Seeing the men being portrayed as the masculine, save-the-day, get-the-girl, and be really strong type. Girls were shown as sex-crazed, domestic, always beautiful and thin, but with the perfect hourglass form. I feel as though while men and women are seen in that light, it is not as extreme as the film "Dreamworlds 3" illustrated it to be. After viewing the film, even I was convinced the female gender was completely doomed. Although I knew it was all overdramatized depictions of what I previously mentioned, the producer Sut Jhally pulls out all the big guns to make us believe what he is preaching. What strategies did this guy use to be so damn convincing?
Jhally creates incongruity by showing all the images in slow motion, and doing exactly what he claims the producers of the music videos are doing. I saw more female body parts in slow motion, with strings and piano music playing ominously in the background than I ever did in an actual music video. Jhally makes his argument about woman's incongruity by repeating the same words over and over again so they stick in our minds. They stay with us after the movie ends. He illustrates the men being powerful and verbally abusive, sometimes physically abusive. Jhally shows men being dominant over women, as they are shown in music videos. He is almost doing the same thing the music videos are doing. The repetition of the images of violence, the repetition of words to give impact to his cause and his juxtaposition of the idea of fantasy, pornographic women against the idea of real-world women create a strong argument that could sway many.
Jhally has an extremely strong argument and does a great job making his argument. He shows sides of the music industry many don't want to see. The backstage lunch-meat throwing scene was disgusting to me. That was objectifying women and I thought that was terrible. There are people out there who watch these music videos, these television shows and movies that portray women and men in these specific gender roles and believe that this is how our society is. The scene that Jhally played of the riot and the women getting water and other liquids thrown on them for no reason at all, that mimicked exactly a scene from a music video was pretty hard to watch, and I would never want to experience that first hand. The problem, I think is that people cannot distinguish what is fantasy and what is reality.
I'd like to hope that people can.
No comments:
Post a Comment