So, I finished my MA essay draft about five minutes ago. It is therefore a perfect time for me to write some more! ... ... Oh my life.
Anyway, this is fun in my brain writing, not academic writing and that makes all the difference in the world.
Important piece of info so I only sound slightly crazy, not psychologically disturbed: I RP Kara "
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(I'm bi, too. I have no problem with scantily clad women, in the right situations. I'm tired of being inundated with it)
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Actually he'd done an awful lot of that with 300...
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But I am confused because 300 was all about oily naked white guys wrestling, hugging, and fighting evil minorities.
I'm not sure how a movie about lesbian fetish pilots comes from that same mindset. Unless we're seeing the forefront of a wave of mainstream adolescent fantasy movies with a truckload of homosexual-way more than- subtext. Which sounds delightfully subversive actually, although I'm sure it's not supposed to be. I'm just waiting for the next Matrix Reloaded Orgy sequence with a blatant guy/guy/girl threesome.
...Sorry I got lost there for a minute. Something about feminism?
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But also by how much she looks like Wataru. Which means, well, the pants are still please never kthnx, but from the, er, well, from the collarbones up, *thumbs up* Well done, poster designers!
Re: the difference between third-wave freedom and objectification, I'm with you on this one. It's a question of agency, to me? And when her costume is clearly being used as a marketing ploy instead of a facet of the character, it's clear where the gaze is and it's not leaving the agency with the character?
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I'm always torn, because I personally love ridiculously impractical outfits in certain contexts. I enjoy the hell out of wearing such impractical clothes when I fit into them. (Which has been a while, but still.) I know you don't object to the clothes themselves, but a part of me would be very sad if crazy costumes ever went away entirely.
At the same time, I remain as baffled as you by the whole "authentic" "pilot" synopsis. Authentic to the comic, maybe, but what the hell? I... think from the name it's meant to be campy and kind of deliberately awful, perhaps. And I do wish that clothing women in this way in fiction didn't automatically signal objectification. I feel like there are probably examples where it doesn't, on an individual level, but the collective effect is the same.
Oh, comics.
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