In Predator: Badlands, the Predator Takes On Toxic Masculinity
Who knew that a Predator movie could be so cute?
Long before the phrase toxic masculinity first stomped its way into our lexicon, there was a great movie about the idea it represents. That movie was Predator, a movie about a band of absolutely gigantic, utterly badass dudes stalking an even bigger, even more badass alien hunter in the jungle. The dudes included steroidal man-mountains such as Carl Weathers, Bill Duke, Sonny Landham, and Jesse Ventura, who somehow wasn't even the most notable of the movie's future governors.
That would be their leader, a cigar-chomping, quip-dispensing Arnold Schwarzenegger, in as fine a form as he's ever been. Predator was one of the best Arnold Schwarzenegger Movies (ASM) back when ASMs were a genre unto themselves. Directed by John McTiernan in 1987, the year before he'd make Die Hard, it was essentially a science fiction reimagining of "The Most Dangerous Game," in which a group of elite hunters become the hunted.
But at heart, it was a movie about masculine strength. Even more specifically, it was about biceps. Predator is the movie that gave us the image that would become the Epic Handshake meme, drawn from a crucial early scene in which Schwarzenegger and Weathers, playing old friends, greet each other by locking arms (and eyes) in a contest of brute upper body strength. Schwarzenegger, obviously, wins, instantly confirming his pack dominance.
In a gang of big, tough dudes, there was a clear hierarchy, a top-down order, defined by raw physical strength. Schwarzenegger was what they all vied to be: the biggest and the toughest. The only remaining competition was the predator itself. The movie was organized around settling that dispute, because men must know.
Predator, you see, was a movie about toxic masculinity—and how it was awesome.
The latest installment, Predator: Badlands, takes a different tack.
This time, the protagonist is a young predator—a Yautja, in the series' current lore—named Dek. He too comes from a masculine honor culture that prioritizes physical dominance. Yautja prove themselves through their hunts, and their culture has little room for weakness, mercy, or mushy feelings of any kind beyond anger.
Dek is small for a Yautja, and thus inherently weak. But when his larger older brother shows up to cull him, at the bequest of their brutish father, the brother shows mercy, out of gratitude for a time when Dek protected him. The older brother helps Dek escape to a planet full of killer wildlife, including the Kalisk, a monster no Yautja has ever slain. Dek sets out to hunt the Kalisk, and thus prove himself as a man, or at least the predatorial equivalent.
Along the way, he meets Thia (Elle Fanning), a chirpy, good-hearted robot, or synth, from the Weyland-Yutani corporation, a legacy of the Alien series that the Predator franchise has interacted with on and off through the years. When the two first pair up, Thia is missing her lower legs, so after deciding that he'll still be hunting alone (a Yautja must) if he treats her as a mere tool, he straps her to his back, and they wander the planet in search of big game. Along the way, they encounter more Weyland Yutani synths, including a sister unit, Tessa, also played by Fanning, who may pose a bigger threat than the Kalisk.
The result is nothing like any Predator movie before. Fundamentally, it's an odd-couple buddy comedy, part outdoorsy hiking trip film, part coming-of-age story about a sensitive young man learning to make his way in the world while fighting for justice. Unlike the brutal original and the various R-rated sequels, it's reasonably kid-friendly, and shot in a high-CGI style that makes it look a lot like The Mandalorian. There's even a cuddly, giant-eyed, alien pet pal named Bud who tags along, echoing the Star Wars spinoff's plushy-friendly Grogu.
Yes, this is a Predator movie about a sensitive young alien hunter who ends up in a sort of found family—synth mom, Yautja dad, cute alien monster kid—and learns to process his feelings. Men will literally hunt unkillable alien monsters on a murder planet instead of going to therapy. The hiking, the talking, the adoption of the cuddly little monster buddy; it's all in the service of learning how to grow up, process his feelings, reckon with his toxic culture, and rethink his difficult relationship with his brutish and overbearing dad. Hashtag #NotAllPredators, right? It might as well have been called Predator vs. Toxic Masculinity.
