Re: Twilight

Allison wrote:

The character is poorly constructed

But not totally unrealistic. People like that exist. It's just that such a character makes a very annoying protagonist (maybe she would work slightly better as a villain).

So honor the valiant who die 'neath your sword
But pity the warrior who slays all his foes...

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Re: Twilight

Yeah, I'm not saying people like that don't exist. But I certainly don't care abut hearing their stories.

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Re: Twilight

Marty J wrote:

But not totally unrealistic. People like that exist.

That reminds me of when we used to joke about doing a short film that was literally nothing happening, like just someone sitting at a table for 5 minutes eating cereal, then credits.

People do that.

Doesn't make great cinema.



...unless you're Alan Rickman.

ZangrethorDigital.ca

Re: Twilight

BigDamnArtist wrote:

That reminds me of when we used to joke about doing a short film that was literally nothing happening, like just someone sitting at a table for 5 minutes eating cereal, then credits.

People do that.

Doesn't make great cinema.

That's why the whole concept of reality TV never worked and always required cheating (creative editing, scripted scenes etc.)  big_smile

So honor the valiant who die 'neath your sword
But pity the warrior who slays all his foes...

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Re: Twilight

BigDamnArtist wrote:

...unless you're Alan Rickman.

Hah! So true.

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Re: Twilight

Christopher Walken and Willem Dafoe sitting at a table and eating cereal. Staring at each other. In silence. The best thriller ever.

A somewhat unsympathetic protagonist can work in a different kind of story (written by a better writer). Think The Social Network. But Stephenie Meyer simply didn't realize that Bella was unlikable.

So honor the valiant who die 'neath your sword
But pity the warrior who slays all his foes...

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Re: Twilight

Squiggly_P wrote:

...Cameron has some pretty heavy issues to deal with, and Ferris unintentionally sets him down a path where he basically has to deal with this stuff he's kept bottled up for a long time. Ferris doesn't really give a crap, tho. He just wants to not get screwed at the end. The fact that he may have just emotionally destroyed his friend - or possibly helped him a lot - is totally inconsequential to him. He just wants to make it home before his parents.

I find this to be a shallow misinterpretation of the film and the main character. I would explain but I only came here in the first place because the thread for BRAVE is currently active with talk of Twilight, and I wanted to throw in my two cents but in the appropriate thread. Basically, I agree with the following:

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Re: Twilight

*headdesk*

The first three minutes of that video are a guy arguing that Bella is dumb because she wants to marry Edward no matter what. In the last minute of the video he admits he did not know the plot of story and had to be corrected by viewers who informed him that it was actually Edward who really wanted to marry Bella. He then says that this is dumb because guys aren't obsessed with commitment like Edward and that makes the story un-relatable. I find this odd. Twilight is a fantasy aimed at women. For lots of women, a handsome, devoted man who really, really wants get married is a very appealing fantasy. Twilight is also extremely popular. If the biggest complaint you have is that it's not going to be relatable to women ... I dunno, it just seems like that argument would be automatically defeated by the success of the series. If it's popular it's probably relatable.

If you hate the character no matter which way the story goes, maybe the story isn't the reason why you hate her. Also, if you make a hobby of screaming that one of the most popular female characters ever created a dumbass and a bitch several times in four minutes, maybe you just have a problem hating women.

Disliking Twilight does not automatically equal respecting women. Disagree with the merits of Twilight if you want, but please respect women in the process.

Re: Twilight

It's the Nostalgia Critic, what did you expect?

Completely off-topic, it saddens me that his style of "criticism" has become so ubiquitous online. There's so much great film criticism out there that's actually insightful and intelligent, but most people prefer the opinions of shrieking morons on Youtube. There's probably an enormous group of burgeoning movie buffs who look at people like him for guidance in their "film education." I got depressed just typing that.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Twilight

I listened to the podcast you linked in the other forum, from the guy who wrote "Spotlight". I was hoping, as an author of YA fiction myself, to get some insight from the interview about what it is that he felt made the story work. I think I just wasted half an hour of my life listening to someone wail on about how everyone is wrong to disrespect it because Stephenie Meyer is really good, even though her prose is lacking but her allegory is interesting. I disagree.

