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"Chick Flicks", or, Movies for the sensitive male...

 
    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 2 mai 2008, 2h22m

    "Chick Flicks", or, Movies for the sensitive male...

    Ahhh, I'm surrounded by women! When I was 12, I was so scared of girls that I couldn't look a girl in the eye when I talked to her. Somehow I managed to get married and have two daughters. Oh, and we also have two female dogs. It's a great situation really. Women have a wonderful sense of humor and a unique outlook on life.

    I find myself constantly having to watch "chick flicks". So I figure, why not start a thread that's dedicated to the genre? Let's see where it goes!

    I'll get the thread started with a copy of an article that appeared on the AZ Central / Cox website. I didn't find it...my brother sent me the link. He knows my plight, (or perhaps he longs to let his inner female blossom?). Ha!

    Here it is:
    From: AZ Central / Cox: http://www.azcentral.com/php-bin/commphotos/show.php?referer=cox.net&colid=5976&slide_nbr=1&numslides=12&go=1

    They're unforgivably sappy and fill women with unrealistic romantic expectations, and yes, guys, you will be dragged to see them every now and then. We are talking, of course, about the dreaded chick flick. Some chick flicks, however, are greater than the sum of their dashing leading men, forbidden romances and period costumes. Here are some of the best that rise above their genre.

    Sense and Sensibility (1995)
    Nothing says chick flick quite like Jane Austen and period costumes. A beautiful-looking movie made by Oscar-winning director Ang Lee.

    Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994)
    A quirky British comedy loaded with charm, made back in the good ol' days before Hugh Grant got caught in public with a prostitute. He could pull off the debonair British leading man back then (he's much better at cads now).

    The Way We Were (1973)
    A classic romantic tearjerker (which was perhaps more effective back in the day when it was believable that Robert Redford and Barbra Streisand could be torn apart by political differences).

    Shakespeare in Love (1998)
    An Oscar-winning period piece centered on the fictional love life of Shakespeare himself. The movie's success was no doubt aided in part by the casting of Joseph Fiennes, who's way more attractive than surviving portraits of the Bard suggest he ever was.

    Working Girl (1988)
    A good movie, but a cruel one for giving working girls everywhere the hope that they too would be swept off their feet at the workplace by dashing executives who look like Harrison Ford.

    The Notebook (2004)
    Separated by time, distance and miscommunication, a pair of sundered lovers reconnect for one of chick flickdom's all-time greatest kisses. Girls everywhere swoon.

    Dirty Dancing (1987)
    The pinnacle of cheesy '80s cinema. Sweet, rich girl Baby falls for poor, bad boy Johnny as he teaches her seductive dances at a summer holiday camp. Dated and a bit dumb, but a steamy classic.

    Terms of Endearment (1983)
    A fairly familiar portrait of a mother-daughter relationship transforms into a three-hankie movie, bare minimum, when the daughter (Debra Winger) is diagnosed with terminal cancer.

    A Room With a View (1985)
    Period costumes? Check. British accents? Check. Forbidden love? Check. This chick flick with an oft-mocked title did well at the Oscars.

    Pretty Woman (1990)
    Boy meets girl. Boy pays girl for sex. Boy falls for girl. Not exactly the traditional romantic story arch, but it is kind of sweet, even if they kiss each other everywhere else before they share a kiss on the mouth.

    When Harry Met Sally … (1989)
    Hands down one of the all-time best chick flicks that manages to transcend the genre. It's a convincing love story of a couple enriched by years of deep (platonic) friendship. Great writing that should've scored an Oscar.

    BluesRok / Jay
  • Atonement

    Atonement is that tipical movie that just women like. But I loved it. I'm sure it was one of the best films I've ever seen. Yes, is very... romantic, but a man also likes it.

    Johnny Walker
  • steel magnolias may be considered a chick flik but it has a solid storyline.i like it.

    love is all you need! is there anybody alive out there?
    • _Tarkus_ a dit :...
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    • 2 mai 2008, 18h35m
    Does Sex and the City count?