I'm not quite sure how to process my own feelings about this movie, which both thematically and literally defangs the creature that gave Schwarzenegger a run for his money in the 1980s, transforming the franchise into something more like a goofy Saturday morning cartoon. (At least one person has already dubbed it Predator Muppet Babies.) On its own terms, it works quite well, and Fanning in particular is a bubbly comic delight. Yet I don't think I was fully prepared for a kiddie Predator film that is soft, friendly, cuddly, even cute. But maybe that's just my toxic masculinity talking.
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I ain’t got time to bleed.
https://tenor.com/view/bad-movies-rule-good-movies-rule-predator-movie-i-aint-got-time-to-bleed-you're-hit-gif-4002021255264255075
When will reason hire a copy editor?
It sounds like they emasculated and completely ruined yet another beloved male-centric hollywood franchise. I don't think I'll be watching this one.
Predator is a classic. Predator 2 was almost a good movie, with at least a few good scenes, including Busey at his Busey-est.
The rest have been dogshit.
+1 I don't know what Predator Badlands is actually about, but this review makes me not want to watch it.
Agreed. And I dare say that makes this the most useful piece Reason has published this year.
Disney did the same thing with Predator here, as they did with Star Wars and Marvel when taking them over.
Too many woke millennial women working there, and the products they put out keep reflecting that.
They took an original property that was made by and for awesome dudes to dude out over, and tried to make it for women and effeminate men.
Itll be another massive flop. Its not a property for women, and you cant make it into one and expect anyone to give a shit about it.
Rings of Power
Girls Ghostbusters
This sounds awful, though it might just be Suderman's take. OG Predator wasn't about toxic masculinity, unless you think it's toxic for a group of soldiers to head into the jungle to rescue a gov official whose plane was shot down by commie guerrillas, who then must fight the Predator.
I'm pretty certain you need to calibrate your sarcasm meter.
If you've read Suderman before the idea that this is sarcasm and not just the mind of a "modern audience" beta cuck kinda goes out the window. Sorry but this is cultural destruction aimed at nobody.
His take on the movie is rather odd. A SF unit sent into the jungle that runs across another team skinned alive and who is then hunted by the Predator isn't what he described it as. I think this guy has a problem with "toxic masculinity". Maybe his man bun, skinny jean wearing permanent friend zone ass likes that shit but it doesn't sound like anything I'm interested in.
"I'm not sure how to process my own feelings" is not something any man has ever said in history outside of a therapy session his cuck ass got dragged to by his wife. Maybe he should stick to 50 Shades.
I couldn't even get to him talking about the movie because he was so long-winded in assuring that he is a beta cuck. He's too effeminate to give a fuck what he has to say about "masculinity."
"Why is Nick Fuentes so popular with young men?" Maybe because he's one of the few people in media who doesn't show open contempt for them?
Unless they're, you know, Jews.
True, but that's not a very large number in the United States (2.4%).
I have less than no use for Fuentes: I don't like disingenuous trolls, and I remain unconvinced he's not a fed. But once you start targeting people for ostracization, you can't exactly complain when they flock to someone far more welcoming. If folks don't like a particular monster, they maybe should have paid more attention when they were in the process of creating it.
I dont know much about the dude, and it sounds like he has some horrible takes, but ya, that would about do it.
When you spend now a good few decades prioritizing non-white minorities in academia, hollywood, and culture as a whole. Then you spend the last couple decades making the focus, "OK, yes definitely minorities still great, whites bad, but also women are the best now" and prioritize women in corporate america, culture, academia, hollywood etc...
You have created a system where you have prioritized literally every other combination of a person on the intersectional chart as "good and awesome" and then spend every other breath complaining, specifically, about white straight men, while not giving them any priority in anything.
I guess when some crank comes along, no matter how bad some of his ideas are, he's going to catch on with the young white men if a big part of his message is "I am pro young white man, and I think they are getting screwed". Fucking shocker.
