As an aside, I think Fox News has similar problems.)
    Fortunately for him, it’s very rare for movies to pass the Bechdel test, so he probably doesn’t have to worry about two of his clone women actually being in frame at the same time.
    A simpler way to put it is: our douchey assumptions on female appearance lead to an emergent property of making us look pretty douchey.

  2. You know, if it were a complaint about the hair of female characters, it might make sense – hair is extremely hard to animate at a high standard, and it gets tougher the longer it is, which means female characters will usually be harder to animate than males based on the hair alone – but emotion? Really? What, so men don’t get emotional (and the example given was anger, which is a stereotypically male emotion at that).

    1. Men are permitted to get angry, look hideous and frightening, and will still look sexy and desirable.
      Women are required to stay pretty no matter what emotions they’re exhibiting. It gives a much narrower set of permissible facial expressions.
      Think of Beauty and the Beast. The Beast could get pretty angry and he was still Mr. Awesome Angry Beast with his Justifiable Emotions. Now imagine Belle letting her face get all contorted like that. ZOMG! She’s not pretty for two seconds!
      Consequently, she’s limited to the range stretching from “fear”, through “deadpan” to “chagrin” in response to negative events.

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