Is it just me, or do all those prominently feature hot, violent, dangerous, often insane and/or criminal male characters? Is this just a massive self-own?
Fight Club and American Psycho were based on books written by men. Any bets on this poster even knowing they're film adaptations of previously existing novels?
The screenplay for Fight Club was written by a man and it was directed by a man. There is no evidence of any female influence in either Fight Club the book or Fight Club the movie.
The screenplay and direction for American psycho were done by women. I'm not sure that really means anything, as it fairly faithfully captures about the first half of the novel.
The novel was written in the 1980s as a critique of consumer culture, which is why Patrick Bateman has these weird interludes where he goes into depth about CDs and songs. It's even more apparent in the book where he describes what brand of clothes everyone is wearing in each encounter, and there are more interludes that talk about things like his CD player.
False. Clearly no man could ever write something nuanced, and men could never understand complexity. Up until women came into the discussion and saved it, those were all just about mindless violence and glorifying sexism and stuff. /s
Hahahahaha.
Is it just me, or do all those prominently feature hot, violent, dangerous, often insane and/or criminal male characters? Is this just a massive self-own?
Nuanced? Seriously?
Fight Club and American Psycho were based on books written by men. Any bets on this poster even knowing they're film adaptations of previously existing novels?
The screenplay for Fight Club was written by a man and it was directed by a man. There is no evidence of any female influence in either Fight Club the book or Fight Club the movie.
The screenplay and direction for American psycho were done by women. I'm not sure that really means anything, as it fairly faithfully captures about the first half of the novel.
The novel was written in the 1980s as a critique of consumer culture, which is why Patrick Bateman has these weird interludes where he goes into depth about CDs and songs. It's even more apparent in the book where he describes what brand of clothes everyone is wearing in each encounter, and there are more interludes that talk about things like his CD player.
False. Clearly no man could ever write something nuanced, and men could never understand complexity. Up until women came into the discussion and saved it, those were all just about mindless violence and glorifying sexism and stuff. /s