1) Boobs 2) ??? 3) Death

I get that it’s totally cliche and well-understood to point out that teen slasher movies, of the Friday the 13th and Halloween variety, seem to have a disturbing fascination with punishing young women for having sex. But there’s a side to this trend that I don’t think has been discussed quite as much, and is frankly even more disturbing to me.

While it’s annoying on a certain level that you can watch Nancy’s friend having sex in A Nightmare on Elm Street and literally just know that she’s about to die, there’s also a certain endearing quality to the way your old-school teen slasher movies tried to preach Sunday School morality even as they gleefully ripped people to pieces. It’s not forgivable or, needless to say, persuasive, but it’s amusing in much the same way that your cranky old grandfather is amusing.

But the dull predictability of sexy female deaths in B-movies up to the present day has long since worn out its welcome. And the side to this trend that I was referring to, the one that bothers me far more than it amuses me (because as to the latter, it doesn’t), is that modern B-movies seem determined to convince us that not only will psychopathic serial killers target young women who are ostensibly sluts, but that the very forces of nature themselves conspire to punish women for such crimes as necking, bathing, and not being entirely dressed. Observe:

boobs=death

 

So basically, even piranhas, crocodiles, and, uh, ghosts target women who commit the crime of not keeping their breasts under wraps at all times. I wouldn’t be inferring any kind of social commentary from this trend if it weren’t so depressingly predictable. And the fact that the women so often die while naked sure seems to suggest that the death and gore are an integral part of the porn. I think our culture gets off not only on seeing boobs, but on punishing women for letting them.

As an antidote, I recommend Teeth, a movie that punishes men for being rapists and douchebags rather than women for having bodies.

Why yes, we do live in a culture where rape is more acceptable than consensual sex

Duke Nukem Forever box coverThat’s right, it’s another Duke Nukem Forever post. But I’m not really interested in discussing the content of the game itself, except briefly. Yes, it’s horrifying. That much is well established. Instead, I’d rather put the game in a certain context – a context that doesn’t justify the game or its content by any means, but does point to some disturbing trends in our culture.

Anna at A Random String of Bits covers does a good job covering the nature of the content of the game, and at one point she quotes a particularly enlightening Destructoid review:

…at times, the game’s attempts to be funny come off as downright horrific. One level in particular takes place in an alien nest where Earth’s women are being inseminated by giant penises. The women writhe and moan in a fairly humiliating fashion, and they regularly sob with no small amount of implied misery. In essence, the women look like they’re getting raped. In fact, they are. That’s the big joke of the level. The aliens are raping the women to create babies… By the time Duke Nukem finally makes a “You’re fucked,” joke, which he makes in front of two girls who are about to die in the process of getting sexually assaulted, Duke does not come across as cool, witty or likable in the least. He comes across as a vile, callous, thoroughly detestable psychopath.

In itself none of this is incredibly surprising – though certainly it’s very disturbing. The game walks the player through the kind of scenery described above, but the game does not allow you to attempt to rescue the women, nor does it seem to understand that you might want to. (Well, you can kill them to put them out of their misery.) What kind of hero does that make Duke? Well, as Destructoid says, certainly not a likable one.

DNF takes the “damsel in distress” trope to an extreme, and not in some clever, deconstructionist way so much as just a stomach-churning way. The women in the game are literally objects with no agency whatsoever. Say what you will about Alyx Vance, but Valve at least acknowledges that women are people.

And you know something – just as an aside? I’m fucking sick of seeing this kind of shit put out time and time again with a bunch of boilerplate proclamations about how it’s “manly” and a “celebration of masculinity.” That’s the line we’re fed over and over when a game or movie comes out; the people behind them act like masculinity doesn’t get celebrated enough in our culture. It does (more than enough, by far), and I’m tired of being told that the way to celebrate my penis is by pretending that it’s what makes me worthy of regard as a human.

But anyway, in the blog post linked above, Anna said something that helped me put this vile shit in context:

I would suggest that, if we’re going to have a rating system at all, the ESRB’s rating of M is dismissive of the seriousness of rape; this game should absolutely be AO.

