There are a few exceptions to the Bechdel test, depending on genre or context.
For example, Shawshank Redemption fails the test, but it’s not a sexist movie. About the only way it could have passed would be if random women fell out of the skylight, discussing politics as they plummeted.
It’s also not a perfect pass/fail for “This is sexist.” You can have a movie where two women discuss something besides boyfriends, and have it still be sexist.
But in general, it’s a good rubric. You just have to ask yourself WHY a particular movie passes or fails.
Actually, while I approve of the Bechdel test, there are plenty of movie that fail it that are also very good movies. Dark Knight is one of those in my book. Actually, most Oscar winners don’t pass it, historically speaking. The test is more a look at how movie makers (and for that matter, the Hollywood machines) view women characters. Namely, Hollywood tends to think multiple strong female characters won’t be profitable, so those movies don’t get made so Hollywood tells themselves that those kinds of movies aren’t profitable. And so on.
No, it doesn’t depend on genre or context. The Bechdel test is universal, it always tells you if a movie has more than one women characters who talk to each other about something other than a man.
It doesn’t tell you if a movie is good or not, and it doesn’t tell you if a movie is in itself sexist. Just the thing that it says that it does. The idea is for you to figure out for yourself what a movie has to say about the culture we live in.
invisiblemoose
No, Ridureyu (to whom I reply here because I cannot reply to directly), Shawshank Redemption still fails the test. Remember, the Bechdel test is about PRESENCE and whether or not it’s ‘okay’ that there are no girls in it. It’s never meant to be used as a means of determining whether or not a movie is feminist.
After all, Twilight might pass the test but that is hardly a feminist movie.
Ridureyu
Well yeah, I meant to say that Shawshank Redemption fails the test. According to the Bechdel test, it’s a horrifically chauvinist, evil, sexist movie, whereas the Bratz movie is totally a triumph for feminism.
I guess SHawshank Redemption needed some cutaway scenes to random women on the street, talking about the weather. THEN it would have been okay!
(or maybe the bEchdel test is fundamentally flawed because it’s a gross oversimplification of complex themes. WHo knows!)
PFCDoofles
The bechdel test isn’t really a “test” for anything as serious as “is this movie sexist.” It’s more a tool for pointing out that -most- movies don’t focus on women.
Doesn’t mean the movie itself is anti-feminist. It’s just meant to make you think. Allison Bechdel is a comedy cartoonist first, and feminist writer second.
DOES Twilight pass the test? Isn’t the whole premise about whether she’ll shack up with one guy or the other? That would seem to be a fail.
Ridureyu
Wow, my shift key skills totally failed there. Might be because I was swapping Glyos parts all day, and my fingers are numb.
invisiblemoose
Or MAYBE the Bechdel test is not what you think it is despite it being explained to you and everyone else multple times, Ridureyu! Thanks for using patronizing sarcasm rather than actually reading what I had to say.
ik
The bechdel test is statistical, I think.
Ridureyu
True, true. I mentioned way down in the ginormous discussion that there is a difference between “What the Bechdel test is supposed to be” (examining overarching trends) and “What it is used for.” Keep in mind that, in my own personal experience, 99.99% of the people who mention the test treat it like a pass/fail “THIS MOVIE IS SEXIST!” thing.
The test in general leads to the interesting result that in most cases movies kind shallow females characters.
But that is as far as it goes.
Using this “set of rules” to classify whether an specific movie is or not chauvinist (which is what I’ve been seeing in most pages so far) is ridicule.
As a set if rules, they are just way too simple, and they imply were little.
Every movie about guys are automatically chauvinist? What about the context?
Since when two girls talking about politics or they future plans make a movie “not-chauvinist”?
Sorry if I look a little bit angered, but I’ve seen people saying that “127 hours”,( the movie about ONE GUY who got his arm stacked in a rock) was bad because it didn’t fulfil this rules.
( It’d been far fetched and unnatural for that movie to focus on girls talking, so what’s the point of complaining about it? )
…
Moreover, most males characters are also shallow as well.
So it’s not just a female thing.
I was just told by someone who actually watched it that they hardly ever talked to each other, so nope!
fhornrocks
actually they do talk to each other for a snippet. when tigress is going to meet tai lung and they go after her she says “don’t try to stop me” and viper says “we’re not. we’re coming with you.” not about a man.
zuche
It is about a man. She’s telling them not to stop her from facing Tai Lung.
