Not to lesbian purity or something but there are some narratives you can’t ABSOLUTELY write m/m aus of. Revolutionary girl utena? The handmaiden? They are stories centered around the abuse and violence men uphold on women and women finding freedom in the love between them how can you find it appropriate in the slightest to write m/m angst of it??
So these Christian anti-feminist protestors showed up at my school and were just yelling misogynist things at everyone, when this guy suddenly walks up in front of them mid-rant and just starts…. singing opera
In most cases racist and misogynists like Rian and the Russo
brothers can avoid having to deal with this through their writing and
casting, but in both the cases of TLJ and IW they had a lot of the
foundation forced upon as the de facto state (Finn is Black, Poe is
latino, T’Challa is Black, Gamora is played by a Black woman and so on)
and they kinda have to be part of the story. But none of these men know
how to deal with that or are interested in learning, so we get TLJ and
IW instead 2/2
That makes sense–the very biases that would have rationalized their decision to exclude women and POC would come out in big ways when they have to cast existing female characters and characters of color. Hence the sidelining and what looks to me like outright hate, destroying their prior triumphs and acting like it’s the height of artistry to have them die en masse horribly on screen. Not that I think Gamora for instance was ever treated that well in her prior movies, but this movie’s treatment sounds like another level of hideous.
Then there’s the extra special mix of racism, fetishization, and misogyny that is Rian Russo, who actually made a new character that he insisted had to be a woman of color only to make her every awful stereotype imaginable and fridge her sister horribly in the bargain. I hope he goes to hell for that. 🙂
Just saw the extended version of The Handmaiden and it was worth every single minute. It wasn’t always easy to watch, as per @jewishcomeradebot’s warning, particularly when the story moved to Hideko’s viewpoint. But it was a beautifully crafted story with a happy ending and I loved it.
Spoilers abound from this point onward. TW sexual abuse, suicide
Sook-Hee and Hideko’s first night together was both heartrendingly moving and hilariously funny–funny, in large part, because they had to rely on the paper figure (in so many ways) of Count Fujiwara to initiate sex at all. Of course, the humor works only because of a darker underlying truth; that women are so socialized to see themselves as objects of pleasure and not agents in their own pleasure, that these women had to invoke the male gaze and male pleasure in order to fulfill their own desire for each other.
Having her sexuality subsumed by the male gaze was especially and brutally true for Hideko, of course, who was groomed and abused from childhood to perform the fantasy of men against her will. As Fujiwara points out jocularly to Kouzuki, but with deadly seriousness, she was so well trained she had no desire of her own left. Isn’t her treatment just a grotesquely amplified version of how women are “trained” under patriarchy, though?
This is one reason Hideko’s masturbating before Fujiwara on their “first night” shows how she has changed by claiming her own feelings and desire with Sook-Hee. Rather than perform Fujiwara’s fantasy for him as she had before, she invites him to be a spectator of her own sexual pleasure instead. Hideko’s flashing the knife at Fujiwara before she gets into bed has several layers of meaning. Korean audiences would recognize the symbolism immediately, because highborn Korean women traditionally carried silver-decorated knives to kill themselves with in the event of threatened rape. Much like the act of refusing sex with him, the knife was symbolic of her fidelity to Sook-Hee–though that symbolism would have been lost on Fujiwara and likely on Hideko herself, who was not a Korean woman. She and Fujiwara would have intended and received it as a threat to him if he tried anything. And, of course, it was a continuation of the ruse on Fujiwara, that Sook-Hee was still their unknowing mark.
There’s another level of the masturbation scene that really gets to me: In addition to being a power move on Hideko’s part, it was also an act of intimacy toward him. It was revealing in a way the sex shows she was forced to perform for him and the other guests never could be, because as abusive as those performances were she also revealed nothing of herself in them. As Fujiwara himself commented, she was trained to the point of being dead inside. By refusing to do his desire but instead showing him her own, she had revealed herself more fully to him than she ever had before–as a person with her own will and her own pleasure that had nothing to do with him. If he had realized what it meant and taken the gesture as offered, if he had accepted her as an equal human being and not an object for possession, then his story could have ended very differently.
On that note, I’ll discuss the tragedy of “Count Fujiwara” in the next reblog.
The tragedy of “Count Fujiwara,” of course, begins with the fact that both words are lies. I couldn’t find any source on this character’s actual name, and I suspect that’s the point. The lie has consumed the man so thoroughly that nothing is left of the original identity except the shame of his origin.
I suspect that the man who became Fujiwara, the illegitimate son of a Jeju Island servant and shaman, had no name. At best it would have been something demeaning like “dog turd.” I don’t know if I can even convey to non-Koreans the crushing lowliness of Fujiwara’s background. His father was a servant, which meant pretty much functionally a slave or at best a destitute manual laborer. His mother was a shaman, which carried some spiritual power but also meant she was despised as spiritually unclean and sexually loose living outside the bounds of patriarchy.
