The Bechdel Cast - Promising Young Woman with Sierra Katow
Episode Date: April 22, 2021Today's episode covers Promising Young Woman with special guest, Sierra Katow!(This episode contains spoilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast.Follow @sierrakato...w Twitter. While you're there, you should also follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, everybody.
Jamie and Caitlin here.
We just wanted to give a quick content warning at the top of this episode.
We are talking about Promising Young Woman today.
And so there's going to be a content
warning for um sexual abuse there is uh we we tried our best but there are obviously some
descriptions um that take place within the movie and we just want everyone to take care of themselves
yes indeed on the pectocast the questions, if movies have women in them, are all their discussions just boyfriends and husbands, or do they have individualism?
The patriarchy's effin' vast, start changing it with the Bechdel cast.
Hello and welcome to the Bechdel cast. My name is Jamie Loftus, and this is our podcast where we discuss movies that you won't stop asking us to cover from an intersectional lens.
And then sometimes movies that, you know, in the case of The Human Centipede, for example, that no one asked us to cover.
Oh, are you sure about that?
I would check the numbers.
I think there was a good two, three hundred.
Bagging, frothing even. Two? I would check the numbers. I think there was a good two, three hundred. Begging, frothing even.
Two, three hundred thousand.
Yes.
Our listenership is just astronomical and just really wanted to know how we felt about
feminism in The Human Centipede.
Spoiler alert.
It's perfect.
It's a feminist masterpiece.
Feminist text.
As you heard on that episode.
But today's movie falls into the category of our listeners were relentless to the point where I was like, I don't want to do it.
And then it was like, well, we're doing it.
We're doing it.
Here we are.
This is the Bechdel cast and and and so we we um we analyze movies using an
intersectional feminist lens jumping off from uh the Bechdel test but what is that Caitlin
anyways well gee whiz I'm happy to tell you it is a media metric created by queer cartoonist
Alison Bechdel sometimes called the Bechdel wallace test that for our purposes our
little version of the test two people of a marginalized gender have to have names and
they have to speak to each other about something other than a man for a meaningful conversation conversation is what we're going with these days sure so some movies do it with ease others
simply have never thought of the concept of women of people talking to each other
makes them sick to even think about it really
truly so yes that is that's the show. Today's episode is Promising Young Woman,
which I understand why we got so many requests. Yes. There's a lot to discuss.
Yes. But also I'm mad at all of you. It's a very challenging movie. And we have a guest joining us that we're delighted to have she is a comedian
actor writer she voices a couple characters in raya and the last dragon she's a writer on close
enough on hbo max it's sierra cotto hello hello hey thanks for me. We're so excited to be here. We are so excited to have you.
So normally we do like, oh, what's your like history with this movie? But since it's such a
new release, I guess tell us your just kind of like general notion of the movie,
general thoughts and feelings surrounding it. Sure i mean i think i i really liked it
i had just watched it like without knowing anything about it which was you know kind of a
lot to take in obviously because it's like if you don't know the cover that the cover of the movie
is like girl with like kind of pastel colors and i don't know you know i was just like oh okay
interesting i wonder what this is gonna be about but like Carey Mulligan and like the fact that you know
it seems to be nominated for a lot of stuff that's good um so then I watched it and then I watched it
again almost like the next day because I was so um yeah I was just like so intrigued by it and the
fact that um you know I guess movies with those heavy topics
sometimes you gotta watch it again just to be like oh wait I gotta catch what everything you
know what was going on because now I know what it's actually about so so yeah nice um Jamie what
about what about you this was this is honestly this was a tough movie for for me not because I think it's not good I think it's
very good um and I really enjoyed uh well enjoyed maybe isn't I didn't enjoy watching this movie
either time I watched it I had a really horrible time I just uh yeah I this is like a movie that
hits very close to home for me in a way that is like just tough i don't know i i tried to kind of prepare myself
going into it and made sure i had like a clear-ish idea of um of what was going on
but it was i don't know the first time i saw this movie it was at a drive-in for some i mean the
reason was covid but also horrible movie to see at a drive-in. And it just like it truly did like
trigger a lot in me. I don't really want to get too too into it. But I like had an experience
with campus assault that is not identical to Promising Young Women in any way. But a lot of
the dynamics at play were very similar. And it seems to have happened around a similar time-ish that they're referencing.
The specificity with which it was really hard.
So by the first time I finished watching the movie, I honestly had no idea if I liked it, didn't like it, or anything.
I just was really affected by it, it like really fucked me up and i texted you caitlin and i said
i do not want to cover this movie on the show like it just was so i don't know like and i it's even
i don't i still have this like tiny angel lord inside of me that is like don't say triggered but
that was the response was like it just fucked me up for two days
seeing this movie and just brought up all these um old bad feelings you know and but but after a
while it was like you know i i think it's been like two months ish since i first i saw it like
pretty close to when it was released and i you know it just like seems like okay you know what the requests aren't going to stop coming
it is uh it is a a an important movie you know an important current movie I think and um Sierra is
like I couldn't think of a better guest to talk about it with and so yeah going back through it
this time um I feel like I experienced it as a as a viewer and not
as like a person trying to keep their brain in check and yeah i have a lot of thoughts i will
say that if you haven't seen this movie and this is like a triggering topic for you like definitely
tread lightly yes i kind of wish i knew a little more going into the first thing or I wouldn't have
for example seen it at a drive-in or even seen it with another person you know it's it is very
sensitive stuff and if this is like a topic that is is particularly difficult for you take care of
yourself I wish I had taken a little better care of myself the first time. Yeah, but there's so much to talk about. Caitlin,
what's your experience? Yeah, I had a similar kind of reaction to the movie in the sense that
I did not enjoy myself while I was watching it. I recognize that it's a good movie that is like well crafted and tackles a lot of important things worth tackling.
But I just I was very challenged by it regarding like some of the things that happen in the story.
I also found it triggering and I don't want to watch it again.
I'll say that.
That's a tricky.
Yeah.
It's like the kind of movie where it's like, I love it.
It's important.
I never want to look at it ever again.
But I would hope that just based on what I've, you know, gathered about Emerald Fennell,
question mark, Fennell, Fennell, we may never know.
Shrug.
But based on what I've gathered around her interviews, that does seem like something
she wouldn't have a problem with.
I don't know.
I think she's so cool and so gutsy and brave for having made a movie like this.
And the performances are incredible.
I really, really like it, but I never want to watch it again.
It's just one of
those things i'll listen to the soundtrack great soundtrack yeah it's got a good soundtrack
yeah i feel like i i listened to a few interviews about it with her and um i think that was also
helpful because it kind of was like you know certain decisions that they that she made
honestly like her talking about it yeah i think was like oh this is a good way to like unpack this
without having to like relive through the scenes or any of that totally and like so this movie is
it was originally supposed to be theatrically released in I think April 2020 which obviously we were excited about
this movie yeah years ago I remember I was talking about this like late 2019 like oh it's gonna be
good and I like I had seen the trailer like what felt like dozens of times and I was like oh like
this is gonna be so good and I'm going to love it.
And I don't I don't I don't know exactly what I was expecting, but it didn't quite match up with what the movie ended up being. Caitlin, OK, and huge spoiler alert if you haven't seen the movie, but like, did you not expect perhaps for the protagonist to be brutally murdered at the end of the movie?