I think the key thing isn’t so much talking about a man as much as talking about a man who’s a romantic interest, which none of those men were.
Blightning
It doesn’t matter what relation they have to the men of the movie. If they are there only to discuss the male characters, then the female characters aren’t really integrated in the story that well.
Actually, a bunch of ’em do! Even the old ones!
Sleeping Beauty consists mostly of three good fairies (all female) talking about how to protect a princess from an evil fairy (also female).
Even, say, Cinderella has the stepmother and stepsisters discussing Cinderella. And Snow White talks to the evil queen (in disguise) about apples.
Not everything that passes the Bechdel test is non-sexist…
Lillian
I also find it interesting that a lot of Pixar movies that don’t even have two major female characters, let alone pass the Bechdel Test. Not everything that doesn’t pass the test is sexist… although Pixar could stand to have more strong female characters. One reason I am excited for “Brave.”
invisiblemoose
…that would be their own attempt at a Princess movie, yes?
True, true. I mentioned way down in the ginormous discuswsion that there is a difference between “What the Bechdel test is supposed to be” (examining overarching trends) and “What it is used for.” Keep in mind that, in my own personal experience, 99.99% of the people who mention the test treat it like a pass/fail “THIS MOVIE IS SEXIST!” thing.
Bingo. But I fully expect everyone to lecture me on it anyway.
Dudes. Leslie will go over the exact rules in a strip or two. Patience.
Joebo
You really don’t know who you’re talking to do you.
Rognik
It’s your own darn fault, leaving this as a Friday “cliffhanger”.
David
Eh, lecturing will happen whether there’s 24 hours between updates or 36.
(Frankly, even if I put up the whole week at once, it’d still happen. Folks don’t tend to read ahead before commenting.)
KHNO
I reply here to David:
of course they are, if it’s “page segmented”, the sequence* is a page, and at the end of it is a provisory stillstand, like a breath in a conversation. And if you breath, people start to discuss what you juste said.
The s(c)o(tt)**-called sequential art is just like any expression, it has a start, an end, and pauses between, and the reader, as the listener, is likely to comment/extrapole/fill. I always thought breakbeat, breakcore and Philip Glass should be enlisted as sequential art too.
*There are sequences inside sequences of course.
**That doesn’t meant all he said is bullshit, just that like many other media, comics involve time, and attention span, aside from a total art that doesn’t eists, will always cut thing in smaller pieces to understand. Sure if the artist does the cutting S/he has more control on efficiency.
Ooo! How is the Dragon Age novel? I tughoht about picking it up, but never got around to it.I also should play some Assassin’s Creed II. I bought it right when it came out but still haven’t broken into it. At least I finally beat Uncharted 2!I can totally sympathize with work being crazy right now. I’ve got a major milestone coming up in the very near future, and just now is when new users start pouring into my hobby website bringing my poor server to its knees. And of course, it when you’re busiest with no time to spare that artistic inspiration will strike. I swear its a corollary to Murphy’s Law.Rambling aside, I’m glad you’re finding time to relax with some games. From the sounds of it, work won’t be letting up for you for some time… Good news for us fans though, I suppose. 😉
Nope. The Bechdel Test is a bit shallow, really. I don’t know why it became so widespread. It doesn’t really indicate anything; a feminist manifesto or gender inequality piece wouldn’t pass it if it talked about men enough and didn’t devote a few sections specifically to women, from what I understand.
Suzushiiro
The point of the test isn’t to label any individual movies as misogynist or feminist because, as many point out, many movies are perfectly justified in failing the test and many movies that pass it could be seen as misogynist as hell. The point is that an incredibly large number of movies out there, especially *popular* movies, fail the test. It’s a statement about gender inequality in Hollywood as a whole, not in individual films, if that makes sense.
If that’s all it’s about, no. But the odds are that a film that features women who are developed enough as characters to be discussing the thought processes and action of American presidents will also talk about other things as well.
That’s an interesting question. Technically the answer would be no, the characters need to be named for the Bechdel test to apply. But the wider question is if it matters.
I’ve acted in a play where none of the seven characters are named (also the two men are the only characters on the stage who never speak to each other for a funny reversal of the test). It makes for pretty surreal storytelling, you can get characters that function more like archetypes than actual people. But does that stuff happens outside of high-concept arthouse movies with extremely small audiences compared to Michael Bay productions? The kind that shape our culture, that the Bechdel test serves to help us examine?