"Why is Nick Fuentes so popular with young men?" Maybe because he's one of the few people in media who doesn't show open contempt for them?
Is there some other Nick Fuentes besides the nazi catboy?
Because the only one that comes to mind is the self hating homo with the hitler cat fetish who is utterly contemptuous of anyone who doesn't share his strange worldview.
There is no such thing as toxic masculinity. Fuck off you Marxist fag
Suderman isn't a Marxist...
You're right, he's just a spineless apologist for them, their actions and their every belief.
Forget it, Rick. It's Commentstown.
I'm not convinced. Any time socialist policies are threatened he squeaks about how the government needs to replace it.
What, no trans character leads?
No but it does have a cripple and a midget plus a female femme fatale along with an angsty tween with daddy issues.
I want to mock this ... but I think it mocked itself.
I'm not quite sure how to process my own feelings about this movie
Men don't say shit like that.
Language.
Non-birthing persons don't say shit like that. Better?
Sorry, but Peter was being super gay.
Like, ultrafag.
I don't remember my predator lore. Are we sure they are males? Maybe the hunters are all female and the movies have been about toxic femininity this entire time?
I don't remember my predator lore. Are we sure they are males?
It's fractured, but yes.
Fun with fictional biology and the retardation of modern humans:
Across two species (human and predator) and two canons of the one species (generally or so far on both species), one of which includes phasal hermaphroditism, reproduction is *still* binary. That is, the "Hish canon" predators drift between male and female but still require a "male" and a "female" union to reproduce ("Yautja canon" is largely a mirror of our own sex and social/gender roles).
Don't ask me how sexually dimorphic(?) hermaphrodites distinguish each other for functional mating, I have a feeling it's only slightly more logically thought out or intellectually deep than switching pronouns. My understanding is that it's really more artistic (deus ex the comic book artist).
Pass.
Feeling great again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K6BRQKHYkjQ
I'll watch it because Elle is in it. No other reason required.
“Men will literally hunt unkillable alien monsters on a murder planet instead of going to therapy.”
Well, yeah. Duh.
The therapist is likely to be someone like molly. A fate worse than unkillable alien monster murder death.
It's astoundingly retarded in a feminine fashion that we can (not) conceptualize a spectrum of biological genders but the idea that hunting unkillable monsters on a murder planet and therapy is a mutually exclusive binary and/or that people needing therapy is unary.
“Men will literally hunt unkillable alien monsters on a murder planet instead of going to therapy.”
Also, kind of yes.
Men dont *need* therapy the way women do for 3 really big reasons.
First off, way less people need therapy then seek it nowadays. Therapy culture is a luxury vice of genZ-millenial, especially women, and its massively over used in people that just need to get their fucking lives together, but instead, they feel like 'doing the work' while paying some quack large sums of money so they can blame their lack of having shit together on their parent not giving them an attaboy at soccer practice in 1st grade. And then they can brag to their friend and signal their virtue about doing said 'work' on themselves.
Second, men arent women. Women have substantially higher rates of mental illness. Theres a reason "for Hers" pills target mental health issues, and "for Hims" target hair loss and erectily dysfunction. Common things are common, and the market aint stupid.
Third, yes, men seek out challenging feats more than women, and these endeavors in and of themselves stave off mental health issues. I wonder if dad going to hunt some game, spend some time up in a tree in nature with his thoughts, talk with some buds around the campfire, or training for an ironman is doing more for his mental health than the 24 year old over-'educated' sociology major turned barista is by crying to her therapist every week about how much the doom scrolling hurt her self care for the week.
First off, way less people need therapy then seek it nowadays.
Not nowadays. For almost a century and in relative contrast to the rest of medicine, the scope of psychotherapy has increased exponentially while the number of people it effectively treats has only increased linearly, even less if you take psychopharmacology out of the equation and limit 'treatment' to 'winds up cured'.
This sounds shockingly horrible.
You're wrong. The movie is about a hardened warrior gaining more skills to become better at his trade and is a thoroughly strong, heroic male character throughout the film.