    I guess it will soon... :)

  • It seems as I get older I like to watch chick flicks, and right
    now that I'm single I will sit at home and watch one. Just saw
    the appropriately titled "In the Land of Women" which I did in fact enjoy!


  • hey jay i particularly like your review on "pretty woman" lol.

    I saw "kate and leopold" on the telly saturday night! i like meg ryan too, i wonder where she went!!! anyway, i absolutely loved this movie i guess because i am female, and the character of leopold (played by hugh jackman) very much appealed to me, if you watch the movie, you will see why.

    plot is based on leopold who is this duke from the 18th century. he accidentally finds himself travelling to the 21st century. hugh jackman stays with the guy who got him there in the first place, and there he meets meg ryan who he woos with his simple courtesy, respect and manners. predictably they fall in love, however, hugh has to go back to where he came from, and that poses as a problem for their relationship. yeah this movie is best described as a cute film, nothing particularly great about it but it is very much likeable thanx to hugh jackman who stole pretty much the entire movie.

    • _Tarkus_ a dit :...
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    • 24 juin 2008, 19h31m
    flatliner said:
    It seems as I get older I like to watch chick flicks, and right now that I'm single I will sit at home and watch one. Just saw the appropriately titled "In the Land of Women" which I did in fact enjoy!

    Same here. In fact, just recently I saw a Girls Gone Wild video, and thoroughly enjoyed it. ;)

  • it's like anythng else. i hate labels.i like good music and hate bad music. same for movies,i suppose.

    love is all you need! is there anybody alive out there?
    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 24 juin 2008, 22h56m
    OldSchool said:
    "I saw "kate and leopold" on the telly saturday night! i like meg ryan too, i wonder where she went!!! anyway, i absolutely loved this movie i guess because i am female, and the character of leopold (played by hugh jackman) very much appealed to me, if you watch the movie, you will see why."

    My daughters, and my wife, loved K&L too. When I asked "why?" they just looked at eachother and giggled. I suspect that they have the same reaction to Hugh Jackman that you did ;)

    Meg Ryan; now there's a real cutie! She's "the girl next door" for most guys that are 40-50 years old.

    Two somewhat memorable lines from K&L:
    First was something like, "You'd think that the 'General of Electric' would make a better product".
    The second was something about "...Robling's erection still stands today..." (the Broklyn Bridge).

    Now, in the spirit of this thread, I'll sign off by saying, "bye, bye"

    BluesRok / Jay
    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 8 août 2008, 14h24m

    In Defense of Chick Flicks

    (My daughter sent this to me because she knoew I'd post it here...Jay)

    One writer makes a case for the validity of the maligned 'genre'

    By Martha Brockenbrough
    Special to MSN Movies


    Pity the chick flick. They're the little purse-dog of the movie world: so cute, so sweet ... and so roundly mocked by the rabid masses. In fact, if there's just one thing agreed upon by manly men and feminists, it's that chick flicks are irredeemable, steaming piles of poop.

    I object!

    Despite the fact that I am a) somewhat frightened by tiny dogs, with their sharp teeth and bulgy eyes; b) a flag-waving feminist; c) able to belch alphabetically as well as any manly man, I also like chick flicks.

    Quite often, I love them. Inspired by the valiant work of Reese Witherspoon as Elle Woods in "Legally Blonde" -- an alpha dog of the genre -- I hereby lay out this defense of chick flicks before the court of foaming naysayers.

