Clueless WaPo Film Critic Unhappy ‘Prom’ Doesn’t Corrupt Your Kids
by Hunter DuesingIt’s no stretch to say that Disney’s new film Prom is a squeaky clean affair, but according to Washington Post film critic Sandie Angulo Chen, this is apparently a bad thing. Prompting responses from Newsbusters and Christian Toto, Chen’s piece laments the lack of edge, angst and subversion in Prom, stating that the event is associated in cinema with things like the iconic pig’s blood prank from Carrie, and the race to lose one’s virginity in American Pie. She wonders why there are no violent outcasts or brooding bad boys that smoke cigarettes, as though the House of Mouse is a studio that has a reputation for delivering hard-hitting works of gritty social realism.
A trap many film critics fall in to is that they feel that movies have a responsibility to speak absolute truths and subvert the norm, which is a nice way of saying that they want movies to conform to, and confirm, their own worldview. Just look at Roger Ebert, a critic who loses his mind any time a movie treats violence in a manner he doesn’t deem politically correct. A good recent example would be the way Ebert childishly punished James Gunn’s Super for being too violent by spoiling the ending in the opening paragraph of his review. This is the same Roger Ebert who scolded Michael Medved for doing the exact same thing to Clint Eastwood’s Million Dollar Baby in 2004. But I digress, critiquing a movie is one thing, actively punishing it is another. Of course, Chen doesn’t stoop to Ebert’s level, but what she does do is expect the movie to behave according to her perceptions.
I’m not criticizing Chen for attempting to put Prom in the context of the real world, one reason we enjoy movies is to think about how they relate to life. But Chen’s review seems to confuse real life with “reel life.” She acts as though Prom has a responsibility to portray the titular event in a way that she deems realistic, yet her view of the activities that go with said event seems to be informed primarily by other movies. This causes her to come across as an out-of-touch film critic living in a movie bubble.
My personal experience with high school prom wasn’t full of sex and debauchery. It consisted of a nice group dinner and a dance where a DJ played trendy music at a swanky venue to this day. I was the same person going out as I was coming in, despite the fact that movies try to sell you on the idea that prom is some sort of rite-of-passage that changes you forever (unless you count the fact that to this day, Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Wanna Miss a Thing” still prompts uncontrollable rage-vomiting whenever I hear it). If my prom were a movie, it would probably be rated PG. It’s a given that many teenagers have prom experiences that would be directed by Bob Clark and earn a hard R-rating, but there are also many with the toned-down experience I had with my friends. That isn’t to say that Prom is at all realistic, but rather, that the experience of prom isn’t the always the time teens use to indulge in bad behavior. A shiny, clean perspective like Prom is perfectly acceptable.
Granted, Chen concedes that not all teen-themed fair needs to be full of horny teens doing drugs, and it seems she simply didn’t care for the movie, which is fine. But she forgets that movies can depict certain events like a high school prom in whatever manner they choose, be it raunchy like American Pie, horrifying like Carrie, or kid-friendly like Prom. Toto noted in his piece that a movie can be whatever it wants to be, so long as it is engaging, and I agree with that statement completely There are many ways to approach telling any kind of story or theme. Critics should remember to criticize a movie for what it is, not for what it isn’t, unless of course, it isn’t good.







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I didn't go to prom. I didn't care enough to.
as far as I'm concerned any prom that doesn't have Duckie isn't worth attending. http://youtu.be/RmyoEFuMGkQ
Unless I'm mistaken this is a movie for kids. Prom is a fantasy for kids. let them have a silly meaningless movie about a silly meaningless fantasy event.
That review must have been written by someone who does not have children. Disney isn't moralizing, they are responding to an ever increasing demand by parents (and some kids) for more wholesome stories at the movies – stories they can watch with their children and not have to worry about covering little ears or eyes at some point. Times are tough, money is tight. No family of 4 or more wants to spend $100+ for a family night out at the movies to see a piece of drivel that glorifies pre-adult sex, drug use and profanity. We can stay home and see that crap for free on tv. Disney gets that every family-friendly movie that gets released rockets to the top of the box office every single time. Its not Disney that is out of touch with this film, its the reviewer.
If Disney stopped making wholesome movies (or at least, movies devoid of sex/drug usage/alcoholism among teens) then WHO THE HELL ELSE WOULD BE MAKING THEM?
These people always believe in "diversity" and "freedom of choice" so long as family values and conservative principles aren't on the menu.
My prom was sexual, a hotel room, and alcohol!!!