Because I certainly did not expect that.
I will say I did not expect that.
And again,
that's not even a criticism.
I think that that is like an incredibly like not,
I mean,
cool,
you know,
all things considered filmmaking choice,
but it was like,
I was expecting like revenge movie where,
where she wins.
I was also expecting that, you one of those i actually well okay
liked is that is a tough word that's no but i think what i appreciate about that ending
and i think this is something i also appreciated more when i heard um the director talk about it
is that it made uh because because it is just it's so sad it feels the most realistic just from my own
perspective that it's like yeah sure i would love to i don't know i guess have revenge in
these situations but i just don't do that um because i out of safety you know and then i
think that like sometimes when the revenge does happen that makes me almost feel worse because
i'm like well god i guess i should just do that you know but then obviously this kind of clarifies
like okay i think we're doing this out of survival if we're letting it go or not even letting it go
but you know what i mean like i think it did show that like this is kind of another way that these outcomes can happen in movies, hopefully, right?
But yeah, so I don't know if it almost kind of like presented another way.
I guess also speaking from a survivor's perspective myself, I guess it does feel like, you know, the relationship that I have with that is like, well,
I guess, I don't know, maybe I could have done more to prevent this, right? And so then I think
that kind of was like, okay, or... Or that could end very badly. We don't have a lot of choices,
you know? Yeah, we don't have a lot of like options here. So I kind of appreciated it for
that, even though totally brutal what actually went down in the scene right just like whoa um yeah yeah oh i i totally hear you
and it's it's one of those endings where uh in the movie parallel i'm coming up with i really
hope that someone could think of a better one but um just a movie in which like there is this
quest that like an oppressed character is on and at the end they lose it doesn't necessarily mean that
that is like not it may it may not mean it's an empowering story but it doesn't mean it's not an
important or impactful story and unfortunately what i'm thinking of is rosemary's baby
and that's not great but that that you know if you think about like rosemary's quest to overcome
this she's met with only obstacles and at the end she fails in that
quest and it's like she is crushed under the pressure that she's been you know pushing against
and that I feel like it's like a similar thing that happens to to Cassie she does everything
she possibly could do and it's just it's too much Like it's too much for one person. Yeah.
The movie I kept coming back to is like a comparison was Thelma and Louise.
Oh, that's way better.
Another one.
Let's go with that.
But I don't think your example is bad. I think like there are major similarities between all of these types, but it also just
goes to show that we need more stories about this that explore different coping mechanisms,
different outcomes, different ways in which trauma is dealt with. And so that we just see a wide
variety of possibilities, because I think there's, there's like a tendency to assume, oh, well,
if this has happened to you, if you're a survivor, here's the way to do it.
Here's the way to deal with it.
So and it's never just a like one path that anyone's going to take, you know.
So the more and again, I don't necessarily want to watch all of these movies all the time.
Here's the 12 movies you asked for caitlin but there is a need for you know just
different explorations of this story yeah and so that was the and i know i know this we're we're
structuring this episode slightly differently but it's just there's so much heavy shit even before
we talk about what happens in the movie um Something that was sticking out to me in the way that this movie was reviewed was there was a lot of speculation on whether the protagonist, Cassie, who is on this perhaps disorganized revenge mission but like but but this protagonist cassie um if like is she a good person or not
which i feel like is not something that we ask of like male revenge protagonists and so there were i
have a few quotes that i can bring up later in the episode because i just don't care to scroll
at this moment uh sure but but yeah just a lot of speculation on like well like in this revenge
movie you know she's not like a perfect you know she's not the perfect person and it's like
yeah when what have you have you ever said that about like liam neeson in any movie like what do
you just even i don't know it's so interesting to me because it's like this movie literally just came out and you still see those like to me they just like feel like bizarre questions to be asking
and they're a little pointed and like oh this person seeking revenge is not completely pure
and but so fucking what like right since when is that the promise of a movie like this like it's
just such a bizarre even, like, premise.
I don't know.
Truly.
Yeah, I hadn't seen those.
Hmm.
And then, well, I mean, this is something we can also talk about.
But, you know, there was that critic who deservedly got a lot of backlash for who, like, wrote that review in Variety being like, well, Carey Mulligan wasn't pretty enough to play this character and like for that
to be criticism in a major publication that is happening in the year that's like a tweet draft
that you get rid of sir like that's that's not a publishable thing to say yeah oh god um people's reactions uh still need work on things so um anyway should i i'm gonna do
a kind of shorter less detailed more condensed version of the recap just in the interest of
keeping things kind of uh tight um we just don't want to like talk about this movie for two and a half hours.
We could, but in the
interest of everyone's mental health, we're
not going to. Wait,
Jamie Pitch, remember how we
did a nearly three-hour
episode on the Santa Claus 3?
Yes. I don't see why we can't
do the same thing for this.
Here's my answer. Absolutely not.
Santa Claus 3 is good for your mental health what about that two-hour episode on flubber um what about that
three-hour episode on coyote weekly we can keep going good wait santa claus three is that the one
with jack frost that you are correct okay Okay. Thank God. So scared.
I was going to get that wrong.
Then of course,
you got to do at least an hour and a half on that.
Jack Frost portion.
We did.
Good.
Then you're good.
Yeah.
Okay.
So here's the recap and just trigger warning for this recap,
as well as what I imagine will be a large chunk of the discussion,
trigger warning of rape and sexual assault okay so we meet Cassie that's Carrie Mulligan who routinely does a thing
where she goes to a nightclub pretending to be very drunk she waits for a man to come over to her under the pretense of helping her.
Well, it's Adam Brody, but yeah, we did warrant stating it is Seth Cohen.
When he inevitably takes her home and tries to take advantage of her, Cassie drops the act of
her pretending to be drunk and teaches him a lesson we see her do this with
a few different characters throughout the movie um early on she bumps into ryan played by beau
burnham a former classmate of hers from med school uh which we learned she dropped out of
he asks her out they go on a couple dates he brings up med school he
wants to know why she dropped out he mentions a couple students that they used to be classmates
with including madison mcphee and al monroe uh thus begins uh care cassie cassie mulligan carrying out cassie cassie mulligan for simplicity cassie mulligan
pretty much her carrying out a revenge plot cassie out cassie cassie
it's okay we all make mistakes um what had happened is that cassie's best friend nina was raped in med school by al monroe
which led to her dropping out which led to cassie dropping out and which eventually led to nina's
death right which we don't fully know yet yeah we don't fully know yet. Yeah, we don't fully know. So this revenge plot includes Cassie teaching a lesson to Madison, who's played by Alison Brie.
She didn't and still does not believe, you know, the circumstances of what happened.
She didn't believe Nina when she came to Madison for help.
Cassie then teaches a lesson to the dean of the
med school connie britain baby connie britain character actors are out in this movie
also a lot of comedians or comedic actors especially in like the guys who were played
or who were cast to play like the creepy men yeah i mean sam richardson fedora sam richardson
what a moment what a moment indeed uh coke addled christopher mince plassie oh yeah mclovin has a
scene i'm like it's almost like i always wonder if i i wonder if she's spoken to this it almost
seems like emerald finnell like cast all these familiar feeling faces in all these roles of like people
that you knew from like the 2000s and early 2010s that you're like oh i know this person i trust
this person and then it's like guess what they are horrible yeah yep um cassie teaches a lesson to
dean walker who had dismissed nina when she reported the crime to her.
