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Spoilers Suicide Squad - Grading & Discussion

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But there's no reason for Katana to bear her midriff or show off her cleavage in a combat situation (certain Rick Flagg doesn't dress to show off his pecs or his abs). (ETA: Same with Harley's costume -- it's ridiculous from a combat standpoint. End edit.) And Enchantress spends much of the movie just standing around in what amounts to a magic bikini
You want to blame someone, blame the comic book industry for its standard boob-tastic approach to female superheroes, going all the way back to Wonder Woman and her pin-up outfit, and definitely including the original Harley costume.

You could make an argument there about the thematic intersection between female sexuality and power -- except that at no time does the narrative explore the ways in which women gain power through exploitation of their sexuality or what the costs of that kind of power are
No-one goes to a superhero movie for metatextual analysis of gender roles.

Considering that this film glorifies the relationship between the Joker and Harley ... and considering that this film also asks us to feel pity for El Diablo because he lost his temper and killed his wife and children? I think that that criticism is completely fair.
Misuse of the word "glorifies". Obviously Harley herself thinks it's great, but then she's obviously crazy. We're not supposed to think it's normal. It's the fucked up-ness of the relationship that makes it interesting.
El Diablo has the unique excuse of being host to a demon. There is no suggestion that what he did (under the influence) is acceptable, but it is forgivable because, you know, literal demon possession. Saying this is equivalent to domestic abuse is ridiculous.

I think Suicide Squad would have been less "domestic-violence-is-okay-y" if the narrative had been constructed to depict Harley as recognizing her relationship with the Joker as abusive and as something she needed to escape
So the problem is that Harley didn't embody the politically correct attitude? If you insist that fictional characters must conform to fixed ethical principles, the result is simply propaganda.
And if this complaint about setting a bad example is legitimate, surely Waller murdering all those people is a MUCH bigger moral problem than Harley's relationship issues? (especially given all the mass shootings in the US.)

that the film has no legs,
That's not an "imagined slight" on the film's part. That is a conclusion that may be reached by somebody who has engaged in a critical analysis of the plot, characters, and thematic elements.
It's nothing to do with critical analysis. "Legs" means box office profit over a sustained period. SS was in the top five grossing movies for 6 weeks (then dropping to 7th place), so it obviously has legs.
 
I think one of the big reasons I wasn't that bothered by Harley and Joker's relationship is because she was into it.
When the Joker electrocuted her, she didn't resist and even told him to do it, and she jumped into the chemicals all on her own. Nothing we saw in the movie ever seemed to indicate any kind of resistance on her part to anything the Joker did.
 
M.A.C.O. said:
You know, Apocalypse being Jubilee's third rodeo under Singer.
M.A.C.O. said:
Here in X1, sitting next to X1 Kitty Pryde and Rouge.
M.A.C.O. said:
Here in a mall in X2.
M.A.C.O. said:
Three times and she's yet to play a role or use her powers on screen.

Yeah, what did you think I meant when I said "Jubilee contributes nothing as always"?

BTW it's Rogue, not Rouge. ( See also: Star Wars )

M.A.C.O. said:
Storm plays a bigger role by being one of the 4 Horsemen
M.A.C.O. said:
and betrays Apocalypse when she sees Apocalypse strangling her.

That sounds kind of like contributing to the story to me. :shrug:

So she did, in fact, contribute to the story and have more than two lines.

M.A.C.O. said:
Olivia Munn being half white and half Vietnamese

How many people know that just by looking at her, as opposed to reading her bio?

Sci said:
El Diablo losing it and killing his family is tragic -- for his wife and children. It should not make us empathize with him, because he is the murderer and abuser. It should make us empathize with his wife and children.

Why can't we have both?

eyeresist said:
No-one goes to a superhero movie for metatextual analysis of gender roles.

Well, I bet someone does.
 
On El Diablo killing his family, I felt that was part of the overall theme of the movie as the "how bad can you be before you're irredeemable". Killing his wife and kids is something so horrible (the other characters are clearly shocked when they learn about this), he lost control over his power in this one moment and carried that guilt for the rest of his life, and to try and redeem himself, he had to sacrifice himself to save his team-mates and help save the world.

But it certainly is a reminder that his is a team of villains. They do bad things, they kill innocent people. Hurting the ones they love is a common trope for anti-heroes and villains to realize the wrong of their doing. I don't see it as glorification of domestic abuse, but as character development.

As to Harley's love for the Joker, it kind of appears a bit glorified. Maybe they should have shown the other Squad members to actually be freaked out by the Joker (I think Mark Waid once wrote a line, something like "When Supervillains want to scare each other, they tell Joker stories"), and not understanding how Harley could love him, to show that this actually is mad love.
 