I read the first Twilight book at summer camp (I was a counselor) because my campers were all reading it and talking about it, so I felt that I should have some perspective on it. I read the first book in about 48 hours, including reading under my covers with a flashlight while the girls were sleeping. It was a very easy book to read and I digested it quite quickly. I knew where the story was going, but was along for the journey. I went straight into New Moon and found it a trial because Bella's moping was SO irritating, but I really enjoyed Jacob's character. I moved on to Eclipse and I remember almost nothing from that book so I guess that sums it up for me. I do recall reading Breaking Dawn (I think that either came out during the same summer, or the following summer) and laughing and groaning in equal share as I read it. By that point I was finding it offensive and another counselor and I spent some time reading portions out to our campers and discussing how controlling and abusive Edward was. Jacob's character went in that direction too, and the whole fourth book was just laughably bad.

I do remember discussing Breaking Dawn with the girls prior to its release, and saying that I hoped Bella became a vampire, lost her self-control and killed Jacob's father (he's in a wheelchair, he's a sitting duck). Which would change the focus of the battle between Edward and Jacob over who 'deserves' Bella to who is going to be stuck with her / take responsibility for what they've turned her into. Of course that didn't happen, Bella turned into a perfectly self-controlled vampire and had the world's most perfect baby, and I gagged and threw the book on the floor.

For the record, I haven't seen the movies and I think Robert Pattinson is incredibly unappealing. I have long subscribed to the "mop" theory as explained on your podcast - call it Edward and they will swoon, no matter what it looks like. (Notably,Stephenie Meyer said she envisaged Edward as looking like Henry Cavill, back when he was in "The Count of Monte Cristo". Now that one I can get on board with.)

I'm with the FIYH podcast on Twilight, there is very little in the podcast that I disagree with - except the assertion that the books get better as the series goes on. I would argue the complete opposite.

And if we're sharing YouTube videos about Twilight, I like the "Alex Reads Twilight" ones. They're hysterical.

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Re: Twilight

Doctor Submarine wrote:

It's the Nostalgia Critic, what did you expect?

I guess just that stuff like that not be shared or admired. Actually, I was not familiar with him before this, so I had no idea what I was walking into. Meh, now I know better, I suppose.

everythingshiny wrote:

I listened to the podcast you linked in the other forum, from the guy who wrote "Spotlight". I was hoping, as an author of YA fiction myself, to get some insight from the interview about what it is that he felt made the story work. I think I just wasted half an hour of my life listening to someone wail on about how everyone is wrong to disrespect it because Stephenie Meyer is really good, even though her prose is lacking but her allegory is interesting. I disagree.

Ah, well, I'm glad that's what stuck out to you as that was exactly my point. For me symbolism outweighs prose. We are free to agree to disagree at this point, I guess.

everythingshiny wrote:

... call it Edward and they will swoon, no matter what it looks like.

I see what you mean and that's probably true for a lot of epic romances, but girls were pretty swoony over him when Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire came out, so in this case I think there's more to the fangirling than just the Edward name.

everythingshiny wrote:

And if we're sharing YouTube videos about Twilight, I like the "Alex Reads Twilight" ones. They're hysterical.

Just be aware he was recently implicated in a sex scandal and his videos about Twilight are now looked down on by a lot of former fans. So view/share with caution.

Re: Twilight

Bathilda wrote:

Twilight is also extremely popular. If the biggest complaint you have is that it's not going to be relatable to women ... I dunno, it just seems like that argument would be automatically defeated by the success of the series. If it's popular it's probably relatable.

Transformers 2 was massively popular, that doesn't mean it's relatable. Success does not equal quality. Correlation does not equal causation.

I'll go into what I think is wrong with that reading of Doug's video later.

Last edited by johnpavlich (2014-06-17 08:50:29)

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Re: Twilight

johnpavlich wrote:

I'll go into what I think is wrong with that reading of Doug's video later.

Don't bother if you don't want to. I realized that video was triggering enough for me that I need to bow out of this conversation. Thanks, ya'll, though. It's been ... uh, quite a thing, hasn't it.

