Images said:
Can you think of a better test for the same purpose?
I think we'd be better off not dedicating time to arbitrary rulesets to define movies and other media in the first place. After all, a feminist movie can fail this and a misogynist movie can pass it. Incidentally, despite what is said in the video, the characters are not required to even be named. There are many variations, including ones that dictate the length of the conversation, but the basic test doesn't require much. In fact, the test's threshold is ridiculously low, which I imagine is why it's used in the first place: with how low it is, you'd think more movies would pass it. At the same time, it's probably not telling anyone who pays attention to "The Rule" anything they don't already know: Women are underrepresented in media and generally only characterised as it relates to men.
That second part can be kind of tricky, though, as a lot of characterisation "tropes" are already built around that concept. People treat it as a paradigm shift when it probably shouldn't be that hard.
Taken as it was earliest used, though, it's probably the best test available to demosntrate what people attempted to demonstrate by adopting it: that women don't really matter much in most movies.
Dangit2019 said:
Ah yes, the Bechdel test. When it was made, it was to make a point about women's gross representation in movies, and now some people actually take it completely at face value.
Look, there are so many variables to decide what a good representation of women in a movie is. Fuckin' Before Sunrise doesn't pass a single aspect of the test, because it was just Julie Delpy and Ethan Hawke playing layered characters talking to each other and almost no one else. It still gave a perfectly fine representation of women.
It's a fun little joke and all, but matters like these can't really be accounted for accurately by a cute little rule of thumb.
Actually, it'd be better if people did take it at face value, as it wasn't intended to represent the strength of the women involved or the relative feminist value, or anything even remotely close.
TehCookie said:
Sometimes I just want to see a B action movie with one-liners and explosions.
And what a shame that vaginas are mutually exclusive with both one-liners and explosions, or this could be readily rectified with virtually no effort.
torno said:
Yeah, I could do with more movies throwing in those three little check-boxes.
Are you a Jim Sterling fan?
Genocidicles said:
I don't think it's a good indicator of female inclusion or whatever the hell it's for.
A film could have two awfully written female characters briefly talk to each other about shopping and pass, or a have multiple, amazing female characters that never talk to each other and fail.
Case in point: Twilight passes.
ninjaRiv said:
Anita Sarkeesian did a bit about it, actually. She misses the point but not as badly as some of her critics would want.
she's done more than one. I'm sort of waiting to see her apply it to video games, too. You know it's coming. The thing about this is, her base explanation shows that she gets it (She even points out that this is not a feminist measuring stick, for example). However, pretty much everything else goes off the rails.
direkiller said:
Any test Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS can pass but Star wars can't should not be considered a benchmark for judging if a film is sexist.
It's not about whether or not a film is sexist. As Kermode points out, a movie can fail and still have strong female protagonists (much more useful to feminism than whether two women talk about shoes or the like).
However, when you consider Star Wars only has like two non-stripper women in it (cookie for the reference)....
blackdwarf said:
A better test? Maybe: can you describe this character in more than three sentences?
Probably a more useful application of characterisation.