I think one of the big reasons I wasn't that bothered by Harley and Joker's relationship is because she was into it.
When the Joker electrocuted her, she didn't resist and even told him to do it, and she jumped into the chemicals all on her own. Nothing we saw in the movie ever seemed to indicate any kind of resistance on her part to anything the Joker did.
I think that's a little thing we call Stockholm syndrome.
 
I don't know if you're quite following what I mean when I say that one might interpret the narrative as being sexist or racist.

You're evaluating this from an in-universe perspective -- "Slipknot wasn't targeted by other characters for racist reasons, therefore it is not racist."

I'm arguing from a metatextual perspective.

Here's a way to illustrate the difference:

Black Dude Dies First is an undeniably racist trope. Yet when we say that, that doesn't mean we're saying that the characters in a film that employs the Black Dude Dies First trope are themselves racist. Indeed, when a monster kills a black dude first in a horror movie, it is not that the monster is racist. It is that the narrative is racist because it is constructed in such a way to depict black lives as being less valuable than white lives -- as "filler" people there to die so that we will feel tension over the fate of white characters.

Now, you may or may not argue that Slipknot's fate is significant enough to mark Suicide Squad as a racist film. As I said, I'm not quite willing to go that far myself, because this film doesn't particularly depict anybody in a good light, and both its most sympathetic (Deadshot) and least sympathetic characters (Waller) are persons of color. But whether or not Slipknot was targeted by other characters for being Native American does not in and of itself determine whether or not the film is racist. You have to examine things metatextually.
So in-universe the film wasn't racist to kill off Slipknot, but out of universe, we are to assert the writers intended harm to the Native American community by killing of Adam Beach's character? Sounds like a big stretch and something you put more thought into than other people who accused the film of racism.

False dichotomy. No one claimed sexy=sexism. But there are ways to be sexy without being objectified.

I was asking you a question, mate.

That is too narrow of a definition of sexism. A narrative that depicts women as being sex objects for male pleasure may not be engaging in discrimination or prejudice per se, but this is still sexism.
I pulled the definition out of the dictionary. A printed and published source. In this age of the internet, there has been a movement to redefine words. Which leads to a lack of consenus and people talking past one another.

As to the film, every female character had their own story, backstory, and agency. They weren't there to give men boners.


Not particularly. I mean, she wore a unitard in Batman: The Animated Series, but it wasn't particularly sexualized. It would be more accurate to say that she was reinterpreted as a sexualized character who would dress in a sexually provocative manner for later projects, such as the Arkham video games, or this film.
Umm...
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What repressed doctor persona? Nothing in the film suggested she was repressed before meeting the Joker, nor anything in the original version of her in The Animated Series.
I'd have to go back and watch the original episode and reread Mad Love, but I'm certain the intention was Harley was a square who was charmed by the Joker and embraced his live free lifestyle.

There are two problems with this argument:

1. She is depicted in the film in explicitly proprietary terms vis a vis the Joker. She does things like wear shirts that say "Daddy's Lil Monster" or clothes that say "Property of Mr. J," and her entire character is oriented around pining for him, around "giving her life" for him early on; she is depicted as someone who is a "being for others" (to paraphrase Paulo Freire in Pedagogy of the Oppressed), as someone who exists for the Joker -- and the film never outright depicts this as a bad thing. This, in spite of the fact that the Joker began their relationship by electrocuting her and demanding that she commit a faux suicide ritual to please him.

2. This is in the context of a work of fiction created by a man, which features other inappropriately sexualized female characters.
Is that harmful to women in the real world though? Suicide Squad doing a loose adaptation of Harley's origin with the Joker (and all that applies) doesn't take away from Harley's own strengths as a character. I get what your saying, but we comic book fans always throw fits when we learn the film makers in Hollywood are not adaptating the source material faithfully. SS took liberties with the material to introduce the audience to Harley and fit her into the SS, but it was still faithful. As for her wardrobe and the phrases on them, I chock it up to it being things Harley would wear and style to her liking. Like her baseball bat and mallet having "good night" and smiley faces on them, respectively.

Uh-huh. Yeah, sure, there's no male gaze at work here:

th_36CC9D9900000578-3723321-image-a-83_1470307040179_zpsp0tqbnbe.jpg


th_Margot-Robbie-as-Harley-Quinn-suicide-squad-39233846-500-209_zpsgjocmo7e.jpg
Hey, man. Women like women too. Hehe.
Besides, I'm certain those specific scenes were not the reasons people chose to patron and repatron the film. For inarguable example of pointless "male gaze", look no further than Alice Eve's underwear scene in STID. Which was in several trailers and stills, and added nothing to the film. It got so bad that JJ and co had to come out and apologize for it.

What you are describing here is how members of the audience choose to appropriate and reinterpret works of art for their own personal aesthetics goals. It's awesome, but it has nothing to do with whether or not a film employs what academics have identified as the male gaze.
If the fans don't have ownership of the media they are consuming, than who does? Women like Harley because she's independent and fun. The same way people like Deadpool.