Cassie also goes to
the lawyer played
by Jamie.
It's Alfred Molina.
Alfred Molina. His
scene is two minutes long but the
impact is felt. I'm like was he
on set for three hours?
We don't know. Probably. We can imagine
it was maybe a day or two um but
his impact you know as always i mean honestly i have opinions on the way his character's treated
but but you know in terms of was the performance there the pathos he's on his knees
honestly okay if there if i had no context for what this movie is about, seeing Alfred Molina open that door and be like, I've been expecting you is a dream I've had.
I want you to someday knock on his door and he opens it and you say, Alfred, it's your day of reckoning, which just means that it's just the beginning of your and his romantic relationship.
And he says, I've been expecting you.
And it's like, oh, my God, this is great.
And then once inside, it goes much differently.
Yeah.
Yeah, of course.
Yeah.
Anyway, so this lawyer is the one who defended Al Monroe and who bullied Nina until she dropped her case and cassie's goal with all of these
things is to get these people to reframe their thinking regarding assaults and victim blaming
and believing women meanwhile cassie and ryan are getting closer and falling in love. There's a Paris Hilton stars are blind song about it.
Oh my God.
I almost forgot existed,
but we,
but it's important that we don't forget.
And so I'm glad it was there.
I mean,
I was glad to be reminded of it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's back.
Then Madison comes back and gives Cassie a phone with a video on it of Nina
being assaulted something that had been sent around
to the various like med school classmates after this assault took place Cassie discovers that
her boyfriend Ryan was one of the people watching this take place she basically blackmails him to get information on where Al Monroe's
bachelor party is, which she goes to to enact the final piece of her revenge plot, where she
confronts Al Monroe for what he did to Nina, and him not wanting his reputation and life to be ruined by this, he attacks and suffocates Cassie to death.
He and his friend, a.k.a. Max Greenfield, get rid of the body together.
But Cassie anticipated something like this might happen to her. So she had arranged for the evidence that she had to be sent to Alfred
Molina's character to report it to the police, which leads to Al Monroe being arrested for
Cassie's murder. And that is how the movie ends. So let's take a quick break and we will come back to discuss.
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I've been thinking about you.
I want you back in my life.
It's too late for that.
I have a proposal for you.
Come up here and document my project.
All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
One session.
24 hours.
BPM 110.
120.
She's terrified.
Should we wake her up?
Absolutely not.
What was that?
You didn't figure it out?
I think I need to hear you say it.
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
This machine is approved and everything?
You're allowed to be doing this?
We passed the review board a year ago.
We're not hurting people.
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
They're just dreams.
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And we're back.
Sierra, is there anything in particular
you would like to start with?
Or we can kind of jump in from any which angle.
Oh, um, hmm.
Oh, I know.
Maybe we could talk about like the sort of easter eggs along the
way of knowing that maybe brian was not this good guy or just talking about the concept of like the
good guy that they kind of played with in this movie sure yeah oh my god i i that was like one
of the things i liked the most about
this movie was like the deconstruction and sometimes it's a little heavy-handed but like
the deconstruction of the of the nice guy is not something you see very often i don't think this
is the first time we've seen it but it's it's definitely not something that happens often in a movie that gets a ton of like acclaim and and like is given a lot of positive attention and we've talked about this
on the show a lot of how like when when um i don't know i mean there's like two things that play here
the first is like when there is an assault on a woman in a movie you know very often it's by this like it's a stranger
it's stranger danger or it's like someone who is like who an average male viewer will definitely
not see themselves in and yeah it's like the whole like twisty mustache like pure evil villain that
is like unrecognizable to anyone or just like huge muscly guy that's like a henchman
whatever it is right and then and then also the fact that the the woman is assaulted becomes her
like the only thing about her but what i what i like about this movie a lot is it takes a lot
of different like very like specific examples that are, oh, God, of guys that think they're nice and have been conditioned to think they're nice, but have also been conditioned to mistreat women and, you know, assault them and do different degrees of abuse and manipulation and exerting their authority over women
while still thinking they're nice guys.
Like, it's so frustrating.
But it's so well written, I thought.
Yeah, I have to say that the first time I watched it,
I did not see Ryan, like, the reveal that he is an absolute piece of shit.
I did not see it coming.
I was like, oh, and maybe it's just because
I like Bo Burnham a lot,
but I was like, no, Bo, don't be like that.
Which I think that just means that
that character was handled really effectively
because like Jamie, you were saying,
and we have talked about this a lot on the show,
although I
think we it comes up more in our like matreon patreon episodes than in the main feed but
there is this tendency to paint characters who are abusers and and predators as being so
cartoonishly evil that no one could possibly recognize them or see themselves
in them so when you present a character like ryan who is like goofy and funny and endearing
then you're not expecting him to end up being like a rape apologist um yeah so i thought that was effective
the way that character was handled but then like you said sierra in terms of like those little
easter eggs those little hints that get planted along the way i honestly like did not fully
notice them until i re-watched the movie and i was like oh he's kind of stalking her he's not
taking no for an answer he's wearing her down well and he's kind of stalking her. He's not taking no for an answer. He's wearing her down.
And he's also like constantly
anytime these guys come up
are like, they're not that bad.
Like, which I,
that was like what really stuck with me.
Classic Al.
Right, right.
Like, and anytime Al comes up,
it's like this,
I don't even know if there's a word for it
or a phrase for it,
but it's like,
oh yeah, that's not great
but also it's not that bad like this weird like sure wishy-washy like i don't want to deal with
this i don't want to have the conversation so let's just move on anytime they come up yeah that
that really stuck out to me on on a second watch too is like oh yeah he doesn't like he doesn't
think anything of how these these guys act yeah yeah even like him
saying or even the way he addresses it too it's almost like he does kind of um he knows something's
going to come up so he gets ahead of it you know he's kind of like oh yeah i mean those guys can't
get rid of him it's almost like he has to apologize for just like hanging around them so you know
something's wrong but it's like it's the way that oftentimes guys talk about their problematic friends you know is like they know something's
up but they're yeah like you said not willing to deal with it so getting ahead of it by sort of
minimizing it right away and then being like but you know that's him or whatever yeah it's so like
i don't know the second watch of this movie was, I mean, you really start to not like Ryan very much.
He is like, and it's, it's frustrating because I mean, but I think like he is like, as funny, like not funny, because they are like, being really sexually aggressive. the specificity and the humor of like the Adam Brody character and the Mick Levin character who
we see earlier in the movie being kind of like these just pompous asshole guys who feel entitled
to having sex with a girl that they don't think is going to remember um which is you know like I
mean that very much fits into this um this narrative but in ryan you see like someone who yeah like the movie fully
gets you to to root for i mean i feel like the bo burnham casting that was really smart because
you're like oh he's it's bo burnham they're falling in love and also like you want i mean
that's like one of the really like gut-wrenching things about this movie for me is like you you want Cassie to have that
and like you like oh it's so awful when it's like it kind of like on on this watch was like oh
I guess like ultimately I don't know exactly what the movie is saying I don't like i whatever i i but but like the fact that you know cassie very clearly
deserves you know to have a you know fulfilling connection with somebody and and then when she
does become vulnerable and when she does trust herself with someone it turns out to like reinforce
her original viewpoint of the world which was that
you shouldn't trust anybody and that like there there is just such a wide degree of complicity
that no one is safe no matter how much you want that connection and it's such a like it's so bleak. Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, get started fast.