    The solemn declaration

    I, Martha Brockenbrough, movie enthusiast, do solemnly and sincerely declare:

    1) The Chick Flick, "the CF," is a woefully misunderstood and unfairly maligned movie category.
    2) Quality CFs are, in fact, inventive, meaningful and, in some cases, magical.
    3) People who write off the entire category as crap really need to spend some time embracing their inner teens. They need to stop running from the big emotional mountains of life: love, family, death. They need to maybe have some cocoa. Wax a body part or two. Feel the tingling of unbidden tears. Because, in the immortal words of manly man Rosey Grier, "It's all right to cry. It might make you feel better."
    Misunderstood and unfairly maligned -- for a despicable reason

    You might know people who hate chocolate. They're not allergic. They've never been traumatized by a chocolate bar, or sucked up the fudge pipes like poor Augustus Gloop. They just claim to hate it in all of its forms. Ridiculous!

    It's just as silly to write off all movies made for a predominantly female audience as mere "chick flicks."

    There's just one reason for it: sexism -- even if people won't cop to it.

    Don't believe me? Consider this: There is no similarly pissy term in wide use for guy movies, even though there certainly are movies meant for men, and there certainly is a word that rhymes with chick and refers to a certain piece of masculine equipment.

    Don't believe me? Do a search on "chick flick" and its rhyming male counterpart. There are roughly 2 million more results for chick flick.

    "Action movie" would be the category aimed mostly at team testosterone. Where's the dismissive, negative connotation here? That's right -- it doesn't exist.

    This is where the feminist in me bares her snarling teeth. Often, all it takes to give something cooties is to associate it with women, and all of a sudden, it's tainted. The word "wench" used to simply mean girl. Now, it's an insult. Pink used to be a "boy" color until the 1940s. Now, only the most metrosexual of men will wear it. And how many men do you know would proudly drive a convertible bug?

    The fact is, there are good women-oriented movies, such as "Mystic Pizza," and there are bad ones. "Crossroads," anyone? I didn't think so.

    Now, some feminists might argue that CFs -- many of which focus on romantic love -- demean women, implying that life is worth living only if there's a man in it. Again, that's bogus, an oversimplification at best.

    For another thing, there's nothing wrong with romantic love. In fact, it should be a highlight in every person's life. Maybe women gravitate toward them, just as some men are more drawn to more-violent movies. But that doesn't mean love is second banana just because it's the typically female diversion. Seriously. Is that the world you want to live in? Where violence and destruction are considered superior to love?

    What's more, some of the best chick flicks, like "Mystic Pizza" and "Love Actually," show love in its various forms, in equal parts heartbreaking and hopeful.

    Since I've mentioned "Mystic Pizza" twice now, I'll use it as an example. It braids together three love stories, none of which end in the same way.

    One couple is engaged, but the bride faints during her wedding. Even though she wants marriage and kids, she's not quite ready. This is a great inversion of the stereotype where the guy is the one who's stalling. Lili Taylor is fantastic as the reluctant Jojo (Vincent D'Onofrio plays her eager groom).

    Another couple is even more unconventional: Annabeth Gish plays the good girl Kat, who's baby-sitting to earn money for college. She falls for her boss and gets burned in the process. The relationship is both understandable and heartbreaking.

    And then there's Daisy (Julia Roberts) and Charles Gordon Windsor Jr. (Adam Storke). Even this relationship defies the conventions somewhat. She's the poor beauty; he's the rich son struggling to find his way in the world. Though there is a wedding at the end of the movie, it isn't theirs -- even though they do have to find ways of letting go of their stereotypes. It's a work in progress, as are the two people in the relationship.

    Put simply, no women were harmed in the making of this movie, and it's quite entertaining to watch. Though Roberts really got famous after the far less enjoyable "Pretty Woman," this is the movie that put her on the map for many of her longtime fans.

    Chick flicks: just as creative as other categories

    CF detractors complain that the movies in this category are all the same. That's a little like complaining about all those war movies that have good guys and bad guys.

    Yes, many CFs start with heartache and end with happily ever after. But most of my days end with my head hitting the pillow, and that doesn't mean I took the same steps to get there each time.

    The CF can be serious, funny, contemporary, historical, heartbreaking or heart-lifting. Though there are some who would limit them to the "Bridget Jones's Diary" class of hapless contemporary heroine in search of love, no woman who's ever tried to get a man to see a Jane Austen adaptation would agree.

