We're not asking to see women getting beaten up, we're asking to see them solve problems in a more realistic way.
I was replying to a specific statement made by the poster in my quotation.
We're not asking to see women getting beaten up, we're asking to see them solve problems in a more realistic way.
We're not asking to see women getting beaten up, we're asking to see them solve problems in a more realistic way.
I was replying to a specific statement made by the poster in my quotation.
shown rugby tackling and beating up men three times their size.
Sarah Connor Chronicles is worse for that, but thats cancelled now. And as a previous poster said its because women can possibly be seen doing any wrong or been beating by a man at anything.
Rediculous really, its like saying a man could do a better job at giving birth - it just aint so..
The Riley character seemed to get beaten up by everyone regularly.
When I said women cant be beating I meant bested, not beating as in kicked the crap out of.
Firefly, and any of the Law & Order series are two off the top of my head that have what I'd call 'strong' females. They get as much credit and take as many lumps as the guys.
^ No, I mean the film, the first fight between Mal and The Operative, at Inara's retreat. After jumping Mal he pushes Inara into a wall, where she remains in a crumpled heap for several minutes as he beats Mal to a pulp.
Because a lot of the time there's only the one female character in the main cast.It is starting to become rather cliche.
I don't understand why the characters can't just be written and played as strong/weak as the story requires.
The next big thing will be "strong gay characters."
I actually think Inara was one of Whedon's more realistic characters, since she couldn't fight her way out of a paper bag and didn't think violence was the answer to everything.
What would you have preferred to have seen ? The Operative beating both of them in to a pulp ? I credit Inara with being smart enough not to pick a fight she can't win.
In the end Mal only beats the guy through sheer blind luck.
All fight scenes are ridiculous and inaccurate in sci-fi/action shows. It's not just the ones with women in them.
I hate when they try to push the female characters. It's 2009. We don't need to prove ourselves anymore. It just gets beyond annoying when it suddenly turns into I'M A GIRL AND I CAN ROUGH PEOPLE UP JUST LIKE A BOY CAN. I hate that girl power BS. I just want a good character that doesn't need to push the strength characteristic.
My favourite female is Storm from X-Men (thanks for ruining her, Halle Berry). She is a strong figure without having to shove the "I AM A WOMAN!!!!" garbage down everyone's throats. She just does her thing and shows she is a strong female without having to push it.
I'm all for a strong female character but I hate how they go about it. Makes it seem so feminist to push it and I hate feminism.
Through Inara's quick thinking, actually. It wasn't exactly a major flaw in the film, her disappearence from the scene was merely conspicuous and we were on the subject is all. Where's Inara? Oh, she's doing the cowering female thing.
I remember watching the first serious fight in The Bourne Identity (between two trained assassins) and literally flinching. Most of it was clever choreography and photography (the shaky cam was done to death by the third film), but it looked so much more realistic than haymakers and rolling around on the floor.
I hate when they try to push the female characters. It's 2009. We don't need to prove ourselves anymore. It just gets beyond annoying when it suddenly turns into I'M A GIRL AND I CAN ROUGH PEOPLE UP JUST LIKE A BOY CAN. I hate that girl power BS. I just want a good character that doesn't need to push the strength characteristic.
My favourite female is Storm from X-Men (thanks for ruining her, Halle Berry). She is a strong figure without having to shove the "I AM A WOMAN!!!!" garbage down everyone's throats. She just does her thing and shows she is a strong female without having to push it.
I'm all for a strong female character but I hate how they go about it. Makes it seem so feminist to push it and I hate feminism.
I meant in their final fight, Mal only beats the guy because his finishing move (for want of a better term) doesn't work on Mal because Mal had had the nerve cluster the Operative was attempting to disable removed years before.
I meant in their final fight, Mal only beats the guy because his finishing move (for want of a better term) doesn't work on Mal because Mal had had the nerve cluster the Operative was attempting to disable removed years before.
Right, my bad.
Incidentally, I just knew Tv Tropes would have an article on this phenomenon.![]()
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