Yeah, because Cassie is engaging in some pretty self-destructive behaviors.
She's, you know, consumed by the guilt she feels,
the trauma that was inflicted upon her friend.
She's bearing the brunt of some of that trauma.
I mean, obviously this movie has an agenda, you know.
It's a condemnation of rape culture.
It's commentary on victim blaming.
Like, these things are all clear but then the the takeaway i know i'm similarly like well
i guess it's like you can you can stand up and fight the abusers and the rapists and like
the larger rape culture and lose there's a good chance you'll lose well that yeah but she did get them legally apprehended i suppose yes so i saw that as a
win a little bit even though justice was served but at the expense of the lives of two women
yeah which doesn't feel great to me right right sure and also it's like once a guy like al is in
custody is he really going to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law of
course not we've seen how those trials play out yeah he's a rich white guy he's gonna be like
he he will probably go to you know probably he'll probably be incarcerated for for a while but will
he you know learn anything or be held to held to task for real no that like that i mean but also i think that it is like kind of an like when i say that i
don't know what the takeaway of the movie is that's an unreasonable expectation coming from
me is like why didn't emerald finnell one person give me the solution to conquering rape culture
like of course she doesn't have that none of us fucking have that and so i i sierra like um referring
back to what you were saying earlier about like how unfortunately like what happens to cassie is
like a realistic outcome it's not cathartic but it is you know like was clearly a very likely
possibility to the point where she recognized that and had planned for that, which also was just like such a bleak thing that she went into this
knowing like pretty good chance I don't get out of this alive.
I mean, and maybe that is the point is like, you know,
it's not a one person job.
It just isn't. And there's not like one brave hero who is going to kill rape culture.
True.
It's just, I mean, yeah, it's just not. anything else in the sense that I think I just have such like negative dark thoughts and feelings
thanks to my depression and anxiety that I just really struggle with with movies that have such
a bleak ending and I um I think it's just it's like I'm glad this movie exists. I think it does a net positive for the world.
But I'm like, I don't know if this is, this is not for me.
I don't need to see, I don't, I already know this stuff.
So it's like, I want men to watch this.
I want like.
I would argue that this movie is, you know, is good.
And I'm glad that I watched it.
But like, yeah, it's, it's, it's kind of frustrating.
Because I feel like, like, we are made it's kind of frustrating because I feel like we are made
to be the target audience of a movie like this
when it's like no this is like
love it but like
I know you know
it's like people who don't
know should be
the target audience for that movie
but also you know
people who are not the target audience
are notoriously difficult to get to watch the movie but I you know uh people who are not the target audience are notoriously difficult
to get to watch the movie but i totally difficult conundrum i totally agree with you like i you know
i think that for this movie to have you know the like to really act out the the agenda that it very
clearly has it's like yeah the mclovens of the world have to watch it, you know and like be made uncomfortable by
the behaviors they see in themselves that are reflected in these characters and like and in the Ryans of the world of like
I'm an amazing guy. I have grown as a person but also like how do you reckon with your past and
That like something I really appreciate about this movie.
And also like I don't dislike the bleak ending.
It like makes me fucking so sad, but I don't dislike it.
And I like how many for the most part I do like in terms of like how this is kind of targeting a very particular area of rape culture too which is also like i don't
know i feel like anytime there's a movie like this that comes out around a large pernicious issue
that is never discussed in movies like rape culture it's like this one movie has to speak
for all of it which is impossible this movie is like very much in the like subcategory of like campus rape culture yeah
and and i do appreciate the different perspectives it explores around that specific area of rape
culture of you know like in through ryan and mad, you have people who are viewed as like, generally good people. They're not super villains. They're navigating the world, you know, normally,
but they were okay with this. They didn't do anything when they had a chance. And what is
an appropriate punishment for that? What is an appropriate penance? Like, I don't have that
answer. And then with Connienie britain you have like these
escalating crimes of like with connie britain's dean character you have like someone who was in
a position to do something about it and didn't because she wanted to be quote-unquote fair and
she had internalized misogyny and all this boomer lady baggage that we see in her.
And then we get up to Alfred.
And honestly, I'm sorry.
I feel like I'm talking.
I just know with Alfred.
I feel like he gets off a little easy in this movie because he is at the top of the the crime thing.
It's like the whatever.
I mean, you can feel any way about it.
I don't know how we feel about it but it's like cassie very much does approach anyone who negatively affected this
situation as equally deserving of punishment regardless of the severity but alfred melina
i feel like is clearly the worst of the bunch like he was the lawyer who got Al off at the expense of aggressively pursuing to like take down Nina
like that is such a huge trauma and yeah like an adult man's bullying like a teenager or young
woman who had been assaulted like there are levels here at play where it's like no one wants to say that they were the bystander that did nothing in the way that Madison knew and like clearly knew and did nothing.
But then you have Alvar Molina who profited off of aggressively doing something.
And I don't.
Yeah, I guess it's I'm still kind of processing that of like, it's tough.
Yeah, the movie frames that where he's so wracked with guilt to the point where like he can't work anymore.
And like begs for forgiveness.
He feels bad, so.
And then she grants him forgiveness.
And I'm like, I just don't really care if you feel bad.
Yeah, I also don't believe that that kind
of person would feel bad sure because it was like multiple cases that he supposedly you know his
law firm did right right like in the past too even when he was like we used to have to dig
through the trash now we just have to find a drunk photo on social it's like so you were
pre-social media doing this yeah like for decades
like yeah jesus yeah like yeah you should feel bad you should feel really bad right yeah yeah
yeah it's like age is not believing that somebody in that profession would even have
a compassion or feel anything sorry not not lawyers at large but just like in his specific
case um and then also i guess like yeah maybe her her revenge i mean
thing it did seem like she was very forgiving overall you know i think she it was the misdirect
of like whoa is she like doing something really really bad to these people or okay well then we
slowly find out oh she just wants like regret and like that's all she's asking for that's pretty
low stakes you know yeah totally and it's like but if you don't that's all she's asking for. That's pretty low stakes. Yeah, totally. But if you don't demonstrate that regret, she's going to have you assaulted.
I saw some critics kind of being like, but her practices are bad, which is not untrue. But I
don't even really want to touch that here I just in general in terms of the the
clear I mean they're literally there's five people like Kill Bill style who are on her list of people
that she particularly thinks had a negative impact on on Nina's case right and yeah I mean it's I
guess I don't I don't dislike it, but they're I don't know.
I don't know.
The Alison Brie thing was tricky for me on the first watch.
But I think that that is also kind of personal where I don't like that's the sort of thing
where I feel like it's it is a kind of survivor to survivor situation where I had friends and people in my life
who were not inclined to believe me
or help me in any way when things were going on
that over time I was able to find some empathy for
and some forgiveness for.
But that's also not everybody's situation.
