![]() ![]() The result of this is that 50 years later the world is ignoring men’s problems, and Big Feminism is taking all the money. The central thesis of director Cassie Jaye’s The Red Pill is that in the 1960’s, the focused energies of anti-capitalist protesters were distracted by American radical feminists into protesting the patriarchy instead, which is where it all kicked off. It comes with a mountain of baggage (of which more below) which is impossible to ignore when assessing the movie. #THE RED PILL DOCUMENTARY MOVIE#But in general every valid point made in the movie is eventually lashed to an angry anti-feminist agenda, devaluing some very serious issues affecting men. It is not without positive surprises – I didn’t realise the extent of domestic violence against men for instance. The Red Pill is a one-sided and unsubtle sermon on behalf of the flawed and suspect MRA (Men’s Rights Activism) movement. “Red Pill” - it cleverly takes its title from “The Matrix,” the “red pill” that conveys a willingness to learn the ugly truth about the world - has a decent cast, a potent message and a promising set-up packaged in a movie without much that passes for a decent fright about it.A one-sided and unsubtle sermon on behalf of a flawed and suspect movement – Bryan O’Connell on MRA documentary The Red Pill The eye-rolling over-the-top finale doesn’t atone for these shortcomings either. And while there are later moments that get closer to the mark, most of the “pick-them-off, one-by-one” tropes come off flat. Moments like this call for close-ups and quick edits, stunned, screaming faces intercut with violence, a “jumpy” camera to convey the mania of the moment. For the scene to work, we have to be as traumatized as the victims. And nobody reacts in a way normal humans might, which is to freak the-f out. They have an instant to process it, what probably came before it and their dire situation. Something unimaginably horrific has transpired before their eyes. That make or break moment comes shortly thereafter, and the cast and director Pinkin utterly blow it. It won’t be too long before their endless debate about the legacy of slavery and ingrained racist beliefs and systems is interrupted by the inevitable “Did you hear that?” The bizarre decor of their old rental house, the Melania in a Bikini aiming a gun with a laser-pointer light embedded in it doesn’t chase them away. Even seeing local white women wearing that symbol in matching black cult suits as they roll into town doesn’t dissuade our travelers. That’s their first “red flag.” But the viewer’s seen others - this pale redhead ( Catherine Curtin) making bread with drops of blood in it, the bizarre symbol on her top. Osakalumi), Lily ( Kathryn Erbe) and Jewish joker Nick ( Jake O’Flaherty) Latin immigrant Rocky ( Rubén Blades) and Croatian Serb Emelia ( Luba Mason) sing the old Gospel protest song, “Marching Up to Freedom Land,” mutter about the “white supremacy” that the past four years has brought out from under a rock and even stop to pull down a one of those racist road signs yokels have been putting up all over the rural South since Trump gave them permission. It’s Halloween, just before the election, and Cass (Pinkins), Anglo-African husband Bobby ( Adesola A. “Could you get inside of their heads and destroy their believes with fact?”īut once they arrive at their small town off-brand AirBnB, the horror begins and the movie sputters like a deflating balloon. Our first-time feature director and star takes her ensemble to “the slave breeding capital of the world” and gives them lots of politically-sharp banter for the drive down.Ĭracks about “Flat Earthers” and “hillbillies” and “genocide” and “Ms.-ogyny” and how “people are loyal to groups built on lies” pepper the conversation. Veteran stage and screen (“Madame Secretary,” “Fear the Walking Dead”) actress Tonya Pinkins packs good players into a GMC Yukon for a jaunt South, to rural Virginia for a weekend of voter canvassing. And that’s pretty much where “Red Pill” goes wrong.Ī well-cast old-leftists-go-Red-Stating thriller in the “Get Out/Red State/The Last Supper” vein, it lands its satiric political punches (sort of) but botches the “Cabin in the Woods” basics. The make or break moment for me in any horror movie is that first time characters are confronted with the horror, be it supernatural or simple slaughter. ![]()
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