Does anyone else feel like this film is actually sexist toward men?
It's pretty heavy-handed in how it portrays men, yes. I don't regard it as *reverse* sexism -- since standard sexism can be towards men as well as women. (Gakk, it really
has become entrenched as a one-sided way of thinking, hasn't it?)
I've edited my post because, since watching the film for the first time and then posting here, I've gone away and re-read Levin's novel as well. No surprise that Levin's version is much more elegantly written, but it also doesn't find it necessary to paint the men as cardboard villains in such a ham-fisted manner as Forbes does in order to make its points. The film is significantly lesser than the novel, because all it gives us is Men Being Beasts To Women. So dreary. I find it very disturbing that the mechanism is so invisible to so many people. We've been sensitised to slights to women by magnifying the concomitant slights to men. That's not an advance.
You might very well think that. I couldn't possibly comment.
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