So which Star Trek movies passed the Bechdel Test? Off hand, I can only think of two: Generations (Lursa and B'Etor talked to each other) and Insurrection (Troi and Crusher talked to each other) Am I forgetting any others?
Both female characters must have names to count."I think it's across the bay...in alameda"
True. Another very weak pass.Beverly and Ogawa talk to each other in First Contact, briefly.
They definitely talk about other things too. A good example would be The Siege.Dax and Kira chatted a lot in DS9 but even then it was about dudes (captain boday, that trill brothel)
They definitely talk about other things too. A good example would be The Siege.Dax and Kira chatted a lot in DS9 but even then it was about dudes (captain boday, that trill brothel)
The Bechdel test (/ˈbɛkdəl/ bek-dəl) asks whether a work of fiction features at least two women who talk to each other about something other than a man. The requirement that the two women must be named is sometimes added.
Only about half of all films meet these requirements, according to user-edited databases and the media industry press. The test is used as an indicator for the active presence of women in films and other fiction, and to call attention to gender inequality in fiction due to sexism.[1]
Also known as the Bechdel-Wallace test,[2] the test is named after the American cartoonist Alison Bechdel, in whose comic strip Dykes to Watch Out For it first appeared in 1985. Bechdel credited the idea to a friend, Liz Wallace, and to the writings of Virginia Woolf. After the test became more widely discussed in the 2000s, a number of variants and tests inspired by it have been introduced.
Plenty of truck commercials fail this "test". So?
Maybe it isn't what you are, but what (cash-disposing marketing demographic) you aren't.
TROI: And have you noticed how your boobs have started to firm up?
CRUSHER: Not that we care about such things in this day and age.
TROI: Uh huh.
Somebody on bechdeltest.com makes the point thatOn the plus side, Insurrection passes the test!
On the minus side, this is how it passes:
Sexual discussions are in no way related to sexism. The key point to take away from Troi and Crusher's discussion of their boobs is that at no point during the discussion did they feel the need to ask for a man's opinion of their boobs' firmness. It was entirely centered around how those two women felt about their own bodies. That is actually a rather feminist dialogue for a movie.
However, I do think it is somewhat foiled by the fact that while Beverly and Troi are the only ones speaking, the conversation appears to take place primarily so that Data can observe it and repeat it for laughs.
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