See how cool I am!? All of my hedonist exploits are dribble today to myself, my children, my wife….
I admire and long for couples, coming out of youth and straight into marriage and whose testimony I love to hear.
I didn't go to my own prom – but I went to the proms of two other schools with platonic male buddies. Catholic all boys schools, with lotsa Franciscan friars in long frocks tied around the waist with rope. I remained a virgin, and didn't drink. My greatest crime was my incredibly huge 80's hairdo and unstoppable sass.
My daughters however, went with groups of friends, a few of which decided to gender-bend by dressing in drag. Yep – one of the boys wore a pink taffeta gown and tiara. Talk about being a culture victim. At least a dozen kids that I know of at that school insisted they were either gay or bi. [There was a 'Gay / Straight Alliance Club'] And yet, three years out of high school, everyone of them is in a heterosexual relationship – some are even married with children. Just more proof that our public schools mass produces insane people. The lucky ones straighten themselves out after a couple years of reality, away from the constant, droning drumbeat of leftist conditioning.
Prom night. What a joke. I didn't even attend my classes prom. I was such a social misfit, outcast, I wasn't even invited to my 5, 10 or 15 year reunion.
They finally gave in on 20, but that was because they could only get about 25 other people to give a crap, and they needed numbers to fill the hall.
And in my opinion my life is all the better for not giving in and living according to "their" rules. I am who I am, and I can look at myself in the mirror. That's good enough for me.
The movie or TV show I've ever seen that accurately describes youth is Beavis & Butt-head.
I don't recall that any of us needed a whole lot of corrupting…..we handled that ourselves.
You get a thumbs up for your gravatar quote alone!
Well, we Christians I hope! Of course, even after making tens of millions, being a Christian film maker is still eschewed as niche!
I mean, to have Christian values in movies or TV shows, even family TV shows is considered… heretical to these Atheist brainwashed gatekeepers.
Spot on!
Great article Hunter!
I'm surprised you didn't bring up Ebert's reaction to "Battle: LA" again… that review was one of the most ridiculous, biased film reviews I've read.
This is an exceedingly irritating way to treat movies. I have a close friend who was OUTRAGED when "Paul Blart: Mall Cop" came out, because it came out at the same time as "Observe and Report," and did better. You see, "Observe and Report" was "edgy" and "subversive," while "Paul Blart" was safe and family-friendly… which to him was unforgivable. I liked both, they were totally different movies, and there shouldn't be anything wrong with that.
To the extent characters in movies are role models that the young because of their lack of experience are much more vulnerable to than adults, a lot can be said for not giving kids evil suggestions.
If a piece of drivel that glorifies pre-adult sex, drug use and profanity is a writer's subject, a lot can also be said for telling the truth about, not the fact of its existance, but the ultimate results in kid's lives.
Thanks!
A "realistic" prom experience would be different for everyone. My children and many of their friends had just such an innocent and basically meaningless prom experience. No sex, drugs, drinking or "subversive" behavior involved. Perhaps I should be upset at the films that portray prom as anything other than a squeaky clean and meaningless event.
Maybe Ms. Chen needs to get out among regular people and not surround herself with MSM and Hollywood elitists. She's surprise that edginess, angst, and subversiveness isn't all that it's cracked up to be. Maybe acting normal and considerate is in itself highly sbversive because it suggests that doing the right thing is an option and not a cheap punch-line.
Haha, indeed the Battle:LA thing has been more than adequately addressed here. Thanks for the warning on Super, now I know not to read Ebert's review of it. A professional critic spoiling endings like that is pretty dang low.
It was horrible, he offered no warning, just BOOM! Lets it all out in the opening paragraph. James Gunn started a massive campaign to make fun of him on Twitter in retaliation.
Heh heheheh heh eheheheheh heheh ehhehehehehe…what?
Considering "Prom" opened at #5 and then plunged to #9 last week, looks like the film missed its audience altogether, regardless of message. I'll bet teens wanted the raunch, and younger kids didn't care all that much about prom.
It did miss the big audiences, but it actually made its money back, so DVD, VOD and TV will no doubt cause it to turn a profit. It was certainly not the sleeper bit of alternative summer box office programming that Disney was hoping for though.
It seems every depiction of prom on tv entails sex and alcohol; how refreshing for someone to put out a movie about prom without either!
Shiori- your experience sounds like mine except that I didn't have '80's hair. My date and I went to a nice restaurant for dessert after prom before his aunt and uncle chauffered us home. I knew of kids who were getting hotel rooms and planning to drink, but most of my classmates were heading to White Castle in their finery to enjoy congative dissonance of taffeta and belly bombers.
