Are We Entering an Era of #MeToo Reckoning?
The movement's net caught a lot of men like writer Junot Diaz—ordinary jerks rather than formidable serial predators.

Amid the glut of retrospectives on the five-year anniversary of #MeToo, the where-are-they-now rundowns of accused men and movement icons alike, a sense emerges that the #MeToo movement itself has finally transformed from a cause du jour to grist for the cultural mill. What it gives us now isn't news but narratives: the Pulitzer-winning reporting, the bestselling books based on the prize-winning reporting, the movies based on the books.
The release this month of She Said, a dramatized retelling of how New York Times reporters Megan Twohey and Jodi Kantor exposed Harvey Weinstein for the predator he is, has a celebratory feel to it, a satisfied look back by the movement's documentarians at a job well done. It's also impossible not to notice the film's end-of-year release date, always a sign of a hopeful contender for the Academy Awards.
But there are loose ends still to be tied. And on this front, the remarkable reporting on Junot Diaz published late last month by Ben Smith of Semafor stands out, revealing not just the movement's far-reaching impact but its limitations and unintended consequences. Diaz was never the movement's greatest monster, his cancellation never one of its biggest victories. But the story of what happened to him has a "now it can be told" feeling about it, even as some angry commentators continue to insist it should not, and can never, be told.
It all seemed righteous enough at the time, when the movement was at the height of its momentum and any allegedly bad man could not be defenestrated quickly enough: Diaz, a Pulitzer-winning novelist and one of the most celebrated writers in the contemporary American canon, was accused of one "forcible kiss" and two misogynistic tirades, all of which was immediately shorthanded per #MeToo best practices to the nefarious-sounding "pattern of predatory behavior."
His swift departure from the literary public sphere seemed like confirmation that a predator was what he was, although if you had been paying close attention, you might have noticed that he held onto his job at MIT even as literary activists on Twitter eagerly announced the removal of his books from their shelves and their classroom syllabi.
The incompleteness of Diaz's ruination was the first sign of the truth that Smith's reporting would reveal: an independent investigation found that the charges against him ran from unsubstantiated to outright false. An audio recording of one of the so-called tirades revealed it to have been, at best, mild disagreement; people present for the other one said they didn't remember it happening the way the accuser said. And the forcible kiss? A peck on the cheek.
If some of those who celebrated Diaz's ostracization from public life felt chagrined to learn that they'd been misled, it was not readily apparent in the response to the piece. "I hope the sexual harasser is at least paying you for the nice PR," read one representative reply on Twitter.
It's fair, though, to ask how much said so-called P.R. will be worth for a man whose innocence of the charges against him has been a knowable fact for years, yet has done nothing to restore his reputation. The fact that Diaz didn't sexually harass anyone, that an independent investigative body spent months determining that he didn't, doesn't matter. He is, per the narrative, a harasser.
As much as the #MeToo movement revealed about the true and terrible nature of men, it also revealed something about women. Their courage and resilience in the face of oppression, certainly, but also their opportunism, their skill at turning interpersonal conflict into a clout-seeking exercise. The prospect of litigating every disappointing encounter, every heartbreak or act of disrespect, in a trial by internet, quickly resulted in the stunning spectacle of women voluntarily surrendering every last shred of their sexual agency for the promise of seeing some jerk get his.
There was the woman who had what could be most accurately described as a bad date with Aziz Ansari: In addition to Ansari's sexual overzealousness, much was made of the fact that she was served white wine, when she prefers red. There was the one who equated rape with her boyfriend's insistence that she wear a certain style of eye makeup. There were the Diaz accusers: the one who described a heated dinner party conversation as "verbal sexual assault," the one who described herself as "a wide-eyed 26-year-old" when the author "cornered" her and kissed her cheek.
And while the #MeToo narrative tells us that men are monsters, it's less sure what to make of women. Are they the competent professionals of She Said? The tragic victims of The Hunting Ground? The broken but badass revenge-seekers of Promising Young Woman, using feminine wiles to dish up a well-deserved comeuppance?
Or maybe they're best represented by the reluctant hero of the horror film Barbarian, one of the most interesting cultural properties to be born out of the miasma of #MeToo—and, sad to say, a far better-made and more watchable film than She Said. There are many different kinds of monsters in this story, but also an unusual sort of hero: the final girl, Tess, whose fatal flaw is that she's just too good, too nice, too willing to believe in the inherent goodness of people. We know, though she doesn't, that a sleazy Weinstein-esque character played by Justin Long is an irredeemable baddie: Asked by a friend what really happened between him and a woman who accused him of rape, he equivocates: "She took a little convincing." The fact that Tess tries to save this man's life is to her credit, but from a #MeToo perspective, it makes her a useful idiot for the enemy: it is her decency standing in the way of the narrative's satisfaction, preventing this monster from getting what he deserves—what he really deserves.