Well yes, obviously. But it’s not, and I agree that giving Duke an M rating despite featuring on-screen graphic rape is incredibly dismissive of the seriousness of rape. But what disturbs me even more is the kind of games that do get an AO rating in the US. The first one that jumped to my mind was Fahrenheit, which we in the US know as Indigo Prophecy. Some content was cut from Indigo Prophecy in order to avoid its initial AO rating, and that content was… a single consensual sex scene. (Well, also the shower scene shows Carla’s nipples in the non-US version.) The ESRB’s reasoning was that the sex scene was interactive, but I don’t care how interactive it is, because it doesn’t feature murdering women who are in the process of being raped. In my mind that makes it a fair bit less “adults only” than DNF.

Similar censorship occurred in the case of The Witcher. Its US release also had a lot of content cut out (all of which was later reinstated in a downloadable patch, fortunately), because there’s a hell of a lot of sex in that game. The Witcher has received criticism from some for its protagonist’s philandering ways, the way he seemingly treats women as conquests, and the way the game itself portrays those women (admittedly, there does seem to be a correlation between a woman’s breast size in the game and how likely she is to be horny for Geralt). But again, however you feel about the portrayal of sex in The Witcher, it’s all consensual. And yet that gets censored and DNF gets a pass.

Are you starting to notice a trend here? It’s almost like our culture reacts more strongly to depictions of consensual sex than it does to depictions of rape! And yes, it does, because while rape scenes may be portraying violence, consensual sex scenes are portraying women with subjectivity and agency, making sexual choices for themselves, and as we all know that’s way worse. Let’s take a peek outside of the world of video games for a final example:

Emily Browning was left fuming after her sex scene with Jon Hamm in Sucker Punch was axed from the upcoming action movie in a bid to please U.S. censors. [...]

She tells Nylon magazine, “I had a very tame and mild love scene with Jon Hamm. It was like heavy breathing and making out. It was hardly a sex scene… I think that it’s great for this young girl to actually take control of her own sexuality. Well, the MPAA doesn’t like that. They don’t think a girl should ever be in control of her own sexuality because they’re from the Stone Age. I don’t know what the f**k is going on and I will openly criticize it, happily. So essentially, they got Zack to edit the scene and make it look less like she’s into it. And Zack said he edited it down to the point where it looked like he was taking advantage of her. That’s the only way he could get a PG-13 (rating) and he said, ‘I don’t want to send that message.’ So they cut the scene!”

I respect Zack Snyder for that. And that’s pretty much all I respect Zack Snyder for. But yes, just to reiterate, consensual sex = R, while rape = PG-13. What a lovely country we live in.

This is the American idea of morality

I got to this controvery a little late, so perhaps my point is moot. But I don’t think so, because it suggests a general principle to me about America’s idea of morality.

The controversy in question, and you may have heard about it by now, is the app that was sold through the iTunes App Store that promised to help gay people become straight. Now, the app has already been removed by Apple, so like I said, the controversy is kind of over. But I still think we can observe something significant from this. From the first story:

The app seeks to help gay individuals become heterosexual. It received a ’4′ rating from Apple, which indicates the company considered the app to contain ‘no objectionable material.’

Here’s why I have a problem with this: Apple has been waging a very inconsistent battle over nudity in the App Store. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of rhyme or reason to what gets banned and what stays, but the overall message is that Apple does not like boobs. That’s their right, and if they want to keep boobs out of their App Store, it’s their business. I think it’s a bad choice, but it’s their choice.

What I want to call into question is that Apple apparently believes that nudity does constitute “objectionable material,” while homophobia does not. I’m not saying either one should be censored. I’m not saying nobody finds boobs offensive, or that everybody finds homophobia offensive.

But Apple’s kneejerk reaction to nudity appears to be, “We’d better block this, because somebody might find it offensive.” Whereas they appear not to have this response to homophobia. They were wrong about that, and they’ve responded to the offense others have expressed over the gay cure app. That’s fine and dandy. What’s not fine and dandy is that they initially felt that there was nothing objectionable about the homophobia in the first place, while there is something objectionable about boobs.

That’s morality in America, something that I got into when I discussed censorship in my very first post. People are terribly concerned that their child might see a breast, but evidently not concerned that their child will be exposed to bigotry. We as a society need to seriously rethink our value system.

Movie Analysis: Man, Woman, and the Wall

Man, Woman, and the Wall posterIMDb Page

Watch it on Netflix (if you have Netflix)

Man, Woman, and the Wall is a Japanese movie I stumbled across on Netflix while looking for gratuitous nudity. In this particular case, I found a great deal of nudity, but none gratuitous.

