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(because if I don't do it now while the thoughts are fresh, it ain't gonna get done)

A bit of gender and a very small smidgen of ethnic stuff.

Ok, to get it out of the way: blah blah Pixar, blah blah amazing animation technique, blah blah exquisite texturing and characterization, blah blah unpredictable plot elements, blah blah. Ok, can I move on?

Not sure if I loved the movie or hated it. I got whapped upside the head in the first ten minutes by having the most engaging, most exciting, most intriguing character in the movie killed off. Ok, death by old age isn't quite "killed off", but I'm feeling rather fragile around issues of aging and mortality these years. Knowing that this was going to be a movie about a curmudgeonly old man with no woman in sight, I watched the fast-forward story from childhood sweethearts to widowerhood the same way I'd watch a car driving off a cliff that hasn't hit bottom yet. It's not nice to have a movie promoted as a children's flick make me bawl my eyes out before the story even gets going.

But it's not just that I feel emotionally ambushed and manipulated, it's that in my heart of hearts, I wanted to see Ellie's story, not Carl's story. Ellie is daring, imaginative, assertive, creative; she knows what she wants and reaches out to take it. Carl is swept up almost helplessly in her wake to his delight and confusion. And up until the start of his great adventure, he struck me as chronically reactive, rather than active.

But therein lies the dramatic problem. Carl has been set up with the potential for a major transformative life experience. We could watch him become what Ellie had always been. And because of that, quintessentially active Ellie was relegated to the passive dramatic role of muse and inspiration. Carl's transformation requires Ellie to be disappeared out of the story so that the vacuum of her absence can pull Carl out of his own essential passivity to become the actor on our stage.

This might be simply a classic dramatic structuring device if it weren't part of a larger overriding message: Adventuring is for Boys. Up is, all in all, a classic boys' adventure story, with the very few female characters providing nothing more than the scrollwork on the picture frame. Peculiarly, the revelation of Kevin's female gender only points this up further. Russell named the bird looking at the world through male-defaulting glasses; when he learns the bird is female, it isn't simply a "*shrug* oops" moment, he seems taken seriously aback. And, of course, in contrast to the (male) dogs, who are active, verbal participants in the adventure, Kevin is non-verbal and exists to be rescued.

And while I can excuse the intense focus on Russell's frustrated desire for attention from his father (since this is required in order for Carl to substitute ... in addition to being a perfectly reasonable same-gender role model issue), it's harder to excuse the presentation of Russell's mother as essentially invisible in his life and interests (other than her cameo in the audience at his awards ceremony, because ... like ... she was going to sit there watching him be humiliated and embarrassed on stage until Carl saves the day, rather than stepping in herself and acting as his award-presenter, right).

In short: massively fails the Bechdel Test.

On the plus side -- and this is going to be tricky to say in a non-risky way, but I'll say it anyway -- I like that Russell is Asian-American and it doesn't matter. (Given the limitations of the cartoon medium, I'm not sure whether he's meant to be specifically of Japanese heritage like the voice-actor or not -- the character isn't given a surname.) As far as I can tell (and I certainly don't discount the limitations of my perception), the character isn't presented as Asian-American in order to evoke some particular social stereotype or cultural myth, but simply because in a story coming out of Bay Area culture it's a perfectly ordinary, normal, everyday, unmarked thing for a random schoolboy to be. I feel weird commenting on it in the same way that I feel weird commenting when a movie stars an actress who isn't a cookie-cutter-Hollywood anorexic. It shouldn't be so refreshingly unusual. And yet ....

I have not, in general, been impressed by Pixar's handling of gender issues. For all that Ratatouille included some meta-commentary on gender, it went ahead and reinforced all the tired old cliches. The Incredibles similarly failed to break anything resembling new ground on gender. I won't speak to the various Toy Stories, or Wall-E or any of the other films I haven't seen, but my general impression is that they wouldn't change my conclusions on this. Has Pixar abandoned the field to the "princess is a career goal" crowd? Or do they simply not care about producing movies that inspire girls as girls and not as girls-imagining-through-male-POVs?

Whoops, bedtime. Gotta post and run.

Date: 2009-06-01 05:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gormflaith.livejournal.com
I am going to have to watch it again, since I never got past the initial emotional response.
I am howerver still really dissapointed in Ratatouille for various and sundry reasons even after viewing it again 6 months later.

Date: 2009-06-01 08:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] momstable.livejournal.com
I waited to read the spoilers until after I had seen it today with Aidan. Checking out various reviews online, you are NOT the only one commenting about the gender cliches.

I want to start by saying I enjoyed the movie. I also cried. And Aidan cried. And hugged me when I cried, because he's a good, caring empathetic kid.

The whole "Scouting-esque" thing failed for me, because in Scouting, the Moms DO participate fully (I'm a case in point). So, mom wouldn't have been sitting in the audience letting her son be humiliated, she would have been putting that badge on Russell.

Its almost like Pixar can only take on so many stereotype bending points per movie. This one was that "life stops when you get old". Or perhaps, "adventures are only for the young". Or something of the sort. I think it would have been cool if there could have been a more active female character, even the villain would have been interesting as a female explorer gone bad. I didn't see Ratatouille, I've seen all the other Pixar flicks. The only time the gender has had a really strong female not in type character, was Cars. I'm not sure what that says.

I'm kind of curious what the future will bring. Meanwhile, this is the type of thing I will discuss with my boys. And I have to keep in mind that its all about the bottom line with a movie company. Message is secondary at best.

Thanks for the review.

Date: 2009-06-02 03:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-zrfq.livejournal.com
This, I think, is one reason why I like Girl Genius. More often than not, when a job needs doing, it's the female characters who spearhead getting the job done. (Not that they don't have help. And the male characters do lead charges and such... but they're never *quite* as successful as the girls.)
Edited Date: 2009-06-02 04:08 am (UTC)

Date: 2009-06-02 10:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cryptocosm.livejournal.com
The Incredibles similarly failed to break anything resembling new ground on gender.

When I watch The Incredibles I see a Helen Parr who is intelligent, resourceful, cool under fire, a kick-ass superhero, a hot-stick jet pilot, and yet still finds time to be a loving and supportive wife and mother. There's at least an implication that Mirage (anorexic though she may be) was instrumental in tracking down and luring a long list of male and female superheros to their deaths. E may be a caricature, but she's a caricature of a highly successful businesswoman and scientist/engineer. Violet offhandedly solves the problems of escaping from the confinement cell and piloting the rocket. Heck, even Kari the babysitter is presented as a hyper go-getter. You may not consider that new ground, but I don't see any reasonable way to classify any of them as princess wannabes, either. Just because the principal focus is on Mr. Incredible doesn't reduce the rest of them to wallpaper.

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