    "Isn't that a chick flick?" is simply a man's five-word synonym for no.

    The best CFs take us into all sorts of worlds. Some, like "Amélie," make France and photo booths seem even more impossibly romantic than we could have imagined. What about "Like Water for Chocolate"? Even though it was set in Mexico, the world it inhabited was magical -- where a wedding cake made by a heartbroken girl could change things in unexpected ways.

    There are the costume-drama classics from Ms. Austen and her fellow novelists, and there are contemporary gems, like "Legally Blonde." Same goes for "Bend It Like Beckham," which mixed love, soccer, sexual identity and culture clashes into one delicious brew -- and sent Keira Knightley's career into the stratosphere (and her torso into many corsets).

    Chick flicks: they're a delicious catharsis

    All good movies take you for an emotional ride. CFs are no exception.

    Seeking misery? Try "Steel Magnolias." Joy? Why not catch "The Wedding Singer," which ends with a Billy Idol/Adam Sandler serenade at cruising altitude. If it is hope that you seek, then "Dirty Dancing" is your choice (and the choice of all average-looking girls who'd love to bump and grind with a hottie).

    Generally speaking, CFs evoke emotions that are pleasant to experience. This is why you will not find ax murderers in chick flicks. You won't see the hideous spurts of arterial blood that festooned the screen in "Sweeney Todd." You are also safe from the spectacle of poop steeping next to a coffee pot, something that almost made me hurl as I watched the second "Austin Powers" movie.

    Fear, disgust, revulsion are not part of the CF formula. Amen to that. We can get all sorts of unpleasantness for free by watching the evening news, or in some cases, rinsing out the long-forgotten cottage cheese tub in the back of the fridge.

    And even though it's true that some of the romance portrayed on the big screen doesn't necessarily resemble the sort we experience in real life, whining about that is like complaining that war movies simply don't spend enough time exploring the bureaucracy of the military.

    Yes, bureaucracy is to the military what nose hairs are to real-life love: inescapable. But also, in the big picture, irrelevant.

    What all of this means, of course, is that only sexist, narrow-minded types who are afraid to plumb the depths of their emotions don't like chick flicks. If that's you, fine, you sorry heap of flesh. But don't come looking for me if you find yourself craving chocolate. I'm not sharing. Not even if you offer me a cute little dog for my purse.

    And so, I rest my case.

    BluesRok / Jay
  • Jay, you reminded me of another great Meg Ryan film When a Man Loves a Woman, (is she not the chick flick queen of all time... let's not even forget Sleepless in Seattle) She plays an alcoholic married to Andy Garcia, who basically loves her so much but enables her to continue drinking and tries to "rescue" her from herself. It made me cry AND fall in love with Andy Garcia for being such a big dumb gorgeous co-dependent.

    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 5 déc. 2008, 4h25m
    I just saw "Happy-Go-Lucky" at a small local theater that specializes in more artistic B movies.

    http://www.happygoluckythemovie.com/

    It was very entertaining. The main character, Poppy, is a British school teacher that is unflapably happy and light-hearted. It was just a really nice feel-good film. If you like the "chick flick" genre, you have to see this film. It's not at all the typical chick flick formula.

    As a guy, I'm always amazed at the vitality, humor, and outlook of women. Poppy portrays this perfectly in this movie. Highly recommended!
    Jay / "Blues-Macho-Rok"

    BluesRok / Jay
  • 10 Things I hate about you

    Something about Mary.

    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 12 jui. 2009, 13h28m
    I think that "Away We Go" is essentially, a chick flick. But, every guy I know that has seen it thought it was really funny and they enjoyed it.