I don’t think so. Bella, Jacob, and Edward are the only characters with decent screen time, and most of the remainder are male. Alice and a couple of the human girls had conversations with Bella(can’t recall the specifics due to blocking most of the movie out), but those conversations were almost certainly about Edward and Jacob.
Twilight Sparkle, and the rest of My Little Pony passes. However, it so far has failed the Reverse Bechdel: no males have even had a conversation yet, except the Diamond Dogs talking about Rarity, and (offscreen) Spike talking with Hoity Toity, the fashion magnate, about Rarity.
Nice job, signalling your high status by disdaining movies that have appealed to a low-status demographic (teen girls).
In regards to your question, Yes, it does. Off the top of my head:
1. A female schoolmate asks Bella whether Bella liked her graduation speech.
2. Caroline and Bella talk about being a vampire — this includes Bella’s relationship with Edward and Caroline’s past abuser, but it’s not exactly what the discussion is about (bloodlust, the absense of children, being “frozen in time” are).
3. At the end, Esme and Jane exchange brief sentences about a third female vampire Esme asks to spare.
I hate it not because it’s written to appeal to teen girls, but because:
A-It’s badly written.
B-The “perfect” relationship, the one designed to be the model for the teen girls that are it’s primary demographic, is emotionally and physically abusive.
Twilight actually has it’s good points(Alice/Jasper is everything Bella/Edward isn’t), but the fact that it is designed to appeal to teen girls while promoting abuse makes me very uncomfortable, and the writing for the main characters is intentionally* terrible.
*Bella’s lack of a personality or a positive trait that would justify every guy in the school being interested in her has been stated by Miss Meyers to be intentional, so that readers could use her as an insert. That’s almost textbook Mary Sue.
Aris Katsaris
I didn’t object to Dean or anyone else hating the movie (or the book) — I objected to his loathing it *without* seeing or reading it, and yet hinting that people who saw it should be ashamed of themselves.
This is insulting and demeaning to all of us who actually saw it (whether we liked it or not). He pats himself on the back for NOT being like us, while nonetheless seeking our answer.
Oddly, it does. Rosalie tells Bella the story of how she became a vampire (a story that has guys in it but is about Rosalie, not the guys) and Bella and a named classmate (Jessica? Or something?) talk about graduation.
I am torn between admitting shame and a passionate defense of my right to badly written porn.
254 thoughts on “The Hangover”
David Herbert
So does Kung-Fu Panda pass the Bechdel Test?
Jen Aside
Was there another female besides Tigress?
[I forget is why I ask]
Doctor_Who
Yeah, Viper. So I guess it passes.
David
Only if they talk to each other about not a dude.
Ridureyu
There are a few exceptions to the Bechdel test, depending on genre or context.
For example, Shawshank Redemption fails the test, but it’s not a sexist movie. About the only way it could have passed would be if random women fell out of the skylight, discussing politics as they plummeted.
It’s also not a perfect pass/fail for “This is sexist.” You can have a movie where two women discuss something besides boyfriends, and have it still be sexist.
But in general, it’s a good rubric. You just have to ask yourself WHY a particular movie passes or fails.
BMeph
For instance, “True Grit” passes. Not sexist, per se, not by a long shot. But still…
Kschenke
Actually, while I approve of the Bechdel test, there are plenty of movie that fail it that are also very good movies. Dark Knight is one of those in my book. Actually, most Oscar winners don’t pass it, historically speaking. The test is more a look at how movie makers (and for that matter, the Hollywood machines) view women characters. Namely, Hollywood tends to think multiple strong female characters won’t be profitable, so those movies don’t get made so Hollywood tells themselves that those kinds of movies aren’t profitable. And so on.
Jenny Creed
No, it doesn’t depend on genre or context. The Bechdel test is universal, it always tells you if a movie has more than one women characters who talk to each other about something other than a man.
It doesn’t tell you if a movie is good or not, and it doesn’t tell you if a movie is in itself sexist. Just the thing that it says that it does. The idea is for you to figure out for yourself what a movie has to say about the culture we live in.
invisiblemoose
No, Ridureyu (to whom I reply here because I cannot reply to directly), Shawshank Redemption still fails the test. Remember, the Bechdel test is about PRESENCE and whether or not it’s ‘okay’ that there are no girls in it. It’s never meant to be used as a means of determining whether or not a movie is feminist.