Now, the distinction between gratuitous and non-gratuitous nudity is not incredibly important to me. The moral ambivalence at the core of American culture thrives on the term, because people want to see boobs, but they also feel they need a justification for that desire beyond the desire itself. So they imagine that enjoying nudity that’s “necessary” to the plot of the movie is less prurient and juvenile.

The truth, of course, is that nudity is never necessary to the plot. The plot of a movie – or a book, or anything else that has a plot – is not sacrosanct and is almost never inevitable. Yes, this includes the plot of any Shakespeare play, any great novel, and any classic movie. If a director doesn’t want to show boobs, they can change the plot of the movie to avoid it, and it’s entirely possible that the movie won’t be any worse for it. Or, if they want to titillate the audience without getting an R-rating, and are willing to sacrifice verisimilitude for that purpose, they’ll do something idiotic like depict a stripper who doesn’t strip, or a woman who just had sex with her lover but keeps her breasts carefully covered.

That being said, the nudity in Man, Woman, and the Wall is entirely necessary. It’s not necessary to the plot. You could easily write a movie about voyeurism without actually showing any nudity – turn to the Lifetime Channel right now and there’s about an even chance that you’ll see an example. But that movie wouldn’t be about what this movie is about. A Lifetime movie about voyeurism, a squeaky clean one with plenty of implied, above-the-shoulders nudity, reinforces the cultural norm; it allows the viewer to watch at a safe distance, condemning the antagonist without participating in his crime. In a sense, this is antithetical to the visual nature of television.

A movie like Man, Woman, and the Wall attempts to be much more challenging to those norms, and in some ways it succeeds. It doesn’t defy or condemn the voyeurism taboo, but it questions it by placing the viewer in the middle of it and examining its boundaries. Less than five minutes into the movie, Ryo has already started deliberately listening in on his next-door neighbor through their mutual wall. This entirely non-visual form of voyeurism tends to raise fewer red flags for the moralists, but in a sense it’s more unsettling because it’s less clear what Ryo gets from it. At the very least, his intent is clearly sexual – he masturbates while listening in more than once.

Ryo is hardly a noble protagonist. In fact, he’s pretty creepy. But you can’t watch the movie and condemn his actions at the same time, because as the viewer, you’re getting much more titillation out of it than he is. As he listens to Satsuki shower, we actually see it, with the camera panning sensuously up her body, prominently displaying her breasts for several seconds. To paraphrase Professor Farnsworth, who’s the real voyeur?

Television is an inherently voyeuristic medium even outside of a sexual context, a fact which is more obvious than ever in the recent glut of reality TV and shows filmed in a pseudo-documentary style. Americans attempt to deny this fact by maintaining a superficial, entirely visual level of censorship which does nothing to truly mask the sexual nature of the content. Man, Woman, and the Wall exposes this false distinction by breaking that thin veneer of censorship. If Ryo can masturbate while simply listening to Satsuki having sex, are we really getting anything more explicit because we also see it?

Admittedly, the visual element of the medium allows for some easy shortcuts. A master writer like Nabakov can force this sort of participation on us through words alone; even if we don’t really sympathize with Humbert Humbert (as we shouldn’t), when reading Lolita we can feel the same charismatic pull that allows Humbert to win the trust of everyone around him. By addressing his narrative to his jury, he attempts to place on the reader a responsibility to judge his actions without the kneejerk reaction to pedophilia most people feel in their gut.

I say all this to point out that, in place of such artistry, the director of Man, Woman, and the Wall pretty much gets his point across by showing boobs. I won’t pretend it’s any more than it is – it’s boobs. Attractive boobs, no less. They’re shown with an intent to arouse the portion of the audience that likes boobs. It’s the bald directness of this fact that conveys the point, however.*

What the director does deserve credit for, on the other hand, is his insightful portrayal of the motivations of a voyeur. Oddly enough, I’m not talking about Ryo here. The story of his relationship with Satsuki is a bit of unconvincing romantic comedy fare tolerable primarily because of the presence of boobs. But Satsuki’s boyfriend, Yuta, also turns out to be a voyeur, and he turns out to be one of the real-life kinds of voyeur. This revelation makes the otherwise whimsical movie take a turn for the ugly.

