Not all men are so easily upset by women.And just who, pray tell, is the movie made for? Seriously, let's spell it out.
If the implication is supposed to be that the movie is made for women, then why was the audience something like 60% men? I think that, while it's true that movies can be made for a certain audience, it's more a matter of genre, not gender.
Yeah, that's absolute bullshit. She said that we should hear more voices because we focus on how white men feel about a movie made for a different audience, when we should hear what that audience thinks about it. If you truly believe that is somehow a bigoted attack on men, then I really don't know how to respond to you because you are completely unreasonable and possible delusional. You seem upset about what you think she said instead of her actual words. It doesn't help that I see similar performances of being upset where they purposely change what she said, which convinces others of the same.Brie Larson has referred to white men in a way that, if she were speaking about any other identity group, would have been immediately condemned as hate speech. Her goal may be merely more diversity but that's not how she said it. If she had some women and minority critics whose work she wanted to promote, by all means go for it. But a lot of people seem to think that promoting diversity is too hard, so they just settle for denigrating white men and figure, "Meh, basically the same thing. Good enough."