And then also it's like you have to keep in mind that this is not nina enacting revenge this is cassie enacting revenge on
behalf of nina right which which is why i kind of i liked that at first in like the molly shannon
character which is like there's another comedian in this movie who plays nina's mom who you know kind of
tells like cassie like you need to move on like this isn't helping me it isn't helping nina you're
you're just kind of acting in this really self-destructive way and like please move on
which is like well that's the point where you need to like her mother told you to cut it, you know, and I don't know.
I mean, that's that's like the tragedy, right, is you don't know what Nina would want in this situation.
She's not there to tell you. And so Cassie's kind of guessing what she might want.
But a lot of that is enmeshed in her own guilt and her own problems and and so any of the revenge enacted is kind of like
there's all these levels to it because it's not like this happened to me and I want revenge for
it it's like this happened to my friend this is what I am guessing she would want and also I would
want for it it's just like it's so messy and complicated right and you get the sense that like she was
just going to kind of target random men for like maybe for who knows how long but her until
jennifer coolidge uh kicked her out of the house right until she filled up her notebook with tally
marks yeah she's like well my notebook is is full, so my job here is done.
And it's not until she learns that Al Monroe has moved back to the area that she starts this more targeted revenge plot to the people who she feels need to be, you know, brought to justice.
And yeah, I struggled with some of that in terms of like,
because the movie kind of tricks you into thinking, oh, is she like killing these men that she meets at the nightclub?
Is she, did she actually arrange for Madison to be assaulted so that she'll learn her lesson?
Did she actually abduct Dean Walker's teenage girl to teach the Dean a lesson? You know,
it's all a question mark. No, right. And so it's, but like, I just, I don't know. I mean,
maybe that's just like, the effectiveness of that storytelling.
But I just found all of that kind of unsettling.
What I really take issue with is there are a couple scenes where Cassie is being assaulted. And I feel like we saw more than we needed to see.
That we were kind of lingering on that.
I don't know.
It was just like, do we do this need to be on screen?
I kind of disagree with that.
I feel like that depends on who the target audience of this movie ultimately is i think if it is like
you know like for uh people who have experienced that or who have felt like that is a looming
threat over them all the time like yeah showing an assault is not really a responsible filmmaking
choice but i think that if your if your target audience is like men generally who have displayed these behaviors
who need to who need to see it like I don't know I mean there's definitely a bunch of different
perspectives there I think that in terms of like a man who might see himself in kind of this goofy
way of like oh yeah I I kind of act like McLovin and blah blah blah and then
seeing that escalation I think could actually have like an effect on like oh shit like have
I done something like that is that an instinct I would have I think that there is like it felt
like it didn't feel like throwaway at least it felt intentional sure but I also you know it is
like triggering as well it's yeah it's definitely
there's like a lot of sides there especially when it comes to like killing cassie you know it's like
that's a long drawn out yeah moment i thought for sure like i couldn't believe it i mean of course
anytime a main character is killed i think i was
just like really waiting for like that next twist of like she's she's faking it and then she's a
vampire now yeah yeah she's gonna do the thing and it was like maybe just i think i remember going
over my head like it maybe there's somehow and then you know it just I guess gave yeah same time to be like oh there's
just no way I guess this happened like I don't know but yeah yeah and and I did feel like that
like I mean it's again it's like it's not a rewatchable scene it's like no one wants to
see that scene happen over and over and over but it did feel intentional that like
especially with a female director who I believe is a survivor as well and you know it's like
I don't know it's like you it's not going to be for everyone but especially it's like
I don't know if she wants me to sit with it for this viewing
okay it's gonna feel like shit but it's supposed to feel like shit and it sounds like that
reaction that we all had to be like no she can't be dead like this like super motivated revenge
character that never dies can't be dead and like but she is and that is so affecting and you see her like go down
fighting and just all this stuff and i don't know it's i didn't i didn't enjoy it but i did
i did feel it was effective i don't know sure yeah
let's take another quick break and just just for us this time just it's this is for us
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And we're back. Where do we go from here i think something worth discussing is yes this is a movie centering on like women's empowerment and condemning this larger victim blaming rape culture we live in, but it still centers a cis, middle-class, able-bodied white woman. And not that those
stories are not worth telling, but that demographic has been who most of stories of this nature have
been focused on, not only in like movies and TV, but you know, real life news. So this just kind of adds, that's just another tally mark to the, that type of story about that demographic. And again, not that this movie shouldn't exist, because it's about a blonde white woman, but there, it just speaks to the need for other people to have their stories
told it is still a largely white cast we have gail who is played by laverne cox who is of course
a black trans woman but she has no i mean she has no story outside of her relation to cassie which is this movie
came out in 2021 how are we still having like one of the only non-white characters be a best friend
we know nothing about outside of relation to protagonist kind of you know deal yeah i was i
was disappointed in that especially because laverne cox like really makes a meal of
what she's given like she's so funny and they're like why couldn't her character be more actively
involved in the story why couldn't we know more about her could we have maybe like cut a random
character who appears for one scene and given laverne Cox an arc like yeah yeah I was that
that was like one of the more disappointing parts of the movie for for me yeah I think she's only
I didn't like time it out exactly but I would guess that she's only in the movie for a total
of like a couple scenes five minutes five to seven minutes in an almost two hour movie that was disappointing and i mean
i think that it's like in in these kinds of stories that like you always see a story around
like a social issue centered around a white character first right and that is like it may
be a very good movie it may be an effectively told movie
but it's that like i feel like we come up against movies like that quite a bit on this show where
it's like oh like this movie was a step forward of like this is not a commonly discussed film topic
but when it finally is able to get made and able to get seen it's done in a way that feels very like hollywood safe of
like well but it's about carrie mulligan so like you know and it is still centered around like a
cis white character yeah i totally see what you're saying yeah i wish i i thought yeah one of the like
well missed opportunities but also kind of unbelievable thing would be that like if
cassie's character and gail's supposed to be like her best new best friend in her new life which isn't attached to
her med school life which i guess she's trying to get rid of so like wouldn't she loop her into
like at least something more but their relationship is really like nothing like it's like what is
what does gail think cassie does yeah Gail doesn't know much about her.
Yeah, like, other than work there.
But yeah, I mean, it was very, I guess, kind of stock BFF coming into like, fluff your
fabrics and leave, you know.
Which also is like a story.
Yeah, like you're saying, that's a missed storytelling opportunity of like, this is
her only, I mean, we're to believe believe her only friend but her only friend doesn't know
anything about her and they just like kind of communicate in these like what do they talk about
all day who are you dating right now like who's that cute boy and it's like come on you you have
laverne cox like yeah almost all of her lines have to do with Ryan. Like she's another,
I mean,
yeah,
we've,
we've talked about this a number of times recently where like,
there's a character who is just like a queer character specifically who is
present to like,
just wonder what's going on in the romantic lives of straight people.
Right.
So,
yeah,
it's like,
it's so it's like a trope that is so easily
identifiable that i am truly like so frustrated and shocked when it still ends up in a mainstream
popular movie it's like how how many times does it need to be said that was yeah that was super
super frustrating yeah um what's let's see there's there's other stuff
going on here oh i did like just in terms i mean in general i guess this is like a genre thing
where i feel like in the revenge genre and correct me if i'm like completely off here because this is
not like my genre right but like i feel like the person seeking revenge sometimes you kind of don't know
that much about them and i always find that so frustrating and i also found that frustrating
in this movie but i think that's just the genre where it's like mad max my daughter and then you
don't know anything else about him like kill bill my daughter and then you don't find out anything
else about her taken my daughter my. Like it's very often.
