- 3,137
- 2,859
But if the point is that it is eventually the mans downfall (with the exception of Blade Runner) then isn't that showing the lesson is that the man is wrong for doing so?
I mean the moral is there, it just seems like the point is missed if you just saw a hot robot woman and then came to that conclusion.
I'd understand her point if the machine women was used as a sex object and then the movie ends there but that were't the case at all. If anything, it tells you not to do so.
I mean yes, Hollywood is sexist and majority of the studio heads are men who greenlits more films where women are objectified than men but those examples are probably the exception.
Blade Runner 2049 Director Opens Up About the Film's Treatment of Women
https://io9.gizmodo.com/blade-runne...ector-opens-up-about-the-films-tre-1820747134
Women in Blade Runner 2049 are constantly objectified by the world around them, turned into automated helpers, puppets, and sex toys. The post-dystopia built by director Denis Villeneuve is cruel and dehumanizing to everyone, but especially to women.