Bio
I am a blogger, vlogger, writer and life long learner. I  finds no greater pleasure than to sniff library dust on a regular basis. And make vide...
 
 
 
 

What’s Hot on BlogHer.com

Cinema Studies – Would You Watch A Chick Flick?

  • Share This Post
  • submit
  • 4
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

My initial answer is usually “No.” In my head a so-called “chick flick” is fluffy, superficial and it reeks of girly-girl craziness in pursuit of beefcake. Or so I have been told. If I dig a little deeper inside of myself I think “How do I know this?” Well, movie reviewers and critics, mostly male but some female critics have passively taught me the negative confines of a chick flick. So I wonder, do women see movies differently than men?

Cinema Studies is many things from how each element in a film contributes to the creation of an movie experience to the importance of a film against the context of its time. Let me start with an movie that I was guilty of pre-judging when I saw the initial ads and reviews.

The Notebook is based on the novel by Nicholas Sparks.  Had no prior knowledge of Mr. Sparks work.  I might have seen the commercials for the movie and read a few of the reviews. It was enough to cause me to dismiss spending money on the film. That was a mistake. This is the trailer for the film: 

About a year ago I saw the movie on television. Loved it. I couldn’t figure out how I had missed it.  Looking back at the reviews I can see why. I was told that it was sweet, corny and well worth the risk of diabetic shock?  Yowser!

I found that the movie invited me into the past and the present with a love story involving class, wealth, loss and the endurance of love. The same qualities that I found in Casablanca, The Quiet Man and What Dreams May Come. For me, it was the story and the craftsmanship used to tell the story.  If the movie touched me in a positive way but creeped out some of the men that reviewed it does that make it a bad movie?

It could be that to a professional movie reviewer who has seen a lot of movies this was a paint by the numbers job. For myself who spent umpteen years watching the Late, Late Show and knows a turkey movie when I see one, I don’t think this was the case. How many good films might have been ignored because they didn’t resonate with the perceptions of the predominately male reviewers? I don’t know. I don’t even know if it is a fair question.

If, on the other hand, watching the movie makes you feel bad about your love life (or lack thereof) is it a good movie because it re-enforces cultural memes about finding true, everlasting love? Shannon at Three Girls Grown Up pulled a double whammy on herself. She read the book and viewed the movie.

So there is the subjective way to view film and an objective way to see a film. For students learning filmmaking there is process you can employ to really understand how the film was crafted. Tendrape at the Communications and Culture Blog reviewed the film looking at how certain decisions were made to invoke mood and experience.  She also looked at how certain mythologies are conveyed in the film:

This movie reinforces attitudes that go along with other popular films today like encouragement for the underdog and living the American Dream. Even though Noah is not working to become a millionaire or something with money which most often is associated with the American Dream, he doesn’t stop trying to get Allie back and eventually all his enduring efforts paid off similar to the dreams goals panning out in the end.

Women who love film/cinema/movies might bring a different perspective on what the see in a movie. They can also shine a light on forgotten or ignored film history. Here are some examples.

Other Cinema Blogs That Inform

Stacia at She Blogged By Night gives a review and critique of BorderTown. Stacia intertwines a synopsis of the movie with how Bette Davis performance in the film enhances or detracts from the presentation.  There is also a mention of the racism directed toward Latinos in the 1930s in the film. Raquelle from Out Of The Past, A Classic Film Blog uses the 1961 movie, The Young Savages to focus in on how Puerto Ricans are portrayed in New York City, 30 years away from BorderTown.

Raquelle has another great post about the dilemma of just focusing

  • 4
  • Sparkle (
    )
     

Comments

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest
Gena Haskett 6 pts

I agree with you. Women don't go because there isn't enough content produced for them other than "I gotta get a man quick" movies. I'm not paying $12 to see women chased, sliced and diced.

The industry admits that they are targeting the portion of the population that will spend money on things that go boom or watching the skimpy babe patrol blink before their eyes.

This group will see a movie again and again and will buy items associated with the movie. That is why we are seeing frat boy comedies. slasher flicks and American Pie-ish type movies. There isn't the range of movie making that there use to be.

Gena - Out On The Stoop ( http://outonthestoop.blogspot.com )

JChandler 5 pts

It is interesting that we have assigned these terms at all to movies.

I am in debates more often than not about movies due to living with a self professed movie buff. Also, I am constantly on a quest to find something with more women in the films, especially where they manage to keep there clothes on. I have seen enough Hollywood actresses T & A to last me quite awhile thanks :)

The trailers and reviews, like you eluded to, are not necessarily a good predictor of whats to come. I'm in the over forty age bracket; if the film is too girly and youth centric it fails to peak my interest. If it is too male centric, as most are, I can't find anything to identify with in the characters or the story. I'm not understanding the fascination with robots and comic characters either so what is a good flick these days?

I'm beyond the princess who finds her prince, the girl in distress who needs saving by a man and the sex in my city goes on without me. Here's hoping "the flicks" of the future get a little more inclusive and more intelligently creative.

My husband argues that women don't really go to the movies so that is why there are more for men. I tend to think we would get see or rent more if you gave us all something better to see than fluff, buff and eye-candy.

Gena Haskett 6 pts

And there was some great women films of the 40s & 50s. Nobody put the hate on those movies because the intended audience was women. I think many reviewers today do just that.

I don't think of Grant/Hepburn movies as chick flicks or anything with Barbara Stanwyck as a lessor movie because she was the lead performer or the plot was focused on her.

The difference between Sex & the City - to me a chick flick I'm not in the demographic for and a great film like Black Narcissus is huge. They don't make films that operate on a grand scale for women any more.

There is more to life than CG and blue screen effects.

Hopping off the soapbox now,

Gena - Out On The Stoop ( http://outonthestoop.blogspot.com )

Virginia DeBolt 5 pts

I think the only good stories are stories about love. That could be romantic love, love for children, parents, friends, even an idea. Love. Not explosions or car chases. Love.

The last movie I saw was "The Visitor" which is a wonderful story about love between a lonely college professor and some illegal immigrants he discovers living in his vacation home. Themes include race, immigration, American foreign policy, fear of Muslims, music, and the transforming power of love. There's no happy Hollywood ending here. But I would classify it as a chick flick because it's about relationships.

Before that, I just saw "Last Chance Harvey." This is an obvious "love story" from the outset--read 'chick flick.' Two unlikely people finding each other at a point rather late in life is the plot. Themes around parenting and finding a true purpose in life are involved. Dustin Hoffman is charming and relaxed in this film, a role he doesn't often get to play. Emma Thompson is so wonderful, she's beyond wonderful. Sure you know at the start that they will be together in the end--it's a romantic comedy after all--but it brings enough to the topic with issues around age and risk that it's a great story for grown ups.

I'll choose even a crappy chick flick over almost anything filled with explosions.

Virginia DeBolt
BlogHer CE ( http://www.blogher.com/blog/virginia-debolt )
Web Teacher ( http://www.webteacher.ws/ )
First 50 Words ( http://first50.wordpress.com/ )