Re: Twilight

Bathilda wrote:

Ah, well, I'm glad that's what stuck out to you as that was exactly my point. For me symbolism outweighs prose. We are free to agree to disagree at this point, I guess.

Well yes, but... my problems with Twilight do not stem from the prose, but from the content and the overall message, which I find disturbing. So his argument that "People say it sucks just because the prose isn't brilliant" is not a valid argument for me to get behind, personally.

I am intrigued by this, because clearly it is phenomenally popular, and I'm interested in why. What boxes does it tick? Do people actually buy into that kind of crazy stalker romance? I guess having an extremely jealous and clingy boyfriend when I was 15 set a low tolerance for me in that regard, but I find Edward increasingly repulsive as the series goes on.

Incidentally, my reaction to his casting in Harry Potter was "But Cedric was meant to be hot!" so I guess it's just personal taste and other people are seeing something different. Which is fine.

everythingshiny wrote:

And if we're sharing YouTube videos about Twilight, I like the "Alex Reads Twilight" ones. They're hysterical.

Just be aware he was recently implicated in a sex scandal and his videos about Twilight are now looked down on by a lot of former fans. So view/share with caution.

Thanks for the head's up on that one. I did a quick search on it and as this was the only article I had time to read http://www.dailydot.com/fandom/alex-day-sexual-assault/ I don't really feel educated enough on the situation to comment at this time.

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Re: Twilight

Bathilda wrote:

*headdesk*

     Wow. That article was a horrible generalization and an insult to everyone, both men and women who does or doesn't like Twilight and does or doesn't like Star Wars. Seriously, almost everything about that was such a didactic dismissal of how a lot of people actually feel about the subject matter. Listen, it's true there are people (notice how I said people, not men or women) who are predisposed to hate something without giving it a chance but to imply that one is the authority on why an entire society of others do or do not like something is extremely rude and narrow-minded.

     It's particularly sanctimonious to say that anyone who doesn't like Twilight and feels compelled to boo at the latest trailer, is doing so because they've either never read or seen it and are just seduced by the mob mentality, too stupid to think for themselves or they don't like Twilight because they're all terrible people with a sexist bent against entertainment made by and for women. Everyone. Every single, solitary person who hates this one thing, especially if they have a Y chromosome, is secretly resentful towards or afraid of the opposite sex....or something.

     It's all so absurdly presumptuous, it's almost impossible to take seriously. Additionally, to compare Twilight to Star Wars makes little sense and doesn't really do Twilight any favors. Now, I'm not the biggest Star Wars fan. In fact, while there are specific aspects from the franchise I enjoy, The Empire Strikes Back is the only film I really like. The rest of it, I can take or leave. Empire is the one I'll watch all the way through, of my own accord.

     However, the fundamental difference between Twilight and Star Wars, and why the comparison falls apart, is that while both stories feature impossible romance, epic battles that transcend generations, silly costumes and growing up super-powered, Star Wars is widely considered to be the good example of those things. The author and her article seem to believe that all entertainment is created equal and that it's all on the same level of lame, so we should either like all of it, or hate all of it across the board.

     This is not how the real world works. This is not how Human Beings operate. If I bake a cake with pink frosting and Teague bakes a cake with pink frosting, using the same ingredients, the 10 same people we give our cakes to are going to have different, individual reactions to each cake. The majority of them may even prefer Teague's cake over mine and it's childish of me to to say, "Come on. They both taste the same and they both have pink frosting. If you like his cake, you should like mine just as much." Also ridiculous, is if were to say, "You guys just don't like my cake because I'm shorter and less attractive than Teague, that's all. That's the only reason. That, and nothing else."

The first three minutes of that video are a guy arguing that Bella is dumb because she wants to marry Edward no matter what.