In real life, of course, there's no danger of this. With the exception of Bill Cosby, who was convicted but released due to prosecutorial overreach, the worst of the #MeToo monsters have not been spared. Some, like Weinstein, will deservedly die in prison. Others have been so thoroughly toppled that they'll never again hold a position of power that they can abuse.
And yet, looking back over the lists of canceled men, it's striking how few cases rise to the level of a Weinstein, how few of them even come close. The net cast by the movement ultimately caught far more men like Diaz: guys who weren't formidable serial predators but ordinary jerks, possessed of just enough name recognition to make it worth something to target them, but so little power that knocking them down took hardly any effort at all. Men whose behavior would have been written off as merely annoying or tacky or impolite, if not for the heady influence of a moment in which it was not just easy but a little bit fun to cast these moments as representative of systemic injustice, of the trauma inflicted on women for centuries by the careless, callous patriarchy.
There was, for a time, an almost party-like atmosphere surrounding the emergence of each new allegation, the humiliation of each accused man. One recent #MeToo retrospective in New York about the "Shitty Media Men list," a crowdsourced Google spreadsheet gathering allegations of everything from rape and violent assault to creepy DMs and awkward lunch invitations, offered up a remarkable quote from one of the women involved in making it: "It was the most fun thing I've ever done in my life."
It's rare to see anyone say so quite so out in the open, but this is the thing: It was fun. It's a feature, not a bug, that most #MeTooings became such public spectacles, fueled by an energy that less resembled the grueling work of activism than it did the malicious glee of a bunch of high school kids scribbling in a burn book.
Five years after the movement's inception, we don't want to look too closely at that part. Better to self-mythologize with prestige dramas about intrepid journalists, thrillers about victims getting revenge, even horror that affirms the need to be maximally merciless to the monsters among us—and to criticize in the most punishing terms anyone who dares suggest that maybe, in the excitement of seeing bad men knocked down like dominoes, we became a bit monstrous ourselves.
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Whoops! It affected a person of color. Better stop.
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It all seemed righteous enough at the time,
A sign that the writer is probably part of the problem. The whole thing has been nothing but women trying to coordinate attack campaigns against men they don’t like, hoping to gain strength from sheer numbers instead of truth in accusations. Or dredging up stuff that may or may not have happened thirty years ago and getting other women to come forward so they can stack onto the unsubstantiated pile. It must be worth it if you can use it as a weapon to attack an incoming Supreme Court Justice. Surely that’s worth a few liars who have nothing better to do, and people will happily put those liars on a pedestal and give them interviews on morning talk shows with softball questions.
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I still don’t know the truth about Weinstein. If all he did was trade sex for better roles, that’s been part of Hollywood since the beginning, part of at least Victorian theatre since women were first allowed on stage, a part of human society since humans split off from apes, and a part of animal life since the first multi-celled critter traded good food for sex.
You could blame some of that on the patriarchy, since men leveraged male-dominated society into free sex. But women haven’t needed to rely on the casting couch for decades, especially since, say, 2000; actresses (or actors) who traded sex for roles were as much in charge of their lives as the men they traded with.
And I still don’t know how much of Weinstein’s crimes were actual forcible rape and how much was just prostitution.
I’m assuming it was more a matter of the power he could wield so people felt they had to go along. Simple prostitution and the women are as bad as he is but if he was leveraging people out of roles and the telatedcoaydays for refusal then that’s something completely different.
No it isn’t. If there is no force involved, if the only incentives are getting a better role, that is no different than accepting lower pay or lesser credits billing or promising to accept other roles in other films.
It is just negotiations if there is no physical force involved.
Yup.
Imagine an alternate scenario. Instead of a pig like Harvey Weinstein, we have another guy. Let’s call him Harry Bierstein. And a would-be starlet comes up to Harry and says to him “Harry, I really want this part. I’d do anything to get it,” as she gently caresses his shoulder and chest. Is she Harry’s “victim”? It’s hard for me to see that. It’s hard for me to assign victim status where both parties voluntarily participate knowing what they’re doing. You can argue that Harry might be derelict to his investors by staffing the project sub-optimally in return for a personal consideration. But, then the starlet isn’t the victim, unless she’s also one of the investors. The entire #metoo episode seems to rely on pretending this never happens when we all know that it does.