So why didn't we see Rick Flagg's abs?
I couldn't tell you. I can tell you I saw the Joker's abs, and pectorals though. Because for some reason the dude wasn't wearing a shirt several times throughout the film. Haha


The MCU films are also sexist.
Not like those X-Men films, am I right? Why Singer insist on having Mystique strutt around naked, is beyond me. It's certainly not something the character does in the comics, and JLaw has voiced her discomfort with it. A white dress Bryan, that's all I'm saying.


Dude, you're literally comparing her costume to Slave Leia while trying to arguing it's not sexist? Seriously?

There was no reason for the magic bikini to be there.

So what? It is still objectifying and sexist. Being an homage does not change that.
Is Slave Leia sexist now too? I know Disney has decided this year to stop producing all Slave Leia merchandise and they were very cross with Amy Schumer for her photoshoot in the metal bikini last year. However, the costume has always been seen as sexy. Like I said in my original post, Enchantress never used sexuality or beauty as weapon. The people who marketed SS, didn't market Enchantress as a sex object or with the "come hither" poses used in Slave Leia merchandise and movie posters.

Dude, the narrative has literally constructed a female character who exists solely to die at the hands of her husband so that you will feel bad for that husband, and you're arguing with a straight face that this isn't sexist and isn't asking us to feel sympathetic towards a perpetrator of domestic violence? The film literally asks us to feel bad for El Diablo for murdering his wife. It glorifies a domestic abuser.

El Diablo losing it and killing his family is tragic -- for his wife and children. It should not make us empathize with him, because he is the murderer and abuser. It should make us empathize with his wife and children.

Now, I'll give the film some credit here -- it also insists on saying that El Diablo cannot run away from his sin, that he has to own it. But his wife literally didn't even get a name. It is a deeply troubling depiction of domestic abusers, and the criticism that Suicide Squad either glosses over or glorifies domestic violence is completely fair.

Yeah, and they kept scenes in that glorified an abusive relationship and which asked us to empathize with another domestic abuser. Had they constructed Harley's character arc differently, then the criticism that the film glorifies domestic violence would have less validity.
When people bring up domestic violence in SS, it isn't El Diablo and his family that they are talking about. It's the Joker and his physical assault (slapping, shoving and punching) of Harley that they are referring to. However, like we saw, those scenes were excluded from the movie.

With Diablo, we never see him attack his family. Know his family died when he lost control of his temper and by extension his mutant power and burned their home down.

After they saw it (not before they saw it), because it turned out to be a generally good movie.

People were rushing to GB's defense long before they saw the movie. A counter movement to the alleged "Ghostbros" who were down voting the trailer on Youtube.

According to Box Office Mojo, Ghostbusters: Answer the Call had a total domestic gross of $127.3 million as of 22 September 2016. It has a Rotten Tomatoes critics score of 76% and an audience score of 56%. It is an exaggeration to say audiences were "left cold" by it. It wasn't a mega-hit, but it was seen by a great many people and was enjoyed by most people who saw it.
Not really an exaggeration to say audiences were left cold by it. To compare GB and SS.

GB
Budget: $144 million
Total countries released in: 67
No Chinese release.
Box Gross:
Domestic $127 million
Foreign $100 million

SS
Budget: $175 million
Total countries released in: 34
No Chinese release.
Box Office Gross:
Domestic $318 million
Foreign $413.6 million

Calling GB a hit would be a false statement. Like I said in my earlier post, GB had every opportunity and more to be a success and it just didn't deliver. Domestically or internationally. Granted GB was never going to be a $700 million, or even a $500 million dollar movie. The amount of business it did do however, is depressing. Paramount had a tough summer for sure. All their big name IPs underperformed or out right flopped. GB, STBeyond, TMNT 2.

Point is, you asked for another movie that had been "unfairly tarred and feathered." I pointed out that Ghostbusters was trashed before it was even released because a lot of people got butt-hurt at the idea of a female Ghostbusters remake. So that's a perfectly fair and prominent example of a film being unjustly tarred and feathered.

Because it was a generally good movie with a few flaws -- as opposed to Suicide Squad, which was a generally flawed movie with a few good parts.

Taste in film in subject, sure. But the math just doesn't support the notion that GB was very good. Especially in overseas markets; where the alleged "Ghostbros" and male fans hating on the film wouldn't have been an issue. People just didn't care or thought it was meh. GB had twice the foreign markets and made 4x less than SS did in those same markets.

Suicide Squad, by contrast, only started being the target of any critics when it actually screened for them and it turned out to have all sorts of narrative problems.
I was under the impression that people had sent their bullets and drawn their blades against SS after BvS disappointed HEAVILY all expectations.