And his parents weren’t just lowlives, they were lowlives from Jeju Island. To the extent people outside of Korea know about the place they think of it as a tourist hotspot, but traditionally it meant poor farmland, crushing poverty, and a distinctive culture that was systematically marginalized and destroyed. Jeju Islanders were crushed underfoot by the mainlanders, and the Japanese happily carried on the exploitation; due to the geographical proximity, Jeju Islanders were taken away en masse to be forced laborers in Japan and elsewhere during the Pacific War. The brutality didn’t end with liberation from Japanese occupation, either. It was the Korean military and right-wing militias sanctioned by them who slaughtered and tortured civilian islanders from 1947 (two years after liberation) to 1954 (after the Korean War) while the U.S. military government looked the other way.
That’s the kind of place Jeju Island occupied in Korean history. That’s the context–endless poverty, marginalization, exploitation, and violence. Fujiwara reinvented himself from the ground up, wiping away that boy who was dirt or turd, the lowest of the low.
(It’s worth noting that the gold mine Kouzuki got in exchange for selling out his country was in Hamkyung Province, which is on the opposite end as Jeju Island–in the far north to the Island’s far south. Hamkyung is another poor and heavily exploited area, and has suffered badly under North Korean rule as well. The cruelty of Japanese occupation reached across the whole of Korea, in other words, and continues in the hands of the Korean elite both North and South.)
I hope this background places Kouzuki’s torture of Fujiwara in perspective as well. Here was a Korean collaborator of Japanese rule who had made his fortune off the explotation of his countrymen, mutilating and torturing a man from one of the worst-affected areas. Much like Kouzuki’s favored transport of riding on a traditional Korean A-frame carried on a Korean servant’s back, the torture scene was a microcosm of that oppression.
The genius of The Handmaiden, of course, and what makes Park an incisive commentator instead of a dull macho nationalist, is that Fujiwara is a villain. The movie resists the extremely easy exit of making Fujiwara the noble sufferer and Kouzuki his diabolic tormentor. Nope, actually, they are ideological twins. Fujiwara is a misogynist and rapist who approached Hideko with the promise of freedom only to try and lock her in another cage, who used Sook-Hee’s trust to not only deprive her of her freedom but kill her in captivity. His attempted violations might not be as outlandish as Kouzuki’s, but are just as horrific.
Fujiwara, then, is the marginalized man who, in the face of exploitation and brutalization, chooses to exploit and brutalize women in turn for his own gain. You see him in just about any community that is targeted by discrimination.
Fujiwara’s real tragedy is that he was actually halfway there to true liberation. When he told Hideko he was no Japanese nobleman but the son of a Jeju Island servant, that was a mirror image of Hideko masturbating in front of him on their marriage night. They both revealed their most vulnerable selves, their deepest secrets to each other and that could have been the basis of a powerful alliance. They could have set Sook-Hee free and plotted Kouzuki’s downfall together. He could have had Hideko’s friendship and respect, something he would have valued if he had seen her as a person in her own right.
Instead Fujiwara chose to become Kouzuki. Rather than challenge the oppressive structures of racism and sexism he wanted to climb it to the top. He didn’t hate the fact that Koreans were discriminated against; he hated the fact that he was Korean, one despised even by other Koreans. He didn’t hate the fact that Hideko was Kouzuki’s prisoner; he wanted to make her his own prisoner.
Still, he was tantalizingly close to being an actual liberator. He was the one who gave Hideko the opium as the ultimate out should Kouzuki get his hands on her. The fact that she ended up using it against Fujiwara instead, of course, showed how he had taken Kouzuki’s place as her would-be abuser.
It’s telling that Fujiwara had prepared the same exit for himself as he had for Hideko, and it’s also telling how limited his imagination was, as was hers: For both of them the plan of last resort was self-destruction. The structures of brutality were so ironbound, so absolute, that it was easier to destroy themselves than the system. Sook-Hee was the only one who had the imagination to smash the structure itself in destroying the books that were the instruments of Hideko’s abuse, Sook-Hee who was the life her mother had stolen from the iron grip of death, who was the victory that great thief had smiled over.
It’s fitting that Fujiwara killed Kouzuki, then, and doubly fitting that he killed himself in the process. A victim of the occupation destroyed his oppressor, but death struck them both because symbolically they were the same by this point, both of them racist, misogynistic abusers.
It is in this context that Fujiwara’s last line is both comical and deeply sad. “At least I got to keep my dick.” He had nothing else at this point, no future, no freedom, and only a few more moments to live, but at least he was still a man in his own eyes. As long as he had that he had something to hold onto.
The tragedy of Fujiwara is that he chose to hold onto the domination his idea of manhood symbolized to him rather than taking Hideko’s and Sook-Hee’s hands in friendship. But then again I suspect that, to him, standing in solidarity with women really would have felt like losing his dick.
I hate most dedicated atheists. Like, there’s are obviously many who are just trying to be critical of problematic areas of religion and that is fine. But there are others who are so obsessive and cultesque about finding their beliefs in opposition to others that it becomes mandatory and you can’t question it and there are rules you have to follow and labels you have to ascribe to…
That sounds kind of familiar.