One of the problems with Hollywood is that there’s a TON of extremely attractive women who can read lines, which is what most actresses bring as a skillset. It’s not scarce, so what sets certain women apart is the ability to leverage other assets.
Let’s put it another way. If an actress promised to take on two other boring roles in exchange for this one better role, she is relying on his power and authority to get what she wanted, and to take that better role from some other actress who wasn’t willing to go so far.
If that first actress then agreed to sex instead of taking on the second boring role, that is her right as a free adult, and the fact that she relied on his power and authority to take the role from the second actress is no different from how the second actress took the role from the first.
It is all negotiations.
“The whole thing has been nothing but women trying to coordinate attack campaigns against men they don’t like, hoping to gain strength from sheer numbers instead of truth in accusations. Or dredging up stuff that may or may not have happened thirty years ago and getting other women to come forward so they can stack onto the unsubstantiated pile”
Okay. I understand why this comment comes out this way, but( the classic saying of ignore everything before a “but” is fitting here) We all, including you, A Thinking Mind, understand that women seeking a career in the modern era of publicized entertainment commit detestable acts to achieve the ends they wish to achieve (don’t know how many of you care about what the majority of modern Americans consider detestable, I know I’m not impressed.) “But” we all consider the way the modern entertainment industry (as compared to an entertainment industry focused around the principles of liberty, which would embrace creative destruction rather than having centralized gatekeepers which is where we ended up) which exploits women as wrong, which is something basically all humans can empathize/understand ala the “MeToo” movement, shows that “society” or a human nature oriented in a direction that the commenters on Reason have (Thank goodness) which detests exploitation. The thing I find interesting is that the virtue signaling of people who find something detestable as the explicated remarks of adult women in the entertainment industry that they had to trade things not publicly known to achieve their roles as compared to everything being “on the table” aka recognized as part of the contract *and* indicative of the works accomplished which seems to be the key to the virtue signal of the “MeToo” movement is that the “follow-up” thought of indicating that entertaining works with individuals who traded outside of regularly established channels (such as sexual exploitation) would give them extra “clout”. I see quite few people use the term clout today with an incomplete understanding that it also encompasses the user as much as the reader/listener so I apologize for the quotes and explanation if unnecessary. My main point on commenting would be, the insidious nature of these attacks is that they are something to generally find detestable (the exploitation of individuals) while still being a cultural virtue signal which does nothing to highlight that everytime any individual is exploited it is a “two way street” where if the individual rejected the terms at the start (even to the detriment of their future prospects) they would not be “harmed”. This sophistry and inability to explicate it and the buy in to all the base assumptions of the narratives involved is what I myself find detestable.
>>It all seemed righteous enough at the time
so did Salem.
The surest way to work up a crusade in favor of some good cause is to promise people they will have a chance of maltreating someone. To be able to destroy with good conscience, to be able to behave badly and call your bad behavior ‘righteous indignation’ — this is the height of psychological luxury, the most delicious of moral treats.
-Aldous Huxley
couldn’t be more exactly.
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It was ritious until the msm remembered that jobiden raped Tara ried, and Ashley Biden. Then me too went away
So did the inquisition and French Revolution.
Sorry, but the really honest question is whether even Harvey Weinstein rose to the level of monster the #metoo movement wanted to portray. I mean, let’s be quite honest. The casting couch at least can be a consensual arrangement. And a lot of Weinstein’s self-proclaimed “victims” remained awfully close with him. And I don’t recall any of his victims exhibiting much outrage when his proclivities were cited as a punchline in an Academy Awards ceremony. None of this is to say he was in any way innocent or not an utter bastard. But, I find some of this treatment just dishonest.
I was going to say the same. It’s actually really interesting. In nature, there are apex predators like bears or sharks and they wind up with a relatively unfettered ability to kill and consume everything in their ecosystem. However, sometimes, there are situations where even low- and mid-level predators wind up in an ecosystem where prey, like rabbits or lemmings, are practically seeking them out in their dens and leaping onto their face. Typically, this is a sign of destructive, or toxic (to the ecosystem), overpopulation of the prey.
I was going to comment that I am a huge fan of Kat Rosenfield but she fell into the very common trap of uncritically accepting Weinstein’s guilt.