This is circular logic. What agenda do they allegedly wish to advance by hurting Suicide Squad's box office?
Isn't it the purview of people in the media to tell their consumers how to think? Don't watch this, watch this? This is why people point to critic scores as a measure of quality. I mean, Spider-Man 3, Cloud Atlas and Sharknado all have positive reviews on RT, does that mean we should embrace them all for being "good" films, because other people said so?

Dude, comic book movies have ruled the American box office for going on ten years now. If you're trying to argue that they're some endangered genre if one or two of them are derided by critics, I think you're not keeping up with the times. They're not gonna stop making action films because critics didn't like Olympus Has Fallen or its sequel, and they're not gonna stop making comic book movies -- not even DC Comics movies! -- because critics didn't like Batman v. Superman or Suicide Squad.
Haha, what part of my post ever gave you the impression I was worried about the comic book genre being endangered/the bubble busting? This was about name calling and keeping criticism constructive. Not accusing the film of bigotry and intolerance, because you can. Outside of an eye catching headline to get clicks to your website, what is the purpose of an article like this?
tumblr_obkfntvvT41ul57wso1_400.jpg


Or this?
From Variety

tumblr_obkfntvvT41ul57wso2_400.jpg
 
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Yeah, what did you think I meant when I said "Jubilee contributes nothing as always"?
I must have missed that part. My bad.
Still tokenism though.
BTW it's Rogue, not Rouge. ( See also: Star Wars )

Hey! Excuse me, Princess. Mistype a letter and you want to make a big deal about it.

That sounds kind of like contributing to the story to me. :shrug:

So she did, in fact, contribute to the story and have more than two lines.
The she becomes a turncoat during the climax, because she's really a hero (who is famous to us the audience) but does nothing in the film to communicate her actual feelings or motivations about being a hero. Storm just wasn't developed or explored properly. Then again, neither were a lot of things in Apocalypse.



In other news, Looper made another video about how the SS should look compared to their comic book counterparts. They've already done one for the Avengers and JL.
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Still tokenism though.

It feels more like comic-fan-service. It's not like she started out white and they changed her to a minority or something.

Hey! Excuse me, Princess.

You must have me confused with Aunt Rouge's niece.

The she becomes a turncoat during the climax, because she's really a hero (who is famous to us the audience)

That's the whole point. She's a major foundational character of the X-Men. Someone you include in an X-Men movie for that reason. Not because of "tokenism".
 
Sci said:
I don't know if you're quite following what I mean when I say that one might interpret the narrative as being sexist or racist.

You're evaluating this from an in-universe perspective -- "Slipknot wasn't targeted by other characters for racist reasons, therefore it is not racist."

I'm arguing from a metatextual perspective.

Here's a way to illustrate the difference:

Black Dude Dies First is an undeniably racist trope. Yet when we say that, that doesn't mean we're saying that the characters in a film that employs the Black Dude Dies First trope are themselves racist. Indeed, when a monster kills a black dude first in a horror movie, it is not that the monster is racist. It is that the narrative is racist because it is constructed in such a way to depict black lives as being less valuable than white lives -- as "filler" people there to die so that we will feel tension over the fate of white characters.

Now, you may or may not argue that Slipknot's fate is significant enough to mark Suicide Squad as a racist film. As I said, I'm not quite willing to go that far myself, because this film doesn't particularly depict anybody in a good light, and both its most sympathetic (Deadshot) and least sympathetic characters (Waller) are persons of color. But whether or not Slipknot was targeted by other characters for being Native American does not in and of itself determine whether or not the film is racist. You have to examine things metatextually.

So in-universe the film wasn't racist to kill off Slipknot,

No. That is a category error. You cannot determine whether or not a film narrative is racist by evaluating it from an in-universe perspective. You have to evaluate it metatextually in order to make this determination.

but out of universe, we are to assert the writers intended harm to the Native American community by killing of Adam Beach's character?

Racism is not necessarily intentional. As Hillary Clinton recently put it, implicit bias is a problem everybody has to grapple with. A racist narrative can result from unconscious biases -- witness, for instance, Tim Burton's consistent failure to include persons of color in his films.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
False dichotomy. No one claimed sexy=sexism. But there are ways to be sexy without being objectified.

I was asking you a question, mate.

Yes, you were. And it was a question based on a false a priori assumption. It was, in other words, a bullshit question designed to allow you to control the parameters of the debate.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
That is too narrow of a definition of sexism. A narrative that depicts women as being sex objects for male pleasure may not be engaging in discrimination or prejudice per se, but this is still sexism.

I pulled the definition out of the dictionary.

Shockingly, a complex social phenomenon, the study of which drives an entire field of academic study and the combat of which drives numerous governmental agencies and activist groups, just might be too complex to be adequately encapsulated in a single-sentence dictionary definition.

As to the film, every female character had their own story, backstory, and agency.

