The Bechdel Test

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Yuuki

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The Bechdel Test plays absolutely no role in how much I enjoy or dislike a movie or how "trendy" something has become (or becoming). There is a lot more works of media than can be covered by a simplified set of rules.

It has no meaningful relevance to anything or anyone.


Unless of course you're a radical/extreme feminist, in which case you will already find the very air you breathe filled with sexism/misogyny so I can't help you there :p
 

josemlopes

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Arent most of the writters men or something? It kind of makes sense that they might not try to write women dialog.

See Seven Psychopaths were they lampshade that.
 

Lieju

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I think it's a useful test in showing the trends, or looking at movies that have a large cast and a lot of dialogue (like LOTR).

It's like a starting point for criticism, or pointing out something that easily goes unnoticed.
It's not a simple test for misogynism or whether the movie is feminist or good.

electric_warrior said:
Again, a series of serious dramas and films with strong female protagonists could fail the test while a series of fluffy romcoms could pass despite being distinctively more patronising and lacking in positive role models. The bechdel test can tell us how many women were talking to other women, but not the heft of their role or how important they were to the plot. As such, any conclusions you can draw from it are pretty hollow.
Well, it does take into account of female characters having characterization outside of their relationships to men.

josemlopes said:
Arent most of the writters men or something? It kind of makes sense that they might not try to write women dialog.

See Seven Psychopaths were they lampshade that.
That's why when I write stuff all of my characters are female. Because men are just so weird with their alien thought-processes and odd language.
Almost like they aren't human.
 

Images

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That's why when I write stuff all of my characters are female. Because men are just so weird with their alien thought-processes and odd language.
Almost like they aren't human.
Have to leave this here...

 

KOMega

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I think the test is more like a Litmus test for movies in general than for one movie in particular.
Where you would use it to test if there is a problem, rather than test for a specific problem.

Okay, so woman are not represented well or enough in films.
Trying to fulfilling the Bechdel does not fix a film or make it non-sexist.

Performing the test on a wide range of movies will give you an indicator that something might be wrong and deserves more analysis.
 

Schadrach

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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.
What makes it funnier is the number of people who take it seriously enough that when movies they don't like pass, they seek to extend the conditions of the test to make it fail.

Or even better, when they start looking for reasons to fail a movie. For example, I once read an argument about whether or not two female characters talking about a clue written on a photo counted or not. The issue was that it was a photo of a group of men, but they weren't talking about the people in the photo, but what was written on it. The movie was SAW 2.

Or my personal favorite, listening to people engage in some incredibly convoluted mental gymnastics to make Sucker Punch fail their modified Bechdel test, while still allowing something else to pass.
 

Thaluikhain

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electric_warrior said:
But if it cannot say anything about the merits of the film itself, what can it say about movies as a whole? If you want to judge the portrayal of women in films in terms of raw numbers, then the Bechdel test is a good test, but if you actually want to look at the way they are portrayed and the way they act, then it isn't at all good. So yeah, it illustrates trends, but very vague trends that aren't all that useful.

Again, a series of serious dramas and films with strong female protagonists could fail the test while a series of fluffy romcoms could pass despite being distinctively more patronising and lacking in positive role models. The bechdel test can tell us how many women were talking to other women, but not the heft of their role or how important they were to the plot. As such, any conclusions you can draw from it are pretty hollow.
Well, yes, but that was the point. A quick and easy way to obtain raw numbers. Any attempt to go any deeper than that would be much more complicated, and very subjective.

In of itself, it was never meant to be very insightful, just to illustrate one point.
 

AuronFtw

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torno said:
Huh, I've never heard of this test and you know what?
I think more films should throw this little criteria in. Not *all* movies from here on out, just more. I would say "all", but then my favorite movie of all time doesn't make the cut.
Anyway.
Yeah, I could do with more movies throwing in those three little check-boxes.
You really don't want to tread down this dark path; forcing directors/studios to follow a checklist of "xyz must be included in 'most' movies" will do far more harm than good. Simply forcing women into movies via checklist will not give them the true and honest representation that's needed; the story has to be crafted, from the beginning, with them in mind. Coming at the writers with a checklist and being all "hey your script is good and all but it would be 1000% better if it had, like, 2 women in it, talking about tampons or periods or whatever women talk about, k?"

I mean... really. You know that's what's going to happen with that checklist approach.
 

Extra-Ordinary

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AuronFtw said:
torno said:
Huh, I've never heard of this test and you know what?
I think more films should throw this little criteria in. Not *all* movies from here on out, just more. I would say "all", but then my favorite movie of all time doesn't make the cut.
Anyway.
Yeah, I could do with more movies throwing in those three little check-boxes.
You really don't want to tread down this dark path; forcing directors/studios to follow a checklist of "xyz must be included in 'most' movies" will do far more harm than good. Simply forcing women into movies via checklist will not give them the true and honest representation that's needed; the story has to be crafted, from the beginning, with them in mind. Coming at the writers with a checklist and being all "hey your script is good and all but it would be 1000% better if it had, like, 2 women in it, talking about tampons or periods or whatever women talk about, k?"