Hardcore atheism has a biiiiiig issue with sexism and racism too.
I just saw a bunch of atheists calling a woman trashy and a whore because of the way she looks, but it’s ok because she was a religious woman.
I just randomly glanced through a few scenes of The Handmaiden for giffable moments, and already I’m a sobbing mess. It looks like I’ll need a box of Kleenex when I dive in for real.
@jewishcomeradebot Thanks for the heads up, it looks like the synopsis I read a while back didn’t tell the full story at all, since the abuse described there was mostly psychological. Which doesn’t make it less harmful or real, of course, I’m just more squeamish about physical violence.
we have a terrible movie where absolutely nothing happens and i cry because i wasted $200 + some extra money in tickets and popcorn.
Star Wars is not about subverting anything, it’s just a dumb space fairy tale where everything is supposed to be good, or at least hopeful, by the end of each episode. If I want to feel bad about life and worry about how Dark and Gritty everything is, I’ll watch Game of Thrones.
Speaking of Game of Thrones, do you know what TLJ and GOT had in common? their terrible treatment of women and people of color.
Holdo, Leia and co were dumbed down as much as Poe and Finn and co (only that the Unfortunate Implications that come from those are different) because, the truth is, Rian Johnson is clearly not a bright man himself. He wrote a simple story that he tried to make deep and utterly failed at it because it just wasn’t the job for him. No estaba a la altura de las circunstancias. He fucked up, simple as that.
If you dont believe me, just look at how he overused lack of communication (with Luke and Rey, with Holdo, Leia and Poe and arguably with Finn and Rose, too) as plot devices that moved the plot forward. Look at how uncreative Kylo’s backstory was (uncle tried to kill him despite the fact that said uncle didn’t even have it in him to kill Darth Fucking Vader). Look at how “we” “needed” to have Rose and DJ turn to us and explain, word for word, that Rich People Don’t Care Who They Sell Weapons To/who lives and who dies (and I don’t mean this as an attack to Rose, but to RJ). How childish Luke and Rey’s training scene was.
He couldn’t show us what he wanted, he had to tell us. That’s what a bad, inexperienced writer does. Not someone working in a franchise as big as Star Wars. (for this, look at how he had to tell us, via Holdo, that Poe is a “hot-headed guy prone to insubordination, because there was no previous evidence supporting the contrary in TFA and only one (1) scene in TLJ).
Rose Tico is nothing but a antiblack wet dream. She thinks Finn is a bumbling idiot and is obsessed with physically assaulting him no matter what he does. She’s disgusted at him if he even shows the slightest agency lmfao. Like he can’t even talk about his friend Rey without her getting angry, demeaning him, and fantasizing about assaulting him. She’s demonic. She shouldn’t be the representation we get for the first main woc in star wars and yet thats what she is!!! It isn’t anti-Asian to say all this lmfao!!!! It’s literally facts!!! If you support this character (not the actress duh Kelly Marie Tran is an angel), you’re an antiblack piece of shit too!! That’s facts!! If your Asian Representation comes with a side of violent Antiblackness THAN FUCK YOUR REPRESENTATION!!! You should be able to ask for better representation and NOT accept a sexist, antiblack mess!!! So everyone using that stupid “this is representation” argument to act like Rose Tico is anything but a horrible character? You’re dumb af. That isn’t an excuse to have such a vile character who serves no purpose but to live out yall antiblack fantasies. Fuck Rose Tico. Fuck Rian Johnsons racist ass. And fuck all of yall who told us over and over that we were overreacting or that we were bad people for not accepting Our onscreen representation being degraded and hurt.
All. Of. This. Even before the novelization showed how horrible she was originally intended to be, Rose was terrible representation for the first Asian lead and the WOC lead in a Star Wars film. She was always abusive and demeaning toward Finn and she never had quality writing in her own right. She had arc or character growth to speak of.
Now we see the full picture of the terrible person Rose was meant to be. The worst part of her depiction is that all of her increased abusiveness and assholery aren’t meant to be flaws. We aren’t meant to see her as an awful person Finn needs to escape. No, she’s meant to be one of the heroes and her abuse of Finn is meant to be not only comical, but a sign of her supposed love for him. And that’s just sick.
The only silver lining in both the film and novel is that Finn doesn’t develop much attachment to Rose as he did with Rey and Poe. He doesn’t even have a reaction after she kisses him. It wouldn’t be at all unrealistic for him to not engage with her at all in Episode IX.
Calling this horrible character Asian or WOC representation is like serving us dung and saying we should accept it as meat because it’s an animal product. Rose is just plain abusive and violent, an awful cross of misogynistic and anti-Asian stereotypes. It makes me sick to the stomach that Johnson is hiding behind Kelly to evade the blame for his shitty writing. Asian bloggers who criticized his writing were attacked for being anti-Asian, which no we’re anti Rian Johnson’s antiblack and anti-woman ass lmao.