Or is it like John Wick is like my dog or something?
Or is that my wife?
It's my dog, but he's also sad about his wife.
Okay.
So it's like this is this doctor.
Doctor.
And for Cassie, it's like my best friend.
And you don't know much about her outside of it.
I just I mean, maybe this is just like me chafing with this genre, but I'm like, but I would have liked to know a little more about her and like what her because I do like that.
They, you know, build out a life for her and you get the feeling of like oh here are her parents they have no fucking clue
what to do even though they love her which plays out and I thought like yeah casting Jennifer
Coolidge there was so great and she is like the perfect mom who does not know what to do
for generations and she's great and and I like that this world is built out for her and you also kind
of understand for the most part of like the only I mean it's like the only reason that Cassie is
able to live this revenge life is because of like her own privilege like if she actually had to like
work to live and didn't have the ability to stay with her parents and plan revenges, then her life might look really different.
And that didn't even like hit with me remotely in the first one.
I was like, oh, yeah, if she didn't have like this nice ass house to hang out with with her parents and like plenty of space to conceal her secrets her life would just look really different that's
not here nor there i was just like oh wow you just you can't just live that revenge life you
know someone has to be bankrolling that revenge life because you can't really live that revenge
life on a barista income speaking for personal experience right by the way her like we said her mom who is jennifer coolidge and her dad
who is clancy brown who is most famous for being one of the henchmen in flubber his best known role
yeah i didn't make that connection and i love i really did like the the parents in this movie i
feel like they they really give they real oh that scene
where her dad is like we really miss nina but we really miss you and you're like that's so
i did appreciate like there are little things that happen in this movie that like speak to
survivors experience or survivors guilt that were like really specific in a way that was
like yeah i mean certain things and and of course it's like it is written in a kind of campy way
at times where like carrie mulligan she gets quippy in some scenes you know she's not firing
off things you would know off the top of your head but like who gives a shit i love that um but like the the knee-jerk defenses that you hear from from the dean the knee-jerk defenses you hear
from ryan especially when ryan is backed into a corner the way he suddenly behaves is like
oh there you are you know there's who you actually are.
And then with her parents, like you,
you like,
I feel like something this movie does do effectively is shows that when an
assault that barely affects the life of someone like Al,
the ripple effects are huge.
I mean,
it's,
it's completely altered the course of Cassie's life,
but it's also like,
you know, affecting her family and affecting, you know, it just, it's completely altered the course of Cassie's life, but it's also like, you know, affecting her family and affecting, you know, it just it ripples out so far.
And yeah, there's never a space made for that.
For sure. Yeah, I think one of the things this movie does effectively that I haven't seen a lot in other kind of similar movies or movies that tackle similar subject matter is it shows that the perpetrator of the assault is not the only villain in this scenario there are
enablers there are cheerleaders there are bystanders who did nothing to intervene there
are authority figures who gave the abuser the benefit of the doubt there are you know peers who
didn't believe the victim because she had a certain reputation you know there's there's all
these people that i think get that tend to get overlooked in other stories of this nature that I did really appreciate about this movie. Yeah, I know one interview with the director
was, she actually described, I think the characters as like good people who are doing bad things,
which I was really fascinated with, even like she would say, Ryan or you know some of the other like characters that
were like oh that's a bad person like i think right that's what she was trying to convey here
which you know as we said with the casting and stuff did a really good job because we trusted
these people and like some of these people seem like they could be your buddy you know um and so
yeah i think that was oh well yeah actually your buddy. Our best friend. So, yeah.
Friend of the cast.
Yeah, I mean, a true knock on his door.
You know, we know the drill.
But, yeah, it is really, like, I think that's what was so unique because it's, like, of course we know rapists equal bad.
Like, we got that, hopefully.
If you don't know that, then, like, lost cause.
Who cares?
Don't watch movies um but like you know i think this was like more of the like yeah the enablers of people around that and being
like examine your own actions or people close to you because that's going to be much more possible
that you might be that person instead of the al monroe but like you might be uh madison mcfee or
whoever yeah the madison m McPhee character in particular,
like some of our viewers are having an issue with her.
But I mean, I think that that is,
I mean, that is the case for women watching this movie
of like there is that internalized misogyny.
And also the way that Cassie speaks with her
because they're talking about an
assault that took place seven or eight years ago but it's been a seven or eight years where the
conversation around campus assault has completely changed like from 2013 it's completely different
now and there was no culture of believe women then and there was a lot of like
and and and having her present that was like I mean it was like painful and frustrating because
it's like behaviors that you recognize in in I don't know like being in school at that time
you're like oh yeah that was absolutely like a constant conversation going on but but but then
like we were talking about earlier for cassie to set the bar so low as to just be like can you
demonstrate remorse for how you behaved then and she can't do it she can't and it's that is like
the worst feeling in the world if like like you're saying sierra that like emerald was
saying in an interview that like they're not bad people but the fact that it's like if madison's
not a bad person and she has spent eight years sort of in the back of her head being like well
you know these things happen and like i mean that's just like a very real thing that exists in the world.
And it's,
I don't know.
There's,
there's so much,
most of the criticism around this movie,
I've,
I sort of received as like,
you know,
how is one filmmaker going to give you a definitive answer for this problem?
I don't know.
Like it is such an ambiguous and changing conversation and everyone feels
different about it.
For sure.
Um,
to your point a little earlier,
Jamie,
in terms of us not knowing a whole lot about Cassie,
I,
I think we do get to know her a little bit better than kind of similar characters in similar movies.
But let me know if this is not a fair assessment.
But because there is a tendency in narratives like this for the survivors to be predominantly defined by their trauma
i feel like we were getting traces of that maybe not to the extent that we've seen in other stories
but with cassie like her whole narrative i mean her whole goal is like this all consuming trauma, guilt, feelings surrounding this assault that had happened to her friend.
And I mean, that's also kind of the nature of storytelling.
It needs to be focused and specific and like you know we've been talking about she she is given more of an
interior life than you know again other similar characters we've seen and a part of the movie
that i like part of the trajectory of the story that i appreciated and enjoyed was when she goes
to talk to nina's mom molly shannon and she's like, Cassie, this is not
doing anybody any good. You're acting like a child and you need to let it go and move on.
And it seems like Cassie takes this to heart and that, cause that's when she starts to get closer
and open up a bit more with Ryan. and she like lets what appears to be a healthy
relationship into her life and it's only until she sees that he was a bystander of this assault
that she decides to carry out the rest of her plot uh her revenge plot that yeah I see what you're saying and I feel this way about
a lot of movies I it's I don't really feel that I don't know for the way it struck me was like
and maybe it was not done in the you know 100 best way possible that you know whatever no movie is perfect but i i i felt like what cassie is experiencing is like
it felt like to me like the how how an event like this takes over you know has the potential to just
take over your life and yourself and not in terms of like a bad writing perspective but in terms of
like i think that that there are ways
that these storylines are written
where it's like,
oh yeah, the trauma is the defining woman,
like moment of this woman's life
because plot, plot, plot, plot, plot.
Whereas like her friend's death
was the defining moment of her life.