I’ve noticed this tendency with recent articles re-evaluating MeToo: “we want to defend the wrongfully accused guys who are nothing like that monster Weinstein, who was clearly guilty”. Even when Matt Damon questioned the excesses of MeToo, he felt compelled to distinguish Weinstein from the “innocent” guys.
he is in jail because he was found guilty of rape…. there are other charges still in the courts…. you really can’t call him anything but guilty, unless you are so dedicated to ignoring the whole movement that you feel compelled to ignore reality.
How much of that rape was actually forcible rape, knife-to-throat kind of stuff, vs if you don’t fuck me I will destroy your career?
Most people have a pretty clear definition of rape, and it doesn’t include casting couch prostitution.
My question is serious. You claim to know. Can you answer? How many actresses did he actually forcibly rape, lock the door, pin them down kind of rape?
The abuse of power is creepy and should be called out. I know he was convicted of rape but never followed the case or even heard any details. Nowhere have I heard substantiation for those charges or even know who exactly was the plaintiff(s.)
I don’t know if the Weinstein situation is an exaggerated example of Trump’s “grab them by the pussy” comment. Is it consensual yet regretful sex or did he actually attack them? Either way he can be called a predator
Abuse of power? You mean the power of femininity that these young starlets have over a lonely, disgusting-looking troll like Harvey?
F*** me or I’ll destroy your career is illegal, your definition of “real” rape aka involving a weapon is more stringent than as is defined by the law.
I see I should have read more comments before posting my own on the same subject three hours later :-O
And a lot of Weinstein’s self-proclaimed “victims” remained awfully close with him.
Weinstein is disgusting, but these people you mention aren’t his victims. The victim went home to Iowa and now works as diner waitress because she wouldn’t give in. Other victims married a mid level agent after her career stalled because the part she needed to make her career instead went to someone who slept with Weinstein.
The women who slept with him for roles were accomplices, not victims. But just because you can’t identify the victims doesn’t mean they don’t exist or what he did was ok.
Okay. But, how many of the accomplices are now announcing their victim status? And how much of what we’re hearing is from the actual victims?
“It was the most fun thing I’ve ever done in my life.”
I believe that pretty well sums it up.
Yep, amoral sociopaths destroying others with full societal endorsement. Kate, you and the rest of the collectivist harpies are 1000x worse than any of the men you brought down. Good job destroying women’s mentoring in professional capacities and destroying any goodwill between the sexes you misandrist.
Bingo!
I’m seeing it EVERYWHERE. Chickens coming home to roost, bitches!
That’s the money quote. The narcissistic entitlement is off the charts.
Once again, accusations are not enough, evidence is necessary. There was evidence against Bill Cosby of rape. There was evidence against Weinstein of rape.
But the overwhelming majority of others, there was no evidence of any crime, and in most cases little evidence of even untoward behavior. Example being Ansari, who’s accuser merely complained about having a bad date.
You made accusations about a black man because of his appearance in a photo.
I made a joke about his funny name. I did NOT convict him or get him fired or anything of the sort.
Right. A “joke”.
And the Bill Cosby allegations fell apart entirely.
Testimony alone is evidence and is legally sufficient to convict.
We know about sexual assault, and things like quid pro quo and hostile environment. What people like this fellow and Garrison Keillor [a lifelong and faithful Democrat] did not realize is that definitions greatly expanded in the wake of “Me Too.” Not only were previously innocuous behaviors such as a simple [non sexual] touch or “flirtatious” speech expanded to put one on a par with Daniel Epstein, but accusations themselves became similar to a Title IX investigation; enough in and of themselves to warrant a harsh response and separation from school or work.
Just because you are a “good guy” with no bad intentions or any record of any type of assault or extortion, doesn’t mean you won’t go down in flames.
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Leftists never want to overthrow oppressors to end oppression. They want to overthrow them to take their place.
Even if their enemy are not “oppressors;” like Roach Pierre said, “you have to break a few eggs,” right? They do indeed want to be the oppressors.
Meanwhile shitheads like Bill Clinton, Joe Biden, Jeffery Epstein’s still anonymous clients, etc. are still walking around unscathed.
Exactly. Billy boy and Pedo Pete are still out and free.
They were just about to get Epstein right before he didn’t kill himself.
Alive on a beach near Haifa or a penthouse in Tel Aviv.
With a new face.
Epsteins coffin is empty. He is alive and well, living in the Middle East as “youth Imam” under the name of Hadid Nahkil Mussef.