     Incorrect. The bulk of the video is excerpted from Doug's Top 11 Dumbasses In Distress video. I've taken the liberty of transcribing the video so you can see in clean, plain text that is not what happens, or even what he's saying, really. I've also included the full list of names, for context and reference. Exhibit A:

     "And the absolute, biggest dumbass in distress is... Bella, from Twilight. This has to be the most selfish, Male-dependent, uncaring, manipulative, self-centered, pretentious, idiotic, whining little Bitch-bag you will ever see in your entire life! And honestly, that wouldn't be too bad a character. That'd be very, very interesting, if it was intentional! But it's not. Bella is supposed to represent the everyday, teenage girl. If that's the case, then the story really got mixed up who the bloodsucking monster is! She thinks she's tortured even though really, she has no problems. She gets a crush on a boy and decides she wants to marry him, even though she's not even out of high school yet. She wants to be turned into a vampire, which everyone has said is throwing her life away but of course, at the enlightening age of seventeen, she already knows exactly what she wants. Aren't you glad you follow through with every bright idea you had at seventeen? Aren't you glad that you totally committed to something that you knew you could never make a mistake on at that age? Oh yeah! Seventeen, nobody ever fucks up at that age! The boyfriend tries to leave her so that he can save her but she constantly keeps throwing herself off cliffs and putting herself in danger, just so he can notice her. Good. Fucking. God. That's right, girls. If your boyfriend leaves you, do exactly this. I assure you, it won't backfire in the least. Sure, you might be dead but that'll teach him! She then gets another boy involved, who actually seems supportive and attentive but she dumps him because the other guy looks at her weird. And by God, how can she turn down a guy with no personality that just looks at her weird? Again, one of those brilliant choices you make at seventeen. So now, a whole war is going on, all because of her and everyone is going out of their way to try and protect her and she's simply like, 'Yeah, that's cool'. Oh wait, she does try to say once that she's not worth it but that only lasts a few seconds. She then realizes she is worth it and is totally on board with having muscle boys carry her around everywhere. And just as her boyfriend finally agrees to marry her (imagine, a boy being pressured into marriage), she dicks around with the other guy, yet again! Oh my God. I mean Oh. My. God. I have never seen a character more needy and more insecure. She's such a dumbass in distress, that it's actually kind of scary. She is a scary character. In another dimension, maybe she could have been a great Shakespeare villain. This really complex, developed psychotic mind. But as the common, everyday relatable girl that we're all supposed to identify with? She is, and always shall be the biggest dumbass in distress."

     The marriage subplot is brought up only briefly and it's done to illustrate a larger point, which is what the bulk of the video is actually about. Doug isn't arguing that Bella is dumb for wanting to marry Edward. His issue with this is that Bella is too young and immature to rush into such an adult commitment and responsibility. Her priorities are out of balance and she's being very selfish. Not to mention, for someone who wants nothing more than to be married to Edward, she doesn't even crack a smile at her own damn wedding (or hardly ever, for that matter).

     Edward is a vampire. He's got all the time in the world. There's no reason Bella can't finish school, maybe go to college and settle into a stable career and then get married. She's seventeen, she's not even at the age of consent in most states. It's also important to consider that not only does she not know Edward very well (he's lived several lifetimes and had a million experiences before her), it's typically not a very good idea to marry your high school sweetheart. Very rarely does that work out. One of the reasons is because at seventeen, Bella is still growing as a person and figuring out who she is and who she wants to be. She may really only wish to define herself as "Edward's Wife" but that's pretty damn sad and not a strong character or a good role model for young girls, but I'm getting ahead of myself.

     No, most of the video is about how Bella Swan is brimming with poor, negative character traits and how she makes bad life choices because of some boy (who quite frankly, doesn't treat her with respect and does and says things that in real life, would and should result in a restraining order) and yet, she's meant to be a cipher for the impressionable girls in the audience and sometimes, is meant to even represent them. Bella has little to no agency in any given scene. Most of the time, she stands around while others (mostly men) decide what to do with/to her, all while objectifying her as this precious MacGuffin to be fought over.

     And why, exactly do people fight over her? Is it because she's a deep, exceptional person who is kind and courteous to others, well-mannered, intelligent and empathetic? Nope! At least in the first film, Edward is drawn to her physical appearance, the alluring mystery of her "newness" and because she's a virgin, with virgin blood coursing through her veins. Hell, that right there is the only thing most of the vampires care about, too. So, basically, Bella rates about as special as a limited edition, soft drink flavor and about as important as a collector's edition blu-ray, with exclusive box art and packaging. Our protagonist, ladies and gentlemen.

