Not by far. They barely show a penis unless it's Hodor (because women REALLY want to see that). A man's ass? Sure. Penis? Nope.
Do they show female genitalia ? I doubt it.
Not by far. They barely show a penis unless it's Hodor (because women REALLY want to see that). A man's ass? Sure. Penis? Nope.
Does gratuitous have to be synonymous with offensive?
Not by far. They barely show a penis unless it's Hodor (because women REALLY want to see that). A man's ass? Sure. Penis? Nope.
Do they show female genitalia ? I doubt it.
For me, the problem lies in the fact that 1) they only showed a second or two of AE naked and Kirk gazing blankly at her, and 2) Cumberbatch actually complained about the fact that they made him build up to the naked chest scene and then cut it.
I call that discrimination and blatant pandering to the male demographics. Although, I'm sure there are many men who wouldn't mind staring blankly at Cumberbatch's naked chest.![]()
It better be in the deleted scenes, dammit.
For me, the problem lies in the fact that 1) they only showed a second or two of AE naked and Kirk gazing blankly at her, and 2) Cumberbatch actually complained about the fact that they made him build up to the naked chest scene and then cut it.
I call that discrimination and blatant pandering to the male demographics. Although, I'm sure there are many men who wouldn't mind staring blankly at Cumberbatch's naked chest.![]()
It better be in the deleted scenes, dammit.
Ask and ye shall receive!
http://teamcoco.com/video/conan-highlight-showering-cumberbatch
![]()
There's no genitalia actually shown in the birth scene. It's very strategically filmed. Plus, Carice van Houten was wearing a prosthetic stomach that probably stretched down and provided cover further down. The Hodor full frontal scene was done with a prosthetic penis. Alfie Allen, who plays Theon, on the other hand, actually went the full monty, as have some of the female cast.Yes. The Red Priestess gave birth to a shadow demon and we see absolutely everything. She's not the only one (several prostitutes, as well), but the most prominent one.
For me, the problem lies in the fact that 1) they only showed a second or two of AE naked and Kirk gazing blankly at her, and 2) Cumberbatch actually complained about the fact that they made him build up to the naked chest scene and then cut it.
I call that discrimination and blatant pandering to the male demographics. Although, I'm sure there are many men who wouldn't mind staring blankly at Cumberbatch's naked chest.![]()
I just watched the Conan clip...and I got it.
No one at Paramount or Bad Robot is really embarrassed or apologizing for the Eve thing at all. Seeing that a little controversy erupted, they're deliberately drawing attention to it.
Off to a slower than expected start last weekend, they're getting a few days of post-release free publicity out of a fabricated controversy that just happens to revolve around images of a well-endowed young blond woman in a bikini - while repurposing the cut footage of Cumberbatch on national TV.
Yeah, it may be a little desperate - but it's clever nonetheless.
In and of itself, attraction is not a bad thing. When girls get the message that this is the only thing that gives them worth, then I think the culture should examine itself.
Yes but that's not the message that this movie sends. Carol Marcus is portrayed as a capable scientist, a woman with a conscience who even stands up to her own father and a woman who is brave and risks her own life to disarm the torpedo and save McCoy. There is also Uhura. And this movie isn't even particularly progressive on that front.
My problem with your posts on the subject is not that I think there is no problem regarding the portrayal of women in mainstream movies and TV - the Bechdel test alone shows that there is - but rather that you hang an awful lot on this one short scene which may be gratuitous but is harmless.
Now as a man, I am insulted by these images. I am insulted that I am seen as some drooling frat boy that just wants to see naked women and get drunk all the time. My experience with this movie was that I laughed and muttered "completely useless scene." I wanted to walk out of the theater, and stopped myself, because I knew I would have to pay again to see the rest of it. When we see men's magazines, women are plastered all over them. It's as if I never have a thought that doesn't include naked women. I never want to know how about health or politics or comedy. Someone says "We cater to men," it automatically means beer, pizza, tv, sports, and women. It means I can't watch other popular science fiction without being offended. It means that I cannot watch a comedy about men without seeing those images (Hangover III) or having a stupid Dad that just goes along with whatever the wife says because she bitches a lot and he can't take her incessant whining. If that appeals to you, fine. It doesn't to me. And I avoid things that say "we cater to men" for that purpose. This movie caters to men.
Yes, well, I do see your point and the gender stereotyping is something that bugs me, too, but again, you're interpreting all this into a scene in a movie that doesn't really fit the somewhat one-sided description you're making here.
Most Hollywood blockbusters cater to men, by the way. That's not something that sets this movie apart. In fact, I'd say it's less lop-sided than many others.
There's no genitalia actually shown in the birth scene. It's very strategically filmed. Plus, Carice van Houten was wearing a prosthetic stomach that probably stretched down and provided cover further down. The Hodor full frontal scene was done with a prosthetic penis. Alfie Allen, who plays Theon, on the other hand, actually went the full monty, as have some of the female cast.Yes. The Red Priestess gave birth to a shadow demon and we see absolutely everything. She's not the only one (several prostitutes, as well), but the most prominent one.
Context matters. And when Kirk is in bed with two women, it shows him as a womanizer. We are not shown why he is in bed with them, except that he flirts with every pretty face that walks by (the scene with Spock where they talk about the 5-year mission, the scene with Bones talking about the Kobiashi Maru). I don't think that is more than a pop culture representation of James Kirk.
Gee, I wonder where pop culture came up with that:
[YT]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-vKN7ZvmvBw[/YT]
It's almost as if people watched the show and saw him snog every attractive female in the vicinity.
And if you agree it's gratuitious, then the larger point about the disease can be made. This is supposed to be the future, a hopeful future, and instead of a world that is equal, we don't see a single person who is a main cast member that is treated as more than arm candy for someone else, this scene being the culmination of that frustration in the movie.
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