Whack-ass punditry

Do tell.

By December 22, 2011No Comments

The sex scenes between Blomkvist and Salander seem thrown in to give us one more chance to see Mara (who is in her twen­ties but has the body of a high-school sopho­more) naked, not because Fincher makes us see any con­nec­tion (emo­tion­al or phys­ic­al) between the char­ac­ters.” —“John Boot,” “Pulp Fascism: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” PJ Lifestyle, Dec. 21, 2011

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  • Tony Dayoub says:

    Just tried to read the column (nev­er mind the com­ments thread) you linked to. Ugh! Do you prac­tice self-flagellation, too?

  • JREinATL says:

    Hmmm… He seems pretty cer­tain about what a high school sopho­more ‘s naked body would look like.

  • Sal C says:

    Those sex scenes are also there in the 2009 Swedish film and I would pre­sume the source nov­el. Suggesting that Fincher threw them in is fairly dopey.
    I have such mixed feel­ings. Typically I would run out and see any new Fincher film in it’s first week, but I so hated the ori­gin­al movie that I can­’t quite fathom how he could have over­come such ter­rible source material.

  • Oliver_C says:

    On the year’s shortest day, the year’s shit­ti­est link (and I say that as someone who’s no fan of the books).

  • JREinATL says:

    The scenes are in the book as well. Also, the whole point of the Salander char­ac­ter is that she is unable to con­nect to any­one; that “Fincher [has­n’t made] us see any con­nec­tion (emo­tion­al or phys­ic­al) between the char­ac­ters” is an incred­ibly dumb cri­ti­cism, even for Pajamas Media.

  • Tom Block says:

    As a libertarian,”
    …eyes glaz­ing over already…
    “I am usu­ally totally opposed to censorship.”
    Why do I sense a “but” coming?
    “But”
    Now, there’s a shocker.
    “I’d make an excep­tion for any works by this author, in print or film”
    So much for that “totally”.
    “if you haven’t seen Seven, don’t rush out and get it for any sexu­al interest”
    Excellent advice.
    “the only genu­inely human char­ac­ter in the film [is] des­troyed by the end”
    Especially if you ignore that pesky Morgan Freeman guy…
    A.O. Scott was at least work­ing toward a good point about the exploit­a­tion angle: “It also rep­res­ents a fail­ure of nerve and a betray­al of the sexu­al egal­it­ari­an­ism Lisbeth Salander argues for and represents.”

  • Joel says:

    Tom: Where is that quote from? I did­n’t see it in the linked article.

  • Tom Block says:

    It’s from one of the com­ments. I know, I should­n’t go there. But I wound up in a brouhaha–one that was def­in­itely short on the “haha” part–in a Big Hollywood thread, and now my brain is for­mu­lat­ing responses to these numb­nuts in my sleep.

  • Zach says:

    That’s just wacky. It actu­ally seems, when you’re read­ing it, that it HAS to be par­ody. It’s hard to name a favor­ite pas­sage – besides the one Glenn quotes, there’s this gem:
    “Whether it would be wise to ask a viol­ent and hos­tile per­son to per­form [oral sex] against her will is one of many legit­im­ate ques­tions the movie simply ignores in its quest to provide an ever more-revolting series of grue­some images.”
    How dare Fincher, Larsson, and all the rest of the lib­er­al pinko pulp fas­cists show naked high­school­ish ta-tas and bru­tal rape! Furthermore, don’t they know that it’s harder to rape spunky hack­er chicks than pli­ant, will­ing coun­try girls? I mean, come on, did­n’t they do research on this film? WHERE’S THE CREDIBILITY? If I was a rap­ist (which I’m not, by the way, I hate rape; it’s gross) I would nev­er mess with some gothed-out girl. Even if she does have nice boobs. But she’s too young. Young-looking, I mean. Wait, what were we talk­ing about?

  • John M says:

    Wish I’d gone to John Boot’s high school.

  • Brandon says:

    Just in case any­one wanted to know: The lit­er­al trans­la­tion of the first book’s title is MEN WHO HATE WOMEN (Män som hatar kvinnor).
    So, the under-thought ques­tion posed by this review­er is kind of ridculous.
    In spite of Salander’s so-called non-traditional appear­ance, all of the men choose to see her as primar­ily female above all else (mean­ing vuner­able to exploit­a­tion). Until she bests them. Gender stud­ies types could go as far as to say that she stands in as some sort of cipher for mis­un­der­stand­ing and under­es­tim­at­ing the com­plex­ity of “female” as a gender.
    That Salander uses all this con­flict (and luck) to her advant­age is what makes her an intriguing char­ac­ter. Her inten­tion­ally cre­ated façade does not repel any of these men from try­ing to harm her. If any­thing it pro­vokes them into even­tu­ally see­ing her as ‘some­thing less(?) than female’ in their con­tin­ued pursuit.
    Yet, she works with­in ‘their’ sys­tem to use these mis­con­cep­tions and lack of under­stand­ing about the com­plex­ity of gender (or just human­ity in gen­er­al) to cir­cum­vent it.
    Or whatever.