I mean... really. You know that's what's going to happen with that checklist approach.
Well, I guess "criteria" was the wrong way to put it.
I think a better way to say it is that it would be nice if more filmmakers gave a little more thought to this test when making a movie.
 

leviathanmisha

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OlasDAlmighty said:
What about movies that are set in time periods where women weren't supposed to speak up? Would you blame them for not having vocal female characters even though it's simply a reality of that period?

What about war movies? The US military used to be men only.
I know certain parts of the internet would. And honestly, this is something that comes up in my day to day (I'm a history major) and I can not began to even count the number of water bottles and other assorted objects that I've lost to chucking them across the classroom at people who would rather hold up class, arguing about how they think that it's offensive that they need to learn about how women used to be marginalized to an extreme degree.

OT: I hate the Bechdel Test down to my very soul. I don't know if it's just my school or what, but I've been stuck in so many history classes with people, who during a movie (usually a documentary of some type), will raise their hand and complain about how the documentary doesn't pass the Bechdel Test. And then the six or so ACTUAL history majors (history is an incredibly hard program to get into at my school) will usually stare at that person with the most condescending look that we can, because for Christ's sake, it's a freaking documentary about the Civil War!!

TL;DR: Basically, people who take that test too seriously are the bane of my existence and I hate the fact that I have to deal with them on a day to day basis.
 

Thaluikhain

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leviathanmisha said:
OT: I hate the Bechdel Test down to my very soul. I don't know if it's just my school or what, but I've been stuck in so many history classes with people, who during a movie (usually a documentary of some type), will raise their hand and complain about how the documentary doesn't pass the Bechdel Test. And then the six or so ACTUAL history majors (history is an incredibly hard program to get into at my school) will usually stare at that person with the most condescending look that we can, because for Christ's sake, it's a freaking documentary about the Civil War!!
You mean the Civil war in general, or just the militaries involved? Women were involved in the former, if not really with the latter.
 

Nickolai77

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The Bechdel test obviously has its limitations in some contexts. Films like Master and Commander or Das Boot "fail" the test, but it would make little sense for such films set in historically exclusively male environments to pass the Bechdel in the first place. There's also films which are obviously designed to appeal to chiefly male or female audiences (e.g- action films and rom-com's) so the sex ratio's arn't going to be 50:50, and there's less of a chance of same-gender dialogue.

It is however a useful test to apply to films to examine the quality and depth of female characters. There's a tendency for female characters to be written in such a way that they exist only to satisfy the romantic interest of the male lead, as opposed to having their own motivations and ambitions, which makes them one-dimensional characters. Partially for this reason, the gender character ratio's tend to be skewered towards men. Perhaps because the majority of screen writers and directors tend to be men, so there's less female to female dialogue which would otherwise build their character. It's also good way to check wherever the story appeals to both genders. Generally, i think it's better if a story can appeal to both genders because it appeals to a much wider audience.

It's not without it's limitations, but if applied in the correct context it's a useful critical tool.
 

OneCatch

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Just gonna repeat ad nausium that it indicates a trend in film-making on the whole, not the validity of the film itself.

In spite of myself I do find myself working out if films pass or fail. What I tend to do though is add a few more categories:

Pass - as per the test

Technical Pass - not as good as a pass, stuff where it only passes because of a brief and inane conversation between the female lead and a female extra playing a coffee vendor or similar.

Technical Fail - not as bad as a fail, covers circumstances like the film focusing strongly on one or two characters (Moon for example), or random stuff the female character being mute or something. Not used to justify larger all-male casts except in the case of historical dramas or similar.

Fail - as per the test

It makes it a slightly better measure than the original test, though you still get some glaring exceptions.
 

generals3

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Images said:
Watch the following video...

Now, we're all on the same page, what do you think about the Bechdel test and film? Can you think of a better test for the same purpose? What well loved films can you name that fulfil or don't fulfil its criteria.

Aaaaand so on...
I have a problem... I usually watch action or sci-fi movies. Two well known male genres. I'm fairly certain i could name a lot if i had more "feminine" tastes.

But i could already bring up GI Joe Retaliation (saw it recently so my memory is fresh enough to be 100% sure it passed the test). A typical testosterone movie and yet it easily passed. Pointless test is pointless if you ask me.
 

V8 Ninja

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Azurelord707 said:
Well... besides this:
*link snip*
Felt it was appropriate.
You sure you can post those types of links on the Escapist? I'm not going to argue it's relevancy as I refuse to listen to it, but you probably should browse the rules of conduct and evaluate your account longevity based on that comments existence.
 

Angie7F

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Comicon may be cut to 45 minutes or less, but anime is filled with many female characters that have some good conversations about things other than men.

Eva (Asuka, Rei, Misato and Ritsuko), Madoko Magica ( Mami, Madoka and the rest of the girls excluding QB), Attack on Titans etc.
Also Maria sama ga miteru, Galaxy Angels, Hetai Ouji, Sakura so, Higurashi, P4 all have multiple female characters that talk to each other alot about fighting evil, solving crimes etc.

Even One Piece, Bleach, naruto have enough charaters and dialogue to pass the test.
But does it make it any less male oriented than hollywood movies that fail the test?

Now it makes me wonder if maybe anime so over sexist that it is less sexist in a weird way.
 

Something Amyss

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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.