Monday, September 19, 2011

Fighting Angel Draft 2


FIGHTING ANGELS

-How women are represented in martial movies

By Chu Qian


As feminism becomes one of the hottest topics people have discussed today, it is widely represented in mass media, namely, the film industry. More and more movies now shift to display women in a more active position, especially in martial fighting movies, where this once being considered as weak and submissive group, turns to bravery and domination.


There are several movies whose heroin figures are extremely impressive and noteworthy: Kill Bill series and Resident Evil series. These two movies had been one of the Year’s bestsellers; using filming as the medium, they drew in millions of people worldwide to go to the theatre where they started to perceived the idea that women could also be the KILLING MACHINE, a term which had been so popularly used before to solely describe masculine male figures such as Rambo in First Blood. In some senses, women have replaced men in the pop culture of martial movies.

This Kill Bill Volume1 poster tells us something about the cultural background of using female martial artists. In the picture, Uma Therman is wearing the notorious yellow suits. If you can recall that it is the symbolic clothing of Bruce Lee, the Hollywood Chinese kungfu actor of 1960s, it will not be hard for you to get the idea that in fact Kill Bill wants to pay tribute to the male legendary actor Bruce Lee. Lee is a monument that is hard to surpass by any other man in martial art industry. Here I say “man” I mean real Man, in a gender perspective. All the centuries we have seen male figure playing around on stage and none could be as talent as him and in fact, many of us viewers get bored, so how can you modify the movie so that it pertains its attractiveness? The answer is, by using women as main characters in them. Also, if using an actor in this yellow suit, viewers will inevitably compare him with lengendary Lee when watching the movie, which was not what the directors expected us to do- they want us to enjoy the movies they make, rather than to question or criticize them against the original one. As a result the best way to solve the problem is to make it female. As a matter of fact, I haven’t seen comments like “Uma stinks! She can’t rival Bruce Lee in every sense!” after the release of the movie, mostly are “Uma did so well, I like her playing what Bruce Lee had been playing!” It’s the power of opposite sex, the tendency to discorver the good traits in a different sex. So here stands a woman, with an undefeatable look on her face, with the clothes so perfectly fit to her body, with the curve of her thighs charmingly formed good angles with her samurai sword, and a long splash of blood all the way behind her. This makes perfect sense.


Movie posters also tell us a lot about the attitude of heroines in those movies. Let’s now shift to the poster of Resident Evil. Noticeably, Milla Jovovich is not wearing a bra! This is a really interesting detail because from this we can formulate an atitude this female character has. The function of brassiere basically is to hold breasts in a place that is pleasurable to look at, but who to look at? Of course, it’s man. “Male gaze” is the spotlight man concentrated on woman’s dressing, wording and behaving; male gaze is everywhere around a woman, restricted her from being a both physically and mentally free woman when she herself has felt being looked at. As a result, Milla’s no-bra seems to be a retreat women take to be away from this cage of male gaze . She seems to be saying, “ I don’t care if you like my breasts or not; all I wanna do is to get zombies down, not you down”.


As a result, if men just come to the theatre to see beautiful women, then martial movies are probably not the best for them: women in these movies very frequently get sweating, get bruised and get bleeding during fighting, which is going to impair their stereotypic impressions of submissive beauties. Nevertheless, now we all could see that women are not just vases, and that they have the ability to do what men are capable of.



Website:

  • Alexandra’s blog, “Horror Movie Coolie: Milla Jovovich in Resident Evil (2002)” Thursday, February 17, 2011 http://scare-tactic.blogspot.com/2011/02/horror-movie-coolie-milla-jovovich-in.html
  • Darryl Knickrehm (aka Dariru) “Kill Bill: Vol 2 (2004)” Friday, May 20, 2011 http://knickrehm.blogspot.com/2011/05/kill-bill-vol-2-2004.html
  • Dreamstime website, “KungFu Bruce Lee” wall paper, 2000-2001 http://www.dreamstime.com/royalty-free-stock-photography-kungfu-bruce-lee-image6979337

1 comment:

  1. The title is very creative and makes me want to read more. The movie business is a very common media outlet and many people will be intrigued, especially since it is about how women are being portrayed as more action and fighting figures. The main idea is that is is becoming more common for women to be the ‘bad girl’ rather than the pretty standby. Chu supports this claim with two movies in particular: Kill Bill and Resident Evil. By discussing the movie posters, her main idea is clear. There are five paragraphs of Chu’s post and each focus on one aspect of women in action movies yet tie together. The paragraph about Resident Evil does not open the topic as well as the paragraph about Kill Bill. Her stance and the color of the poster should be compared and contrasted before the actress’s particular outfit. I have never seen either of these movies and a small summary may be useful for a full understanding of the women’s roles in each of these movies. The language use id good and ties together what we are learning in class to the media chosen. The last paragraph needs a little work, tying all the pieces together. Although women are having a larger role in action/killer movies, it is not a complete generalization yet and men still go to these movies for the women. Lastly, the blog uses visuals well yet I think that they should be beside the paragraphs. The pictures in the center break up the flow of the blog post and make it harder to read continuously.

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