Not really. The only female characters with any agency are Amanda Waller and the Enchantress. Harley's entire personality is built around her submission to a man; Katana is fixated on her dead husband and has next to no personality otherwise; June is essentially a victim of the Enchantress's magical body-rape; Deadshot's daughter is just there as a prop to make the audience feel sympathetic to him; and El Diablo's wife exists for the sole purpose of being killed so the audience will feel sympathetic towards him.

They weren't there to give men boners.

Then Harley, the Enchantress, and Katana all should have been given different costumes.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
What repressed doctor persona? Nothing in the film suggested she was repressed before meeting the Joker, nor anything in the original version of her in The Animated Series.

I'd have to go back and watch the original episode and reread Mad Love, but I'm certain the intention was Harley was a square who was charmed by the Joker and embraced his live free lifestyle.

The impression I got from both the "Mad Love" episode and comic one-shot was that she was an unscrupulous doctor wishing to profit off of treating high-profile patients. ("Well, I've always had an attraction to extreme personalities. They're more exciting, more challenging..." "And more high-profile?" "You can't deny there's an element of glamor to these super-criminals." "I'll warn you right now -- these are hard-core psychotics. If you're thinking of cashing in on them by writing a tell-all book...")

Edited to add: I just re-watched part of "Mad Love." In fairness, there is a scene later in the episode where Joker reassures Harley that it's understandable to fall in love with him because she's been a dedicated career woman who put her profession ahead of fun, and that it's natural to fall for someone who can make her laugh. End edit.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
M.A.C.O. said:
HOWEVER, Harley being sexy and promiscuous is always on her own terms. She's not available sexually to anyone she chooses not to be with. The Joker originally, but now it's down to Ivy and Red Tool (Deadpool parody. We don't need to use our imaginations of how Harley reacts to men disrespecting her.

There are two problems with this argument:

1. She is depicted in the film in explicitly proprietary terms vis a vis the Joker. She does things like wear shirts that say "Daddy's Lil Monster" or clothes that say "Property of Mr. J," and her entire character is oriented around pining for him, around "giving her life" for him early on; she is depicted as someone who is a "being for others" (to paraphrase Paulo Freire in Pedagogy of the Oppressed), as someone who exists for the Joker -- and the film never outright depicts this as a bad thing. This, in spite of the fact that the Joker began their relationship by electrocuting her and demanding that she commit a faux suicide ritual to please him.

2. This is in the context of a work of fiction created by a man, which features other inappropriately sexualized female characters.

Is that harmful to women in the real world though?

Have you really never run into the numerous examples of research showing that sexual objectification of women in media is deeply damaging to women, particularly to teenage girls? Is this a serious question?

As for her wardrobe and the phrases on them, I chock it up to it being things Harley would wear and style to her liking.

Of course they are things the fictional character would like to wear. That is not the point. The point is that this fictional character is being depicted by this narrative as someone who likes to wear sexually objectifying clothing in the larger narrative context of also being a character who is obsessed with feelings of love and submission towards an abusive predator. This is a character that was assaulted by a man, who symbolically kills herself to prove her devotion to him, and wears sexually revealing clothes that assert proprietary ownership of her by that man. This is not an independent character. This is the very definition of a character that is defining herself by her subordination to a man.

So, no, you can't fairly argue that her expression of her sexuality is an act of empowerment. It is an act of subordination.

Hey, man. Women like women too. Hehe.

Besides, I'm certain those specific scenes were not the reasons people chose to patron and repatron the film.

Which does not address the question of whether or not the film is employing the male gaze.

For inarguable example of pointless "male gaze", look no further than Alice Eve's underwear scene in STID. Which was in several trailers and stills, and added nothing to the film. It got so bad that JJ and co had to come out and apologize for it.

I completely agree.

Of course, Harley's bra shot and ass shot were both in plenty of trailers and publicity stills, too, and added nothing to the film, either.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
What you are describing here is how members of the audience choose to appropriate and reinterpret works of art for their own personal aesthetics goals. It's awesome, but it has nothing to do with whether or not a film employs what academics have identified as the male gaze.

If the fans don't have ownership of the media they are consuming, than who does?

Legally-speaking, Warner Bros. has ownership of Suicide Squad and its related media, obviously.

Less legalistically -- that's not the point. How an audience chooses to appropriate a work of art is actually not the same thing as a critical assessment of the themes at play in that work of art. It's the difference between a Harry Potter novel that depicts Hermione and Ron as being in love, and a Harry Potter fanfic that depicts Hermione as only really being in love with Harry. The content of the work is not the same thing as the appropriation of the work for the creation of subsidiary derivative works.

Women like Harley because she's independent and fun.

Harley, at least in Suicide Squad, is not independent. Her entire psyche revolves around a man.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
M.A.C.O. said:
I don't consider exposed mid-driffs to be a sexualized area.

So why didn't we see Rick Flagg's abs?

I couldn't tell you.