The prom was pretty pointless when I was in school. It didn't help that all my male friends asked my female friends, and I couldn't even get someone to go with me by offering to pay for their ticket. Gee, that sucked. I was on the prom committee, so I went anyway. Everybody showed up dressed so nicely…then after an hour and a half, took off all the fancy clothing they spent all that money for and danced until dawn in blue jeans. Pointless, why bother with the dresses and "dreamy" prom setup in the first place? Prom for me was something I'd like to forget.
I hate to say it, but the poster really is kind of a bait-and-switch for a wholesome movie though, isn't it? If I had young kids, I'd assume it was a sex farce and not let them go, and if I were an older kid, went based on that poster and there wasn't any foolin' around in it, I'd be sure to tweet that it sucked. Marketing fail, IMHO, which is why the b.o. is so low for it. (well, that and the fact everyone wanted to see Vin & Dwayne crash cars, not something that probably should have been saved for t.v.)
I laughed several times while reading this. You put the case very succinctly: if all you can do is cite Carrie and American Pie, you're not citing examples of proms, but the ways that other filmmakers have used the "prom" to deal with other themes. I didn't think Chen's ultimate point — that the movie fails to be relevant to either the real world or the "reel world" — is invalid. I haven't seen the movie, but that's a point I wouldn't have a problem with in principle. I'm not sure she's arguing that the film should corrupt the nation's children; she's just arguing that it's too tame to be interesting. But she makes such a big deal out of "edginess" as a virtue that it feels like she doesn't realize that tame *can* be interesting if done well.
But whats "edgy" anymore?
I mean if one person does something considered edgy and it's copied OVER AND OVER again like half of the films made today, is it edgy anymore or passe`?
Thats really the problem with her critique. She thinks that this film needs this to be interesting. And like you, I agree that a film could be edgy without being over the top. Tame can be interesting if done well. This review speaks more to the values of the writer than a film critique, and really, thats is not something any good film reviewer should aspire to be. Judge the film on it's own merits and not the ones you wish it had.
Straight into marriage and straight into divorce court?
Kidding. I hear yah Brah.
The pendulum always swings. Since dental floss has been the measuring stick for Madison Avenue and retailers selling to teenage girls is blatant nudity the next progression?
My guess is the trend of promiscuity is over. Disney as a corporation can be deplorable at times but as a production company we should salute them.
Yeah, like I said, she obviously didn't care for it, it didn't speak to her in any way, and I have no problem with that at all. It's the points she makes for its failings that make me roll my eyes. I don't think she's saying it should "corrupt children" but rather that it needs to speak to some universal truth that really doesn't exist.
We don't even have a Prom down here, the closest thing being a Debutante Ball which I was never invited to. I only know of them through watching American TV and movies, even if I was American I doubt I would have went anyway, just not who I was/am.
The problem with "Reality" in movies is, that it is impossible. All one is can get is someones view of reality. Lefties are insane and so their view of reality is twisted. Of coarse they would view something that is not twisted as being unrealistic.
If you want to know what life was like in Victorian England, don't read Dickens, he was trying to chance minds so he lied, read Doyle, he just cared about entertaining his Victorian English audience so he had to be believable.
Yeah, well, citing the "prom" in Footloose would hurt her arguement, wouldn't it?
One wonders what Miss Chen's own prom experience was like.
People with inner strength lower drones' self esteem just by existing.
Word.
Thumbs up x 1000
Another case where half-assed attempts at being edgey have become cliched and the only way to be truly "subversive" anymore is to be socially conservtaive and traditionalist.
Stryper is a hell of a lot more metal than Slayer as I always say.
Exactly. All liberal film critics (yes, I know, redundant) take that view. Ebert thinks left-wing ranting lunacy from Oliver Stone is brilliant, but anything presenting the opposing viewpoint is to be derided and destroyed.
I didn't go to prom. I didn't care enough to.
Seconded. I didn't want to deal with the drama of romance, so I didn't chase girls. As a result, my high school experience was a PG-rated affair. It would also make for very boring TV.
Walden.
Duckie rules!! And there was no Duckie (or even Blain) at my prom either…therefore I didnt go.
Oh…well, and because I didnt get invited either, but I didnt care…I had LOTS more fun later in life (still do with my husband!)
Disney isn't in the business of breaking even. Add this to the beating the Disney coffers took from "Mars Needs Moms" and I'l bet Mickey's sharpening his headsman's axe right about now.
Ouch, I forgot about that disasterpiece.
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