After all, Twilight might pass the test but that is hardly a feminist movie.
Ridureyu
Well yeah, I meant to say that Shawshank Redemption fails the test. According to the Bechdel test, it’s a horrifically chauvinist, evil, sexist movie, whereas the Bratz movie is totally a triumph for feminism.
I guess SHawshank Redemption needed some cutaway scenes to random women on the street, talking about the weather. THEN it would have been okay!
(or maybe the bEchdel test is fundamentally flawed because it’s a gross oversimplification of complex themes. WHo knows!)
PFCDoofles
The bechdel test isn’t really a “test” for anything as serious as “is this movie sexist.” It’s more a tool for pointing out that -most- movies don’t focus on women.
Doesn’t mean the movie itself is anti-feminist. It’s just meant to make you think. Allison Bechdel is a comedy cartoonist first, and feminist writer second.
Gianni
DOES Twilight pass the test? Isn’t the whole premise about whether she’ll shack up with one guy or the other? That would seem to be a fail.
Ridureyu
Wow, my shift key skills totally failed there. Might be because I was swapping Glyos parts all day, and my fingers are numb.
invisiblemoose
Or MAYBE the Bechdel test is not what you think it is despite it being explained to you and everyone else multple times, Ridureyu! Thanks for using patronizing sarcasm rather than actually reading what I had to say.
ik
The bechdel test is statistical, I think.
Ridureyu
True, true. I mentioned way down in the ginormous discussion that there is a difference between “What the Bechdel test is supposed to be” (examining overarching trends) and “What it is used for.” Keep in mind that, in my own personal experience, 99.99% of the people who mention the test treat it like a pass/fail “THIS MOVIE IS SEXIST!” thing.
And I’m sorry that you feel the need to get angry
NerdAtComputer
@InvisibleMoose: Sorry, but I agree with Ryu.
The test in general leads to the interesting result that in most cases movies kind shallow females characters.
But that is as far as it goes.
Using this “set of rules” to classify whether an specific movie is or not chauvinist (which is what I’ve been seeing in most pages so far) is ridicule.
As a set if rules, they are just way too simple, and they imply were little.
Every movie about guys are automatically chauvinist? What about the context?
Since when two girls talking about politics or they future plans make a movie “not-chauvinist”?
Sorry if I look a little bit angered, but I’ve seen people saying that “127 hours”,( the movie about ONE GUY who got his arm stacked in a rock) was bad because it didn’t fulfil this rules.
( It’d been far fetched and unnatural for that movie to focus on girls talking, so what’s the point of complaining about it? )
…
Moreover, most males characters are also shallow as well.
So it’s not just a female thing.
cappadocius
It probably does not, because any conversations Viper and Tigress may have had are almost certainly entirely about Sifu, Po, or Tai Lung.
Jen Aside
I was just told by someone who actually watched it that they hardly ever talked to each other, so nope!
fhornrocks
actually they do talk to each other for a snippet. when tigress is going to meet tai lung and they go after her she says “don’t try to stop me” and viper says “we’re not. we’re coming with you.” not about a man.
zuche
It is about a man. She’s telling them not to stop her from facing Tai Lung.
Vivvav
I think the key thing isn’t so much talking about a man as much as talking about a man who’s a romantic interest, which none of those men were.
Blightning
It doesn’t matter what relation they have to the men of the movie. If they are there only to discuss the male characters, then the female characters aren’t really integrated in the story that well.
Lokitsu
I’m not sure if any of the Disney films would pass the Bechdel test. But considering how Disney films feel about moms, that’s not so surprising.
David
Kung-Fu Panda isn’t Disney, it’s Dreamworks.
boojum
Actually, a bunch of ’em do! Even the old ones!
Sleeping Beauty consists mostly of three good fairies (all female) talking about how to protect a princess from an evil fairy (also female).
Even, say, Cinderella has the stepmother and stepsisters discussing Cinderella. And Snow White talks to the evil queen (in disguise) about apples.
Not everything that passes the Bechdel test is non-sexist…
Lillian
I also find it interesting that a lot of Pixar movies that don’t even have two major female characters, let alone pass the Bechdel Test. Not everything that doesn’t pass the test is sexist… although Pixar could stand to have more strong female characters. One reason I am excited for “Brave.”
invisiblemoose
…that would be their own attempt at a Princess movie, yes?
