Review: The Authoritarianism of Barbieland
Arm the Kens?

Imagine a country that denies fundamental rights to many of its citizens. The disempowered are deprived of economic opportunities, lack adequate shelter, and may not participate in the political process. It's long past time for international human rights organizations to turn their attention to Barbieland, the setting of this summer's smash hit movie Barbie. (Spoilers follow.)
As envisioned by director/co-screenwriter Greta Gerwig, Barbieland is a paradise for the various Barbies, including the film's protagonist, Stereotypical Barbie (Margot Robbie). The president is a Barbie, as are all the Supreme Court justices; every meaningful job is held by Barbies, who live in mansions.
In contrast, life is deeply unfulfilling for Beach Ken (Ryan Gosling) and his fellow Kens. Barbie withholds housing, realistic employment, political representation, and romantic love. Supporters of U.S. interventionism might expect the Kens to greet us as liberators. Indeed, Barbie and Ken do eventually go to the real world—Los Angeles, specifically—and hilarity ensues as they discover what it's like when men hold positions of authority. While Barbie is investigating existential dread, Ken returns to Barbieland and seizes power (the Barbies, exhausted from running things, overwhelmingly approve), forcing Stereotypical Barbie to save the day.
And where does Ken end up? Right back where he started, as the Barbies cruelly vote to return the Kens to their previous second-class status. The Kens ultimately ask if they can have a single Supreme Court seat. The Barbies say no. The authoritarian reaction to the Revolutions of 1848 was less vicious than this.
It's unclear whether the movie is actually endorsing this arrangement (Stereotypical Barbie opts instead to return to the real world); indeed, Barbie's broader message is a muddled one. Despite these problems, the film is colorful and entertaining. Now if only we could arm the moderate Kens.
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Stupid chick flick.
It's yet another movie that has thoroughly convinced me that the "Box Office" numbers are between majority fabricated and meaningless. "$1B at the Box Office" is about as meaningful "NYT Best Seller". Maybe "$1B at the box office" never meant that 100M asses hit 100M seats at $10 a pop (or 10M asses, 10X at $10 a pop) or whatever, but now, more than ever, "$1B at the box office", feels like somebody, somewhere, worked things out and spent $1M on empty seats in China so that, on paper, with the exchange rate, it looks like the movie made "$1B at the box office".
I know virtually no one who's seen the movie and I know several women with 30+ yr. old Barbies tucked away in their original packaging, several other women whose daughters play with the Barbie toys and accessories they themselves played with 30 yrs. ago. Of the people I do know who saw it, no one saw it twice. Nobody remembers any lines or memorable moments. There aren't little girls running around singing "Let It Go." at every dance recital and public outing. The idea that the movie was just so popular it made a billion dollars is just absurd.
Captain Marvel's empty, yet somehow sold out theaters all over again? Could be.
shame it wasn't just funny. I could have made it just funny.
>>several women with 30+ yr. old Barbies tucked away in their original packaging
my mother has hundreds. an entire room of it. very scary.
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I know a lot of people who saw it, but they were mostly late-middle-age liberal women who seemed to think it was some kind of obligation.
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I bet if you asked the 90 million people who bought tickets, to name a 'theme' from the movie, 11 would use the word Authoritarian.
11 would use the word Authoritarian.
11 million or 11?
I'm guessing just eleven.
That is a prime comment!
" . . . go to the real world—Los Angeles, specifically . . . "
Say what?
Even then, the 'real world' Los Angeles is better described as an idealized satire of actual Los Angeles.
Apropos, the actual real world does not make an appearance in The Barbie Movie.
>>Imagine a country that denies fundamental rights to many of its citizens.
hey! how has life in the cave been?
Once the bear moved out for the trunk, pretty good.
As a "spoiler alert" this one failed miserably with me. I haven't watched the movie and have no intention of ever watching the movie, but standing alone the rest of the article left me as clueless about the movie as I was before I read the article. By the way, I don't think fundamental rights means what the writer seems to imply in the context of "economic opportunities" and "adequate shelter." Perhaps it was tongue-in-cheek, requiring actual experience of the movie itself to make sense?
The fundamental rights are the rights to pursue economic opportunities, adequate shelter, etc. not to be given those things.
I've seen enough clips and videos on this movie to know that it's just another one of Greta Gerwig's third-wave feminist screeds, using Barbie as a skin suit for it.
The irony is that, as successful as this movie apparently has been, the Snow White remake she wrote, and indulges in the same stupid themes, is going to end up melting down harder than Chernobyl because its loudmouthed lead actress made it completely radioactive with her political sperging.
Gal Gadot also helped on that front, but I guess she can be forgiven because she is gorgeous.
It's unclear whether the movie is actually endorsing this arrangement
No, it isn't unclear at all. It's obviously meant as a "see, men, this is how the world looks to women" moment. It wasn't subtle.
The amazing thing is how fragile women were in the Barbie movie. The Kens just have to act like they should be in charge and the Barbies are "brainwashed". Then the Barbies just have to reawaken them in less than a minute each. They seem to need to be absolutely dominant or they go with the person who is.