Their courage and resilience in the face of oppression, certainly, but also their opportunism, their skill at turning interpersonal conflict into a clout-seeking exercise.
Toxic femininity.
As one clinical psychologist said (paraphrasing): Anti social behavior in men presents itself as violence. Antisocial behavior in women presents itself as reputation destruction… and that scales on the internet.
Yeah. Again, when the animal seeks out the prey, finds it in its den, tears the den apart and consumes the prey, it’s a predator. When the animal is sitting around its den making shadow puppets, the prey wanders in, asks to help, and offers more benefits than what all the other prey offering to help offers, the prey is overpopulated.
Toxic femininity doesn’t exist. Just like there are no racists among minorities.
This is actually true, which is why whatever Ye says isn’t racist.
That sounds like Dr. Peterson from the Cathy Newman interview.
There was the one who equated rape with her boyfriend’s insistence that she wear a certain style of eye makeup. There were the Diaz accusers: the one who described a heated dinner party conversation as “verbal sexual assault,” the one who described herself as “a wide-eyed 26-year-old” when the author “cornered” her and kissed her cheek.
There was the one that destroyed the New Atheism movement where an offer to get a cup of coffee was characterized as rape, and so on, and so on and so on. And while we spend energy handwringing over the ‘edge’ cases, there were the outright unsubstantiated false claims.
If there is another mass Atheist/Skeptic gathering like ReasonCon, I plan to wear a T-Shirt saying: “I Take The Stairs! That’s My Alibi! Come chase me!”. 🙂
You haven’t got a prayer.
Exactly. And with that T-shirt, no prayer will be needed. 🙂
Welcome, latecomers to the party! Everyone honest about it already knows that #MeToo was never anything but an epidemic of false accusations of rape.
The silver lining is that its days of success are numbered (though not yet over) because two sitting Supreme Court justices were victims of it during their confirmation processes.
I find it interesting we got through an entire article on the #MeToo era reckoning without mentioning Kavanaugh or Biden- and the interesting way in which blue check elites and the media treated both sets of allegations.
After all, Reason called the incredible and unsubstantiated allegations against Kavanaugh as “credible” so arguably, this magazine played a role in hyping them.
What I find interesting is the Biden allegations were treated.. on balance correctly based on the age and ability to substantiate the claims against him. Suddenly there was sober analysis, reason and a demand for due process, clear evidence etc.
Reason called the incredible and unsubstantiated allegations against Kavanaugh as “credible”
If you recall the supposedly “credible” accuser asserted a timeline which could not possibly have been true because Kavanaugh was provably not in the state. Supporters then culled Kavanaugh’s travel records to find a time it could have occurred, and all the journalists, apparently including Reason, pretended this retrofitting was perfectly legitimate when every reasonable person recognized it as immediately discrediting.
When the judge is in your pocket you don’t need credible evidence, literally anything you say will be deemed “credible”.
Of course the charges against Kavanaugh were credible. He’s Irish which means he drinks to excess and loses all inhibitions just before he blacks out from the booze. Blackout drunks have memory lapses so the very fact that Kavanaugh didn’t remember anything about Ford proved that he raped her.
The trauma of the attack was so overwhelming for the victim that she couldn’t remember what, where or when it happened further establishing Kavanaugh’s brutality.
The logic is unassailable.
Because I predate hashtags by a fair margin, I still have a hard time not reading “#MeToo” as “pound me too”…
Had Reasons’ resident literary blue stocking blown her whistle earlier, the Paris Review might not have gone the way of the Weinstein agency.
even horror that affirms the need to be maximally merciless to the monsters among us
The fact that this sentence doesn’t contain an “and within” after “among” is very telling. The echos of the lack of “and within” in the canyon of COVID lockdowns is practically deafening.
“Sure some of the people whose lives we ruined weren’t actually guilty of anything, but that doesn’t make us the monsters!”
We would have all been abolitionists in 1860.
Just for the record:
None of the consequences were unintended.
And Kat knows it.
it’s striking how few cases rise to the level of a Weinstein, how few of them even come close.
Another question is why eventual MeToo-ers spent decades arguing high heels and pockets without pants were sexist when an ocean of sexual assaulters were operating in the open. Now that we discover there were only a handful of examples both of these otherwise inexplicable circumstances make more sense.
But women did get what they want which is an employment blacklist for men they don’t like / want out of the way, just as they corrupted Title IX to accomplish the same thing on campus.
“Blacklist” in more ways than one…
Rape fell out of fashion when SleepyJoe got accused.
