Why Modern Movies Suck - The Strong Female Character

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Published 2023-06-10
One of the most tiresome tropes of the past ten years in moviemaking is the "Strong Female Character." Not women who are smart, capable, well written and complex, but bland, boring, superficially "strong" characters designed to pander to simplistic ideals of female empowerment.

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All Comments (21)
  • @TheCriticalDrinker
    FYI - Experienced an editing glitch that caused the video to freeze half way through. Sorry about that, but its fixed now so enjoy the vid!
  • @Jabberstax
    People don't dislike female characters. They dislike poorly written characters.
  • @XeniaChow
    Write female characters Not female characters.
  • @mistyydagoat
    Sarah Connor is a very good example which I never realized about. The writers never tried to overpower her from other men, she ran and escaped where she had to. She planned things out with her team. The writers never forcefully tried to show us that she's "equal" and as strong as the terminator.
  • @Escape_Reel
    Im from Sri Lanka, and I think my mom was a strong female character. She did not fight an army or defeat a super villain nor had super powers. But she raised me alone amidst all the hardships the society threw at her. Now she inspires me. Not all powerful Captain America. 😢
  • @chucksenhowzen9740
    Don’t forget the first ever female character to be strong: Jennifer Lawrence
  • @seacrest73
    I'm a tall girl, 5'9. I was in a brief relationship with a guy who was shorter, skinnier, and weighed less than me, and he was still significantly stronger than me to the point I knew he could hurt me if he actually tried. Modern movies are ridiculous in their lack of realism.
  • @nikcue2542
    Eowyn vs the Witch King is how its done. Perfect example. I even smiled when she took off her helmet and said, "I am no man." And fucked him up. That wasn't insulting at all. She stood her ground, faced absolute death and won. Thats worthy of a standing applause in itself.
  • @estebanpavez3162
    I think Over-confidence looks gross on both men and women. No balance.
  • @titanblade3706
    Traits like arrogance, self-entitlement, know it all, stoic, bluntness, rudeness, ruthlessness, confidence, self-respect, and aggressiveness For males, they’re flaws But for females, they’re “strengths”. Double standards
  • @iceman242436
    Ripley was done perfectly. She was often scared, indecisive, bested in battle, belittled by her male coworkers, and even - gasp - cried now and again. At the same time, she was 100% grade A badass.
  • @lorismith1722
    I’m glad you included Samantha Carter in your list of real women of strength. She often gets overlooked. I’ve known females in the Stargate fandom who went into a scientific field because of her.
  • @rednaskela4830
    Emily Blunt in Edge og Tomorrow is the brilliant way to tell a strong female character, we do not even see a second of what made her a Rey-like but we all learn from watching Tom Cruise go through the exact same over and over, we learn how it's all muscle memory and experience. Seeing women today just reminds me of how ridiculous it was watching Steven Seagal movies, wondering how he could possibly do 99% of the things he did or try to relate to his bland characters.
  • @wolfpile1
    Mulan is the perfect example of what you are talking about. In the original animated Mulan, she started off as a weak recruit that was trained and hardened into a fighter. She learned to fight using her speed and intelligence, not brute force. In the live action remake, she started off with a special ability that allowed her to quickly excel with little effort. The first one could be seen as inspiration for girls to exceed despite what hinders them. The remake just says, "she exceeded because she had special powers."
  • @gollyg9339
    The best example of this is Mulan. In the animated movie, she constantly struggles during boot camp to the point where others are telling her to quit. Then comes the giant pole with the arrow on top of it, and no one can get to it. No one! Not even the strongest recruit. Mulan refuses to give up, and while everyone else is sleeping, she keeps trying her hardest until she reaches the top of that giant pole. When her drill Sergeant comes out in the morning, Mulan throws that arrow at his feet. It was a powerful moment, not just for Mulans character, but for ALL kids regardless of gender. Jump to the live action movie, and Mulan is so strong from the moment of birth that she literally has to physically hold herself back so as not to easily embarrass everyone around her. Absolutely butchered her character with a straight trash message.
  • @Kevin-jb2pv
    I think it's funny how the one time Disney hired an actress who actually looks like she has a pretty reasonable chance of being able to fuck up an average man in a one-on-one fight (Gina Carano) they went and shit-canned her.
  • @annabelledee6554
    BEATRIX FUCKING KIDDO - I love her character so much. My favorite part of the film series? Her rigorous training with Pei Mei and how she had to EARN his respect and admiration. The strength he teaches her comes full circle when she has to free herself. It’s chefs kiss perfection
  • @GruffGames
    Amazing that in the same breath, they wish to call masculinity "toxic" meanwhile, EVERY positive trait that creates the modern; Strong Female Character™ is masculine! The irony cannot be lost if you are immune to it.
  • @JD..........
    No faults. No learning. No suffering. No realism. No story.
  • @brianfuller757
    A friend of mine is an actual female writer. When I asked her about her views , she says the issue is agenda. Modern/woke female writers don't want to write female characters as people. They want to write them as agenda driven memes.