She can't move on,
but we do get indications
that she might want to
through like this potential relationship
and through her,
you know, talking to Molly Shannon and being and being like yeah i'm clearly like but she can't let it go and i don't know
i found that relatable of like you know you're trying to get out of this toxic cycle of behavior
but you just like and you and also i'd like i agree with you there is like that moment
with molly shannon she like she knows she's fucking her life up i don't think she's just like
she doesn't think that but it's like she cannot get there she can't let it go yeah and i don't
know like it's it's it's an extreme example but i there's a part of me that's like yeah I get it yeah I don't think it's bad I don't
think it's bad writing no but like I I and I see what you're saying I just I don't know yeah it's
it's there's moments where I'm like Cassie's like more of a symbol than a character to me
at different points where like she is this like symbol of like trying to break past this traumatic event and trying to
hold people accountable and it's too much for one person it's impossible it's already killed one
person and it's i don't know like i i this is i don't know what this says for the movie but i
like don't even really think of her as a character as much as like this central symbol for the harmful effect that this is.
And like the precedent and like what had me just like fucked up for days after
seeing this movie.
The first time was like for Nina,
right.
Of,
of like the only way she got justice is to have a friend willing to like give
up years of her life and die and it
still wasn't enough you know it's just like so sad and so frustrating and and not completely untrue
and yeah so it's I don't know I feel like I I think of Cassie almost as like this like symbol of like the impossibility of these of these situations for people.
Right. Yeah, I see that.
Yeah, definitely.
Yeah, I think I think also she'd been described, you know, again, referring back to probably an interview or something that I some meta data on the show or whatever like that.
She kind of had already like her life had already
been over by that event and I think that I wonder like if it's kind of like the way that people you
know when I mean the whole movie right it's called Promising Young Woman because I guess it's a play
on you know well he's a promising young man why ruin his life and it's like always oh well a life's
already been ruined why didn't we care about that?
So I feel like maybe, you know, I kind of mapped that concept onto her.
It's like her life has been ruined and it's not that she's ruining it.
It's that he ruined her life and Nina's life, obviously.
And so then this is the result of that.
So, you know, and it's, it's obviously just awful thinking about it,
if you're thinking like, what would she have been right, like, think of the possibilities if she had
if this hadn't, if he hadn't done that, and then she had become a doctor and saved a bunch of other
people's lives, you know, so I think that's kind of reminded me of like, whenever we talk about
like, I mean, not to bring it back to
literally something too close to home but like when people complain about oh my favorite dude
actor or comedian or whatever and now I'm not going to get to see his movies anymore because
we're canceling him and it's like well what about the literal like several creative women typically
whose lives he ruined like we didn't get to see their work or
whatever right so that's already been sacrificed apparently and now we only worry about his future
work but i guess that's sort of like yeah she was a character she was a symbol and it was almost like
she wasn't she didn't get to live the character's life because that was already over yeah it reminded me this is like the like worst observation of my life
especially after sierra that was like so well put and but i i the way i saw this movie ending
originally just as i was watching it unfold and before the second act fuckery started going and
you're like oh no i'm hurting this my oh no my body um was i thought it
was kind of going to go the way of teeth which is one of my favorite vigilante justice movies ever
and at the end of teeth spoiler alert everyone should go watch teeth the you know, like she, you know, the, the, the girl with teeth in her vagina.
She does not win per se.
Right.
But she does survive.
And she goes on to say, I'm going to enact that.
I'm going to continue this vigilante vagina crime that I've had going.
And like, it's not, it's a very imperfect outcome.
It's not like she got what she wanted, but she still is, you know, she has this mission.
And that's kind of what I saw happening for Cassie.
And throwing a wrench into that in like, very sudden realism was like, fuck, I mean, it's
it, it, I don't even know, like, at what point I'll be like, I've fully processed that filmmaking
choice.
Like, it's, it's a lot. don't even know like at what point I'll be like I've fully processed that filmmaking choice like
it's it's a lot but but I'm yeah that that level of of realism and and then they really I mean
Emerald Fennell makes you fucking sit with it they light her on fire and you see this character that
you've built this emotional connection to to like oh she was so close to getting some of you know
maybe making some progress in her life and like maybe this is the last big thing she needs to do. And then she can
move forward. But but like you were just saying, Sierra, it's there should be space made for for
people who who do not get to have that triumphant other side of the story. Because there's many
people that through all these different factors don't
get to have that and then i became a doctor and justice was served like that is just not the norm
like even in this i find it like i mean i know they have to wrap up the movie but al getting
arrested i'm like so fucking what what is actually going to happen to this person like if this is
commentary on the brock turner case nothing is going to happen to him if it is commentary on the Brock Turner case nothing is going to happen to him
if it's commentary on the Brett Kavanaugh case nothing is going to happen to him but that's
another movie right like that's another series that's another thing but it's yeah I don't even
know what my point was teeth two things I just spent the last 30 seconds trying to figure out if vigilante
anagrams to vagina something at all because you did say like vagina vigilante instead of listening
to my incredible point that's interesting jamie i can multitask i can i can i can anagram plus
anything i does it come out to anything?
It's, it's not quite, there's a, there's an extra A that we need, but it's, let me, I'll keep working
on it. Um, the other thing is, uh, I read on our favorite scholarly journal, Wikipedia, that
Emerald Fennell originally planned to have the ending of the movie be that Cassie's body her body is
disposed of and she's burned and uh that's how the movie ends without any justice being served in
terms of Al Monroe getting arrested but that the investors in the film did not want that bleak of an ending um so she rewrote it to include
um the ending that we get the other ending she had considered was where apparently cassie does
not die she appears at the wedding and then kills it just says responsible men. So Al Monroe, whoever else.
Ryan, Max Greenfield's character.
I mean, that would have been the teeth ending, right?
Like that's the vigilante ending that you're expecting.
I mean, I do kind of like that she subverted that.
And I also appreciate that it wasn't the worst thing she could think of.
And the reason that she didn't go with that ending of like her
just like vigilante killing everyone was that emerald finnell deemed it unrealistic which goes
back to what we've been talking about is that it isn't super realistic and the ending that does
play out is more aligned with what tends to happen in real life a fun fact that i found that is like so dorky but i was like
interesting uh cassie is a that is a reference to like a greek myth um it's a reference to
cassandra who is the truth teller prophetess who was never believed.
And so it turns out that was a very deliberate name choice. And I was like, damn, she's good.
Emerald Fennell went to a library. Emerald really did her Wikipedia.
She's good.
And that knowledge.
Is there anything else anyone else wanted to touch on?
I'm pretty emotionally exhausted so i'm that's uh yeah yeah
we covered on covered all of it solved all of it i think yeah i think we really fixed rape culture
today yeah we did it your move promising young woman to just kidding please oh yeah the sequel the 10 part amazon series right yeah like let's
make this uh more painful for everybody i'm very glad this movie exists but i don't want to see it
again um but does it pass the bechdel test it does there are yeah right it's like is it even
relevant for this movie but it does it does uh cass talks to Gail, her mom, Nina's mom.
As far as our nipple scale, where we rate the movie,
a zero to five nipples based on an examination of intersectional feminism.
Okay, I guess I'll give this four nipples.
Because I agree, I'm give this four nipples because I agree.
I'm glad this movie exists.
