HumbleTangerine Wrote:There is something disturbingly sweet about revenge in the short run, with a simple perspective, yeah. Revenge movies are very popular and audiences seem to thrive on seeing raped and victimized women in particular slaughtering their rapists or abusers as violently as possible.
In the long run, however, I believe it's destructive. When taking revenge on someone you're simultaneously lowering yourself to something more basic, primitive and carnal as opposed to a being of rationality and compassion. You're dehumanizing yourself to have your revenge at someone who mistreated you.
This is why rape-and-revenge flicks never really appealed to me. They try to sell themselves as feminist stories where victimized women pull themselves together to kill their enemies, but really all there is to it is a woman being horribly mistreated and then horriby mistreating herself in the process of revenge. It's dehumanizing.
Interesting enough this is often true where the vigilante is male. As just one example, the classic Death Wish has a man turn vigilante after his wife and daughter are gang raped (wife killed, daughter in an insane asylum, IIRC).
I've always found it strange...and a little disturbing by its implications...how many countries use the idea of their women being raped by the enemy to rile up the population (particularly men) and get them prepared to fight while turning a blind eye to the rape by their own people of others even to the point (at least in the USA) where female soldiers who point out rape are themselves punished for it. It's disturbing because I think they don't see women as real, but as property, and to rape HIS woman or women is an "honor" thing.
Gods, how I hated that song
Coward of the County. Wife gets raped by 3 men, IIRC, and the point of the entire song is how the man had to get some respect by beating up the ones involved, not for his wife but for his own honor, and as far as the song says his wife is fine after (or maybe it just doesn't matter).
That said, I think the movie Death Wish showed a man's love for his wife and daughter rather than some sick "my property" thing. So did my cousin who swore revenge on any who raped me (and I believe his believed threats were why I wasn't raped). But sometimes it's more about men "owning" their female livestock rather than seeing them as human beings. Yet interesting enough a man will take his revenge be it for supremely egotistical honor or out of genuine love, and they can be very popular movies, and I think
Death Wish is more popular than say
I Spit on Your Grave or even
Thelma & Louise.
Also interesting to me is how rare "man is raped, gets revenge" movies are. The only one I can think of offhand was more of a subplot found in the movie
Pulp Fiction, and not many details were shown visually.