What’s amazing is that leftists like you were openly tolerant and even adoring of these “monsters” until you thought you could use the accusation against a political enemy. Then when your excesses were applied to your allies in media, entertainment and politics you were suddenly all about going back to rational standards. #metoo was a marxist political weapon of the DNC that backfired and you’re still covering for them like the good little proggy propagandist whore you are.
Women are simultaneously the most intelligent and capable gender, and the variety of humans unable to direct their own lives. Deal with it, you chauvinist pigs.
Also even though women are equal to, and usually even better than men in any field (source: Joe Biden)…and also, gender is fluid and a social construct so any man can be a woman, any woman a man, there is still a gender pay gap that we have to correct, because…science?
Now do Afro-centrism.
Intelligence is over-rated.
Intelligence in others is *definitely* overrated.
Most feminists I know don’t actually want agency. There’s too much advantage in blaming every disappointment in their lives on men.
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…a lot of men like writer Junot Diaz—ordinary jerks rather than formidable serial predators.
This is not off to a good start.
Well written article. Last sentence really solid conclusion.
Asked by a friend what really happened between him and a woman who accused him of rape, he equivocates: “She took a little convincing.”
This is not when you learn he’s a real bad guy. It’s creepy, questionable, and frowned upon but he didnt rape her according to this dialogue.
The end of the film is where we really learn what a piece of shit he is.
There was the woman who had what could be most accurately described as a bad date with Aziz Ansari
This is my favorite me2 event. It’s so great.
I read the whole article from this woman and it was laugh out loud funny. Bravo sweetheart.
“but this is the thing: It was fun.”
Fuck. Right. Off.
When will there be a #MeToo backlash against the false accusers? Seems they get off with no negative consequences.
Interesting that you mentioned Barbarian because the first half of the movie was uncomfortably weird in a good way. I don’t remember the character’s name, but even though the first guy in the house had all the Me Too vibes, he did nothing wrong and really showed how distrusting and paranoid Tess was. I can’t relate to the scenario of 2 people booking the same room, but when I watched it for the first time, I kept telling myself he needed to keep it in his pants. The way he’s telling Tess about the room felt rape-y, like he was trying to coax her in more and more. Of course it’s a horror movie so fundamentally the characters have to make terrible choices for the plot to proceed. It’s like he keeps pushing his luck. He gets her to agree to staying with him, but then he’s trying to get her to drink with him. Meanwhile, she’s paranoid about everything, taking pictures of his ID and locking her door. He knows she’s paranoid so he keeps providing proof. Ok with her making her own tea, offers wine but doesn’t open the bottle until she sees him do so, etc. Their situation was so awkward that I didn’t blame Tess in the moment, but I’ve been wondering about the movie a lot because I couldn’t figure out what the point was. The ending wasn’t satisfying but I couldn’t forget the movie because I love the horror genre and it’s the first horror movie I’ve seen in a long time that didn’t rely so heavily on cliches.
I worry about the second half and the ending of the movie because like you said, it sort of justifies everything while washing over the first half as if it never even happened. Justin Long’s character is kind of rape-y, he’s clearly a conflicted person with some degree of conscience, but in the moment makes terrible choices where he puts himself first. Ultimately he gets what he may have deserved, but the only reason you’re left with that feeling is because he tries to use Tess to save himself. Prior to that, even in the bar scene, he doesn’t really fit the bill of rapist. If he was truly so selfish, he could have run away once he shot Tess by accident.
All these conflicted characters leaves me wondering what they were trying to say. All I was left with was a feeling of chaos, which is exactly how I feel about modern male/female interaction. Obviously, men aren’t going to find themselves in a double booking situation where Tess’s paranoia is understandable, but what about actual romantic interactions? I do worry that we’re getting closer to the point where men are not permitted to show romantic interest in women. The spotlight shines on when it’s the ‘wrong’ time but never the right time with the implication being it is never the right time. Tess trusted a genuinely good person who did nothing wrong less than a likely rapist.
I don’t think it is any coincidence that fewer people are having relationships and forming families when the romantic dynamic is so troubled. I don’t think it’s normal or healthy for people to be so guarded while entering into a process that’s all about lowering your guard and showing some vulnerability.
It took 60 women , 50ish years, and charges/accusations dating from the 1960s to finally get Bill Cosby convicted . Only to have it vacated. Most victims don’t even get their day in court. Don’t speak to me of injustice.
Then how do you know they are victims?