In the last minute of the video he admits he did not know the plot of story and had to be corrected by viewers who informed him that it was actually Edward who really wanted to marry Bella.

     Not quite. Doug explicitly states that he confused the marriage subplot with the other subplot of Bella's desire to become a vampire. He also says that ultimately, it's irrelevant who said what because neither subplot is a good idea and how the two characters talk about and then execute them makes both Bella and Edward look bad.

     The correction in the last minute or so of the video is taken from Doug's Top 11 Nostalgia Critic Fuck Ups. Exhibit B:

"Bella didn't want to marry Edward in Twilight, you war whore!" (at least, that's what I think I heard)

     "Yes, when I put Bella in my Top 11 Dumbasses In Distress, I brought up that, among her other faults, she was pressuring Edward into marriage. Actually, I got it the other way around. It was Edward that was pressuring her into marriage because really, Ladies? Isn't that a common problem? Men pressuring you into marriage? God, we're just so obsessed with commitment! I guess I got confused by the fact that she was pleading him to turn her into a vampire, which from the sounds of it is a much bigger and even dangerous commitment. So, I figured marriage, after asking that wouldn't be such a big deal, but nope! Apparently, living her life as a bloodsucking beast of the night for the rest of her life, she's absolutely sure about. But being legally bound together, that's obviously the much bigger issue that takes a lot more time. And don't get me wrong, it is a big issue and it does take time but she just hears the word vampire and she's like, 'I'm in! I'm in!' Oh well, whoever's idea it was, it still makes both of them look like jackasses but still, fess up when you mess up. It was Edward who wanted to get married, not Bella. I guess that means we can like her now, right?"

TOP 11 DUMBASSES IN DISTRESS
11. Mary Jane Watson (Spider-Man)
10. Kayley (Quest For Camelot)
09. Willie and Short Round (Indiana Jones and The Temple of Doom)
08. Robin (Bat-Man)
07. Inspector Gadget (Inspector Gadget)
06. Lois Lane (Superman)
05. Jubilee (X-Men)
04. Scrappy-Doo (Scooby-Doo)
03. Jar-Jar Binks (Star Wars)
02. Princess Peach (Super Mario Bros.)
01. Bella Swan (Twilight)

He then says that this is dumb because guys aren't obsessed with commitment like Edward and that makes the story un-relatable. I find this odd. Twilight is a fantasy aimed at women. For lots of women, a handsome, devoted man who really, really wants get married is a very appealing fantasy. Twilight is also extremely popular. If the biggest complaint you have is that it's not going to be relatable to women ... I dunno, it just seems like that argument would be automatically defeated by the success of the series. If it's popular it's probably relatable.

     As I previously stated, Transformers 2 was massively popular, that doesn't mean it's relatable. Success does not equal quality. Correlation does not equal causation. The best way to approach Doug's material is with the understanding that he is a comedian, first and a film critic, second. At least, that's how I tend to look at it. Much of what he says, he over exaggerates and yes, even yells for comedic effect. It's just his shtick. Often, he'll use certain words in a certain way because it has the potential to sound silly. For example, I don't exactly know what a bitch-bag is or why he called himself a war whore but I do recognize it as humor of the absurd.

If you hate the character no matter which way the story goes, maybe the story isn't the reason why you hate her.

     I'm not sure how you came to that first conclusion but I think you're missing out on something crucial. If Doug hates the character of Bella and the plot and/or story never goes in a direction to change that, then it stands to reason Doug hates the character despite the story, which he probably also hates. They can be mutually exclusive issues within a film. So no, the story may not be the reason why one hates a character but rather, the character may be why one hates the character. In addition, a good or bad character can sometimes exist within a contradictory, good or bad story and vice versa.

Also, if you make a hobby of screaming that one of the most popular female characters ever created a dumbass and a bitch several times in four minutes, maybe you just have a problem hating women.