I can: Because Suicide Squad is a film designed to sexually objectify its female characters through costumes that make no sense in the context in which they are presented, purely for the titillation of audiences.

I can tell you I saw the Joker's abs, and pectorals though. Because for some reason the dude wasn't wearing a shirt several times throughout the film.

Yes, it is a long-standing male power fantasy to associate shirtless masculinity with assertions of power and dominance, especially over women. He's not objectified for the pleasure of audiences, he's shirtless as an expression of power. And notably, of course, the Joker is not shirtless when he's in combat -- his outfit still makes more sense than Harley's.

Not like those X-Men films, am I right?

The X-Men films are also sexist, yes.

Is Slave Leia sexist now too?

Is this a serious question?

Yes, of course the "Slave Leia" bit in Return of the Jedi was deeply sexist.

Like I said in my original post, Enchantress never used sexuality or beauty as weapon.

Which actually makes her magic bikini even more sexist of a creative decision on Ayer's part, because we are left without even so much as a character-appropriate justification for that costume. Harley's costume at least makes sense insofar as this is a character who is obsessed with pleasing a man to whom she has subordinated herself -- it's still sexist, but at least it is consistent with the characterization (as the character itself is sexist). With Enchantress, there's not even that. She's just belly-dancing in a magic bikini for no reason. It's ridiculous.

When people bring up domestic violence in SS, it isn't El Diablo and his family that they are talking about. It's the Joker and his physical assault (slapping, shoving and punching) of Harley that they are referring to. However, like we saw, those scenes were excluded from the movie.

I am bringing up both, and both are more than adequate supports for the argument that Suicide Squad glorifies domestic abuse. And, once again, the Joker literally electrocutes Harley, so, no, not all of the scenes where he is violent towards her are cut.

With Diablo, we never see him attack his family. Know his family died when he lost control of his temper and by extension his mutant power and burned their home down.

Yes. And the film doesn't even bother to give his family names -- they are props that exist to make us go, "Oh, poor Diablo!" That is a form of glorifying domestic abuse.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
Can you think of any other film in recent memory that was tarred and feathered unjustly?

I'm sorry, but do you actually read film reviews and critiques on a regular basis? People call out racism and sexism in movies all the time. Nothing unique about it with Suicide Squad.

Hell, at least these criticisms of Suicide Squad only emerged once critics had actually seen the film. Compare that to the vitriol unleashed against this year's Ghostbusters remake just in reaction to the mere idea of an all-female version of that story before anyone saw it.

Difference is, people in the media were praising GB,

After they saw it (not before they saw it), because it turned out to be a generally good movie.

People were rushing to GB's defense long before they saw the movie. A counter movement to the alleged "Ghostbros" who were down voting the trailer on Youtube.

Who? I remember people rushing to say, "Give it a chance, don't assume it's bad because it has an all-female cast" in response to the "MRA"-aligned backlash. This is not the same thing as asserting it is a good movie.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
M.A.C.O. said:
while it was the general audience that was left cold by it.

According to Box Office Mojo, Ghostbusters: Answer the Call had a total domestic gross of $127.3 million as of 22 September 2016. It has a Rotten Tomatoes critics score of 76% and an audience score of 56%. It is an exaggeration to say audiences were "left cold" by it. It wasn't a mega-hit, but it was seen by a great many people and was enjoyed by most people who saw it.

Not really an exaggeration to say audiences were left cold by it. To compare GB and SS. <SNIP>

So what? I'm not comparing their box office results. I am saying that it is wrong to claim that GB "left audiences cold." It was a popular movie that was enjoyed by many people -- as was Suicide Squad!

M.A.C.O. said:
Calling it a hit would be a false statement.

I don't know -- how do you define a "hit?" By profit percentage? By ratio of income to expense? By number of tickets sold? I have a hard time saying that a film that made $227 million isn't a "hit," even though, yeah, it's not as big of a financial success as Suicide Squad has been.

And of course, this isn't a binary thing, it's a continuum. Films are not either mega-hits or bombs. There's an entire spectrum of financial results a film can achieve.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
Point is, you asked for another movie that had been "unfairly tarred and feathered." I pointed out that Ghostbusters was trashed before it was even released because a lot of people got butt-hurt at the idea of a female Ghostbusters remake. So that's a perfectly fair and prominent example of a film being unjustly tarred and feathered.

Suicide Squad, by contrast, only started being the target of any critics when it actually screened for them and it turned out to have all sorts of narrative problems.

Taste in film in subject, sure. But the math just doesn't support the notion that GB was very good.

1. Nonsense -- it is a film that many people saw and which most people who saw enjoyed.

2. Again, so what? That is not the issue. The issue is whether or not there has been another film that was unfairly tarred and feathered, and Ghostbusters was unfairly tarred and fathered before people even had a chance to see it! Suicide Squad, by contrast, only got negative reviews when it was actually screened for critics, and was widely regarded as a highly-anticipated movie before that point.