What the director exposes through Yuta is that, like virtually every male-controlled gender interaction, voyeurism is ultimately about power. While the act of seeing his own sexually intimate girlfriend naked seems innocent on the surface, Yuta gets off on the lack of consent. From the beginning of the movie, Satsuki is being sexually harassed by a telephone stalker. After every call, she gets scared and calls Yuta over to comfort her. It’s no real surprise when Yuta turns out to be the caller; his clandestine stalking is not some quirky attempt to see her more often, but a malicious act of control. Later, he installs a camera and microphone in her apartment without her knowledge. This time, when he calls her as her stalker, he watches her on his computer and masturbates, and for the first time, he declines to come to her apartment to comfort her. Instead, now that he has the camera, he chooses to remain the voyeur so that the lack of consent can be maintained.

His obsession with control becomes more obvious when Satsuki begins defying his expectations. Satsuki and Ryo eventually become friends, with her still unaware that he’s listening in on her, and when Satsuki eats dinner at Ryo’s apartment one night, Yuta becomes enraged. He’s angry not because she’s eating dinner with another guy, but because she’s not in her apartment when he expects her to be, and thus not subject to his unconsented watching.

What follows is the most disturbing scene of the movie. When Yuta arrives at Satsuki’s apartment, he’s desperate to take control of Satsuki back, and so he forces her to bed. With her wrists bound as Yuta has sex with her, she weepingly says, “I don’t want this.” The movie allows no ambiguity that this is an act of rape.

The connection between voyeurism and rape is one that few people pick up on, which is why I was impressed when this movie did. Now, I’m certainly not saying that all voyeurs are rapists. But am I saying that voyeurism and rape are related? Yes, very much so. Not in the sense that conservative moralists mean it – I’ve seen the term “visual rape” used to describe voyeurism before, and that’s bullshit. Voyeurism is not rape, and the idea that it is is based on a fundamentalist concept of feminine purity, a belief that no man should see a woman naked except her husband.

But I’m not being soft on voyeurism here. It stems very much from the same set of motivations as rape: power, control, objectification. It’s an assertion that the female body exists for the enjoyment of men, when and where the men want it, whether or not the woman wants it. It’s an assertion that women aren’t entitled to privacy, because that privacy inhibits the control over them that men are entitled to.

Privacy is the crucial distinction here, because I don’t believe that appreciating a woman’s body is necessarily sexist or objectifying. If a woman is naked on a beach, or on a movie screen, or in any other public or semi-public context, looking at her is hardly a crime. But if she’s in a place where she should be able to expect privacy, to violate that privacy is a crime. I’ll even take this point further than some would: if you look out your window and see a woman next door undressing through her window, looking is not wrong. If that view is available to you on your own property, letting those photons hit your retinas is not going to hurt anyone. It might be considered creepy or, by many, rude, but the key fact here is that the viewer is not in control. He can’t decide when the naked woman will be visible, or if she’ll be visible – she decides that.

The line is crossed when the viewer decides to seize control, by planting cameras, by sneaking onto the woman’s property in order to peek through her blinds, or by drilling a hole in her wall. This is why, like rape, voyeurism is about control.

This all leads up to a critical difference between Yuta and Ryo. Ryo hears Satsuki through her wall and listens – while creepy, this isn’t a violation. Pressing a microphone against the wall is a lot more ambiguous, ethically speaking, but whatever your opinion on that, I have no real desire to defend Ryo in this situation. What’s important is that he doesn’t listen to Satsuki in an attempt to control her, but in an attempt to know her. He wants to sincerely learn about her, and when they finally truly meet, he treats her as a person rather than an object, as Yuta does.

Don’t get me wrong – while Ryo’s a decent guy in the movie, I don’t believe for a second that this sort of thing happens in the real world. If I knew a guy who obsessively listened to his next-door neighbor through the wall, I’d think he was a bit of a creeper and also assume he was a stalker. In fact, Ryo crosses pretty blatantly into stalker territory when he starts tracking Satsuki’s movements. To his credit, at least, he doesn’t harass her or make repeated, unwanted contact with her. He respects her wishes, not as a delicate woman who needs a man’s protection, but as another person to whom he happens to be attracted.

But I simply don’t find that kind of character believable, and this is where the movie breaks down. But in pretty much all other ways, I found Man, Woman, and the Wall to be an incisive examination of voyeurism and gender politics, and more importantly, a movie that punches a hole in the wall of defenses that the patriarchy builds to protect and justify men who thrive on controlling women.

*Incidentally, this is also the reason that neither of the two Lolita movies is any good. If you can’t look at a naked 12-year-old girl without feeling like Humbert, this is something about yourself you should probably be aware of before you judge Humbert. Hopefully you can, but neither movie is willing to challenge the audience in this way.