I do think it is a net positive. I think it's, and I'm glad more movies are tackling this issue of just this kind of societal ill of rape culture, victim blaming. This movie has a very clear agenda.
And I think that for the most part, it handled it all pretty effectively, especially because
it's handled in a way that it is like palatable for a wide audience, which it shouldn't have
to be.
Movies like about this shouldn't have to be palatable but it does help and there are some
movies that were there was a movie i saw cited i'll post it in the in the notes of the episode
but there there are a few movies that have in the past five years explored campus rape culture
but this is the one that took hold and i think that it does have to do with what you're saying, Caitlin, with like it being the most palatable star studded attempt to touch on this subject.
Because I know that some of the synopses I was reading for movies that have come out in the past year about campus rape culture were fucking brutal.
Yeah.
Not bad, but just brutal.
Sure, sure.
So, yeah, I think that's helpful especially that plus it's
gotten a lot of attention a lot of award nominations which means more people will see it
and i'm i'm glad that is the case and i'm glad i saw it but as i've said i don't want to watch
this movie again i've seen it three times now to you know for yeah and that i
filled my quota for at least 10 to 20 years so uh but even so four nipples um yeah uh i'm gonna
honestly i'm gonna skip rating this i'm not gonna rate it because i still don't i feel like
i'm still processing it sure um fair but i i will i will say that i am very glad this movie exists
i i think it is like a big step forward in having this discussion in the mainstream i don't agree
with every choice made we didn't even have time or the emotional energy to get into like the hyper
hyper hyper specifics.
But I also think that there's a lot of pressure on movies like these to be perfect and to have a message that is palatable to everybody. To have a message that is like meaningful to men who may display these behaviors and also to people who have been on the receiving end of them.
Like it is such a huge burden.
It's such a huge topic to take on as a it's such a huge topic to take on as a
filmmaker and such a huge topic to even get something like this made and i think that this
does kind of fall and and this is not a slam on emerald finnell in any way she's clearly very
talented but there is like you know she we see many or most directors that kind of pop out who are women recently are already established
white actresses um and that is that's not fortunately is not exclusively the case but
it is a clear kind of trend of like you have to have already been a successful blonde woman for
a decade and then you can be creative we'll let you direct a movie. It's not the fault of the women, but it bums me the fuck out.
That's neither here nor there.
I'm very glad this movie exists.
I think it challenges a lot of things that are not challenged at all.
And I hope that we can see different takes on this topic.
I hope that this is not the rape culture movie.
It shouldn't be.
There's so many different perspectives and communities and,
you know,
all of that shit.
It's just sub,
I mean,
this is like a campus rape movie with a particular view.
This shouldn't even be the only campus rape movie,
you know?
And that makes me sad to say out loud too,
but I hope,
I hope that this movie's success makes room for,
like blazes a trail for other filmmakers
to explore similar themes and be able to do it their way
in the way it seems like Emerald Fennell
really did it her way here, which is amazing.
So I am not granting nipples at all today.
And the movie is good.
Yes.
Sierra,
final thoughts.
You're,
you can award nipples or also pass,
you know,
pass on that up to you.
Yeah.
I mean,
I think also a good four nipples is a good range for me as well for this movie at large and i think um
i've also was thinking about it in the sense of like sort of how rom-coms like it had a lot of
rom-com tropes in it you know we're talking about like the the kind of stock best friend and then
you know and then it flips it on its head of of course, with like Ryan being. Even aesthetically. Yes, yes, totally.
Music, soundtrack.
Yeah, the way they just did all the like glances and they look up at each other and all these things.
So, yeah, I think it was I that was another thing that I think resonated with me as somebody who feels betrayed by all rom-coms.
Why were they so problematic?
But I still like them, but they're always i can't watch
them again because they have problems um so i think that kind of was another thing that i thought
was interesting about it liked about it um yeah but yeah i agree there's like definitely it feels
like sometimes with these uh topics these heavier movies like it's like they almost can only tackle
one thing at once like we're babies and they almost can only tackle one thing at once,
like, we're babies, and we have to only do one thing. So they have to. Yeah, we can only do this
and has to be this kind of person with this kind of, you know, thing. And, you know, okay, so
hopefully, we'll move past that soon. But, but yeah, similar feelings for sure. Yeah. And I mean, we've had a really interesting discussion.
I'm glad that there are movies like this more and more that generate these deep, thoughtful, amazing discussion.
Oh, wow.
Look at us.
We're so amazing.
Wow.
We're so smart.
But no, like I appreciate that this movie challenged
me in the ways that it
did so kudos
to the movie for that
Sierra thank you
so much for joining us
in this discussion thank you for having me
so you know we
dove right in you know
so I'm glad I feel very honored to be
here yeah I feel like honored to be here.
Yeah, I feel like, yeah, let's like, let's decompress.
How have you been?
How's things?
You know, yeah, everything's light and fun.
So you got that side of me.
But yes, for sure.
You know, I'll come back for a light one someday. But it was good to kind of have this conversation because this movie has kind of been, you know i'll come back for a for a light one someday but it was good to kind of have this
conversation because this movie has kind of been you know it's a quarantine time i only got to see
it in my lonesome and like stew on it in my own head and maybe read a few articles but it's good
to talk it over with real humans who are also very thoughtful about it. And even though it is very heavy
and probably will, you know, require some,
I'll have a little white tea after this,
you know, do a little self-care.
Oh, yeah.
I'm going to take a bath.
Yeah, please.
Take the night.
Yeah, yeah.
You guys.
Let's all take the night.
Kick up your feet.
Yeah, there you go.
Thank you so much. we where can we find you
online where can our followers come and come and find you is actually really scary yeah what where
can they dox me please do not go and find her um but do follow her on the on the yeah in the digital sense um yeah thanks i i am on instagram at sierra cotto s-i-e-r-r-a-k-a-t-o-w
uh twitter same thing that's just my name and i have a podcast called stay pod-sitive
that i have kind of lapsed out a little bit but um you know it exists there are episodes would
love to have you both on someday if you would be so open to it.
It's, you know, it's very, it's more light, I would say, than Promising Young Woman.
But, you know, we talk about just how people keep their heads up in tougher times, stuff like that.
And I am on, oh oh i'm on tiktok
brave same name as well i mean i don't do that much but i love to watch them
no i have some i put some videos um yeah i'll uh that those are the main things excellent
thank you thank you again for coming on come back You know, if there's a Christmas movie, for example,
that you want to talk to us about for three hours.
Where's Santa Claus 4?
Or our podcast.
Let's do it.
Hell yeah.
You can follow us on Twitter and Instagram at Bechtelcast.
You can check out our Patreon at patreon.com slash Bechtelcast,
which is $ dollars a month it gets you two bonus episodes every month plus access to the entire back catalog you know take a bath take a nap
you're gonna be you're gonna be fine drink a tea drink a tea you know and and really practice self-care now and always.
I watched the first half hour of my Big Fat Greek Wedding after finishing Promising Young Woman last night
because I'm like, we just need a palate cleanser.
Yeah.
It's a good one.
Yeah, indeed.
Okay, bye-bye.
Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
I have a proposal for you.
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All you need to do is record everything like you always do.
What was that?
That was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister, or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing.
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Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
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In California during the summer of 1975,
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One was the protege of Charles Manson.
26-year-old Lynette Fromm, nickname Squeaky.
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