![bridesmaids movie sex scene bridesmaids movie sex scene](https://cdn3.whatculture.com/images/2014/08/bridesmaids-jon-hamm.png)
“Now, they’re in bed together, they’ve been having sex… and yet she’s wearing her bra. Here are a few excepts from the review written by Johanson (source: FlickFilosopher), and I’ll critique this farther below: However, it is my understanding (and I am aware that some on the internet dispute this) that the “gross out” humor scenes in ‘Bridesmaids’ were not in the original script that was written by two women (Wiig and Mumolo) but were inserted by the male director, which you can read more about here: I too dislike bodily function, gross-out humor in movies and wish Hollywood would stop resorting to such content. ( “If You Enjoyed Actor Chris O’Dowd as Nathan Rhodes Avoid Him In These Other Roles – Re: Bridesmaids Movie”), Johanson is annoyed by the bodily function humor in the movie, as was I.Īs I said in this previous Bridesmaids-related post,
![bridesmaids movie sex scene bridesmaids movie sex scene](https://media.npr.org/assets/img/2011/05/10/2400_d014_00146r_crop-c4b62f3bece5f1a028f54a51cb6b0aaa047f3a64.jpg)
Who gives a flip if the Annie character was wearing a bra during her bedroom scenes with Ted? Get over it, America. I also saw people complaining about this bra-wearing thing in the sex scenes in the ‘Bridesmaids’ movie on other discussion boards and blogs: that a woman was shown in a bra during a sex scene didn’t bother me, and I didn’t get obsessed about it or hung-up on it. It really perturbs Johanson that the Annie character is shown with her bra on in the sex scenes with the Ted (played by John Hamm) character, who is a skeezy, womanizing, dirt bag. I didn’t pick up that vibe at all in the movie and think she’s over-reaching. Johanson feels that the Megan character, played by McCarthy (who I wrote more about here – vis a vis her role in ‘Bridesmaids’) was used to ridicule over-weight people. On to my thoughts regarding Johanson’s ‘Bridesmaids’ review… I am right of center politically and have fairly traditional values, while a lot of people tend to associate the term “feminist” with a woman being left wing and socially progressive. While I do believe in equality for women, I am hesitant to apply the “feminist” label to myself, because the term comes with a lot of baggage I do not want to be associated with. The author of this movie review I am critiquing here, Johanson, is the sort of feminist who apparently doesn’t consider being sexually abstinent a valid, feminist choice for women. I rarely see liberal feminists promote the notion that it’s acceptable, feminist, or equally empowering, for a woman to choose to be sexually abstinent.
![bridesmaids movie sex scene bridesmaids movie sex scene](https://videocelebs.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/image3_temp-85.jpg)
I find it strange and distasteful that so many liberal feminists consider having sex the only sexual choice that is empowering for women. Which is my way of nicely saying she’s one of those people who did in fact watch the same movie as I did, but was apparently too – I don’t know, out of it, ignorant, or driven by her hobby horses and pet causes – to follow the script, plot, and character motivations, or to see those things clearly.īecause she sure as hell arrived at some very wrong or weird conclusions about aspects of the movie, its plot, or its characters. Johanson wants to see nudity and raunch – which, had that been done, would have made ‘Bridesmaids’ an X-rated affair, not an R-rated project.īased on Johanson’s criticisms and observations of this movie, I am left wondering if she and I even saw the same film. Until that happens, we could at least be offering the pretense that people in bed together for the purposes of sex are nude.” “I’d love it if Hollywood - and America - would discard its hangups about sex and nudity. Johanson seems to feel that showing a woman’s sex life accurately means showing nudity – which she denies in the review, but that’s what it comes down to, which she reveals in this comment she left to someone else under her review: The author of that review, Johanson, is a feminist who wants to see Hollywood crank out movies that accurately depict the lives of women – especially their sex lives. I came across all sorts of stuff, including this movie review:īridesmaids (review) by MaryAnn Johansonvia FlickFilosopher – May 2011 (I’m not sure why, but I’ve always found movie and music reviews fascinating and interesting.) I also wanted to read reviews of the movie to find out what people thought of it. I looked up more information about it, including information on actors Kristen Wiig, Chris O’Dowd, and other people involved with the film.
Bridesmaids movie sex scene tv#
“Did this reviewer or commentator even watch the same movie I did? It sure as hell doesn’t seem like it.”Īfter I saw the movie ‘Bridesmaids’ on TV for the first time in 2015, I liked it so much, I wanted to learn more about it. I sometimes read movie reviews, or comments left by people on entertainment related blogs and forums, such as IMDB, and wonder,