A film which most audiences and critics expect to be good, gets a fair shot from critics once it is screened, and is negatively reviewed, has NOT been unfairly tarred and feathered. A film that gets people trashing it and trying to organize a boycott against it before it has even been released, solely because they don't like an all-female cast, HAS been unfairly tarred and feathered.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
Suicide Squad, by contrast, only started being the target of any critics when it actually screened for them and it turned out to have all sorts of narrative problems.

I was under the impression that people had sent their bullets and drawn their blades against SS after BvS disappointed HEAVILY all expectations.

Who? The critics I followed were mostly talking about how they were hoping it would be good and "redeem" the DC Extended Universe after Batman v. Superman disappointed them.

Sci said:
M.A.C.O. said:
The reverse was true for SS. Critics were praising Ghostbusters before

Who?

Still waiting on an answer for this one.

M.A.C.O. said:
Sci said:
This is circular logic. What agenda do they allegedly wish to advance by hurting Suicide Squad's box office?

Isn't it the purview of people in the media to tell their consumers how to think? Don't watch this, watch this? This is why people point to critic scores as a measure of quality. I mean, Spider-Man 3, Cloud Atlas and Sharknado all have positive reviews on RT, does that mean we should embrace them all for being "good" films, because other people said so?

This is an utter non sequitur and it has nothing to do with my question. What alleged agenda do these critics who all have it out for Suicide Squad wish to advance by hurting it at the box office? Are you alleging that they are all trying to advance a particular political ideology? What is this "agenda?"

M.A.C.O. said:
Haha, what part of my post ever gave you the impression I was worried about the comic book genre being endangered/the bubble busting?

Because nothing about the question you asked ("Why would anyone go see a comic book movie if people on site after site are saying these negative things about it?") makes no sense otherwise.

Sci said:
But there's no reason for Katana to bear her midriff or show off her cleavage in a combat situation (certain Rick Flagg doesn't dress to show off his pecs or his abs). (ETA: Same with Harley's costume -- it's ridiculous from a combat standpoint. End edit.) And Enchantress spends much of the movie just standing around in what amounts to a magic bikini.

You want to blame someone, blame the comic book industry for its standard boob-tastic approach to female superheroes

I completely agree that the comic book industry has a major problem with sexism and female sexual objectification.

That doesn't mean it's okay when that problem carries over into movies.

No-one goes to a superhero movie for metatextual analysis of gender roles.

I'm sorry to hear that you don't want to think critically about the media you are consuming. But just because you don't like analyzing what you are seeing doesn't mean that something isn't there in the piece. To paraphrase "Mr. Plinkett" at Red Letter Media in his analyses of the Star Wars prequels: "You might not have noticed it, but your brain did."

eyeresist said:
Sci said:
Considering that this film glorifies the relationship between the Joker and Harley ... and considering that this film also asks us to feel pity for El Diablo because he lost his temper and killed his wife and children? I think that that criticism is completely fair.

Misuse of the word "glorifies". Obviously Harley herself thinks it's great, but then she's obviously crazy. We're not supposed to think it's normal.

Normal? No. But the narrative implicitly asks us to root for their relationship; it depicts Harley's "loss" of the Joker at the end of Act II as a sad thing, and it depicts her reunion with him at the very end as a positive thing. It asks us to be sad for her that she's lost him and happy for her that she's with him again... even though this is a guy who literally assaulted her and demanded that she commit a suicide ritual to prove her devotion to him. And that's just restricting ourselves to material that wasn't cut from the theatrical release.

So, yes, the film glorifies Harley's relationship with the Joker, even though that relationship is depicted as one built on abuse, subordination, and sexual objectification.

El Diablo has the unique excuse of being host to a demon. There is no suggestion that what he did (under the influence) is acceptable, but it is forgivable because, you know, literal demon possession.

"It's not my fault, the [alcohol/drug/whatever] made me do it" is a pretty common excuse amongst domestic abusers. The fact that the narrative substitutes a drug with a demon doesn't mean it's not still depicting a domestic abuser as not being responsible for his actions and asking us to feel sympathy for him for his abuse of others, while not ascribing any real agency or personality -- not even a name! -- to his victims.

eyeresist said:
Sci said:
I think Suicide Squad would have been less "domestic-violence-is-okay-y" if the narrative had been constructed to depict Harley as recognizing her relationship with the Joker as abusive and as something she needed to escape

So the problem is that Harley didn't embody the politically correct attitude?

I had no idea the idea that domestic violence and abuse should not be depicted as good things we should feel sorry for a character if they lose, or as things that should make us feel sorry for the abuser, constituted political correctness.

And if this complaint about setting a bad example is legitimate, surely Waller murdering all those people is a MUCH bigger moral problem than Harley's relationship issues? (especially given all the mass shootings in the US.)