OmegaDez
I do think Pixar is (was?) kinda sexist for the glaring lack of main female characters in their (older) movies though.
Ridureyu
True, true. I mentioned way down in the ginormous discuswsion that there is a difference between “What the Bechdel test is supposed to be” (examining overarching trends) and “What it is used for.” Keep in mind that, in my own personal experience, 99.99% of the people who mention the test treat it like a pass/fail “THIS MOVIE IS SEXIST!” thing.
And I’m sorry that you feel theneed to get angry
CWY
And I’m sorry that you feel theneed to get angry
While I’m sorry you feel the need to be patronising.
Ridureyu
And I’m sorry that… uh… that…
(Insert Chunk’s confession here)
Alix
Heh, I told my family about that just last month.
Joebo
awwwwww yeaaah.
cappadocius
Strictly speaking, to pass the Bechdel Test, the young ladies in question have to have a conversation that isn’t about a man or men-in-general.
Jackson
I’m guessing that’s what Leslie would’ve asked Joe next. But The Hangover failed on the second point, so there wasn’t any need.
David
Bingo. But I fully expect everyone to lecture me on it anyway.
Dudes. Leslie will go over the exact rules in a strip or two. Patience.
Joebo
You really don’t know who you’re talking to do you.
Rognik
It’s your own darn fault, leaving this as a Friday “cliffhanger”.
David
Eh, lecturing will happen whether there’s 24 hours between updates or 36.
(Frankly, even if I put up the whole week at once, it’d still happen. Folks don’t tend to read ahead before commenting.)
KHNO
I reply here to David:
of course they are, if it’s “page segmented”, the sequence* is a page, and at the end of it is a provisory stillstand, like a breath in a conversation. And if you breath, people start to discuss what you juste said.
The s(c)o(tt)**-called sequential art is just like any expression, it has a start, an end, and pauses between, and the reader, as the listener, is likely to comment/extrapole/fill. I always thought breakbeat, breakcore and Philip Glass should be enlisted as sequential art too.
*There are sequences inside sequences of course.
**That doesn’t meant all he said is bullshit, just that like many other media, comics involve time, and attention span, aside from a total art that doesn’t eists, will always cut thing in smaller pieces to understand. Sure if the artist does the cutting S/he has more control on efficiency.
Chandan
Ooo! How is the Dragon Age novel? I tughoht about picking it up, but never got around to it.I also should play some Assassin’s Creed II. I bought it right when it came out but still haven’t broken into it. At least I finally beat Uncharted 2!I can totally sympathize with work being crazy right now. I’ve got a major milestone coming up in the very near future, and just now is when new users start pouring into my hobby website bringing my poor server to its knees. And of course, it when you’re busiest with no time to spare that artistic inspiration will strike. I swear its a corollary to Murphy’s Law.Rambling aside, I’m glad you’re finding time to relax with some games. From the sounds of it, work won’t be letting up for you for some time… Good news for us fans though, I suppose. 😉
captainswift
The Bechdel test requires the following:
1. Two female characters have a conversation and
2. That conversation is not about a man.
That is all. Conversations about lipstick pass the test, conversations about your Dad fail it.
DrDVD
so 2 girls talking analyzing the thought processes and actions of american presidents don’t pass the bechdel test?
Kojiro
Nope. The Bechdel Test is a bit shallow, really. I don’t know why it became so widespread. It doesn’t really indicate anything; a feminist manifesto or gender inequality piece wouldn’t pass it if it talked about men enough and didn’t devote a few sections specifically to women, from what I understand.
Suzushiiro
The point of the test isn’t to label any individual movies as misogynist or feminist because, as many point out, many movies are perfectly justified in failing the test and many movies that pass it could be seen as misogynist as hell. The point is that an incredibly large number of movies out there, especially *popular* movies, fail the test. It’s a statement about gender inequality in Hollywood as a whole, not in individual films, if that makes sense.
Kschenke
^This.
Also, I had a multi-week “discussion” with another woman on reddit who just could not get this idea through her head. I finally gave up.
invisiblemoose
Correct.
Jackson
Well, not unless the presidents in question are female.
das-g
That’s not even required, as long as the president isn’t male. A genderless president would suffice.
Jackson
Robo-prez.
hotsauce
If that’s all it’s about, no. But the odds are that a film that features women who are developed enough as characters to be discussing the thought processes and action of American presidents will also talk about other things as well.
hotsauce
There’s one more point: the two women have to have be named characters. “Prostitute 1” and “Prostitute 2” aren’t names.
dchorror
And what happens when you are presented with a story in which none of the characters have real names?