    BluesRok / Jay
    Modifié par BluesRok le 29 sept. 2009, 23h49m
  • Some Kind of Wonderful
    Say Anything
    Moonstruck
    The Last of the Mohicans
    Splash
    Married to the Mob
    An Officer and a Gentleman
    Switch
    Forever Young
    Youngblood
    Coming Home
    She's Having a Baby
    Bird on a Wire
    Ghost
    Lost In Translation
    Frankie & Johnnie


    Romy and Michelle's High School Reunion: Greatest Chick Flick EVER!!!




    • Spazyy a dit :...
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    • 4 sept. 2009, 19h19m
    Speaking of Meg Ryan,even though 'Sleepless In Seattle' is one of the most romantic movies I've ever seen,let's not forget 'When Harry Met Sally'.It was a great movie and it seems no matter how many times I see it,I still cry at the end.
    Same goes for the classic 'An Affair To Remember'.

  • I love Romy & Michelle. Genius film.

    Also, if Last Holiday counts as a Chick Flick then that should be added to the list. Brilliant film really.

    Come and join the groups Female Singer-songwriter of the week and Orchestral Composer of the Week. Nominate your 5 favourite artists each week and see who gets into the Hall of Fame.
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    Love Actually
    Serendipity
    The English Patient
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    The Family Stone
    Bridget Jones's Diary
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    Runaway Bride
    Ghost
    Chocolat
    Maid in Manhattan
    The Wedding Date
    Just Like Heaven
    Kiss Me Kate
    While You Were Sleeping
    Rumour Has It
    Jerry Maguire
    Must Love Dogs
    Sleeping With The Enemy


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  • Pride and Prejudice
    Guys, do you like smart-alecky girls who don't shrink from verbal sparring? If not, Keira Knightley is still smokin' hot.

    It's okay to laugh at yourself now and then. We're all airheads on occasion.
    • raininonme a dit :...
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    • 20 fév. 2010, 1h41m
    I'm reading through all these posts and cant help but notice that while the rest of you listed a lot of Meg Ryan movies, you forgot about her awesome role in City of Angels.
    I dont know if that was oversight or if I'm simply the only one who considers that a "chick flick". But guys if you want a girl crying in your arms I'd say thats one movie to watch.

    live everyday likes its gonna be your last!!!
    • zebedee236 a dit :...
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    • 21 fév. 2010, 23h29m
    PorridgeGun said:
    Some Kind of Wonderful
    Say Anything
    Moonstruck
    The Last of the Mohicans
    Splash
    Married to the Mob
    An Officer and a Gentleman
    Switch
    Forever Young
    Youngblood
    Coming Home
    She's Having a Baby
    Bird on a Wire
    Ghost
    Lost In Translation
    Frankie & Johnnie
    ]


    You'd class Lost in Translation as a chick flick?

    'I know the future looks dark, but it's there that the kids of today must carry the light'
  • The Chick Flicks are my guilty pleasure.

    My Life Without Me
    My Blueberry Nights
    For Love Or Money
    Beaches
    Before Sunrise
    Before Sunset
    The Proposal
    In The Land Of Women
    Little Women
    Mermaids
    Left Luggage
    Clueless
    Just Like Heaven
    Music And Lyrics
    Two Weeks Notice
    The Wedding Date
    Must Love Dogs
    Wild Hearts Can't Be Broken
    Dear Frankie
    Now And Then
    If Only
    Griffin & Phoenix
    A Lot Like Love
    The Cutting Edge
    The Truth About Cats And Dogs
    Head Over Heels
    A Good Year
    Starter for 10
    Uptown Girls
    13 Going on 30
    How to Make an American Quilt
    Ice Princess

    Hello, you've reached the winter of our discontent.
    • BluesRok a dit :...
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    • 24 oct. 2010, 3h25m
    Miss Potter is a heartfelt flick:

    BluesRok / Jay
  • I just found a very old chick flick but is a very good one. It's called "A Little Romance" it was made by George Roy Hill (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting). The story is lovely.



  • I just found a very old chick flick but is a very good one. It's called "A Little Romance" it was made by George Roy Hill (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting). The story is lovely.


    i love a little romance. very cute film.

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