     That is a wildly absurd leap in logic to make, based solely on something like this. For starters, it wasn't several times. Doug refers to Bella as a bitch only once. Second, when not referencing the title of the video, he also refers to Bella, in the context of the video as a dumbass only once. Third, neither of these terms have anything to do with gender, as both men and women can sometimes be qualified as a bitch or a dumbass. Fourth, why is it you didn't say anything about the myriad of other descriptors he used, such as selfish, uncaring and manipulative? At one point, he implies that both Bella and Edward are being jackasses. Does this mean Doug has a problem hating men? What about Dorkman? Early in the Twilight commentary, he uses the word cunt, in relation to Bella. Finally, Bella is one person, not every woman ever, no matter how much the film makers keep insisting her to be. To top it off, she's a fictional character. Calling her names doesn't say much of anything about the misogyny or misandry of real life men and women, respectively.

Disliking Twilight does not automatically equal respecting women.

     That depends greatly on one's reasons as to why they dislike Twilight. If they dislike it for the sole reason of it featuring a female lead because they don't want their protagonists to be women, then yes, that is a concerning issue that might need further discussion. However, keep in mind that it wouldn't be just Twilight getting booed at. Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Aliens, Kill Bill, The Hunger Games, The Color Purple, The Help, Easy A, Hanna. I've yet to see a mob of people collectively boo at advertisements for these stories and characters. Here's a radical thought: What if one dislikes Twilight because they feel the film itself is disrespecting women?

     No, disliking Twilight does not necessarily, automatically equal respecting women....but neither does liking Twilight.

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Re: Twilight

I'm not politically motivated enough to like or dislike any piece of fiction for ideological reasons. Not everyone shares my beliefs and I don't expect to see them represented and/or appealed to in everything I watch. This goes to back some of the shit I was saying about True Detective a few months ago:

I understand criticizing a film or show through structural analysis, aesthetic criticism, genre criticism, auteur theory, and so on, because those have to do with the actual filmmaking and storytelling. I may not agree with it, but at least there is a degree of objectivity and it's trying to better understand how films and shows work. I can't take social criticism of media seriously. All of it boils down to the author projecting their own political and social ideologies onto the work. There is no objectivity or true criticism of the piece, it's just a soapbox for the critic to explain why something sucks because it doesn't cater to their desires and values. It's film criticism for people who don't understand the nuances of filmmaking or storytelling. It is the absolute laziest way to critique any work.

As soon as we start bringing in self-congratulating tidbits like "maybe you hate women if you dislike this movie so much" and "I dislike this movie because it disrespects women", we get distracted by actual analysis and devolve into a debate where it's like we're trying to prove our moral superiority based on our taste in movies. It's an adaptation of a young adult romance novel, not Mein Kampf. Obviously, nobody in here is purposefully or even unintentionally turning the debate into a series of self-righteous exchanges, but those comments come off as embarrassing to me.

I dislike Twilight because I can't connect with the material and I think it's extremely hokey. Teenage romance does nothing for me. That doesn't mean a film can't come along that does it well enough that I'll like it, but for the time being I've yet to see a teenage romance story that I've enjoyed. Call me shallow, ignorant or petty and I'll probably agree with you but I just have a hard time caring about 16 year olds finding true love even though the world doesn't want them to be together or some such shit. It's just too absurd for me and unintentionally comedic when you throw in stakes like the fate of the universe depending on their love. I think it's cheap wish fulfillment for sexually repressed teenagers in the same way The Raid 2 is wish fulfillment for violence junkies like myself. Of course there are people who do connect with the material and that's totally fine. I'm sure some of them are just as turned off by The Raid 2 as I am by Twilight.

However, I really want to get wasted with my buddies and watch the last installment of the franchise. I have to see any movie that features this:

SPOILER Show
http://media.giphy.com/media/qQFkyrp4h7HGg/giphy.gif

Re: Twilight

johnpavlich wrote:

Third, neither of these terms have anything to do with gender, as both men and women can sometimes be qualified as a bitch or a dumbass.

"Please understand, Ladies, it's not just you. Some of us [N-word]'s are Bitches, too." - Ice-T

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Twilight

Very disappointed at how this thread has fallen into mansplaining. We have the benefit of having women's voices in this conversation, guys. Don't just leap to "explaining what's wrong with" their perspective.

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Re: Twilight

johnpavlich wrote:

As I previously stated, Transformers 2 was massively popular, that doesn't mean it's relatable.