Would a conversation between Science Teacher and Social Study Teacher not count even if your other characters are Goth, Jock, Geek, and Bully?
Jenny Creed
That’s an interesting question. Technically the answer would be no, the characters need to be named for the Bechdel test to apply. But the wider question is if it matters.
I’ve acted in a play where none of the seven characters are named (also the two men are the only characters on the stage who never speak to each other for a funny reversal of the test). It makes for pretty surreal storytelling, you can get characters that function more like archetypes than actual people. But does that stuff happens outside of high-concept arthouse movies with extremely small audiences compared to Michael Bay productions? The kind that shape our culture, that the Bechdel test serves to help us examine?
Joebo
So my question is this, does the conversation have to be only between the two girls or do group discussions count?
drpepperfan
You seem to know a lot about Gender Studies classes Willis, I’m guessing you took them at college?
Dean
So, does Twilight:Eclipse pass the Bechdel test? I ask because I would sooner gouge out my eyes than see it.
Viktoria
I don’t think so. Bella, Jacob, and Edward are the only characters with decent screen time, and most of the remainder are male. Alice and a couple of the human girls had conversations with Bella(can’t recall the specifics due to blocking most of the movie out), but those conversations were almost certainly about Edward and Jacob.
BlueNight
Twilight Sparkle, and the rest of My Little Pony passes. However, it so far has failed the Reverse Bechdel: no males have even had a conversation yet, except the Diamond Dogs talking about Rarity, and (offscreen) Spike talking with Hoity Toity, the fashion magnate, about Rarity.
Semysane
Snips and Snails had a few conversations… almost entirely about Trixie, though, which I would suppose fails the reverse Bechdel as well.
Rainbow Brisk
Snips and Snails talk about finding an Ursa Major, not about Trixie!
BlueNight
Ah, but they’re finding the Ursa to bring to Trixie! It’s like a technical Bechdel pass where Betty and Veronica are discussing buying birth control.
… Okay, that was a HORRIBLE example.
Trenton
I don’t think there’s a page of Bella’s inner monologue that passes the Bechdel test (i.e. isn’t about a man)
Aris Katsaris
Nice job, signalling your high status by disdaining movies that have appealed to a low-status demographic (teen girls).
In regards to your question, Yes, it does. Off the top of my head:
1. A female schoolmate asks Bella whether Bella liked her graduation speech.
2. Caroline and Bella talk about being a vampire — this includes Bella’s relationship with Edward and Caroline’s past abuser, but it’s not exactly what the discussion is about (bloodlust, the absense of children, being “frozen in time” are).
3. At the end, Esme and Jane exchange brief sentences about a third female vampire Esme asks to spare.
Viktoria
I hate it not because it’s written to appeal to teen girls, but because:
A-It’s badly written.
B-The “perfect” relationship, the one designed to be the model for the teen girls that are it’s primary demographic, is emotionally and physically abusive.
Twilight actually has it’s good points(Alice/Jasper is everything Bella/Edward isn’t), but the fact that it is designed to appeal to teen girls while promoting abuse makes me very uncomfortable, and the writing for the main characters is intentionally* terrible.
*Bella’s lack of a personality or a positive trait that would justify every guy in the school being interested in her has been stated by Miss Meyers to be intentional, so that readers could use her as an insert. That’s almost textbook Mary Sue.
Aris Katsaris
I didn’t object to Dean or anyone else hating the movie (or the book) — I objected to his loathing it *without* seeing or reading it, and yet hinting that people who saw it should be ashamed of themselves.
This is insulting and demeaning to all of us who actually saw it (whether we liked it or not). He pats himself on the back for NOT being like us, while nonetheless seeking our answer.
Lana
Oddly, it does. Rosalie tells Bella the story of how she became a vampire (a story that has guys in it but is about Rosalie, not the guys) and Bella and a named classmate (Jessica? Or something?) talk about graduation.
I am torn between admitting shame and a passionate defense of my right to badly written porn.
Digidestined of Trust (Tim)
Wow, just….wow.
Chris
I thought the Bechdel Test was:
a) Is there more than one female character?
b) Do two women ever talk to each other?
c) Do they talk about something other than a man?
R
The female characters need to be named. Otherwise random conversations by extras could count.
dchorror