The difference is that the film doesn't ask us to feel that Waller did the right thing by murdering her employees -- but the film does ask us to root for Harley's relationship with the Joker.

And I think I'd look up stats on deaths from domestic violence compared to deaths from mass shootings before I make any sort of comparison about which is a bigger problem in the film.
 
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eyeresist said:
No-one goes to a superhero movie for metatextual analysis of gender roles.
I'm sorry to hear that you don't want to think critically about the media you are consuming.
Nice personal attack there! Actually, I take pride in thinking critically about all sorts of stuff. The fact that people hold different opinions to you is what really pisses you off - why can't they see that they are wrong and you are right?!?!?!!?
the narrative implicitly asks us to root for their relationship; it depicts Harley's "loss" of the Joker at the end of Act II as a sad thing, and it depicts her reunion with him at the very end as a positive thing.
Those are Harley's reactions, which are authentic to the character. What is this alternative you demand? Either totally change the character in order to make her a positive role model (pretty weird thing to ask of a villain, and not really what fiction is about), or have the movie editorialise "It is SAD and WRONG that she feels these things", like some primitive morality play.
"It's not my fault, the [alcohol/drug/whatever] made me do it" is a pretty common excuse amongst domestic abusers. The fact that the narrative substitutes a drug with a demon doesn't mean it's not still depicting a domestic abuser as not being responsible for his actions
It's a demon. A LITERAL demon. A demon that possesses a human host and incinerates its surroundings with supernatural fireballs. You can analogise it to domestic violence as a literary exercise, if you like, but it terms of direct correlation it does not hold up.
 
Nice personal attack there!

I'm honestly not sure what else you could possibly be trying to say when someone points out an obvious element of sexism to a film and you reply by saying, "No one sees these movies for a metatextual analysis of gender roles."

Those are Harley's reactions, which are authentic to the character.

And by endorsing those reactions rather than depicting them as objectively self-destructive -- which they are -- the narrative is glorifying an abusive relationship.

It's a demon. A LITERAL demon. A demon that possesses a human host and incinerates its surroundings with supernatural fireballs. You can analogise it to domestic violence as a literary exercise, if you like, but it terms of direct correlation it does not hold up.

Your argument here would hold more water if the film had not linked Diablo's power to his feelings of anger (thereby playing right into the abuser narrative of, "It wasn't my fault, I lost control, the demon/booze made me do it")... or if, y'know, the film had bothered to give his wife a name.
 
I'm honestly not sure what else you could possibly be trying to say when someone points out an obvious element of sexism to a film and you reply by saying, "No one sees these movies for a metatextual analysis of gender roles."
I was responding to "at no time does the narrative explore the ways in which women gain power through exploitation of their sexuality or what the costs of that kind of power are", and I stand by my response that that's not what superhero fans want. It could be done as a subtext (which could be cool), but it seems you are in favour of nothing less than the thumpingly obvious.
Those are Harley's reactions, which are authentic to the character.
And by endorsing those reactions rather than depicting them as objectively self-destructive -- which they are -- the narrative is glorifying an abusive relationship.
Harley is nuts! That is her character - she is irrational and makes bizarre choices. What's the alternative? Can you propose a specific alternative that would not mean basically creating a new character? When Harley is pining for Joker, how exactly should the film undermine the legitimacy of her desires?
Your argument here would hold more water if the film had not linked Diablo's power to his feelings of anger (thereby playing right into the abuser narrative of, "It wasn't my fault, I lost control, the demon/booze made me do it")... or if, y'know, the film had bothered to give his wife a name.
As I said, you can't directly analogise a supernatural event to a real situation. I mean, in Harry Potter, the Dementors are allegorical to depression, but you can't overcome depression by waving a wand and shouting a magic word. No-one is accusing JK Rowling of telling lies about mental illness.

The wife's name is not important in dramatic terms. We do get to see her (in a great performance); what would the name add? The term "nameless victim" only really applies to people who have been rendered invisible, unacknowledged, erased from history. We see Diablo's wife, and she makes an impact, so the criticism doesn't really apply.
 
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I'm honestly not sure what else you could possibly be trying to say when someone points out an obvious element of sexism to a film and you reply by saying, "No one sees these movies for a metatextual analysis of gender roles."

I don't watch these movies in that manner either. ::shrug:



And by endorsing those reactions rather than depicting them as objectively self-destructive -- which they are -- the narrative is glorifying an abusive relationship.

Oh brother! :rolleyes:

There was no glorifying abuse or mistreatment of women. There was no "endorsing" these actions. No good guy came along and said "these actions are okay." If that's the way you saw it then you have a very odd way of watching movies. The movie went out of its way many times to let the viewer know that these were bad guys. If a viewer got turned on by the horrible actions these villains were doing then that's on the viewer, not the movie.
 
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