Not relatable to you maybe. But those movies are massively successful. Clearly people see something in them and have found something in them to latch onto. Just because you don't like them doesn't invalidate the opinions of the millions of people who do.

Which brings us back to Twilight.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Twilight

Dorkman wrote:

Very disappointed at how this thread has fallen into mansplaining. We have the benefit of having women's voices in this conversation, guys. Don't just leap to "explaining what's wrong with" their perspective.

If we, as a group stopped doing that, then these forums would die. The entire structure of these conversations is: One person raises a point about something, others examine it and share their thoughts on why they agree or disagree with that, while also attempting to share their own perspective as well.

I can't speak for anyone else, as only they know what they are truly thinking but for me, my thoughts on something like Twilight does not change when I know the gender of the person I'm conversing with. It makes no difference if Bathilda, Miki, Teague or Ewing tries to tell me why I do or don't like something and they're incorrect, especially if it's along the lines of "Your issues with Twilight stem from a deep-seeded misogyny and nothing else." I'm going to stand up for myself and say, "You're wrong about me and here's why."

Hell, in this case, Bathilda already left the conversation a while ago, so my "Male Voice" is mostly falling on deaf/absent ears anyway but that's not why I speak my mind. I don't do it for the benefit or validation of others. I speak for myself, because I can. If no one hears me (or makes a deliberate choice not to listen), that's unfortunate but fine. At least I had the opportunity to voice my opinion, which is a big part of why I love it here so much.

Besides, correct me if I'm wrong (and I do apologize if I am) but isn't everythingshiny a Woman? If these discussions were truly an example of "mansplaining", she would have dropped out of the conversation or at the most, been shouted down or something. Typically, that doesn't really happen here, anyway.

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Re: Twilight

Doctor Submarine wrote:
johnpavlich wrote:

As I previously stated, Transformers 2 was massively popular, that doesn't mean it's relatable.

Not relatable to you maybe. But those movies are massively successful. Clearly people see something in them and have found something in them to latch onto. Just because you don't like them doesn't invalidate the opinions of the millions of people who do.

Which brings us back to Twilight.

That was not my point and for the record, I actually like the first Transformers film. I am well aware that many people love those movies, for many different reasons. Some love it because they can relate to it, which is great. I'm glad someone can actually connect/identify with such a thing, even though it makes me scratch my head as to how that's possible. People also love things for other reasons, besides being able to relate to it.

I kind of like David Lynch's Lost Highway. That doesn't mean I relate to it in any way, or that I even think it's a good movie.

Last edited by johnpavlich (2014-06-20 16:58:33)

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Re: Twilight

johnpavlich wrote:

TOP 11 DUMBASSES IN DISTRESS

09. Willie and Short Round (Indiana Jones and The Temple of Doom)

This Doug guy has already lost me at this, which makes me inclined to think they're just regurgitating other people's ill-formed opinions.

...Willie's dialogue is, like, 30% needless shrieking, but Short Round is the most competent character in that movie.
He's ready with the getaway vehicle.
He does not spend the whole film pissing and moaning (his antagonism with Indy is playful banter, not whiny petulance).
He's the one who breaks Indy out of his trance.
As soon as he is chained up and his jailer look away, he goes to work breaking his chains.
He beats up the Maharajah!
And then he kicks a bunch of guys in their dicks!

(Sorry, I watched Temple a month or two ago and I feel strangely protective of this misunderstood character. As you were).

Disclaimer: if you dislike the tone of a post I make, re-read it in a North/East London accent until it sounds sufficiently playful smile

Re: Twilight

I don't feel that one selection completely invalidates anything else Doug says. It's just personal preference and for the record, I also like Short Round.

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Re: Twilight

Doesn't invalidate it, but it should make you go over each point more thoroughly. If two people come at an issue with different definitions, they're likely to end up talking past each other, or not realize they actually agree/disagree on certain points.

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Re: Twilight

Oh, I know. I was just coming at it from more of an "agree to disagree" kind of perspective. While I don't completely agree with Doug's assessment of Short Round, I can understand how and why he might feel that way, so I move on to the other names on the list. I just didn't want him to throw the baby out with the bathwater, based on Doug's opinions about Short Round.

Last edited by johnpavlich (2014-06-20 20:37:35)

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