caitri: (Gamora)
"Helen Cho, Age of Ultron, and Representation Feels" by Nicole Soojong Callahan

With Helen Cho in Age of Ultron, we get an Asian woman in a big-budget major motion picture who:

1) has a name,

2) gets more than thirty seconds of screen time,

3) does not die immediately after being introduced,

4) has no apparent martial arts skills,

5) is neither a math tutor nor a geisha,

6) gets to talk and say smart things — even in a roomful of white characters, who actually shut up for a minute and listen to her when she is explaining her science and why she’s a boss,

7) does not exist solely to give some white lady no one cares about questionable relationship advice, and

8) is not a crime lord and/or running a shady as fuck business out of a big scary warehouse. ...

It shouldn’t feel like such a big deal, and I wish I didn’t have to feel so excited about a character like hers. I wish I could be neutral and reasonable and blasé about media featuring Asian characters who don’t seem like tokens or play to obvious stereotypes, but it’s so rare that I can’t be. Is it getting better? I believe it is — there are certainly more Asians on TV. But after going to see Age of Ultron, I tried to think of other American movies with Asian or Asian American characters that meet all the criteria I mentioned above, and I had a very hard time. It was especially difficult thinking of Asian women whose film characters could pass the test. ...

If this is frustrating for me, just a casual viewer/fan fielding awkward questions from her kid, I can’t imagine how frustrating it is for Asian actors and artists trying to make a living. As great as it was to see Claudia Kim in Age of Ultron, we shouldn’t have to feel so grateful for one role in one movie.
caitri: (Screw Subtext)



So this is a really interesting speech and I love that it's about *words.* And Joss supplies "genderist" as an analog to "racist" to contextualize, to acknowledge this whole history up until "we realized it was wrong"--and, here's the thing, HISTORY ISN'T LIKE THAT.

Lemme back up a sec.

The more and more reading I do the more I realize that history is utterly constructed. (This is me saying the obvious. Imma gonna do that a lot.) Twentieth century narratives were constructed in reaction to the nineteenth century (look how much we've improved!) which were constructed in reaction to the eighteenth century (REVOLUTIONDEATHANARCHYSEXOHMYGOD) which was constructed in reaction to the seventeenth century (....REVOLUTIONDEATHANARCHYSEXOHMYGOD!!!!!), etc. etc. But within each and everyone of those centuries you also have women who are fighting the status quo and there are men championing them too and then you have something like a dam opening up and then teabaggers making more laws. It's basically like BSG on repeat, constantly.

And right now, I know so many good guys who are feminists and who are smart, and who also total enable the problem. (Seriously, the older I get the more I totally think that separating the sexes is just the best off for sanity.) And they don't see themselves as enabling the problem at all. (I'm not sure if Joss is one or not. That'll require more time and reflection than I have today.)

Anyways, I wanted to think and rant. There you go.
caitri: (Cait Yatta!)
My reactions largely went: GUNN!!!!!!!!! COULSON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BOOK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! etc.

Spoilers of Spoilerdom )

All things considered, I think it was a solid pilot episode: It set up all the characters, foreshadowed a bunch of possible plot-lines, and told a self-contained story. I'm pleased with it and am curious what's coming next, especially as it starts to set up its themes and such. So far what it reminds me most of thus far is Dollhouse, setting up these insider and outsider characters in this new world. SQUEE ON!
caitri: (books)
Just got back from Whedon's version of Much Ado. SO MANY FEELS, YOU GUYS!!!!

Seriously, it was like when I went to see The Hobbit, and was so happy to see everyone--but even exponentially greater. Wesley!!! Fred!!!! Coulsoooooooon! Dominic!! Simon Tam, I didn't even KNOW I had missed you! Topher, when did you get all cut?! Andrew! Mal! BriTaNick! WAITRESS OF DESTINY, YOU DIDN'T EVEN GET CUT THIS TIME!

I love so much about the whole thing, especially the composition of "Ladies, Sigh Not So"--I really hope Amazon has that. I also love how it's one of those film versions where everyone clearly understands the words they are saying (something that should seem obvious but is so often lacking in Hollywood productions).

That Whedon goes with the interpretation that Beatrice and Benedick used to have a thing works really well, especially as set up through the wordless prologue/flashbacks. On the other hand, I didn't get the sense that it worked for those versions of the characters, and REALLY didn't work with the sexual context/comparison of Hero and Claudio. Any thoughts on this?

I have mixed feelings about how they handled the Ethiop line--on the one hand, way to acknowledge something in the text, on the other hand...hmm. Oh well, Claudio always was a problem, wasn't he?

Also, I think Reed Diamond and Clark Gregg should always be bros in everything, forever and ever. The end.
caitri: (Default)
I just got back from this movie and OH MY GOD STILL IN NERD ECSTASY. Full disclosure: I've been waiting for this film since 2009, and it's Whedon & Goddard with Acker and Kranz, and so my expetcations were ridiculously high to begin with, BUT DEAR GODS, THE AMAZING!!!!!

The short review is: I think that The Avengers will be my favorite film of the year but Cabin will be my favorite of the decade if not longer. It is mad, brilliant, subversive as hell, hilarious, heartbreaking, and completely wonderful.

The long review: Read more... )
caitri: (Default)


Dear FOX,

If you fuck this up I will....be really mad! Like, as bad as Firefly getting cancelled mad! Maybe more, because this has Helo in a frakkin' suit, man!!!!

Sincerely yours,
Caitri
caitri: (Default)
Pencils, that is. A while back I posted on how you too could support the WGA Strike by buying boxes of sustainable pencils for $1 and delivering them to the PTB. Well people did, and lo, there were boxes and boxes of them, which Joss Whedon (Buffy, Firefly etc.) and Ron D. Moore (BSG) did pour into a tub.

Whedonesque did report on the hypnotic effect of this video.

ETA: Ron Moore posts on his blog about the whole thing.
caitri: (Default)
Presented by Dark Horse Presents. It's called "Sugarshock! Battle Royale with Cheese" and is right here.

It's some fun randomness for your day!
caitri: (Default)
Best News Ever! Joss Whedon Spills Exclusive Deets on His New Series!

Whedon's new Fox series, called Dollhouse, stars Miss Eliza Dushku, best known as Faith to you Buffy the Vampire Slayer fans. And this show isn't just a pilot. It's already been given a seven-episode commitment by Fox. Woo!

Here's how Fox describes the series:

Echo (Eliza Dushku) [is] a young woman who is literally everybody's fantasy. She is one of a group of men and women who can be imprinted with personality packages, including memories, skills, language—even muscle memory—for different assignments. The assignments can be romantic, adventurous, outlandish, uplifting, sexual and/or very illegal. When not imprinted with a personality package, Echo and the others are basically mind-wiped, living like children in a futuristic dorm/lab dubbed the Dollhouse, with no memory of their assignments—or of much else. The show revolves around the childlike Echo's burgeoning self-awareness, and her desire to know who she was before, a desire that begins to seep into her various imprinted personalities and puts her in danger both in the field and in the closely monitored confines of the Dollhouse.


I'm trying not to worry too much about the fact that Fox is involved....

But dude!! WHEDONY GOODNESS!

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