the film caused controversy upon its release

by time news

2023-09-17 20:00:12

France 2 is broadcasting the thriller “Gone Girl” this Sunday evening, directed by David Fincher. At the time of its release in 2014, the feature film caused controversy.

On the TV program this evening, thriller fans will be able to (re)discover “Gone Girl” on France 2. The second channel is broadcasting the feature film by David Fincher at 9:10 p.m. Adapting the novel by Gillian Flynn, this thriller dissects the life of a couple between Nick Dunne and Amy Dunne when the latter disappears on their wedding anniversary. Initially a grieving husband in the media, Nick becomes the prime suspect as the couple’s seemingly perfect married life is undermined by the investigation.

When it was released in 2014, “Gone Girl” was praised by critics and the public. But he does not escape controversy. The Dare to Feminism association denounces the way in which the feature film “veers towards the perfect illustration of masculinist theses”, particularly through the proposed vision of the character of Amy: “she embodies the patriarchal cliché of perversion ideal feminine, who uses psychological violence, supposedly the favorite weapon of women, to humiliate and hurt her husband. […] Conversely, Nick appears to be a poor man who is the victim of women.

The author and actress respond to the controversy

In The Guardian, Joan Smith accuses the film of “recycling rape myths” in its second part and in its denouement, in particular by highlighting a plot about a false report of rape. The author of the novel and screenwriter of the film, Gillian Flynn, was questioned in 2013 about its “divisive” ending by Time Out.

She then explained that she had wanted to go against the image of the good and caring woman. She also told the New York Times that when men write evil or evil male characters, they become anti-heroes, and that Amy Dunne deserves the same treatment.

For her part, the actress Rosamund Pikewho plays the protagonist of “Gone Girl”, responded to criticism in an interview with Première, ensuring that the novel is mainly interested in anger among women: “It’s a feeling that we rarely associate with women in the culture and media.

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