Full disclosure: I’m writing this on my abbreviated lunch
hour and I’m kind of annoyed, so I may not use my words at their best. Carry
on.
Second full disclosure – I am not a comic book person. I
am nominally a comic book movie person when the movie combines
writers/directors/actors I like and seems to produce a story that looks
interesting to me. I’ve seen maybe… half (?) of the MCU franchise films. Hard
to say because I don’t know how many there have been so far off the top of my
head, but hey, I know what “MCU” means! I have like, one toe in the club,
right?
So I feel okay talking about this off-message PR tour for
“The Avengers: Age of Ultron” from the perspective of someone who’s outside
enough not to have opinions about whether, say, Iron Man’s characterization is
consistent with a previous storyline. I don’t know if the cast is ill-prepared
or just really tired after approximately 47 MCU films in a row, but it seems
that the press tour has gone off the rails a bit. Unless a debate about when it’s
okay to call someone a “whore” was among the talking points for a
billion-dollar family-friendly franchise… which I doubt.
Since I brought him up, let’s start with Mr. Renner. The
actor I used to jokingly call Movie Boyfriend. (Emphasis on “used to.”) A week
or so ago Renner and Captain America did an interview where they were asked
about Black Widow, who has been romantically linked to both of their characters,
and apparently now to Hulk in AoU. They both joked that Black Widow was a “slut”and a “whore,” and then Renner went on to say something about Black Widow
having a prosthetic leg (Huh?).
The actors rightfully got a lot of criticism on social
media for their comments, and immediately issued apologies. Well, one of them
did anyway. Chris Evans’ statement was perfect – a succinct “I screwed up and I’m
sorry” apology that ended the story. (Takeaway: Everyone should be more like
Chris Evans.) Renner……. Yeah, he needs new people. Because “I am sorry that
this tasteless joke about a fictional character offended anyone. It was not
meant to be serious in any way. Just poking fun during an exhausting and
tedious press tour” is a BS attempt at actual contrition and everyone who read
it knows that he is not at all sorry.
AND THEN he doubled down on Conan this week, first
whining about getting into “internet trouble” and then saying “Mind you, we are
talking about a fictional character and fictional behavior, Conan, but if you slept with four of the
six Avengers, no matter how much fun you had, you’d be a slut. Just saying. I’d
be a slut. Just saying.”
Okay, Jeremy? Shut up. No, no – you don’t need to reply.
Just stop talking. You look like an ass. Just saying.
The issue is not one person’s off-the-cuff stupid
comment. The issue sure as hell isn’t that he said it about a fictional
character. The issue is that actual real-life non-fictional women get this BS
thrown in our faces EVERY DAY. Renner’s remarks are basically Why I Don’t Go to
Bars Anymore Bingo:
-
You like men, therefore you are a slut.
-
Oh, you don’t want to have sex with me? Fuck
you, you’re ugly anyway.
-
What, can’t you take a joke?
-
I mean, I would call a dude a slut, too…….. (except
that I don’t.)
Part of the reason this bugs me so much is that Jeremy
Renner has always seemed like a thoughtful guy who respects the women in his
life. So for that guy to so deeply
not get why what he said was hurtful, to the point where he’s eye-rolling fans
like me on national television, feels like a betrayal.
Hold on, I need to go back to that “prosthetic leg”
thing. I think that might bug me more than the slut/whore thing. That was…
really, really awful. Maybe if, the day the Interview Where Stupid Things Were
Said had come out, I hadn’t just been
reading about the Boston Marathon bombing trial, which included testimony from
women my age who are now missing legs and who are coping with life-altering
change in their perception of self……. Nope, it would still be really, really
awful, regardless.
I must’ve been madder at Jeremy Renner than I thought,
because what I really started to write about was Joss Whedon quitting Twitter. The AoU writer/director took down his profile
a few days ago. There was a lot of speculation that he’d been driven away bysocial media criticism of the movie, including the depiction of Black Widow and
the merchandising – which largely leaves out the female characters (and over
which Whedon has no control btw). Yesterday Whedon told Buzzfeed that he just
needed a Twitter break to focus on work. Cool. But then Whedon said this:
“Believe me, I have been attacked by militant feminists
since I got on Twitter. That’s something I’m used to. Every breed of feminism
is attacking every other breed, and every subsection of liberalism is always
busy attacking another subsection of liberalism, because god forbid they should
all band together and actually fight for the cause.”
Um. No.
First things first, Joss Whedon is awesome. He’s a role
model for writers who want to develop interesting female characters. He’s one
of the good guys. And since he’s one of the good guys, I hold him to a higher
standard than I would, say, Mike Huckabee. What a lot of male feminist allies
don’t seem to get is that being an ally doesn’t make you immune from criticism.
If anything, it opens you to more because you’ve basically raised your hand and
said “Feminists! You’re awesome! How can I help?” You can’t do that and then
get mad when we tell you.
So, a few things – I need to know what Joss means when he
says “militant.” Individual women tweeting snark at you is not militancy. And
the other thing is – he’s not wrong about people in the same camp picking each
other apart. The problem is that what looks like nitpicking when you’re the one
being nitpicked is actually how you educate the others under your particular
big tent to check their own privilege and be more inclusive of other points of
view. And I WISH I could get across to men how rage-inducing it is to be told
that the thing you’re concerned about is not worth anyone’s attention because of
Other More Pressing Issues, Little Lady. Kind of like with the Bar Bingo above,
women get this ALL THE TIME, and we are really tired of constantly having our
concerns be brushed aside because a dude doesn’t feel like addressing it.
Guys? Sometimes you just need to stop talking. Sometimes
it’s not about you. If enough people are criticizing something you said or did
that you notice, and if those people are all saying the same thing, that’s when
you need to take a pause and just listen. It’s okay if you don’t completely
understand WHY what you said/did was problematic, as long as you acknowledge that
it was. Don’t lash out at the mean Internet people, don’t mansplain to me why I’m wrong. Just listen. You
might actually learn something.
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