What gets your goat? All-female movie remakes

Illustration by Janis McMath
Illustration by Janis McMath

We need original movies starring women, not gender-swapped remakes

By Jessica Berget, Opinions Editor
There is something to be said about the film industry when their idea of female representation or ā€œstrong female rolesā€ is just casting women in movie remakes that originally starred men.

As much as I like to see women play leading roles in major movie blockbusters, when they roles they take on were originally written for men, it leaves a bad taste in my mouth. The problem I have with these movies is that they donā€™t represent women or give them ā€œstrong female rolesā€ to play, it just places women in roles that were originally written for men. Some people will praise this trend of gender-swapped remake movies, regarding them as a ā€œFemale representation win!ā€ but how exactly do these movies represent women when the roles werenā€™t originally written for them? These roles donā€™t represent women in any way because these were roles made for, and by, men. Theyā€™re women playing a manā€™s character, and to me, thatā€™s not representation.

We recently had an all-female Ghostbusters, and an expansion on the male-dominated Oceanā€™s 11 franchise with the all-women Oceanā€™s 8, it looks like this may be a reoccurring trend in Hollywood, with the next gender-swapped movie remake being The Expendables (renamed as The ExpendaBelles, just in case you forgot itā€™s starring all women). To take it even further, there has even been talks of remaking The Lord of the Flies with an all-female cast, which completely misses the point of the story. The point was that it was a group of boys and that they succumbed to toxic and violent aggressions. If it were all women, I feel like there would be a completely different outcome and story, so it makes no sense to make the same movie with a female cast and not change the story at all. I worry if this all-women reboot pattern keeps up, more classic films will have their ultimate story points and morals misconstrued.

Canā€™t movie producers make original films about a group of female friends battling some supernatural force, or a story about a class of teenage girls stranded on an island? Surely this would be more interesting than the same movie continuously regurgitated and gender-swapped in the name of female representation.